Showing posts with label Chicago Tribune Editorial Board. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Tribune Editorial Board. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2018

A week in the life of a Chicago Tribune reader

It was tough, but for a week, I limited myself to a media diet of the Chicago Tribune alone. 

No New York Times or Washington Post. 

No CNN, MSNBC or Fox. Not that I watch them anyway, but still. 

No Daily Worker or union publications printed in the blood of the Illinois taxpayer. Because, as the Tribune has been warning us all week, we're bleeding them dry, so the presses haven't been able to run for a while now anyway. 

Every morning, after brewing myself a pot of coffee and the finest caviar, beluga and pate de fois gras my union provides for me in exchange for my unrelenting support for Mike Madigan, I settled down in my Throne of a Million Public Sector Swords and leafed through all twenty pages or so of the main section of each day's Chicago Tribune.

Pictured: An endangered species. The newspaper reader.
Why? Because I’m masochistic? Because I wanted to see what happened when you took as much of the Internet commentary out of the question as possible? Because I wanted to know whether I would hunger for more context, or whether I would just accept the line I was given? 

Who knows. As a child, I was sort of raised to deify Chicago press, though they've been known to crap all over my own profession in return. And given the fact that this week was the most messed up, tumultuous week in a long series of Weeks in Hell, concluding with the deaths of five reporters in Maryland at the hands of a gunman with a grudge going back years, this may have been the worst possible week to attempt this experiment. Or the best, depending on how you look at it. 

Let me stress that this was in no way a scientific strategy. I did not objectively measure and compare stories, number of stories, word count in stories. Naturally, I gravitated to what was repeated the most, and naturally, my own biases, cognitive and political, played a role in my observations and reactions. (I have not included weblinks to any of the Tribune stories I've talked about here, since I worked exclusively off their print edition.) There were stories I absorbed more readily than others. There was some top notch journalism. There were stories that adhered closely to the narrative the media has been selling for decades. I can say nothing new on that subject; if you're not looking for it by now, you won't get any insight from me. But here's a hint: it has nothing to do with liberal vs. conservative

It does, however, have a lot to do with what's acceptable power and what's not. Like public opinion. 

Janus vs unions

For starters, one thing I was explicitly taught early in the week was that the Janus case, which the Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday, had absolutely nothing to do with taking power away from unions. This is the case of Mark Janus, who felt it was unfair to pay union dues to a union he didn’t belong to but nevertheless negotiated his contract and working conditions on his behalf. The case our governor of Illinois originally started, and then watched eagerly as Janus went ahead on his behalf. 

No, this wasn’t an “anti-union” thing. I learned this from Kristen McQueary’s column earlier that unions wouldn't be "dead" after the ruling, only obligated to work harder to retain members. And I learned that, while page Two sage John Kass "understands" fair share fees being used to negotiate contracts, nevertheless we all have to understand ourselves that every union member is a Democratic minion giving their money straight to Mike Madigan (a man I've never voted for and couldn't even if I tried), which is how they earn their "luxurious" pensions (averaging $45,000 a year), 37-hour workweeks and retirement at the age of 50. 

My God! I haven't learned I had it so good since Trump proclaimed the nation's schools "flush with cash" in his Inaugural Address. These two guys must attend PTA meetings together or something. 

And that's not even counting the three editorials from the Editorial Board, gushing over the SCOTUS decision in favor of Janus, who says he doesn't "begrudge" unions, but only thinks it's unfair he should have to pay for them negotiating on his behalf. The Edit Board agrees. They totally agree. 

They agreed Thursday: "We’re not great fans of that symbiosis between one party and the public’s workforce. Unions have a vested interest in the taxing-and-spending status quo in Illinois, which in fiscal terms is a disaster. Democrats have been too happy to go along for the ride, saddling taxpayers with enormous public debts." 

I can't wait to read about the concerns these guys have with corporate cash infecting the minds and lining the pockets of the GOP!

They agreed again on Thursday, comparing Rauner to Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker. Rauner's victory, they argue, has given "a louder voice to rank-and-file taxpayers long battered by the high personnel, pension and benefit costs imposed on them by Illinois politicians. Those often exorbitant overhead costs have created huge public debts — and threaten to keep taxes rising." 

