If Bob Woodward says it’s true, is it?
This great tragedy, and the many that have now followed from this watershed event, are due to disinformation and misinformation consumed by a public that could have chosen more wisely.
“Everyone has their version of the truth. But there are facts. There is reality. As a reporter, you can come up with the best obtainable version of the truth.”
Bob Woodward became a household name when he and his colleague at the Washington Post, Carl Bernstein, laid bare the scheme of President Richard Nixon and his associates to cheat, using criminal tactics, in order to stay in office.
Their story revealing Nixon’s Democratic Headquarters break-in, became the loose thread that unraveled a much larger pattern of corruption and criminality pervasive at the White House including a plan to firebomb a think tank office for documents.
Woodward and Bernstein’s reporting ultimately led to the only presidential resignation in U.S. history.
No, Nixon wasn’t impeached. He was threatened with impeachment when the U.S. House of Representatives Judiciary Committee put forward three articles charging him with “high crimes and misdemeanors”, in July of 1974, including obstructing justice, covering up the crime, abuse of power and not cooperating with the investigation. This abbreviated list hides the enormity of the abuse.
When you read the salacious details of a criminal unit called the “plumbers” operating a shadow war on the other main American political party using tactics like firebombing and stealing information from a private citizen’s psychiatrist, using the powers of the IRS and FBI, your eyes begin to water wondering who would be safe from tyranny in such a nation.
Nixon resigned when it became clear that the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate had a bipartisan majority willing to impeach, convict and remove him from office. The dam of democracy held in 1974.
Without quality journalism - on the part of both the reporters and the organization they worked for, The Washington Post, Nixon and his associates would not have been held accountable.
Woodward strikes at the core question of journalism in his Master Class introduction, “Everyone has their version of the truth. But there are facts. There is reality. As a reporter, you can come up with the best obtainable version of the truth.” He goes on to elaborate what journalism means to him.
In short, it’s all about the evidence, the data, the corroboration – the process.
Good judgement demands that we pick our sources of news with care. To learn the nearest truth about the happenings in the world, the reporter or news source you put your faith in must use a reliable, consistent process that adheres to best practices which includes a commitment to the “the best obtainable version of the truth”.
The Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics includes four principles:
· Seek Truth and Report It
· Minimize Harm
· Act Independently
· Be Accountable and Transparent.
Each of these is further defined and act as guard rails for authentic journalism.
If you’ve never been misled by gossip with tainted motives, then you are in a tiny minority. The fallout at the least is personal drama at worst real-world loss.
Scale that nationally with persuasive misinformation, disinformation, and opinion labeled as news and the damage can be catastrophic. Further scale that with social media and whole countries can be harmed. Death is the highest price to pay but there is no shortage of economic and social cost for individuals and society.
One U.S. example is Pizzagate, the false story that was spread initially by right wing social media, then moved into wider circulation, that a pizza restaurant in Washington D.C. was a front for a child sex trafficking ring.
The owner, employees and even bands that performed at the restaurant were harassed with threats of violence. One believer ultimately drove to the restaurant from North Carolina with an AR-15 rifle to “investigate” the problem himself.
No one was killed when he fired his gun in the restaurant packed with families eating lunch, but significant damage has been inflicted on the owner, those who work there, and on the shooter who was convicted and sentenced to 4 years in prison.
Parents whose children’s pictures were taken from the family friendly restaurant’s social media likes had to hire lawyers to attempt to get their pictures removed from conspiracy theory posts about pedophilia.
The owner, James Alefantis, gave an interview to Hatewatch a blog of the Southern Poverty Law Center and said of the ongoing experience, “ These weaponized social media attacks … those people [the extremists] move on. But they leave damage, real lasting damage in their wake. Not to mention they brought a gunman into my restaurant, an arsonist, [#Pizzagate] tourists, others. … My employees are traumatized, literally have PTSD, traumatized, waiters in their twenties. I know specific people who are going to therapists, or, you know, afraid to go places because of the actions of these people. So, these are real consequences. As the federal judge said, in the case against the gunman, it’s a miracle no one was killed.”
