Nessie
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2012
- Messages
- 16,222
In practice, your proposal is exactly this.
Which journalists should be able to ignore, for the greater good, right?
Which journalists should be able to ignore, for the greater good, right?
Which journalists should be able to ignore, for the greater good, right?
And the courts? And the courts? And the courts? Really?
This entire thread is based on your contention that reporters should be exempted from judicial sanction, if they commit criminal acts for the greater good.
That is an over simplistic way of describing my position. I say there are times where I can see a greater good being achieved by the press breaking certain laws.
If you actually want journalists to be subjected to the same rule of law as everybody else, then apparently we agree, and this entire thread is irrelevant.
I can see times where the press should be given some leeway. The main area is over privacy as many of the activities that I want the press to deal with are activities that need secrecy, such as criminal enterprise and corruption.
Why? What makes journalists more special than other citizens? Why can't any citizen investigate and publish, and be exempt from legal sanction if they can show "due cause" for breaking the law?
For the same reason I would say citizens cannot pretend to be doctors and treat people, or pass themselves off as police to investigate crime.
I guess the bottom line is that you believe that "press regulations", "code of conduct", and "editorial" are a sufficient basis for establishing a special extra-legal class of citizens, that are exempt from the rule of law in ways that no other citizen--even actual agents of your government--enjoy.
Since the phone hacking scandal I agree with the present action (supported by the Lib Dems and Labour) to tighten up on press regulations and have them backed by law.
The police and government bodies have far more powers than the press to investigate others and exemptions in the law.
And, having reviewed your body of work on this forum, I have no reason at all to think anything will ever shake this belief.
If you can show me I am wrong, I will alter my belief. I did so with regards to guns.
So, suffice to say that I strongly disagree with your proposal. I think that journalists, like every citizen, have the right to investigate and publish information to the fullest extent permissible by law. I think that they should have remedy in court if they are prevented from exercising that right. I think the state and their victims should have remedy in court if a journalist breaks the law, and I think that journalists should not have the power to hide from the law behind their press pass. Finally, I think that if special investigators are needed, they should be sanctioned by the state, and subject to far greater admission and oversight controls than are currently in place for press entities.
I think your fetish for investigative reporters is perverse and harmful.
I do think that by being a journalist you do get certain powers others do not, but that is not as scary as you think. Most jobs give people powers not shared with the general population. Try turning up at a school and announcing you are there as a citizen to teach the children and see what happens.
I think investigative journalism is an important protection in our society and your desire to hamstring them is perverse and harmful.