Here’s something everybody should understand about journalism. The reporters, columnists and news anchors you follow almost all have opinions about the subjects they cover. There is nothing wrong with this. In fact, it is a good thing,
moncler jakke, because any person who immersed him or herself in a vital, contentious subject all day and formed no opinion about it whatsoever would be an idiot,
Parajumpers long bear, and you do not want to get your news from idiots.
Some journalists (like me) are paid to express opinions. Others are paid to report news without regard to their opinions–and many, though not all,
parajumpers jakke, do an excellent job of this. And many more are required to hide their opinions by their bosses, in the belief that it builds reader confidence to maintain the illusion that the news is produced by people without opinions,
parajumpers online, i.e.,
pjs jakker, idiots.
That is the spirit behind a new policy at the Washington Post about staffers using Twitter,
kjøpe moncler, which manages to get both social media and journalism wrong at the same time, and suggests that the newspaper is working hard to make itself as irrelevant as possible.