Imagine a basketball game where the refs told one team "no matter how many fouls you commit we're only gonna call three of them, so we don't look biased." Now imagine this was happening with something way, way, way more important than a basketball game.https://twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu/status/1136632892686249984 …
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Replying to @jsmooth995 @delong
For this analogy to work, you have to pretend that the media’s role is akin to that of a referee. It’s not. The media are the media, the sideline commentators. They should act accordingly
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There's room for commentary, but referee should be a role played by media. Journalists examine competing claims and figure out what's true. It's how we come to a shared understanding of facts. Baquet's "balanced" treatment of asymmetrical phenomenon distorts reality.
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There are almost no journalists who are qualified to decide what is true. Their value add isn’t in arbitrating truth. It’s in reporting accurate facts and the necessary context. Just like the sideline commentators aren’t there to make calls. They’re there for analysis
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There are a number of problems with this take, the first of which is that the voters, whom our press is entrusted with informing, are not at all comparable to the passive spectators of a sporting event. They (we) are active, vital participants in the process at hand.
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It was your analogy. I just pointed out that in a basketball game, the media isn’t the refs. It’s the commentators.
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And I just explained why that is inaccurate. I made an analogy, yes, and then you overextended it to a place where it doesn't hold.
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If I “overextended” it by pointing out what refs actually do, then it was probably a bad analogy to begin with. But we can ageee to disagree
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The comparison is that in the context of politics, the press is relied upon to provide accountability, as refs are in basketball game. They do not have the same level of direct power/authority in that role, but that is a difference of degree not of kind.
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The probably with the analogy isn’t the level of extension. It’s that the press lacks the relevant authority to have the impact that refs do. And in many cases don’t have the relevant training to do what refs do
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