[Mb-civic] Hold that opinion - Jeff Jacoby - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Apr 5 03:54:00 PDT 2006
Hold that opinion
By Jeff Jacoby | April 5, 2006 | The Boston Globe
FOR OBVIOUS REASONS, journalism places a premium on speed. When news
breaks on Tuesday, reporters spring into action to get the story into
the paper on Wednesday -- and maybe even online or on the air by Tuesday
night.
For reasons that are rather less obvious, opinion journalism -- the
business not of reporting what happened, but of commenting on it -- also
tends to place a premium on speed. When that story breaks on Tuesday,
members of the pundits' guild spring into action as well. Editorial
writers and columnists tell their readers what the news means. TV
talking heads and radio pontificators pass judgment. Internet bloggers
-- the commentariat's newest, increasingly influential players --
scramble to weigh in. And the more compelling or startling the news, the
more immediate, and often the more adamant, the opinions expressed.
All of this is very democratic and robust; it certainly makes for a
noisy and bustling marketplace of ideas. But does it make for a more
thoughtful one?
I have always thought that racing to report a story makes a lot more
sense than racing to express a point of view about it. No doubt there
are some sages who don't need time to reflect -- or to wait for more
facts, or to see how a story turns out -- in order to generate some
well-chosen words of genuine wisdom and insight. My own experience is
that judgment doesn't usually work that way. I find that thought and a
bit of distance vastly improve the odds of coming up with something
worth saying -- and that rushing to tell the world what to think of the
latest headlines makes for shallow, half-baked, or unfair commentary.
Case in point: the release of Jill Carroll.
When the Christian Science Monitor reporter was set free in Baghdad last
week, she insisted at first that her captors had not harmed her. ''I was
treated very well; it's important people know that," she said in an
interview conducted by the Iraqi Islamic Party, the Sunni organization
into whose hands she was released. ''They never threatened me in any way."
On the same day, a videotape made before she was freed was posted on the
Internet. In it, Carroll denounced the United States and praised the
insurgents as ''good people fighting an honorable fight." Asked by the
interviewer if she has ''a message for Mr. Bush," her answer was
one-sided and hostile:
''Yeah, he needs to stop this war. He knows this war is wrong. He knows
that it was illegal from the very beginning. He knows that it was built
on a mountain of lies."
To some people hearing this, it was plain that Carroll was speaking
under duress. ''Jill Carroll forced to make propaganda video as price of
freedom," the Monitor headlined its story the next day. Anyone imagining
that Carroll could have had any other motive, cautioned Ellen Knickmeyer
of The Washington Post, ''should think about what they would do (after)
three months with machine guns held to their heads."
But others, in their haste to express an opinion, pronounced Carroll
guilty of collaboration.
''May as well just come right out and say she was a willing
participant," one conservative blog announced. Declared another: ''She
was anti-America when she went over there and I say the kidnapping was a
put up deal from the get go." The executive producer of a prominent
radio/television talk show described Carroll on the air as ''the kind of
woman who would wear one of those suicide vests. You know, walk into the
-- try and sneak into the Green Zone . . . She's like the Taliban Johnny
or something."
At a popular site on the left, there was scorn for the ''totally
inappropriate" assumptions that Carroll's warm words about her captors
could be ''motivated by anything other than a desire to tell the truth."
Yet one day later, once she was safely out of Iraq, Carroll issued a
statement repudiating the ''things that I was forced to say while
captive." She bitterly labeled the men who kidnapped her and murdered
her translator, Alan Enwiya, as ''criminals, at best." What she thought
of the opinionated prodigies who couldn't wait to climb on their
soapboxes and tell the world what to think about her, Carroll didn't
say. Perhaps she was being polite. Perhaps, unlike them, she prefers to
think before she vents.
With the swelling influence of the Internet and the blogosphere, the
pressure to generate instant commentary is only going to grow more
intense. But it is a deeply unhealthy impulse, and commentators -- in
every medium -- should resist it. It's nice to be first. It's better to
be right.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/05/hold_that_opinion/
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20060405/e4e56b09/attachment.htm
More information about the Mb-civic
mailing list