Media culpa: Margaret Wente and quotes: Who said that?:
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Carol Wainio providing more quality control for the Globe. And God love her, because the brain trust on Front Street obviously won't do it.
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Showing posts with label embarrassment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embarrassment. Show all posts
Friday, April 12, 2013
Media culpa: Margaret Wente and quotes: Who said that?
Anonymous hands @cselley his ass | #Rehtaeh #RapeCulture
"How would you respond to columns like Chris Selley’s in the National Post that say your efforts are not needed?
Wow, you picked a real winner there. Well, no offense to Chris Selley or the National Post, but he seems to insinuate that if the police screw up and a few rapists get off the proper response is “tough shit,” move on to the next case. For that, I think he's a moron. Let's slow down for one second and assume that I did release the names of those rapists... what law am I breaking? I suppose they could sue me for slandering them. Of course, to do that they'd have to prove I was lying.This gets worse: he says we should ignore the photo being spread around the school because it probably happens all time. We can't expect the legal system to punish everyone that's passing around photos of women being raped, now can we? It's “fairly routine adolescent behaviour.” Chris Selley article epitomizes the rape culture. "
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If there's a better rejoinder to all the handwringers and mansplainers and apologists who caution us against going vigilante and say we should just let the legal process and the justice system do their jobs, I haven't found it yet.
News flash, fuckheads: the justice system screwed the pooch on this. The legal process, the school system, and the police -- all the institutions we charge with keeping young women like Rehtaeh safe -- did sweet fuck-all to protect her.
And the fucking RCMP? Well, they're pretty good at tasering immigrants to death and then lying about it, sitting there with their thumbs up their asses while serial killers prey on women, and/or sexually assaulting their female colleagues and aboriginal prisoners. Serving and protecting young women? Not so shit-hot.
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Wow, you picked a real winner there. Well, no offense to Chris Selley or the National Post, but he seems to insinuate that if the police screw up and a few rapists get off the proper response is “tough shit,” move on to the next case. For that, I think he's a moron. Let's slow down for one second and assume that I did release the names of those rapists... what law am I breaking? I suppose they could sue me for slandering them. Of course, to do that they'd have to prove I was lying.This gets worse: he says we should ignore the photo being spread around the school because it probably happens all time. We can't expect the legal system to punish everyone that's passing around photos of women being raped, now can we? It's “fairly routine adolescent behaviour.” Chris Selley article epitomizes the rape culture. "
'via Blog this'
If there's a better rejoinder to all the handwringers and mansplainers and apologists who caution us against going vigilante and say we should just let the legal process and the justice system do their jobs, I haven't found it yet.
News flash, fuckheads: the justice system screwed the pooch on this. The legal process, the school system, and the police -- all the institutions we charge with keeping young women like Rehtaeh safe -- did sweet fuck-all to protect her.
And the fucking RCMP? Well, they're pretty good at tasering immigrants to death and then lying about it, sitting there with their thumbs up their asses while serial killers prey on women, and/or sexually assaulting their female colleagues and aboriginal prisoners. Serving and protecting young women? Not so shit-hot.
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Saturday, November 24, 2012
Carol Wainio and a couple more Wente-isms: Nothing to see here
Here and here.
Second one even picks apart the correction, or clarification, or whatever the fudging mechanism the Globe's using is called.
Uh-huh.
Well, I guess if the Sun's betting its saleability on Sue Ann Levy, we shouldn't be that surprised if the corporate meat puppets on Front Street are having similar thoughts.
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Sunday, November 18, 2012
Wente, the Gelber, and the Globe: more quality control from Carol Wainio
Another persuasive argument from Carol Wainio, who, beyond providing a stellar illustration of the value of independent academia, is making a convincing case for herself as a national treasure.
In her latest post, Prof. Wainio takes issue with the participation of disgraced Globe columnist Margaret Wente on the jury for the Gelber Prize — a supposedly prestigious award presented by the Gelber Foundation and the University of Toronto's Munk School for Global Affairs. With all this academic and financial star power, one would think academic integrity would be a prerequisite for all involved. As Prof. Wainio argues:
Don’t universities take strong public standards against plagiarism? What would the University of Toronto or The Munk School (partners in the award) do with students who engaged in these practices?
Having documented repeated instances of, at the very least, sloppy attribution or "originality problems" from Wente, it's entirely in order for Prof. Wainio to be raising such a question. She goes on, however, to compare another column from Wente to recent work from Walter Russell Mead and fellow Globe columnist Gary Mason, and to note Wente's evident "efficiency" in using the same material for two columns two weeks apart.