Since I limited myself to the Tribune, I couldn't consult the news or periodicals reporting on exactly what Walker's crackdown on unions has done to Wisconsin, but rest assured, it's easy to find. It's been bad for schools, bad for unions, bad for Wisconsin's economy,  bad for their municipalities...if I were reading a more evidence-based account of this issue, I'd be mad.  

And lest alone forget how awesome this decision was, the Editorial Board agreed with it again on Friday. They think Governor Rauner should take a "victory lap" for dealing a blow against one of the last democratizing forces in this country and beefing up private power, and use his clout to...raise the smoking age to 21? Well, whatever. 

Trump's Muslim I mean brown-skinned people whoops, that's travel ban

Oh but it wasn't only a week to bash public unions. It was also the week SCOTUS upheld President Trump's ban against foreign nationals from seven different countries, most of which, coincidentally, are Muslim-majority and none of which, also coincidentally, have sent terrorists here to kill us. 

But the Roberts court, according to Tribune reporting and according to the Editorial Board, assured us that the intention behind the ban doesn't matter, just like Trump's tweets don't matter. It's what the president does that matters. 

“Roberts pointed to one broadly worded provision in an immigration law that says the president may ‘suspend the entry…of any class of aliens’ if he believes they ‘would be detrimental to the interests of the United States,’" the Tribune page one story read. "After a ‘multi-agency review…the president lawfully exercised that discretion,’ (Roberts) said in Trump vs. Hawaii.”

Again, true to form, the Editorial Board echoed the point in their corresponding piece. They quoted Roberts again: “Plaintiffs argue that this president’s words strike at fundamental standards of respect and tolerance ...But the issue before us is not whether to denounce the statements. It is instead the significance of those statements in reviewing presidential directive, neutral on its face, addressing a matter within the core executive responsibility. In doing so, we must consider not only the statements of a particular president, but also the authority of the presidency itself.” 

And they then delivered this little bon mot: "Say it with us, Trump critics: deeds over Twitter feed.”

In all of this coverage, there was a pitiful amount of space dedicated to counterarguments from the liberal dissenters on the bench. One writer Tweeted a line from Sotomayor's argument I wish they'd considered, though: "It (the ruling) leaves undisturbed a policy first advertised openly and unequivocally as a 'total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States' because the policy now masquerades behind a facade of national-security concerns." Very true. If the president believes seven nations are a threat to us, he has discretion to ban entry from those nations, but if the president believes Muslims are evil, we're supposed to discount that? 

Say it with me, Tribune: In Twitter veritas. 

And before they could even finish their surface-level discussion of a racist policy enshrined by the nation's highest court, the Board had to go ahead and talk up the court’s thinking on the Korematsu ruling from 1944. This was the case that, remember, legalized the forced internment of Japanese-Americans into concentration camps during World War II. The Editorial Board agreed with Roberts and said critics comparing this disgrace of a precedent to Trump’s Muslim travel ban were wrong: "Because different rules apply to noncitizens and citizens...those legal comparisons are baseless." 

Meaning, I take it, we can cage as many noncitizens as we want. Yay Supreme Court! 

And how about that new Supreme Court seat?

Somewhere during the week, the Janus ruling popped up in my news feed even as I was reading the Tribune's coverage of the travel ban ruling, and somewhere after that, Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement. It was too much. My circuits blew. I threw the papers away and went drinking. 

Twenty-four hours later when I sobered up, I looked over their coverage. A long front page article walked through the powerlessness of Democrats wanting to hold up a conservative nomination in revenge for Mitch McConnell's theft of Antonin Scalia's seat in 2016, and highlighted Kennedy’s career, calling his a "pivotal role at the center of a court equally balanced between more predictable conservatives and more consistent liberals." His "legacy" would likely come down to his decisions "championing gay rights: striking down discrimination, restrictions on sodomy and the federal government's position of not recognizing legal same-sex marriages." (Later in the week, such praise would be tempered by commentary.) 

