Monday, 11 July 2016
On the subject of professional journalism - using Leigh Sales as an example of the disconnect between citizens and reporters
Excerpt from Tim Dunlop writing at medium.com on the subject of professional journalism and the very real, deep disconnect between citizens and reporters, 8 July 2016:
These differences are not merely minor quibbles: they point to a fundamentally different understanding of what role journalists play in a democratic society.
And here is a key point: What they point to is not just a disconnect between the expectations of audience and journalists, but to the lack of power that audiences feel in regard to their elected representatives.
This is something that goes much wider than this exchange on Twitter and it is something that I don't think very many journalists really understand, so it is worth lingering on: audiences — citizens — feel powerless. They feel that events are outside their control and that they are forever being manipulated, lied to and pushed around by people with more power and influence than them, and that that includes journalists.
Outside of voting, and maybe the odd protest, citizens feel that they can have very little effect on the political process, and they therefore expect the media — who they see as powerful compared to themselves — to fulfill that role and exercise that power on their behalf. This is a view that is encouraged by journalists themselves when they describe their work as a profession, or boast about their "insider" connections, or when they describe themselves in terms of being a watchdog on power, a fourth estate in the national polity. It is doubly reinforced when voters see journalists and politicians on a first-name basis with each other (as happened in much of the television coverage of election night) or when they see them all attending the same parties.
This is the real disconnect at the heart of the criticism Sales copped on Twitter, that her audience understood her comments to indicate, not just a failure to act properly, but a failure to understand what her job even was. Their own powerlessness — they will never get a chance to question John Howard — turns into a frustration with the profession who they see as having the power to do something about their concerns, and failing to do it. To them, Sales' Tweet was saying, no, that's not our job.
The question that arises is obvious: who is right here? Well, in one sense, there isn't an answer. No-one is right or wrong, both sides just have different expectations about the nature of the job.
But that isn't really good enough. In fact, to leave it at that would be a very journalistic response. It would be to avoid the judgement that I am saying I think is at heart of the disconnect I am trying to describe.
So I don't think there is any doubt. Sales, and any journalist who agrees with what she said, is wrong. The audience is right. Not in any sort of the-customer-is-always-right sort of way, but because what is the point of a journalism that so fundamentally contradicts the expectations of the audience for which it is created?
What a significant section of the audience heard when they saw the original Tweet by Leigh Sales was: I am on his side, not on yours. I have more empathy with his point of view than I do with my audience's. In expressing admiration for John Howard's press conference, she was telling her audience that she approaches her entire job in a way that gives politicians the benefit of doubt and she was confirming what many in the audience feel in their bones, that journalists too often come across as siding with power rather than challenging it.
That mightn't be what she meant, but she and every other journalist needs to realise that that is how it was understood. And that that underlying approach goes to the heart of how they do their job.
It is all very well to say, well, this is just how we do it, but that would be the worst sort of professional hubris, tantamount to saying, we don't care what you, our audience think.
Leigh Sales has one of the most high-profile political jobs in the land, but in Tweeting what she did she was telling her audience that she is maintaining standards and practices that fundamentally contradict their expectations.
She and other journalists can, of course, simply dismiss all this as yet another example of the Twitter "echo chamber" and reassure themselves with declarations that Twitter is not representative of the wider audience, and that the views expressed there can be safely ignored.
But I think that would be a mistake.
Another perspective on the issue from Jim Parker…..
The Failed Estate, 7 July 2016:
There’s a lesson for Australian media here. Journalists need to stop seeing themselves as players. Their job is to represent the public to decision-makers, not the other way around. We don’t want them to make forecasts; we want to them to demand answers to simple questions. We want them, beyond rare exceptions, to stop reporting self-serving anonymous scuttlebutt and to insist that people go on the record. We would prefer that instead of guessing and surmising and speculating, they just said “I really don’t know what will happen next. But here are the facts.” And we would prefer their editors to stop asking them to issue “hot takes” on every little brain fart in Canberra and leave them to get their teeth into a story once in a while.
As Russell Marks writes in The Monthly, in perhaps the best analysis of the media’s failures this election, journalists can do us all a big favour by giving up the pretence that they are god-like electoral analysts or judges of spin. Stop the second-hand running commentary on how the management of issues will ‘play’ in the electorate, turn your bullshit detectors up to 10 and start testing the “perceptions” against the facts.