This great tragedy, and the many that have now followed from this watershed event, are due to disinformation and misinformation consumed by a public that could have chosen more wisely.
So yeah, if someone like Bob Woodward says it’s true, then it’s a good idea to allow his reporting to shape your view of reality instead of the myriad of other sources that do not follow the process of journalism.
Are reporters infallible? No
But it’s not about Woodward, the individual; it’s about his commitment to process. If a reporter or publication is consistently adhering, much like a scientist, to a set of formulaic standards with professional principals and best practices as their guide, then you’ve found the clearest mirror of our world that we have at present.
If you’re like me, your parents cautioned you growing up that, the company you keep is who you are. It’s also true that the information you consume is who you are. Are you choosing wisely?
Sources:
https://www.masterclass.com/classes/bob-woodward-teaches-investigative-journalism
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/080974-3.htm
https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/watergate/part1.html
https://www.britannica.com/event/Watergate-Scandal/Watergate-trial-and-aftermath
https://www.vox.com/2014/8/7/5970967/what-was-watergate-scandal-nixon
https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/12/5/13842258/pizzagate-comet-ping-pong-fake-news
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/27/technology/pizzagate-justin-bieber-qanon-tiktok.html
https://time.com/4590255/pizzagate-fake-news-what-to-know/
https://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-38156985
https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/richard-m-nixon/
https://www.spj.org/ethicscode.asp
https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artII-S4-2-3-5/ALDE_00000695/
https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2021/07/07/theres-nothing-you-can-do-legacy-pizzagate
Measuring Reality
Gathering and ordering the “soundings” of human activity with a new methodology that parallels the scientific method is the next frontier in journalism.
For a time, the pandemic even changed the weather.
Weather prediction, it turns out, is partially reliant on your trip to Disney or that sales meeting in Las Vegas via a previously little-known commercial flight measurement called an aircraft sounding.
The evocative term “aircraft sounding” conjures an old technology that goes back to ancient seafarers. Still sometimes used, soundings allow sailors to gauge the depth and composition of the sea floor using just a lead weight secured to a line pre-marked with fathoms*.
Today, more than 3500 commercial aircrafts plumb the skies for more than 250 million weather observations per year, according to the National Weather Service, a massive amount of data.
Aircraft soundings, along with reports from 900 weather stations across the globe, are fed into predictive models that assist meteorologists with their forecasts. Helping us in turn to decide whether to proceed with that backyard BBQ, ball game or outdoor wedding.
But during the early days of the Covid pandemic with the precipitous drop in air traffic, the accuracy of the predictive models dropped by 50% - 75%. That’s a huge statistical shift which was anecdotally noticeable.
You may recall grousing around that time about yet another problem, unreliable weather predictions. Well, it was true.
What is a forecast ultimately but a snapshot of reality? A meteorologist uses consistent data points to assemble a prediction of future likelihoods based on the same conditions in the past. Those same points, after the fact, create a final record, or history of what was occurring that moment, hour, day and ultimately year and century. It’s not comprehensive but the snapshots become our window into the past.
Accounts of happenings in our community and world give us data points of another kind. News reports are the soundings we use to mark human history and in turn predict future possibilities.
Journalists, like meteorologists, are taking their measurements of the daily human experience and putting the data into “models”, that is patterns of behavior, in an area of expertise or beat.
For instance, if you cover city hall long enough you begin to recognize signs of misuse of public funds or of corruption. There are repetitive characteristics of both courage and graft in the human record.
Journalists are public servants that sort through the raw data of the daily human experience and turn it into a report that helps us understand a broader narrative.
That reporting helps us navigate a complex world enabling us to, again like the weather forecast, make decisions that can harm or benefit our individual lives. Ultimately the work of journalists significantly contributes to the overall history of humankind. And it’s absolutely essential for democracy.
With so many of us asking anew, what is truth? How can we understand as a group a shared, objective human experience? My answer is quality journalism. The alternative is hearsay, propaganda, and disinformation.
Data journalism is at the forefront of a new approach to analyze human activity. Using forensics, analytics and open-source information to mine social media, GPS data, financial data and more; professional and citizen journalists are breaking news using innovative methods.