The Editorial Board wasted no time setting about framing the issue as another instance of Washington Power Politics. "Rerun here the debate," the Board intoned, "about whether Senate Republicans unfairly kept Obama from replacing the late Justice Antonin Scalia in 2016, or whether Republicans merely were following the dictates of Democratic Sens. Joe Biden (in 1992) and Chuck Schumer (in 2007) that the Senate shouldn’t confirm a nominee in the final year of a presidency."

See? It's nothing that hasn't been done before. I mean, Biden didn't actually try to hold up a Supreme Court seat getting filled. And Chuck Schumer didn't do it either--he was urging "no" votes against candidates Democrats didn't like. You can't vote "no" if there's no hearing at all, right? 

But the Editorial Board equivocates them, so yeah, this is all the same and the Trump presidency is so far nothing different than any other Muslim-banning, Supreme Court-stealing, invective-spewing administration this country has seen. Oh my head. Where are my pills? 

The rest of the mess

I learned plenty of other things reading the Trib exclusively this week, though. I learned there's a problem with affordable housing in Chicago, and that the Emanuel administration, having been taken to task, is setting up a department to look into it. 

I learned that the ongoing Chicago Public Schools sex abuse crisis has gotten a lot of attention, thanks to Tribune reporters hitting the pavement, delving into records and doing all the things journalists are supposed to do (and for which they're reviled by our president, but never mind, that's nothing new, blah blah blah). 

I heard from dissenting opinions questioning some (but only some) of the narratives fed by the lead articles and their omissions, the Editorial Board and their agenda, and the right-wing shrieking of the occasional National Review contributor or paean to Charles Krauthammer (may his nationalist, Iraq War-supporting soul rest in peace). 

I heard from Eric Zorn, one of the paper's most prominent liberals, dissenting from cries for "civility" in the wake of Sarah Huckabee Sanders being refused service at a restaurant last weekend. "Sorry, no, I won’t suffer lectures about civility from members of a party led by a swaggering, unrepentant bully who relentlessly attacks his detractors with schoolyard insults," he wrote. "Civility has a poor track record in politics, particularly lately — the nastiest, crudest, most dishonest primary candidate won the GOP presidential nomination in 2016 over a host of more qualified, more restrained contenders. He then marched through the rhetorical sewers all the way to the White House."

Presumably, the rest of the staff reminded him that, in light of the upheld travel ban, words are meaningless. 

Zorn also cautioned Rauner not to take too much credit for the Janus decision, walking it back to the earlier California case and McConnell's blocking Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016. "Credit" is an interesting word here--I would have said "blame," but that's just a liberal word, I guess. Towards the end of the piece, Zorn brings out what I would have called a central point: "Though they like to cloak their advocacy with gauzy platitudes about freedom of speech, those backing the Janus effort, including Rauner, are plainly motivated by a desire to destroy public-sector unions. These unions, for all their flaws, have provided a bulwark against the decline of the middle class and the widening income gap."

Likewise, columnist Rex Huppke, the paper's other most prominent liberal, took the country to task for hating Muslims, distrusting Muslims and betraying the values we constantly tout as "American." 

“We are a country that doesn’t want Muslims to come here," he wrote (correctly). "We are a country that doesn’t want people from Mexico or South America or Central America or Africa to come here. We are a country that wants people who weren’t born in America but have lived here and put down roots to leave, even if it means they’ll return to countries plagued with violence and poverty. We are a country that will intentionally separate mothers from their children as a means to deter non-white people from coming here, even if they’re facing certain death and seeking asylum. That’s who we are."

Strident words, though they seem drowned out by the overbearing coverage and commentary to the contrary. True to form, page two featured another diatribe from Kass’s, drooling over the thought of sad liberals and equating everyone on the left upset at the thought of weakened unions and another Trump Supreme Court justice pick as “Democratic bosses” or hippie dippies living on Big Rock Candy Mountain, wanting to abolish ICE and get “free government jobs for all.” 

At least Dahleen Glanton's column on page three that same day delivered a solid rebuttal. Where Kass sees some crazy broad yelling on camera, Glanton sees an independent woman standing up for what she believes in. One can only hope those two writers go out for coffee sometime and Kass can get an earful. 

