I love this passage: Packer, a cultural anthropologist and psychiatrist, wraps the usual milquetoast conventional leftist wisdom in the kind of melodramatic prose that impresses well-heeled progressives.
The liars in the media believe they can lecture us on morality and the truth. You cannot make up the level of lunacy, dishonesty, hypocrisy and outright delusion leftists wallow in.
Legacy media have no business lecturing anyone about the ‘truth’
In his new, much-talked-about Atlantic essay, George Packer contends that journalists “will have a special challenge” in the era of President-elect Donald Trump. “We’re living,” he writes, “in a world where facts instantly perish upon contact with human minds.”
For those unfamiliar with Packer’s work, he’s a celebrated author of numerous books, including one that purports to tell the story of America’s “unwinding.” Packer, a cultural anthropologist and psychiatrist, wraps the usual milquetoast conventional leftist wisdom in the kind of melodramatic prose that impresses well-heeled progressives.
But perhaps the most corrosive problem with contemporary journalism is that it acts as if Trump poses a uniquely dangerous threat to the country, necessitating reporters to drop many of their ethical standards to engage in a defense of “democracy.”
Contra Packer’s contention, “human minds” — the best minds around, I say — are no more inclined to dismiss facts today than they were in the past. Conspiracizing has always been a part of American politics. The Atlantic, for instance, just hired a writer who contends there’s a high probability that Trump was recruited by the KGB in the late 1980s and remains a Russian asset. It is what it is.
The critical difference is that these days, even genuinely curious people can no longer trust the Fourth Estate to help them discern what is and isn’t real. Rather than meeting the challenges of the social media age with more careful, professional, ethical, broad-minded journalism, big media have gone in a different direction, destroying trust in the entire institution.
www.washingtonexaminer.com
The liars in the media believe they can lecture us on morality and the truth. You cannot make up the level of lunacy, dishonesty, hypocrisy and outright delusion leftists wallow in.
Legacy media have no business lecturing anyone about the ‘truth’
In his new, much-talked-about Atlantic essay, George Packer contends that journalists “will have a special challenge” in the era of President-elect Donald Trump. “We’re living,” he writes, “in a world where facts instantly perish upon contact with human minds.”
For those unfamiliar with Packer’s work, he’s a celebrated author of numerous books, including one that purports to tell the story of America’s “unwinding.” Packer, a cultural anthropologist and psychiatrist, wraps the usual milquetoast conventional leftist wisdom in the kind of melodramatic prose that impresses well-heeled progressives.
But perhaps the most corrosive problem with contemporary journalism is that it acts as if Trump poses a uniquely dangerous threat to the country, necessitating reporters to drop many of their ethical standards to engage in a defense of “democracy.”
Contra Packer’s contention, “human minds” — the best minds around, I say — are no more inclined to dismiss facts today than they were in the past. Conspiracizing has always been a part of American politics. The Atlantic, for instance, just hired a writer who contends there’s a high probability that Trump was recruited by the KGB in the late 1980s and remains a Russian asset. It is what it is.
The critical difference is that these days, even genuinely curious people can no longer trust the Fourth Estate to help them discern what is and isn’t real. Rather than meeting the challenges of the social media age with more careful, professional, ethical, broad-minded journalism, big media have gone in a different direction, destroying trust in the entire institution.

Legacy media have no business lecturing anyone about the ‘truth’ - Washington Examiner
We live in a world where journalists cry after hearing about a presidential Cabinet nomination. This is a culture problem, from top to bottom.
