Thursday, August 17, 2006
We're special
Why should reporters have to follow the law like mere commoners? So asks the Chron.
CONFRONTED WITH overwhelming evidence, baseball toughened its steroids-testing policy. It wouldn't have happened, it's safe to say, had the details and names gathered in a closed-door federal grand jury investigation not appeared in this newspaper. Well, maybe, but how much better is the world for it? "Haha! Now baseball has a new PR effort to pretend to be clean, and the world is this much better for it." Right.
Two Chronicle reporters, Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams, have refused to reveal how they received the grand-jury information that helped elevate the steroids scandal into a matter of such public interest that it merited mention in President Bush's January 2004 State of the Union address.
Now, a federal judge has sided with prosecutors who want the two staff writers to cough up the identity of their source. It threatens to hinder newsgathering: Who, after this ruling, may ever trust a promise of confidentiality? The Chron asks the right question, but in the wrong context. Who, after the way the press treats grand jury testimony, can trust that their testimony in front of the grand jury will remain confidential? But those are the commoners. The plebeians. The "less-than-press" folks. They don't matter.
Neither the White House nor Congress has shown any interest in protections that would bar such press-bashing. Holding press folks to the same standards as normal people? That's press bashing!
. . .
|
. . .
|