Then there was Steve Chapman wearily trotting out the inconvenient facts about our 17-year-old war in Afghanistan: lives lost, money spent, nothing to show for it. I love that he thinks this. In 2001, he called protestors of the Afghanistan war "morons" and argued that they would have tried to make peace with the Japanese empire after Pearl Harbor in 1941. And look at him now, all grown up and thinking rationally...

Or not. Now, Chapman tells us not to feel guilty over not having heard of a cease fire breakdown with the Taliban this week. Not because his paper didn’t cover it (they didn’t), but because "Seventeen years after the U.S. invaded, there is not much reason to pay attention to Afghanistan because nothing ever changes much. Yet we remain there in the obstinate hope that something will.” 

So wait, if "Afghan civilians have been dying at a near-record pace," if "Production of poppies, used to make heroin, set a record last year," and if "the U.S. has been dropping a huge number of bombs – three times more in 2017 than in 2016, under Barack Obama," only to see the insurgents flourish and civilians die by the thousands, there's no need to pay attention?

Chapman also warned liberals of the responsibility they would have protesting the decisions likely to be handed down by a conservative-majority court in the future. No, he didn't like the travel ban ruling, he assures us, but the law is how the courts make up their own minds, independent of what a president says about his own laws, at which point the people can exercise power of their own via protests, elections. 

See? If they overturn Roe, you can carry a sign in the streets. That’ll show them.

I support newspapers, but you guys, you...

By the end of the week, even though I was punch drunk from everything and drowning in my own liberal tears, the Tribune headlines were still looking like news dispatches from Gilead. Analysis of the threat Roe vs. Wade is now under. The Democrats’ toothlessness in stopping Trump’s judicial pick. Trump blistering his hands with a shovel, breaking ground on the Foxconn plant in Wisconsin, all while threatening Harley Davison to keep its jobs in the U.S. or else. Secretary of Defense James Mattis assuring the nation that, even though we’ve heard how Trump is going to totally rock out peace with the North Koreans, we’re still keeping troops in South Korea. John Kass in his garden, grumbling about all the politics today and protestors “demonstrating for what they want” and his tomatoes. 

And then there was the shooting in Annapolis. 

Five died and at least two were wounded when a man with a beef against the Capital Gazette going back to 2011 stormed the building with smoke grenades and a shotgun. The coverage quoted extensively from reporter Phil Davis, who described hiding under his desk and listening intently to the gunfire, fearing for his life. He said it was like “a war zone.” 

The Gazette, it turns out, is also owned by Tronc, parent company of the Tribune, and the Editorial Board referred to the victims, understandably, as “family.” 

“Shootings are frighteningly common in the American workplace,” they wrote. “People in virtually every store, factory, warehouse or office dread what happened Thursday: Blasts of gunfire. Workers dead or wounded. The caterwaul of sirens.”

Horrifying, no question. And to their credit, the board has been calling for reasonable gun control measures for a long time now. A brutal end to a dispiriting and alarming week. 

A perfect time to call for support of journalists, who are doing careful, diligent work in the face of an apathetic, aliterate public and a White House that seems to have declared de facto war on them. I’m all for that. I just wish their opinion makers would talk more to those scrappy journalists, firsthand, maybe read their work a little more carefully. 

Over the past week, the Tribune has given careful, often limited coverage of key issues emanating from Supreme Court decisions that nevertheless gave a much broader context than you find in their myopic editorials and columns. Their coverage of the travel ban, for example, had one single direct quote in it, from Devin O’Malley, Justice Department spokesman, who claimed that “Without this action by Congress, lawlessness at the border will continue,” leading to “more heroic and fentanyl pushed by Mexican cartels...a surge in MS-13 gang members and an increase in the numbers of human trafficking prosecutions.”

Is this correct? No way to tell; nobody fact checked it. And such nuance doesn’t seem to matter to They Who Opine for a Living. 

And when the paper covers crises in DCFS or the creation of a committee to investigate sexual abuse in the Chicago Public Schools, does anyone attempt to square that with their gripes about spending-spending-spending? Infrastructure costs money. Counseling children costs money. That is no small part of what the 2012 strike was about, not these gold-plated pensions I keep hearing of. 