“While intelligent journalists are running themselves ragged acting as unglorified public relations assistants for politicians, they’re not testing statements and checking claims,” Marks writes. “News reportage becomes quite literally a matter of ‘Turnbull said A, while Shorten said B’, which is close to entirely useless without context. In the end, we are told, the voters get it right. But that expression of faith in the democratic process depends on faith in the fourth estate to present political realities so that voters can make sensible choices.”
Journalism is a tough job, even tougher when your resources are constantly being cut, the bosses are asking you to file constantly and social media is bagging you. But journalists can make it a lot easier for themselves by giving up the pretence that they are all-seeing political sages and focus instead on asking good questions, reporting facts, placing those facts in context and admitting that neither they, nor anyone, has any idea about what happens next.
In journalism at least, god is dead.
Labels:
Australia,
journalists,
media
CSIRO implements Abbott-Turnbull Government's climate change denial agenda?
The latest CSIRO chief executive Dr. Larry Marshall (with the organisation since January 2015) clearly states in this podcast that the type of scientific investigation to be conducted in the future will be dictated by the federal government ("the customer") and implies that the Abbott-Turnbull Government is unbiased when it comes to climate change.......
https://www.buzzfeed.com/ginarushton/secret-tape-reveals-why-climate-change-is-off-the-csiros-age?utm_term=.tjdmAJnAG#.yr3Dy3Eyz
Both an Abbott and Turnbull appointee, Dr. Marshall was previously employed by a Silicon Valley-based private capital venture firm and, was sued in 2015; Shareholders in failed laser technology company Arasor claim Dr Marshall was a central figure in the company’s collapse, alleging he and other directors engaged in misleading and deceptiveconduct, as well as serious breaches of the Corporations and ASIC acts inrelation to the company’s financial reports and a disastrous $81 million float.
Both an Abbott and Turnbull appointee, Dr. Marshall was previously employed by a Silicon Valley-based private capital venture firm and, was sued in 2015; Shareholders in failed laser technology company Arasor claim Dr Marshall was a central figure in the company’s collapse, alleging he and other directors engaged in misleading and deceptiveconduct, as well as serious breaches of the Corporations and ASIC acts inrelation to the company’s financial reports and a disastrous $81 million float.
Independent Australia, 7 July 2016:
Hanson, who leads her own One Nation party, has won election to Australia’s Senate and, as counting continues, she could bring more candidates with her.
But as well as pushing xenophobia and division, the Queensland politician will also take a most extreme brand of climate science denial with her into the Senate.
As I wrote on The Guardian, Hanson’s party has been taking cues on climate science from one of the country’s most enthusiastic and relentless pushers of climate science denial, former coal miner Malcolm Roberts.
Roberts is the volunteer project leader of the Galileo Movement, a Queensland-based project launched in 2011 to fight laws to put a price on greenhouse gas emissions.
Roberts is also standing as a Senate candidate for One Nation and still has an outside chance of being elected, although Hanson is more enthusiastic about his chances than some analysts. The “wacky world view” of Roberts has since been reported by the Courier-Mail and the Sydney Morning Herald.
If you hang around the climate change issue for long enough, then at some point you’ll likely come across the extreme end of science denial and the conspiracy theories that Roberts represents.
It goes a bit like this. Humans are not causing climate change. Government-paid climate scientists and their agencies are corrupt. The United Nations is in league with international bankers to defraud the world. It’s all about control.
That sort of stuff.
A year earlier, the pair had organised a speaking tour for British climate science denialist Lord Christopher Monckton — a tour that attracted sponsorship from mining billionaire Gina Rinehart.
Roberts became the project manager. The group pulled together an “advisory council” that includes the likes of Fred Singer, Monckton, Pat Michaels and Richard Lindzen.
The advisory group once included influential political blogger Andrew Bolt, until the News Ltd writer claimed Roberts had been spreading anti-Jewish conspiracy theories — a charge the Galileo Movement denied.
Those policies include calls for investigations into the “corruption of climate science” and the teaching of climate “scepticism” in schools.
After gaining enough votes to secure her own seat, Hanson told The Saturday Paper:
“This whole climate change is not based on empirical evidence and we are being hoodwinked. Climate change is not due to humans.”
Elsewhere, One Nation also reflects Roberts’ paranoia over United Nation’s policies to support environmentally sustainable development — known as Agenda 21. In the eyes of One Nation, Agenda 21 morphs into a sinister control program leaving “no person outside of its reach.”
Sunday, 10 July 2016
Australia Infrastructure Development doesn't know its rivers
The Message from Iluka....
