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Media's Weird Ethics: Pretending to Be Someone Else Is Worse Than Facilitating Global Catastrophe
There's a popular verb in headlines about climate researcher Peter Gleick's admission that he used trickery to get damning documents out of the climate change-denialist group the Heartland Institute: "Activist Says He Lied to Obtain Climate Papers" (New York Times, 2/21/12); "Scientist Peter Gleick Admits He Lied to Get Climate Documents" (L.A. Times, 2/21/12); "Climate Researcher Says He Lied to Obtain Heartland Documents" (WashingtonPost.com, 2/21/12).
Peter Gleick at Word Economic Forum (Photo: Flickr/CC BY 2.0)
What you wouldn't gather from all these pants-on-fire condemnations is that there is a long and honorable tradition, from Nellie Bly feigning madness to expose mistreatment of the mentally ill to the Chicago Sun-Times' Mirage Tavern corruption lab, of investigative journalists using false identities to gather information--when the public interest is clear, and there's no other way to get the story. While it's not possible to give Gleick ethical absolution without knowing more details of what he did, it's clear that Heartland was not about to give up incriminating documents to anyone they thought would make them public--and there is hardly a story where the public interest is more obvious than in documenting efforts to block action to stop catastrophic global climate change.
However, as Aaron Swartz pointed out in Extra! (3-4/08), in recent years corporate media have largely abandoned the tactic of undercover reporting, largely in response to the Food Lion case, in which ABC was sued (ultimately unsuccessfully) for having its reporters get grocery store jobs without revealing that they planned use their positions to gather evidence of unsafe food handling. Bizarrely, many journalistic observers seemed to find Food Lion's position persuasive--an ethical stance that is great for corporate malefactors but terrible for the public interest, since it would virtually insure that reporters can never be eyewitness to workplace abuses that happen in employees-only areas.
Thus when Ken Silverstein (Harper's, 7/07) pretended to represent a Central Asian dictatorship to document lobbying groups' eagerness to work for human rights abusers, he got a chorus of scoldings from ethical arbiters like Howard Kurtz (Washington Post, 6/25/07): "No matter how good the story, lying to get it raises as many questions about journalists as their subjects." In this peculiar moral universe, pretending to work for a ruthless dictatorship is every bit as ethically questionable as actually volunteering to do so.
And that's the standard that's being applied to Gleick (Climate Central, 2/21/12): The New York Times' Andy Revkin (Dot Earth, 2/20/12) charged that "Gleick's use of deception in pursuit of his cause after years of calling out climate deception has destroyed his credibility and harmed others." Wrote Bryan Walsh for Time.com (2/20/12): "No reputable investigative reporter would be permitted to do what Gleick did. It's almost certainly a firing offense." According to Houston Post science editor Eric Berger (2/21/12), Gleick "has unquestionably ceded some of the high ground scientists held in the climate science debate. It will not be easily won back."
Funny, you'd think that climate scientists held the high ground in the climate science debate because of, you know, science--the science that shows that we're making catastrophic changes to the Earth's atmosphere?
Holding that Gleick's sins are much worse than Heartland's--I predict you will see virtually nothing from now on in establishment outlets about the contents of the Heartland memos--is a bizarre moral proposition, equivalent to holding that a child should starve to death rather than a loaf of bread be stolen. (Do bear in mind a fact that seems entirely absent from the media discussion of global warming, which is that large numbers of people, many of them children, are already dying as a result of lack of action on climate change.) But the most maddening thing is that these same media outlets are entirely willing to accept misrepresentation and illegally gathered information as legitimate parts of journalism--when they are used to advance a right-wing agenda, including climate change denial.
As Exhibit A, look at James O'Keefe, who famously and proudly passed off his partner as a prostitute while secretly videotaping ACORN staffers. Who in the debate over O'Keefe's work took the position that because the colleague was not actually a prostitute, the entire project was unethical and therefore all of his videotapes should be ignored? The actual objection to O'Keefe's work (Extra!, 4/10) was that he deceived the public--misleadingly editing his footage to create false impressions, including the popular delusion that O'Keefe had gone into ACORN offices wearing an outlandish Superfly costume. Nevertheless, he got overwhelmingly positive coverage from right-wing and centrist news outlets alike, with the result that his mendacious reporting had the successful result of helping to bring ACORN down.