We are seeing the emergence of a new level of transparency and evidentiary corroboration that is staggering.
Belllingcat and ProPublica are at the leading edge of this kind of work. Bellingcat’s most famous contribution to date is the evidence they extracted to definitively connect Russia to the downed civilian Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 in Ukraine which took the lives of 298 people. I highly recommend subscribing to their newsletter.
Journalistic best practices and ethics over time act as a developing body of standards to regulate the quality of information gathering. Now that we are awash in data and the traditional information gatekeepers of old, a small consortium of newspapers and book publishers, are no longer controlling the narrative, we need new filters to protect the quality of our understanding of the world.
Aristotle, one of the original pioneers of the scientific method, gifted us a type of thinking on how to observe the natural world.
As described by the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “For Aristotle, empiricism, careful observation (but passive observation, not controlled experiment), is the starting point, though the aim is not merely recording of facts. Science (epistêmê), for Aristotle, is a body of properly arranged knowledge or learning—the empirical facts, but also their ordering and display are of crucial importance. The aims of discovery, ordering, and display of facts partly determine the methods required of successful scientific inquiry.”
And later, Enlightenment thinkers refined the profile of those pursuing truth, “The scientist is humble in the face of nature, not beholden to dogma, obeys only his eyes, and follows the truth wherever it leads.” The character attributes of scientists and journalists closely mirror one another.
Gathering and ordering the “soundings” of human activity with a new methodology that parallels the scientific method is the next frontier in journalism. The capacity of thinking machines to help us grasp the nature of reality in aggregate, though not comprehensively, is an area where advances are due. Those advances must also come with, yet to be defined, guardrails.
We are on the threshold of a new type of journalism. Like depth soundings and weather measurements taken at a variety of locations -then put together and processed through a tested model that yields a view of the natural world that is unachievable through our individual senses - this new science of human observation will find novel truths of our combined human endeavor and may spark a revolution in philosophy that rivals the tectonic shifts born of the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment.
As a resident of Springfield might put it, this new journalism will “embiggen” our understanding of humanity and truth.
*Annotation:
A fathom, derived from Old English, Norse and Saxon, means: arms, embrace, and grasp. It’s a measurement based on the anatomy of a large man with outstretched arms as if about to give you a bear hug, taken from the middle finger of one hand to the other.
I like to imagine the fathom was born when one such man was describing to another how far it was to the bottom of the river with arms thrown out saying, “It’s about this far.” Used mainly to describe depth, it has been standardized over time to about six feet (yet another anatomical measurement). Reaching into the unknown to take this measurement was critical for navigating safe depths, map readings and where to park the ship (or not).
Incidentally, the word plumber originates from the Latin word for lead, plumbum. Ancient Roman pipes were made of lead. The artisans that crafted and repaired the waterworks were known as those that worked with lead. Yikes. Plumbing was a more dangerous occupation back then. The symbol for lead, Pb, makes a little more sense too with that insight.
So, the next time you are plumbing the depths of some gritty problem, you can visualize spreading your arms as wide as a large, weathered Norseman to size it up and find understanding as if pulled to the bottom by a lead weight.
Sources:
https://sites.google.com/a/wmo.int/amdar-news-and-events/newsletters/volume-9-april-2015
https://amdar.noaa.gov/docs/bams/
https://www.lexico.com/en/definition/sounding
https://www.grammar-monster.com/sayings_proverbs/plumb_the_depths.htm
https://seahistory.org/sea-history-for-kids/leadline/
https://www.weather.gov/ffc/pop
https://www.discovery.com/science/chance-of-rain
https://corrosion-doctors.org/Elements-Toxic/Lead-history.htm
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02198-4
https://www.etymonline.com/word/plumber
https://www.etymonline.com/word/fathom
https://www.britannica.com/science/fathom
https://physicsworld.com/a/covid-19-pandemic-has-made-weather-forecasts-less-reliable/
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200717101026.htm
https://www.bellingcat.com/about/
https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/03/15/belling-the-cat/
https://www.npr.org/2021/03/02/972862453/how-bellingcats-web-sleuths-solve-global-crimes
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-method/#HisRevAriMil