Clarence Valley Independent, June 2016:
Ed,
I read with some bewilderment that a “summit” had been held in Casino last week by AID (Australia Infrastructure Development) for the development of a mega port to accommodate massive ships in the Lower Clarence River.
Thought I’d Google here to see what is going on: www.aid-australia.com.au.
This proposal would completely destroy the lower Clarence.
It would appear to be a box ticking exercise as part of a formal application process to government.
Ticking the “community consultation” box.
Community consultation indeed!
This company has completely failed to consult the right communities.
Surely the business people and residents of Iluka, Yamba, Maclean, Grafton and all the smaller villages and islands along the river should have been the target audiences?
One would think the company’s “summit” might have been held in one of the fine clubs that are at Iluka, Yamba, or perhaps Maclean or Grafton, rather than Casino over 100kms away.
And hey, not even the right river! Casino is on the Richmond River. Go figure.
Perhaps AID just had some bad advice about matching the right town/s to the right river.
Or is this just being a tad sneaky? Trying to keep us all in the dark until the paperwork has been lodged.
Or worse still, trying to bluff us and the government that AID conducted extensive “community consultation”.
Either way, there will be huge opposition to this MEGA PORT proposal if it is ever considered.
Tony Belton, Iluka
The Message from Grafton....
The Daily Examiner, Letter to the Editor, 8 Jul 2016:
Ugly transformation
THE Yamba Port and Rail proposal first raised its ugly head three or four years ago, and now the promoters, Australian Infrastructure Developments, and Deakin Capital Pty Ltd, are ramping up the pressure, promoting their multi billion dollar, 36sqkm obscenity, which would completely transform the lower Clarence into an export port facility to rival Newcastle.
Gone would be the fishing, sugar and tourist industries that are the current economic drivers, replaced by heavy industry and its associated noise, air and water pollution, as huge freighters, tankers, and container ships, spewing their poisonous bilge sludge into the river as they go, replace the current pleasure craft and fishing vessels.
Gone would be the quiet relaxing retirement destination described in a series of Government development strategies over the past 20 years, as coastal villages of Iluka, and Harwood, along with communities on Palmers Island and elsewhere, are decimated to allow for the widening and dredging of the river estuary, to four times the current depth.
Gone would be the culturally significant Dirrangun Reef, sacred to the Yaegl people, as part of that massive dredging.
Gone would be the supposedly protected significant agricultural land on the delta, replaced by endless kilometres of wharfs and warehouses, and massive holding pens for the proposed live cattle export, their stench wafting over the urban centres of Yamba and Maclean.
And don't forget border security, with the proponents making provision for a naval base that, in the event of conflict, could see the area become an enemy target.
There are of course the obvious obstacles to such a scheme; the sacred reef, the unstable delta soils which will collapse into the river as a result of the dredging.
There are regular floods that will require mountains of fill to raise the entire project area above flood level, a barrier that is bound to divert those flood waters across Yamba, causing even worse flooding there.
Then there is the added problem of climate change and rising sea levels. Even a modest .75 of a metre within 80 years will see most of the land proposed for the industrial complex inundated at high tide, a situation that will worsen even further with the passage of time.
It's hard to take such a proposal seriously, but over the years we have heard reports that politicians, state and federal, various northern NSW councils, including some of our local councillors, meeting with the scheme's proponents. The Northern Star's report featuring a happy Australian Deputy Prime Minister, Barnaby Joyce, with arms around the proponents smiling for the cameras, adds a worrying dimension to this abhorrent proposal.
It's time for our leaders to come clean, tell us exactly what has, and is still being discussed behind closed doors, and if this proposal is pie in the sky, then to inform the proponents of that fact, and tell them to back off and put their foreign investment into something useful, like renewable energy.
John Edwards, South Grafton
The Message from Yamba....
Post-Australian Federal Election 2016: feel the angst rising
Voter text to candidate, Twitter, 2 July 2016
Data shows that 18.94% of those eligible to vote in Cowper didn’t cast a ballot according to the Australian Electoral Commission on 5 July 2016.
ABC
News, 4 July
2016:
Complaints are growing
in Western Australia's north about late changes and limited polling options,
which left hundreds of people unable to cast a vote in the federal election.
Shire of Halls Creek CEO
Rodger Kerr-Newell said dozens of tourists were turned away from the town's
polling station on Saturday.
"There were issues
... there was not interstate voting," Mr Kerr-Newell said.
