The FoxNews.com reporter who broke the exclusive story about a notebook that Colorado shooter James Holmes sent to his psychiatrist, then refused to reveal her sources under threat of jail, was ordered to return to the Aurora courtroom April 10, in a case experts say has chilling ramifications for the First Amendment.Wrong. It has absolutely no ramifications for the 1st Amendment. Reporters are not a special class of people, and the freedom of the press belongs as much to me, a blogger--the political descendent of Thomas Paine and other pamphleteers--as it does to a reporter who works for FoxNews.
If you (wrongly) argue that keeping sources secret is necessary to a free press, then I ask, doesn't taxation limit the free press? After all, if news companies must pay corporate taxes and property taxes and all the rest, isn't that an infringement on the freedom of press?
The answer is, of course, self-evidently, no. But that doesn't keep the reporters from pushing the issue, and making fools of themselves in the process.
Rot in jail, kid.
Yes. Technically you have just as many rights as a reporter does. People just like to treat "the press" all special. But you could as a private citizen go look at the police reports yourself. You could call these news sources yourself. You can attend city council meetings yourself.
ReplyDeleteBut I'm surprised, Darren. You see the awful restrictions government often puts on people, the gag orders that are out there, the intimidation some people are under.
I'm not saying reporters are a law unto themselves or even that printing this was necessarily right, but I have to admire a reporter or editor who is willing to face jail time because he thinks the information getting out to the public is important enough to take a stand for.
We both know that making a habit of revealing sources means no one will trust you with the next story. I don't think they are fools. They just have a certain set of ethics they're working under that you don't understand.
I understand their so-called ethics just fine. I just don't *accept* them.
ReplyDeleteShould cops be able to protect the names of their confidential informants? Same idea, with a much more dramatic effect on third parties...
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