What Glenn and msnbc.com (sort of) said

Glenn Greenwald:

Yesterday, Digby wrote about the ongoing reverence for Karl Rove from our political and media establishment and, quoting a great new piece by Matt Taibbi on that topic, noted that Rove’s popularity among the media is not in spite of his flagrant contempt for law, ethics and rules, but due precisely to it:

Because this generation of Americans has become so steeped in greed and social Darwinism that it can no longer distinguish between cheating and achieving, between enterprise and crime, and can’t bring itself to criticize winners any more than it knows how to be nice to losers.

That echoes what NYU Journalism Professor Jay Rosen observed last year about the media’s ongoing reverence for Rove himself and his band of disciples — that the modern journalist, above all else, reveres and desperately wants to be close to the ”unprincipled winner”: those who engage in bad acts, ones which everyone knows are bad, and — most importantly of all — gets away with it through flagrant indifference to law and rules:

Savviness! Deep down, that’s what reporters want to believe in and actually do believe in— their own savviness and the savviness of certain others (including operators like Karl Rove.) In politics, they believe, it’s better to be savvy than it is to be honest or correct on the facts. It’s better to be savvy than it is to be just, good, fair, decent, strictly lawful, civilized, sincere or humane.

Savviness is what journalists admire in others. Savvy is what they themselves dearly wish to be. (And to be unsavvy is far worse than being wrong.) Savviness—that quality of being shrewd, practical, well-informed, perceptive, ironic, “with it,” and unsentimental in all things political—is, in a sense, their professional religion. They make a cult of it. And it was this cult that Karl Rove understood and exploited for political gain.… What is the truest mark of savviness? Winning, of course! Everyone knows that the press admires an unprincipled winner.

msnbc.com headline:

"Obama camp relying heavily on ground effort — Campaign borrowing from top GOP strategist Karl Rove's 2004 playbook "

Comments

One of the things I have said repeatedly

is that for modern journalists, truth has no intrinsic value. But most liberals have so completely adopted the idea of dispassion as giving both sides their say, whether both sides are equally honest or not, that they cannot see how significant a statement that is.

If we are the ones we have been waiting for, then we have met the enemy and he is us.

One word: equivalation

This year the media has become an equal opportunity...

prevaricator.

Pick up your copy of the '2008 Axelrove Playbook' - this year with dozens of brand new recipes to round out the original classic. Look for it in paperback this holiday season.

NYT admits: only 10% of stories about policy--

"... Through Friday, of 270 news articles published in The Times about the election since the national tickets were formed in late August, only 29, or a little over 10 percent, were primarily about policy substance. And that is a generous tally that includes some very brief items ...

only 8 percent of front-page articles in The Times from late August through last Sunday were about policy. Nearly three-quarters were about the horse race, political tactics, polls and the like. The Times numbers are about the same as for the news media in general, including cable television and blogs — not a standard to aspire to. ..." -- http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/12/opinio...

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