Thursday, January 13, 2005
Saturday, January 08, 2005
UPDATE: Unethical behavior can get you FIRED!
"I thought we in the media were supposed to be watchdogs, not lapdogs," said Bryan Monroe, a vice president of the association. "I thought we had an administration headed by a president who took an oath to uphold the First Amendment, not try to rent it."Barbara Ciara, another vice president with NABJ said:
"He's lost his credibility," said Barbara Ciara, another vice president of the NABJ. "He's tainted fruit. And he's unfairly indicted all commentators who have their own independent opinion, don't need a script from the administration and don't need to be paid off."That's it in a nutshell. He's lost his credibility. Just like Dan Rather did with the fake memo about Bush's National Guard service. Rather's problem stemmed from letting his personal politics obstruct his obligations as a journalist. His disdain for President Bush clouded his otherwise better judgement into not waiting until the memo was authenticated before releasing it. Williams set himself up the minute he or his company accepted these funds from the Dept. of Education.
I don't know how many times it needs to be said, but we as citizens, need to demand that the media present the facts and the facts only. Allow US to form our own opinions. Each time that they skew the news to fit their agenda (FOX, CBS, ABC, etc.), it lessens the importance of what they are reporting and makes some of us question its authenticity. This goes for both right- and left-wing news outlets.
Uhhhhhh, this is funny! Hehehehehehe Dude, shut up!
LAKE STEVENS, Wash. - Someone in the Census Bureau may be watching a little too much MTV. Bevis Lake, a 5.7-acre body of water in a forested area about 25 miles northeast of Seattle, is now appearing in Bureau records with a different name: Butthead Lake.Friggin' Hilarious! This is something I would do, just not on the final copy...
Those two names — Bevis and Butthead — are almost identical to the 1990s MTV cartoon show "Beavis and Butt-head," which featured a pair of slacker teenagers who watch music videos and make bad jokes.
Someone at the Census Bureau must have gotten bored and made a joke out of naming the lake, said Ken Brown, a land surveyor with the state Department of Natural Resources.
"It's got to be," he said.
It's not unusual for small lakes in out-of-the-way places to have different names because of variations in county, state or other official records, but there are no such indications in this case, Brown said.
"That means someone is playing a joke, I think," Brown said.
Whatever happened to Ethics?
The campaign, part of an effort to promote No Child Left Behind (NCLB), required commentator Armstrong Williams "to regularly comment on NCLB during the course of his broadcasts," and to interview Education Secretary Rod Paige for TV and radio spots that aired during the show in 2004.Don't get me wrong, the idea behind the NCLB is fantastic. It allows parents to choose the best school for their child(ren). It also takes those failing schools and school systems to task for not doing what is needed to make sure that they provide a good education to their students. While I personally disapprove of the use of vouchers for private schools, a responsible, loving, parent will do whatever is necessary so their kids receive a quality education. I don't think anyone disagrees that a good education is the key to success. I know I've been taught that and I also teach my children that.
Here's the part that makes me livid(again from USA Today):
Williams said Thursday he understands that critics could find the arrangement unethical, but "I wanted to do it because it's something I believe in."The whole contract, while shady at best and unethical at worst, begs the question of Williams: If this is something you believe in, why did you not do these spots for free, thus eliminating the question of ethics? But Mr. Williams gives a valiant effort in redeeming himself as follows(from the Yahoo! News story):
"It's a fine line," he told The Associated Press on Friday. "Even though I'm not a journalist — I'm a commentator — I feel I should be held to the media ethics standard. My judgment was not the best. I wouldn't do it again, and I learned from it."His actions most likely were not illegal, but they sure do look that way. We need to demand a return to ethical behavior by ALL members of the media, commentators and journalists alike (take that Dan Rather!).
Friday, January 07, 2005
Not Afraid to Admit when I'm Wrong or Washington State does NOT have a mandate
Bulldog
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
Outcry over standardized test! or Can't anybody Read anymore?
A few days before her holiday break, South River High School junior Emily Hawse took a three-hour standardized test offered by military officials that suggests possible careers for students while helping to identify promising recruits.Now I'm sorry, but that is just plain ridiculous. Hell, the name of the damned thing is Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery. What part don't these people get about Armed Services? What is being taught at these schools that parents and students alike just don't get it?
Hawse, 16, of Davidsonville said she did not realize until the day of the exam that it had a military link. She said students were told not to go to the Edgewater school that morning if they didn't want to take the test, called the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery.
"We couldn't go to class if we wanted to," said Hawse, who is undecided about her future but said it doesn't include the military.
They say military recruiters use the test to identify students with skills that would be useful in the armed forces.Nuh uh!! Get out! You mean that if I were to take that test, a Military Recruiter might tell me what jobs in the military I'd be suited for? Would that be any different than saying:
They say college recruiters use the (SAT, ACT, PSAT) test to identify academic skills useful for admission to any particular college.The long and the short of it is this: People are opposed to Bush's "War in Iraq™", and want any way to make it seem that a draft is pending. I am not one of those people even though I oppose this war. Personally, I also took the ASVAB in high school. DURING CLASS TIME TOO! It was offered the same way the SAT, ACT, and other standardized tests were. Some people just need to use some Common Sense.
Sunday, January 02, 2005
I refuse to take my Happy Pill™
My friend Doug is fairly conservative guy who labels himself Republican even if he doesn't agree with the direction the party appears to be headed. He and I have had several, sometimes-spirited debates concerning politics, both local and national. Leading up to the elections on Nov. 2 and during one of our debates, he made the statement "Why won't you just take your Happy Pill™?" That comment stems from the movie: Equilibrium.
The basic premise of the movie is that emotion and critical thought are BAD - The solution in the movie is to take a pill which counteracts emotion and critical/free thought and do what the government tells you - Emotion and Free thought are crimes.
I guess I kind of equate that to the current political landscape. If I don't subscribe to President Bush's policies and speak out against them, then I can be potentially be convicted of a crime at worst or, at best, could become an "interesting" person to the FBI-CIA-NSA or whatever acronym they go by these days. Of course, rational political discourse is something that is still lacking in this country where our President has claimed a mandate with only 51% of the popular vote. I'm blaming both Democrats AND Republicans for that. There has been altogether too much vitriol spewed by both sides towards each other this past year. Here's to hoping things calm down a bit politically, and that the Democrats actually come up with a unified view/mission in 2005.