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Bizarre free speech argument: White House can't have an opinion about journalism

October 30, 2009 2:15 pm ET by Eric Boehlert

That's clearly what's being pitched by more hysterical Fox News defenders in the press corps who are trying to mainstream this completely unique notion that if politicians, and specifically if White House administration members, publicly criticize the press, that means they're trying to police and control it.

It's sort of ironic. Fox News defenders, in the name of free speech, now apparently want to ban the Obama White House from having an opinion about journalism. They want to take away the White House's free speech right to step forward and correct the press.

Over at Mediaite.com, Glynnis MacNicol offers up some of the more ridiculous the-White-House-is-trying-to-trample-journalism rhetoric [emphasis added].

From the beginning, the ultimate danger of allowing the-White House to take on a news organization the way it has with Fox, is that it has now set a precedent. One that they apparently have no qualms about extending. Does the public really want its president determining what news is fit to consume?

"Allowing" the White House to take on a news organization? What does that even mean? Is MacNicol suggesting the White House is suddenly not allowed to criticize the press? It's not allowed to exercise its freedom of speech. It's not allowed to call out falsehoods? And is MacNicol really so naive to suggest the White House, by having an opinion about Fox News, is somehow "determining" what news is consumed?

More painful prose:

Earlier this week Valerie Jarret told CNN that the White House’s was not just taking on Fox, but anyone who spreads false news. This week that apparently includes both the AP and the “highly-respected and influential car site Edmunds.com” for an analysis piece they did on ‘cash for clunkers.’ You can read the White House blog rebuttal “Busy Covering Car Sales on Mars, Edmunds.com Gets It Wrong (Again) on Cash for Clunkers” here. Starting to sound like a bit of a disturbing trend, no?

Got this? The AP and Edmunds posted news items for news consumption, and then the White House offered up detailed public rebuttals, claiming the AP and Edmunds got the facts wrong. Yet MacNicol presents this as a deeply "disturbing trend." Why? Has the White House voice suddenly been banned from public debate?  

The ugly conclusion:

The White House is on a slippery slope, here. What’s next? A re-edit of the NYT? Perhaps a vetting of the Nightly News? The Internet has certainly made it possible for anyone to become a media watchdog, but it is not the White House’s responsibility to be approving our news for us. Ever. There are a lot of things the White House should be policing, our media is not one of them. Ten Glenn Beck’s will always be preferable to a media comprised of all the news the White House sees fit to print.

Again, almost too dumb for words. The White House has expressed its opinion about Fox News, so MacNicol hysterically claims the White House is "policing our media," and it's "approving" the news.

If MacNicol wants to play dumb and pretend Fox is a legit news organization, that's her right. But this kind of completely uniformed argument is just embarrassing. 

Also, I'm assuming that MacNicol slept through the Bush years when the GOP White House routinely pushed back and publicly criticized mainstream news organization, while partisan White House fans attacked targeted news outlets as being traitorous. I make that assumption because MacNicol never mentions the often hateful press-bashing from the Bush days, and instead pretends the Obama's critique of Fox News is the first time a White House has ever taken issue with the press.

And it's disturbing.

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    • Author by mk3872 (October 30, 2009 2:26 pm ET)
      5  
      Duh! Free speech only applies to conservatives, you goofballs!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Jen7 (October 30, 2009 2:42 pm ET)
      4  
      Excuse me, but they aren't allowed to correct factually wrong information??

      Wow, that's a new one.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by Don Hussein Fabuloso (October 30, 2009 3:11 pm ET)
        2  
        Jen, remember the outrage from wingnuts just a while back,when the White House had a website for reporting misinformation about health care.

        It was called a "spy" site, and another attack on free speech.

        I think it says a lot about the GOP that they always start screaming about violations of their 1st amendment rights any time somebody wants to exercise theirs by contesting the rightys lies.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (October 30, 2009 4:42 pm ET)
        1  
        It's okay when conservatives complain about the media...

        That's good red-blooded American criticism. When liberals complain about the media you know they want to destroy freedom of the press, they're being bullies, and they hate freedom.

        This pathetic double standard has been deeply ingrained in people's minds. But the absurdity is starting to come apart now.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by DellDolly (October 30, 2009 2:48 pm ET)
      2  
      It's a stupid argument, that's for sure. We see it here all the time when people bring up "free speech" or the "first amendment", not realizing that that only stops the government from restricting citizen's right to say what they want to say.

      It doesn't stop other people, including people in the White House, from being able to criticize and debunk the distortions!!

      And the White House has an obligation to the American people to help us discuss issues and have fair debates. The way to do that right now is to stop allowing FoxNews to push their nonsense and get credibility for it that they don't deserve. If FoxNews won't straighten up their act on their own, then their lies and misstatements and omissions need to be pointed out to the public at large.

      Their nonsense poisons the public debate and stops us from being able to address the topics we should be discussing. Instead, we talk about how a czar encouraged statutory rape (he didn't) or we talk about death panels that don't exist, or we talk about how Anita Dunn wants to stifle FoxNews from being able to say anything - she doesn't.

      We want FoxNews (and Lou Dobbs and Rush Limbaugh and the Washington Times) to lose their ability to get their nonsense taken seriously by the MSM. We want the citizens of the USA to be informed when they hear something from Glenn Beck or Sean Hannity that if it attacks the left, it's more often than not a gross distortion of what really is the truth. The only way to get that to happen is to promote and publicize their errors and omissions.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by cpinva (October 30, 2009 4:42 pm ET)
      1  
      and what makes you think ms. macnicol is playing dumb? based on her (really poor) writing, she is dumb. i'd go so far as to say she's really, really dumb.

      fortunately for her, her readership is even dumber.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by political_left-religious_right (November 02, 2009 12:15 pm ET)
           
        Good point. I particularly liked "Ten Glenn Beck’s"; ten Glenn Beck is what? Or does something belong to 'Ten Glenn Beck'?

        (By the way, please be sure to have your shift key fixed.)
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    • Author by mattcable250650 (October 30, 2009 9:25 pm ET)
         
      Time Magazine has an okay piece about Presidents and their relationships with the press (Though they left out Sprio Agnew and "Nattering nabobs of negativism"), but yeah, I had to laugh out loud at the idea that the Obama Administration "has now set a precedent". Precedent!?1?!?! Huh!?!?! What on Earth are these cretins babbling about?!?!? How could an editor with any sort of self-respect let that passage through?
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