Well, we can't fault Wente for her embrace of the 3 Rs. But, as Prof. Wainio points out:
Are these as serious as past instances? No. But they do reflect a kind of practice, a habit, and dare one say, a kind of entitlement. Given all that, and what was pretty universally described as the dreadful way Ms. Wente and her editors dealt with the more serious instances, one has to wonder why the Gelber Prize, the University of Toronto and the Munk School chose to rely so heavily on jurors associated with that particular newspaper ...
I've already pointed out the invaluable work Prof. Wainio does in providing the quality control that the senior editors of the Globe apparently refuse to do. It's particularly salient in this case, given both Wente and Mead's professed disdain for the kind of free and independent inquiry supposedly ensured by the institution of academic tenure, but it's even more valuable for the context it provides. Since it's clear that we're not going to get any critical analysis of Wente's, er, "work" from the Globe, Prof. Wainio's observations are essential as a reality check. They give readers the information they need in order to understand what they're getting from Wente.
And moreover, they put a rather jarring spotlight on the ideological and managerial decisions being taken in the executive suites on Front Street. It's not as if the warnings aren't there; while I'm not rushing to embrace the National Putz, Chris Selley raised several questions about the Globe's handling of the Wente scandal and its implications for the Gelber Prize in another essay late last week:
The Globe didn’t seem bothered about being seen to do anything, and I think it wound up leaving a widespread impression that it did nothing ... Maybe some principles are worth bending if sticking to them upsets the official Canadian chattering class hierarchy in which Margaret Wente plays house contrarian.
Nothing new about the smug, oblivious attitude the Globe appears to be taking toward this, or its condescending dismissal of mere "bloggers." It goes hand-in-hand with Wente's cringe-inducing poor-me non-apology in September.
What's left, however, are lingering questions about the Globe's credibility — questions which only grow more insistent the longer the Front Street brain trust tries to pretend they're not there.
(For even better takes on this, please read thwap and Sixth Estate.)
Related posts:
- Carol Wainio rips Terence Corcoran and Margaret Wente a new one
- This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Newspapers
- The real issue here is that, even after all of the flaccid apologies, the Globe is doubling down on upholding an editorial regime which gives its tacit approval to this sort of behaviour ...
- Did anybody see where Margaret Wente?
Friday, September 28, 2012
Carol Wainio rips Terence Corcoran and Margaret Wente a new one
John Stackhouse too, by implication.
And the best part is, she does it so politely and reasonably. No sneering, no condescension, no invective, none of the aggrieved privilege that marks so much of Wente's and Corky's oeuvre.
From her rebuttal to Corky, everyone's favourite crazy old uncle, in the Putz:
All of which makes the contrast with Carol Wainio and her firm and principled arguments that much more biting.
Better wake up, old-media types. Prof. Wainio is teaching a course in Credibility 101, and you ain't got much left.
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And the best part is, she does it so politely and reasonably. No sneering, no condescension, no invective, none of the aggrieved privilege that marks so much of Wente's and Corky's oeuvre.
From her rebuttal to Corky, everyone's favourite crazy old uncle, in the Putz:
In the wake of the Margaret Wente affair, the National Post’s Terence Corcoran suggests that media ethics require no oversight at all. But in performing his analysis, could Mr. Corcoran not have provided us with something other than a variant on the “political-correctness-gone-amok” meme? It’s becoming a bit of a worn out catch-all, perhaps best retired or re-assigned.You couldn't ask for a starker delineation between new media and old media. Never mind the arrogance of its initial response or Wente's I'm-the-victim non-apology or the Real Estate Deals From Leah McLaren And Her Mom section. To the extent that the Globe even acknowledges the existence of a "blogosphere," it's only to blow off the idea that bloggers have anything worthwhile to add or ought to be taken seriously. It still hasn't gotten the message, evidently, because it seems to think that if it just circles the wagons and ignores the buzz on social media, this will all go away.
There is such a thing as ethical correctness — more difficult and less cartoonish than political correctness — which we expect in banking, government and business. Does Mr. Corcoran recommend ethics be removed from all areas of public life, or just his own profession? And what good are ethics, without consequences in the breach?
All of which makes the contrast with Carol Wainio and her firm and principled arguments that much more biting.
Better wake up, old-media types. Prof. Wainio is teaching a course in Credibility 101, and you ain't got much left.
Related posts:
- This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Newspapers
- The Sixth Estate » Canada’s Print Media: Democracy Couldn’t Ask for Finer Keystone Kops
- What is most saddening about Ms. Wente’s response …
- The real issue here is that, even after all of the flaccid apologies, the Globe is doubling down on upholding an editorial regime which gives its tacit approval to this sort of behaviour ...
- From John Miller's blog: Wentegate and the Globe
- Did anybody see where Margaret Wente?