And when Kass grouses about protestors protesting “just so they’ll get what they want,” I assume he’s talking about people like Lidia Souza, a Brazilian who was covered that day on the following page. She crossed the border illegally last spring, applied for asylum and was released, but it took a federal judge to reunite her with her son Diogo while the home she’s moving to is being investigated. The judge ruled it was harmful to keep them separated while the home she was moving to was being investigated. 

“I cried almost every day when I wasn’t with my mother,” Diogo told the Tribune. “The other children are suffering a lot.” 

The protestors in Washington, D.C. this past week are protesting exactly this sort of thing, and it’s embarrassing when our commentators can’t factor humanity and empathy into their opinions and commentary. 

Sixty-one percent of Americans approve of labor unions, and 39 percent want them to have more influence, according to a recent Gallup poll. But if you read the Tribune, all you learn is that union members retire at 50 and feast on the flesh of the taxpayer. Also frustrating. 

This is a week where Americans saw key liberties thwarted, and others threatened, by the Supreme Court. Take your cue from the bulk of coverage provided by this newspaper, not to mention the overwhelming slant of its commentary, and all of this is business as usual. Banned Muslims, partisan bickering. 

But take your cue from your own honest thought and reflection, and there’s plenty to be alarmed about. To protest about. 

Just make sure you stay out of the old guy’s garden while you do. 

What a lovely garden. If you look outside its walls, you'll see brown-skinned people getting thrown in cages, but you go ahead and rock those cucumbers, you... 





Sunday, September 3, 2017

Will the media play by the same rules as it expects the schools to? Very, very doubtful.

I read with interest the Chicago Tribune Editorial Board's reiteration of its Student Bill of Rights this morning, which is probably its third or fourth appearance this year. Basically, it's market-driven drivel, geared towards the schools-should-be-run-as-businesses mentality. Consolidate schools. Expand school choice. Use merit pay to dump those lousy teachers (presumably demonstrated through test scores). Ban strikes. Empower parents to shut down schools, because that's how you get parents involved (as opposed to, say, communicating with the educators or monitoring their kids' homework completion).

I must say, I'm impressed by the Editorial Board's completely tone-deaf approach to the problem. Even when their own newspaper reports on socioeconomic factors that almost certainly impact a child's learning and school performance (decades of disparate school funding, city violence, exposure to lead, immigration and domestic violence issues, city violence and its corresponding poverty, etc.), they manage to ignore most of it and retain their focus, laserlike, on the schools alone. It's a veritable one-note trumpet they're continually playing: Schools are to blame. No excuses. If kids aren't learning, that's on the teachers and the teachers alone. If a student gets pregnant, then that's a mark against the student's school (as Editorial Board member Kristen McQueary bizarrely argued in a podcast last week).

"You're playing the same note over and over again. You are now ready to write songs for the media about public education."


Meanwhile, the research consistently demonstrates family plays a much greater role in a child's educational success or failure than the school's, and the teaching profession, battered by years of scapegoating and demonizing, is seeing its ranks fall, while fewer college students are getting into the profession at all.

One wonders whether the Tribune would hold itself to its own standards.

One wonders if, in a world where we blame teachers for all aspects of student performance, we could apply the same standard to the newspaper writers doing the blaming.

One ponders the sheer idiocy of holding a newspaper reporter responsible for what even his or her own readers retain from the reporter's work, given the apparent inability of a large portion of this nation to do anything resembling rational thinking.

One might, in a fit of pique and with a head full of righteous indignation, cook up a missive in the same spirit as the Tribune's, and publish that missive in an effort to call out this kind of fallacious reasoning. And if one were to do so, one might come up with something like the following. 

---------- 

The Newspaper Reader's Bill of Rights

This country has watched its journalism decline into spectacles of reality TV and incessant navel-gazing. Newspaper defenders paint reporters and editors as scrappy little crusaders filled with derring-do, valiantly attempting to capture the attention of the American people with Stories That Matter. And yet they're still struggling because, doggone it, people aren't reading them.

