Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Is the Fourth Estate Really Facing a Crisis?

The News of the World scandal simply reveals the dangers of nepotism in large, publicly held corporations.


The British media have been complicit in attempts to spin a broader moral or theme from the hacking debacle, and this has, worryingly, been focused on the state of journalism. The implicit – and often explicit – message is that the fourth estate is faced with a crisis: Its reputation is under assault, its freedom is being questioned, and its methods and practitioners are being tacitly impugned. But this narrative, which is increasing in currency and traction to the point of becoming axiomatic, misrepresents the nature of this scandal entirely – particularly with regard to the light it sheds on the British media.

As has become – or, perhaps, has always been – the case with watershed scandals, the fact that newspapers operated by News International were responsible for hacking has, like an imploding star that had previously configured its solar system, exerted a strong distorting influence on subsequent commentary and opinion, and, in doing so, encumbered any attempt to gain a broader and more sober perspective.

Contrary to much instant analysis, the crisis does not expose a rotten core at the heart of journalism that requires redress through new legislation, or a new regulatory body to replace the Press Complaints Commission. Such action is unnecessary, and would be merely window dressing; you can put lipstick on a pig, but it remains a pig. Rechristening the watchdog and repainting its kennel is a superficial political stunt, not a substantive change. When the smoke has cleared, the British establishment will remain, immutably, incorrigibly incestuous.

Rather, what the crisis reveals is the danger of nepotism in large, publically held corporations – particularly those fighting to lead the industry peloton. Rupert Murdoch is probably an honest man and executive, whatever one may think of his politics and Machiavellian values. He is true to his (at times noxious) brand, but it is highly unlikely that he would have knowingly employed such blatantly illegal tactics. It is more likely that his sin is one of blindness, as a consequence of his determination to keep the company in the family.

His son, James Murdoch, is clearly inadequate for the position of authority he has been granted. Unable to trust himself to fashion complete thoughts of substance, he leaned on the verbal crutch of managerial Americanese throughout the hearing at Portcullis House. The vacuity of his unresponsive answers, with their washed out and nasal delivery, stood in contrast to the pithy – if erratic – sound bites that were being semaphored by his father, who came across as an old lighthouse, its flame flickering softly atop the rapidly eroding promontory that is News Corp. James Murdoch – call him Transatlantis – had already slipped, for all intents and purposes, beneath the swell, and his protestations were so much gargled water. Yet, despite the mess and his submarine status, he maintains his position in News Corp.

The senior Murdoch has failed, and continues to fail, to see that his son lacks the smarts, the charisma, and the intuition to lead. Thus, it has all begun to unravel. News Corp., long a salutary example – for its competitors – of a frustratingly inexorable logic, has been undone by a profoundly human error. So the cautionary tale of the hacking scandal can be boiled down to the danger of attempting to maintain the highest standards in a corporate environment while maintaining uncompromising positions founded in emotion. Blind nepotism is the fastest way to accrue structural weakness and compromise, which will lead inevitably to decline.

So, what of journalism? What is being lost in the furor, drowned out by the naming, blaming, and shaming, is that this scandal is as much about the power and necessity of investigative journalism – and the fourth estate, more generally – as it is about the structural dangers of nepotism in large, publically held corporations. The Guardian newspaper should be feted for its tenacious investigative work, which has exposed the endemic corruption in a powerful organization. The decline of News of the World is shocking, but it is no bad thing for the integrity of the public discourse. Tabloids are inevitable in a democracy with a largely free press, but they are not necessary. Investigative journalism is, conversely, not inevitable, but overwhelmingly necessary.

We should thus celebrate this as a new high in 21st-century journalism. Shining a light on the familiar is much more difficult than illuminating the other, and that the press can successfully police itself bodes well for the health of public life in the U.K., despite all its perils and pitfalls. Reform, then, is not the answer. The answer, if we applaud the exposure of such pernicious and corrosive conduct, is for more people to take out a newspaper subscription.

Origin
Source: the Mark 

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