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
The Sixth Estate » Canada’s Print Media: Democracy Couldn’t Ask for Finer Keystone Kops
The Sixth Estate » Canada’s Print Media: Democracy Couldn’t Ask for Finer Keystone Kops:
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This country has real issues to worry about. In the last year alone, we have been presented with documented evidence of large-scale electoral fraud, our environmental protection and climate change regimes have been ripped to shreds, and the federal government has laid aside the Canada Health Act and thus ended, at least in principle, universal healthcare. More evidence continues to emerge that it plotted a systematic course of deception with regard to the cost of a multi-billion dollar military procurement project. And our media is so breathtakingly incompetent that they can’t even agree on whether someone in their ranks was copying and pasting without attribution and, if so, whether it was very wrong of them to do so.
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Sunday, September 23, 2012
From John Miller's blog: Wentegate and the Globe
Blog: Wentegate:
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Pop quiz: When confronted with something like this, do you:
a. recognize that you're in deep doo-doo, reflect on how you got there, and take tangible steps to fix the problems that made it happen
b. circle the wagons, stick your fingers in your ears, and go "la la la la la?"
See also:
The Globe’s (and wider media’s) response to this is telling and a serious wake-up call
Margaret Wente Plagiarism Allegations: Globe Responds To Criticism (TWITTER)
Did anybody see where Margaret Wente?
"So what should happen now?
The Globe and Mail has itself a big, big problem. The Wente Affair makes the newspaper -- and the rest of mainstream journalism -- seem hopelessly out of touch with the internet-savvy hordes who seem to enjoy circling around the decaying corpse of authority these days.
...
When Stead was appointed to the job last January, editor-in-chief John Stackhouse said: "The Globe and Mail is among the most respected names in Canadian media, because we've always been held to the highest standards. Credibility is our currency and we want to protect its value."
That currency has taken a fast plunge. One reader addresses it in a comment attached to Stead's column: "As questionable as I find Wente's lapses of journalistic integrity, the greater blame falls to The Globe for being so irresponsible as to give her this space and lending her an air of credibility by virtue of their (former) reputation. I stopped subscribing to the Globe years ago when it became apparent they were abdicating their responsibility to the public as a source of responsible journalism. This gutless editorial downplaying and excusing Wente's abuses has made me lose any remaining respect I had...No accountability = No subscription."
'via Blog this'
Pop quiz: When confronted with something like this, do you:
a. recognize that you're in deep doo-doo, reflect on how you got there, and take tangible steps to fix the problems that made it happen
b. circle the wagons, stick your fingers in your ears, and go "la la la la la?"
See also:
The Globe’s (and wider media’s) response to this is telling and a serious wake-up call
Margaret Wente Plagiarism Allegations: Globe Responds To Criticism (TWITTER)
Did anybody see where Margaret Wente?
Friday, September 21, 2012
Margaret Wente Plagiarism Allegations: Globe Responds To Criticism (TWITTER)
Margaret Wente Plagiarism Allegations: Globe Responds To Criticism (TWITTER):
'via Blog this'
Whoever did the twitter slideshow is an evil genius. When you're done guffawing, go read Jymn.
Is it just me, or does the Globe totally suck at damage control?
'via Blog this'
Whoever did the twitter slideshow is an evil genius. When you're done guffawing, go read Jymn.
Is it just me, or does the Globe totally suck at damage control?
Friday, July 20, 2012
Mayor Stupid on the Danzig shootings
First on video ...
And then audio ...
He's unbelievable. A fucking multimedia fountain of stupid. Not only is he ignorant, he fucking revels in it.
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And then audio ...
He's unbelievable. A fucking multimedia fountain of stupid. Not only is he ignorant, he fucking revels in it.
Related posts:
- The downtown/suburban divide and its fetid offshoots
- Tiny Tim and Brother Dumbfuck? That's a marriage made in ... um ...
- Rob Ford's mayoral trajectory | #TOpoli
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Putting the Blatchfords of the world in the proper context
Activist Communique: An open letter to Christie Blatchford by Alice Moran | rabble.ca
NOW Magazine // Daily // News // A vainglorious, partisan spectacle
Thing is, Blatchford and her enablers probably get off on this sort of thing and see it as validation. Sad, really.
NOW Magazine // Daily // News // A vainglorious, partisan spectacle
Thing is, Blatchford and her enablers probably get off on this sort of thing and see it as validation. Sad, really.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
A little kosher wine with that crow, Ezra?
I hear it's a tough bird. Probably trayfe, too.
Oh, I'm sorry, it's Yom Kippur. You'll have to wait till this evening. Maybe you can give some thought to, oh, I dunno .... atoning for your sins today while you're davening?
Schmuck.
H/t Alheli Picazo, who did a masterful job of deconstructing and debunking Levant's revolting smear job on Soros. She also gets the prize for this:
Update: This ain't no mere karmic pile-on. What we've got here is a schadenfreude mosh pit. Linky dinky dinky dinky doo ...
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