And on the issue of climate change itself, corporate news outlets devoted endless attention to the "Climategate" story (Extra!, 2/10), the selective release of scientists' private emails, evidently obtained through hacking. This release was designed to create the appearance of scientific impropriety where none existed, as every inquiry into the controversy has determined (FAIR Blog, 4/19/10). In a journalistic failure that will likely surpass the selling of the Iraq invasion and the overlooking of the housing bubble in terms of human devastation, media allowed this malicious hoax to upend the climate change discussion (FAIR Blog, 2/2/10), turning the scientific consensus on global warming once again into an open question and effectively taking real action to reduce greenhouse gasses off the political table.
Climate Central's round-up of reactions to the Heartland/Gleick story cites Forbes.com's Warren Meyer (2/21/12)--identified not as a prominent global warming denier (he's got a video called Catastrophe Denied, for Pete's sake), but merely as one of "several commentators" making the point that people on both sides in the "climate debate" have caused it to become "unethical and dangerous." Meyer is quoted, seemingly approvingly: "When we convince ourselves that those who disagree with us are not people of goodwill who simply reach different conclusions from the data, but are instead driven by evil intentions and nefarious sources of funding, then it becomes easier to convince oneself that the ends justify the means."
Here's what the Heartland documents actually show (Deep Climate, 2/14/12): The leadership of those who reject climate science are not people of goodwill who simply reach different conclusions from the data, but instead are driven by nefarious sources of funding. If you want to call that "evil," when you're talking about working to prevent action to avoid worldwide disaster, I think you're on solid moral ground.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllThis story was in today's Chicago Tribune, and my reaction was the same as reflected in this article. While I often disagree with the Trib's editorial stance(es), as well as some of their columnists - Jonah Goldberg and Charles Krauthammer, especially - I've been a subscriber for decades. When liberals use undercover tactics, the information they get is suspect. When conservatives do it using suspect tactics, the information is gospel. Mere information has become power; knowledge and fact have been driven out of what used to be called journalism.
SMIP: Exactamente... and why that's so is due to the fact that only articles that pay tribute to mammon pass snuff in an era where Capital Rules (with ample assistance from Mars, the warrior, and the make-war state).
for those just getting off of the bus...
the media is the enemy...
this is because anyone trying to do honest journalism is killed...
one is left with less-than-honest journalism...
the correct approach to the media is that of antagonist...
to look to the media for truthful information is delusional...
Re: "anyone trying to do honest journalism is killed"
Remember Gary Webb.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Webb
yes, around here poor Gary is one of our running punchlines:
and he shot himself in the face...twice...
lest we forget, Gary was the brave chap with the San Jose Mercury News who attempted to publish the facts regarding the CIAs drug running activities in LA in the 80s...
for some time, he told friends and family he was being pursued, and he was eventually found dead, the victim of a 'suicide' that featured not one, but TWO shots to his face...
I've never tried to shoot myself in the face, but I'm not sure I'd be up for that second shot if the first went badly...
I've got an autographed copy of "Dark Alliance."
This is what he inscribed on the title page:
8.3.98
onward & upward
GWebb
What dubet sez ...
Those who own the Assimilated Press are also the owners of USInc's federal executive, "legislators" (sic) and top-level judges. They are, in fact, keenly interested in truth ... they work tirelessly to root it out, overwhelm it with shock-and-awe-level propaganda, and eradicate it before it has a chance to spread.
See also: DeChristopher, Tim.
From the article:
"Holding that Gleick's sins are much worse than Heartland's--I predict you will see virtually nothing from now on in establishment outlets about the contents of the Heartland memos--is a bizarre moral proposition, equivalent to holding that a child should starve to death rather than a loaf of bread be stolen."
I suspect Naureckas' prediction is accurate, that the contents of the Heartland memos will be ignored. Naureckas is correct that it's bizarre when outlets condemn Gleick's act in the absence of any scrutiny of the malfeasance uncovered at Heartland.
Were the law to be taken seriously in this instance, Heartland's 501(c)(3) charitable exemption would be revoked, and its directors prosecuted for tax fraud, because political activities discussed in Heartland's "2012 Fundraising Plan"* are a clear violation of IRS rules (particularly Heartland's Wisconsin initiative, "Operation Angry Badger").
The most repellant aspects of Heartland's sociopathic work, undermining sane policy informed by careful science, and destroying K-12 science education, are probably not illegal - but should be.