"Halls Creek has a
very large population of tourists at this time of year and they were denied the
opportunity to vote."
According to Mr
Kerr-Newell, several tourists came to the shire to complain….
Complaints have also
surfaced from several Aboriginal communities in the Pilbara and Kimberley.
WA
Today, 6 July
2016:
Callers to Radio 6PR's
Breakfast rumour file said on Tuesday several polling places across WA ran
out of ballot papers on election day, leaving many with no opportunity to vote.
Polling stations near
Caversham, in the electorate of Hasluck, were said to have
combined leaving a shortfall of ballot papers come the afternoon…..
In the electorate of
Pearce, it was claimed the only polling station
in Aveley and Bullsbrook ran out of ballot papers, as did the
only two available in Quinns Rock…..
There is also trouble
brewing in the knife-edge Perth seat of Cowan, with Sky News reporting that up
to 150 votes were not properly signed off by an AEC officer, potentially
rendering them void.
ABC
News, 7 July
2016:
The Australian Electoral
Commission (AEC) and the voting system have come under intense scrutiny as
reports of ballot issues in several seats continue to emerge.
Four states have been
affected by mishaps, including shortages and incorrect distribution of ballot
papers.
Many people have claimed
they were unable to vote on July 2 and some votes have even been ruled informal
due to AEC errors…..
In the electorate of Pearce, 105 voters were given
Victorian Senate ballot papers, meaning their votes have now been deemed
informal.
The blunder happened
under the supervision of an early polling mobile ballot team which visited
various health and aged care establishments across the region….
Queensland senator Glenn
Lazarus, who has not been returned, said many Queensland voters had contacted
him to complain they were unable to vote due to polling booths running out of
ballot papers.
The Glenn Lazarus team
is compiling information from those around the country who were unable to vote
which will then be lodged with the AEC as a bulk complaint.
Mr Lazarus has created
an online form for people to complete which has been shared more than 600 times
on Facebook.
"According to many
people they were told by AEC staff to check their name off the electoral roll
so they could be excused from voting to avoid a fine because the polling booth
had run out of ballot papers," Mr Lazarus said…..
The AEC said it was
investigating reports of wrong ballot papers being handed out in the electorate
of Higgins.
For the first six
minutes of voting at a South Yarra polling station, voters were given ballot
papers for a neighbouring seat.
ABC political analyst
Barrie Cassidy said an ABC staff member was one of several people who received
the wrong paper.
"He went back and
said, 'It's not the right paper'," Cassidy said.
"They got the
supervisor. They noticed other such ballot papers had been torn off."…..
Independent candidate
Rob Oakeshott and Greens candidate Carol Vernon, who both ran for the seat of
Cowper, have lodged an official complaint with the AEC claiming the
neighbouring seat ran out of Cowper absentee ballot papers.
Those who voted in the
electorate of Lyne were reportedly told they would be signed off the electoral
roll but would not be able to cast a ballot.
"People turned out
to vote and didn't have the chance to have their say, and it's their right to
do so," Mr Oakeshott told the Coffs Coast Advocate.
He said it was unclear
how many people were unable to vote but he urged the AEC to clarify the issue.
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
7 July 2016:
Fresh
voting controversy has hit Western Australia after residents
at a nursing home in the Pearce electorate were counted as informal
voters after being given Victorian ballot papers by mistake.
The Australian Electoral
Commission confirmed a mobile voting unit gave the 105 residents the Victorian
senate papers on Thursday.
"The Senate is a
statewide vote, and I can't speculate on what the impact might be, except to
say that together with 47,000 votes already deemed informal [in WA] those
105 are also informal and will play no further part in the determination of the
election result," the commission's state manager Marie Neilson told
News Talk 6PR on Thursday.
ABC News, 8 July 2016:
On election day, Defence
said just under 1,300 ADF members voted at the special polling stations in the
exercise area, but that the Army had to truck another 1,400 or so to civilian
booths in places such as Port Augusta.
Defence said AEC staff
and volunteers stayed back for up to three hours - until 9pm - to process the
huge lines.
But it still was not
enough.
In a statement Defence
said: "628 Army members did not cast their votes. Of this number, 543 are
from the 1st Brigade."
Labels:
AEC,
Federal Election 2016
Saturday, 9 July 2016
SOS Save Happy Paws Haven
Happy Paws Haven, Eatonville, NSW, 27 June 2016:
Dear Friends of Happy Paws Haven
Thank you so very much for your support it has really made a significant difference.
