Wednesday, July 20, 2005

TAKING SIDES BY NOT TAKING SIDES

According to cbc WATCH, a "mind your language" internal memo recently made the rounds at Canada's national public broadcaster, The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation:
'Terrorist' and 'terrorism': Exercise extreme caution before using either word.

Avoid labelling any specific bombing or other assault as a "terrorist act" unless it's attributed (in a TV or Radio clip, or in a direct quote on the Web). For instance, we should refer to the deadly blast at that nightclub in Bali in October 2002 as an "attack," not as a "terrorist attack." The same applies to the Madrid train attacks in March 2004, the London bombings in July 2005 and the attacks against the United States in 2001, which the CBC prefers to call "the Sept. 11 attacks" or some similar expression. (The BBC, Reuters and many others follow similar policies.)

Terrorism generally implies attacks against unarmed civilians for political, religious or some other ideological reason. But it's a highly controversial term that can leave journalists taking sides in a conflict.

By restricting ourselves to neutral language, we aren't faced with the problem of calling one incident a "terrorist act" (e.g., the destruction of the World Trade Center) while classifying another as, say, a mere "bombing" (e.g., the destruction of a crowded shopping mall in the Middle East).

Use specific descriptions. Instead of reaching for a label ("terrorist" or "terrorism") when news breaks, try describing what happened.

For example, "A suicide bomber blew up a bus full of unarmed civilians early Monday, killing at least two dozen people." The details of these tragedies give our audience the information they need to form their own conclusions about what type of attack it was.
Excuse me for a minute while I go throw up.

Via: Clear and Present

1 Comments:

Anonymous The_Real_JeffS said...

The details of these tragedies give our audience the information they need to form their own conclusions about what type of attack it was.

The good news is that the CBC (a news organization that I loathe, BTW, having been raised on the US-Canadian border) thinks people are able to form their own conclusions.

The bad news is that with this degree of weaseling, many people are going to think, "Oh, it's not a terrorist attack! The CBC didn't say so!"

Newsflash, CBC! A suicide bomber is not some high school jock out for a joy ride. A suicide bomber is a terrorist. If you removed your collective head from your collective a**, you'd know that.

7:51 PM  

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