I vehemently disagree with those who say what Gleick did is journalistically unprofessional. If the profession of journalism excludes subterfuge of this kind, that explains why there's no news in the newspaper.
But Gleick wears two hats: journalist, and scientist. Some of his scientific colleagues, while giving Gleick credit for coming forward to take responsibility in the tradition of civil disobedience (in marked contrast to the CRU hackers from the other side) regret the damage Gleick has done to his own scientific career. Gavin Schmidt of RealClimate had this to say:
"Gleick's actions were completely irresponsible and while the information uncovered was interesting (if unsurprising), it in no way justified his actions. There is an integrity required to do science (and talk about it credibly), and he has unfortunately failed this test. The public discussion on this issue will be much the poorer for this - both directly because this event is (yet) another reason not to have a serious discussion, but also indirectly because his voice as an advocate of science, once powerful, has now been diminished."
* http://www.desmogblog.com/sites/beta.desmogblog.com/files/%281-15-2012%29%202012%20Fundraising%20Plan.pdf
Good article. As Chomsky has dissected often: the media (and intelligentsia) serve the interests of the powers that be. Otherwise they would be out of funding and jobs.
Here is what I sent to Joe Romm at Climate Progress, referencing your excellent article:
I hope you will reconsider your condemnation of Peter Gleick - and so should Gavin Schmidt and any others who have condemned him. It's important because such dilemmas will arise in the future, and whistle-blowers need to have some confidence that they will be protected and admired, not vilified and rejected.
I think what distills the essence of the problem of judging Gleick's actions is to consider that Gleick is BOTH a scientist, and a journalist. To make the assumption that his actions should be regarded - and disparaged - as those of a scientist who has lost integrity is simply a rather arrogant way of assuming the role of scientist erases and supersedes any other role. That could even include the role of parent, or citizen.
Clearly, Gleick was acting as a journalist in this instance, and so he should be judged on that basis.
There are much more important issues that are being tragically ignored, as detailed here:
http://witsendnj.blogspot.com/2012/02/what-part-of-emergency-dont-they.html
From my reading of Romm's response, I wouldn't call it a "condemnation" of Peter Gleick. To the contrary, Romm has been passionately defending Gleick (in particular, pointing out Andy Revkin's hypocrisy on this subject) in two pieces over the past two days:
Washington Post Embraces False Balance in Flawed Piece on Heartland Affair
http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2012/02/22/429989/washington-post-embraces-false-balance-in-flawed-heartland-piece/
Crossing the Line as Civilization Implodes: Heartland Institute, Peter Gleick and Andrew Revkin
http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2012/02/21/428884/crossing-the-line-heartland-institute-peter-gleick-and-andrew-revkin/
JR has been criticizing Revkin, and rightly so, but he has hardly been defending Gleick.
Compare what he said: "But Gleick is right that he committed a serious lapse of professional judgment and ethics."
To a comment on that post from Clive Hamilton:
"Any transgression by Peter Gleick was trivial compared to the moral cesspit he has exposed at the Heartland Institute. I applaud him for uncovering material that is vital to public understanding. The world is a better place for what he has done."
The point I am making is that Romm, and even more so Schmidt and other professionals, are judging his actions as a scientist. He is not only a scientist, he has other roles of equal value, despite the tendency for scientists to think of themselves as sacrosanct and superior. Gleick had every right to go undercover as a citizen, whether you want to call him a journalist or not. He wasn't acting as a scientist, and it's too bad he felt pressured to apologize.
So Heartland can lie about global warming science and get a free pass, but the man who exposes these lies gets castigated? How typical.
Peace,
Tex Shelters
Since justice is now solely based on the badly misinformed court of public opinion, the Do"J" has announced that evidence gathered by undercover police is no longer admissible because it is unethical for them to pretend not to be cops.
Nothing new here. Whistleblowers versus the crimes they report.
Does anyone remember that reporter Cameron McWhirter hacked into United Fruit and reported on all its misdeeds, only to be fired for hacking.
When FBI translator, Israeli born Shamai K. Leibowitz, reported on Congresswoman Jane Harman's sharing of classified information with Israel, he ended up in the Federal pen for 20 months, she was uncharged for her treason and manages to remain a "liberal" spokesperson on Huffington Post.. The NY Times didn't even see fit to mention her name in the story -- http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/06/us/06leak.html?pagewanted=all