We very very much appreciate it!
We really need your help!
We have just re-launched today a crowdfunding winter appeal.
We are asking those who have supported us for a donation.
Every little bit helps us and goes directly to the animals in our care.
Could you also please share this email with your friends and those you know may have supported us in the past.
Please ask them to do the same as we are struggling financially.
We have approximately 70 dogs and puppies, and nearly 130 cats and kittens in our care, at foster carers and at our shelter locations.
We are also renovating the dog shelters and cat enclosures to make them warmer for the animals for winter!
We have so many mouths to feed!
We have so many mouths to feed!
We have 6 puppies and 20 kittens to desex and immunise.
The good news is that we have already rehomed over 80 animals this year since January 2016.
Please help us raise the funds we urgently need for us to continue!
We urgently need money to make sure the puppies and kittens, cats and dogs in our care are warm for winter, have the food and vet care they need as we are struggling financially!
Please, please donate to this very worthy cause.
To donate:
All donations over $2 are tax deductible! We have DGR status.
Our BSB 633000 Our account is 130786031, Our Account name is Happy Paws Haven Inc.
Regards
Sally Rogers
MBA Macquarie, BSc (Bio-Med),
Founder, President, Public Officer and General Manager
HappyPaws Haven
140 Tindal Road
Eatonsville NSW 2460
Your local animal welfare charity
Rescue Officer Belgian Shepherd Club, NSW
Labels:
animal rights,
animal welfare,
cats and dogs
Friday, 8 July 2016
What will happen to the more than 40,000 year-old fishing rights if the NSW Clarence River Estuary is industrialised?
Dredging activities impact on the marine environment by smothering benthic biota and habitats and degrading water quality through elevated turbidites and bioavailability of pollutants. In addition, alterations in seabed morphology and bathymetry, and consequently to wave energy and water circulation, result in modified patterns of littoral drift (NSW Fisheries 1999, Watchorn 2000). The effects of this can include progressive accretion of sediments on some parts of the coast, and erosion in other areas (Winstanley 1995). Biota are obliterated during dredge removal and may take months or years to recover (Coleman et al. 1999). Species directly affected include invertebrates, fish and seagrass, although mangrove and saltmarsh communities are indirectly affected through altered water flows within estuaries (Edgar 2001). Dredging has been implicated in the disappearance of some invertebrates from port environments, such as a number of hydroid species that have not been recorded in Hobsons Bay, Victoria, since the advent of dredging programs (J.E. Watson, pers. comm., cited in Poore and Kudenov 1978b). Studies elsewhere have shown that the long-term influences of dredging on benthic infauna occur through permanent modification of the sedimentary environment (Jones and Candy 1981). [Commonwealth Dept. of Environment, National Oceans Office, Impact from the ocean/land interface, 2006]
Many North Coast Voices readers will be familiar with reports that deep and/or sustained dredging of tidal rivers and ocean harbours negatively impacts marine biodiversity resulting in species richness and abundance declining over time.
Environmental problems in the Port of Gladstone around 794kms to the north of the Port of Yamba have been in the news for years.
The Clarence River estuary is the largest combined river-ocean fishery in New South Wales and home to the biggest commercial fishing fleet in this state.
It is also a river which for a significant part of its length is held under Native Title by the Yaegl people (Yaegl People #1 & Yaegl People #2) of the Clarence Valley - from the waters approximately half-way between Ulmarra and Brushgrove right down to the eastern extremities of the northern and southern breakwater walls at the mouth of the river.
Here are the official maps outlining in green Native Title officially held to date:
On 2 June 2016 the CEO of Australian Infrastructure Developments was careful to note that this speculative company - lobbying for heavy industrialisation of the Clarence River estuary via a mega port covering 36 sq. kms or 27.2% of the entire estuary area - was yet to approach the Yaegl community or the trust created by traditional owners to manage these native titles.
Surely, with indigenous fishing rights recognised at law as existing on the Clarence River since time immemorial, any responsible company with a plan to extensively alter the riverine and marine environment should have asked the Yaegl people first before approaching the NSW Government with this:
Based on preliminary mapping published by Australian Infrastructure Developments Pty Ltd, yellow block overlays indicate bulk, liquid & container cargo terminals and shipping berths with grey overlays indicating proposed industrial areas
But then, Des Euen and his small band of backers have not yet publicly approached any of the Lower Clarence communities most affected by this prime example of environmental vandalism.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)