Would you believe it: the public doesn't even trust them in the first place! Those ingrates! In a world where you can't trust a Fourth Estate made up of a handful of incredibly wealthy corporations, what can you trust?

But I think we all know the real reason for these travails: journalists, and especially newspapers, aren't doing enough to get people to read them. They can't maintain quality in journalism because they just don't have the subscribers, and they don't have subscribers because they totally suck. Don't you see?

The Chicago Tribune no longer has that excuse. I just paid for a month's subscription at ninety-nine cents, and because I am an ardent free market enthusiast, I, like a corporate sponsor, expect my money to produce the kind of reporting that I think it should. Never mind what the media elites say is good journalism.

You got the money, Tribune. No more excuses. Now here's my list of demands. You may need seven or ten for Illinois's schools, but I only need four or five for you. What's bedeviling your industry is really that simple to fix.

1. High-quality reporters for all stories. I'm talking Pulitzer Prize-winning, globe-trotting, Clark Kent-mixed-with-Edward R. Murrow figures. Why are you not hiring economist journalists to cover the economy? Why are you not hiring Joyce Carol Oates to write book reviews? Hire the best. And use incentives to keep them on their toes once they're working for you. If their reporting isn't read by thousands of people within hours of posting, show them the door. There is absolutely no reason why people wouldn't read riveting reporting, and any excuses given (short attention spans, too much competition, too much confusion over what news is real and what isn't) is just that: a bunch of excuses.

2. Comprehensive exams to make sure news readers remember and understand what they read. I mean, if a student in a class doesn't know when the Civil War was fought, or that Columbus was basically a genocidal land-thief, it's obviously because their good-for-nothing teachers never told them. So when we read that one out of five Americans think the sun goes around the earth, yeah, those lazy "educators" probably never got around to holding up a globe next to a lamp or something, but it's also because the news didn't tell them. So I call upon the Tribune to hold its staff to accountability. Do your readers know who the Rohingya are? You ran a story about them Sept 2, so if they don't, it's because you didn't explain it clearly enough, or you didn't have good enough photos to go with the story, or you didn't fold some cat videos around it on your webpage. Are your readers intimately familiar with the conflicting religions and ideologies fueling the conflict in Syria, Iraq and the surrounding areas? Can they identify the differences between Shia and Sunni Muslims? They can't? That's on you. Come on, guys. No excuses.

3. Show me the numbers. Newspapers should make better use of Big Data and internet tools to boost readership. Find out what your readers want to read about. They didn't want to read about financial shenanigans that led to the Great Recession, and you and your ilk quite rightly didn't report on them. Ditto investigations of the Bush administration's WMD claims. Good on you. So keep delivering the goods, regardless of how good those goods in reality are. As I type this up, I notice that Beyoncé and Cardi B are trending on Twitter, yet I see nothing about this on your page one. What's up with that, guys? Do you have such little faith in the wisdom of the American people? Are you so elitist as to assume we can't decide for ourselves what our needs for information on pop stars are? Insulting.

4. More competition. If competition improves quality, then two newspapers to compete with aren't enough. We want ten more papers. And you should be funding this competition yourself, much like the taxpayer is now funding private schools and charter schools with less accountability. So bleed some revenue out and get those newspapers well funded and running, and then compete with them. What are you, scared of competition? Just think how awesome you'll be, fighting over a finite number of readers with only so many hours to devote to reading the press. See? You're coming up with ideas already. I can see the desperation rising in your eyes.

5. I'm leaving numbers five through ten for the general public to fill in as they see fit. Possible items include more skin in the style section, no paywalls, fewer stories on places we can't pronounce so we don't feel stupid, and more gratuitous and shameless plugs for Game of Thrones since there's only been one this week.

Newspaper readers and news consumers' interests and tastes should never take a back seat to what the elitist "experts" claim is actually the news, and market forces rule all. Make all this happen in the next week or so, which seems a reasonable timeline, or else you're, you know, fired.

"This will now be the format for story pitches. Fifteen reporters enter. One (who dutifully parrots the right talking points) leaves, and gets a salary."