greenwald | A new and rapidly growing journalistic “beat” has arisen over the last several years that can best be described as an unholy mix of junior high hall-monitor tattling and Stasi-like citizen surveillance. It is half adolescent and half malevolent. Its primary objectives are control, censorship, and the destruction of reputations for fun and power. Though its epicenter is the largest corporate media outlets, it is the very antithesis of journalism.
I’ve written before about one particularly toxic strain of this authoritarian “reporting.”
Teams of journalists at three of the most influential corporate media outlets — CNN’s “media reporters” (Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy), NBC’s “disinformation space unit” (Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny), and the tech reporters of The New York Times (Mike Isaac, Kevin Roose, Sheera Frenkel) — devote the bulk of their “journalism” to searching for online spaces where they believe speech and conduct rules are being violated, flagging them, and then pleading that punitive action be taken (banning, censorship, content regulation, after-school detention). These hall-monitor reporters are a major factor explaining why tech monopolies, which (for reasons of self-interest and ideology) never wanted the responsibility to censor, now do so with abandon and seemingly arbitrary blunt force: they are shamed by the world’s loudest media companies when they do not.This is a point I've made over & over again: "go woke, go broke" has it exactly backwards. The revenue crunch is the /cause/ of the ideological monoculture, purity tests, & witch hunts -- not the reverse.
— jonstokes.com (@jonst0kes) February 7, 2021
Fix the revenue model, & you fix the newsroom culture. https://t.co/z1sEYLAxII
Just as the NSA is obsessed with ensuring there be no place on earth
where humans can communicate free of their spying eyes and ears, these
journalistic hall monitors cannot abide the idea that there can be any
place on the internet where people are free to speak in ways they do not
approve. Like some creepy informant for a state security apparatus,
they spend their days trolling the depths of chat rooms and 4Chan
bulletin boards and sub-Reddit threads and private communications apps
to find anyone — influential or obscure — who is saying something they
believe should be forbidden, and then use the corporate megaphones they
did not build and could not have built but have been handed in order to
silence and destroy anyone who dissents from the orthodoxies of their
corporate managers or challenges their information hegemony.
"Those of us in journalism have to come to terms with the fact that free speech, a principle that we hold sacred, is being weaponized against the principles of journalism," complained Ultimate Establishment Journalism Maven Steve Coll, the Dean of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism and a Staff Writer at The New Yorker. A New Yorker and Vox contributor who runs a major journalistic listserv appropriately called “Study Hall,” Kyle Chayka, has already begun shaming Substack for hosting writers he regards as unacceptable (Jesse Singal, Andrew Sullivan, Bari Weiss). A recent Guardian article warned that podcasts was one remaining area still insufficiently policed. ProPublica on Sunday did the same about Apple, and last month one of its reporters appeared on MSNBC to demand that Apple censor its podcast content as aggressively as Google’s YouTube now censors its video content.
Thus
do we have the unimaginably warped dynamic in which U.S. journalists
are not the defenders of free speech values but the primary crusaders to
destroy them. They do it in part for power: to ensure nobody but they
can control the flow of information. They do it partly for ideology and
out of hubris: the belief that their worldview is so indisputably right
that all dissent is inherently dangerous “disinformation.” And they do
it from petty vindictiveness: they clearly get aroused — find
otherwise-elusive purpose — by destroying people’s reputations and
lives, no matter how powerless. Whatever the motive, corporate media
employees whose company title is “journalist” are the primary activists
against a free and open internet and the core values of free thought.
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