Mark Steyn's been linking to some pro and con sites regarding the Human Rights Tribunal, and I check in now and then to see what's going on.
I was looking at this article by John Miller, who has a piece on a website called The Canadian Journalism Project. Steyn has him as a journalism professor. As boring and dry as that sounds, I decided to read his bit all the way through.
I've been calling for the mainstream press to get on board against this human rights business for a while. Instead, I get this:
Journalistic opinion is hailing Mark Steyn, of all people, as the new poster child for freedom of expression in Canada.
I beg to differ.
Miller has a problem with Mark Steyn, whose writing he declares both xenophobic and Islamophobic. Miller thinks the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal should take Steyn down a peg or two. This line of Miller's will give you a good first impression. His lectures must be a blast: "That is the law as it stands, and everyone must obey the law."
When I read that note from Squaresville, I sank a little lower into my chair and let my eyes glaze over. From then on, I was on auto-pilot, waiting for the buried lead (cool - I just used some hip journo-speak) to rear its head.
It comes at the end of Miller's essay. After he's done declaring Steyn's article a work of bigotry, Miller gets to the point:
Steyn and Maclean’s also appear to violate a great many of the principles and guidelines for reporting that the CAJ [Canadian Association of Journalists] adopted in 2002. They include (to name only the most obvious ones)...
Horrors! Xenophobia, Islamophobia, and violating the CAJ's principles.
Actually, I figured that's what Miller's problem was. It's not that Steyn's a bigot, it's that Steyn's not a real journalist. He doesn't toe the CAJ line. He shouldn't be playing with Miller's toys. Steyn didn't quote enough sources, or give enough references, or otherwise follow the rules of the CAJ (which is pretty funny, since the CAJ intervened on Maclean's behalf in BC and wants them off the hook, rules are meant for bending, so forth).
Still, let me play devil's advocate. Here's what Miller says, with my comments to follow.
It [Steyn's article] is contrary to the value of keeping the news comprehensive and proportional – specifically by “inflating events for sensation, neglecting others, stereotyping or being disproportionately negative.”
Sounds like how I describe strip clubs to my girlfriend. Still, let's say it's true, that Steyn waxed negative. So what? Where is this mighty book of values kept, and when did it become law? If Steyn is guilty of breaking some sort of ethics, then newspapers can refuse to print him, and Maclean's can stop running his stuff. This does not mean that a government agency has the right to tell Maclean's what to print afterwards (yes, John, Maclean's is the real issue here, no matter how much you want it to be about the xenophobic writer).
It violates the discipline of verification – specifically by not “seeking out multiple witnesses, disclosing as much as possible about sources, or asking various sides for comment.”
There's no way Miller can know any of that, unless he was sitting in the room when Steyn wrote the piece, or he broke into Steyn's pad and stole his notes. (Dear Journalism Professor: when you see the words "Newsweek stands by its story," it's because Newsweek knows more about the story than you do, but isn't disclosing the sources). But, again, let's say it's true. Big deal. If John Miller was an editor of a paper and one of his reporters wrote a fabricated story about neo-Nazis, I doubt he'd agree to a human rights commission forcing him to run an essay supportive of neo-Nazis. No, John Miller would use the old "Miller's Magazine regrets the error," run an op-ed berating itself, and that would be that.
And it runs contrary to a journalist’s first obligation to the truth – specifically by neglecting “the professional discipline of assembling and verifying facts.”
Um, sources please? Again, there's no way he can know any of that. He's making it up. He has no clue what sources Steyn and Maclean's looked at two years ago, and which ones they found credible or not. Earlier in his piece, Miller says that he spent a few minutes Googling Steyn's subject, and he found entirely different facts and arguments. No surprise. That's why there's dozens of books on the Kennedy assassination. Nobody agrees on anything. But does the good professor really believe that this means Maclean's should be found guilty of promoting hatred in British Columbia?
Other specific claims in the article are questionable. For example, Steyn states that high birthrates in Muslim countries “will give tiny Yemen a higher population than vast empty Russia” by mid-century. Yemen’s population in 2007 was 22 million, and Russia’s was 141 million. Barring some historic collapse of the Russian population, Yemen is not going to overtake it by 2050.
Note the key words. Questionable. Barring. Not exactly a damning assessment of Steyn's article. If something is questionable, then it is possible. I also like the "barring some historic collapse" bit. Okay, but what if the collapse happens? One, Yemen would be pretty crowded, and two, Miller's argument would cave in.
Indeed, one is tempted by this evidence to conclude that Steyn’s article was not journalism at all, but a “polemic” – which my dictionary defines as a selective attack.
Damn, a journalism prof that has to look up "polemic." I hope he paused for irony when he saw what it meant. Miller's whole article reads like a polemic - a very selective attack against the xenophobic, Islamophobic writings of Mark Steyn.
Let's be real. Miller kicks off his piece by calling Steyn's work xenophobic and Islamophobic, and uses exactly one source to back up the bigotry claims (a year-old book review; the rest is just his opinion). Tsk, tsk. He then Googles some of his own facts, cherry picks the good ones, and uses them to refute Steyn's piece. In essence, he did to Steyn what he says Steyn did to the world.
You know what? That's exactly what he should do. That's called arguing. Anyone can do it, and Miller just did. Asking the state to step in and shut Steyn up because he doesn't follow the rules of the BCHRT or the CAJ is chicken, and it's a crock.
What is it with the guys in the writing game that don't see the writing on the wall? It might be Steyn today, but later on it could be some CAJ member's career on the line. It wouldn't help the reporter to know that a journalism professor, John Miller, once told the human rights commission that a lack of references should be a factor in judging someone as a promoter of hate speech.
15 comments:
I think you hit the nail on the head when you said that Miller is upset the Mark is playing with his toys. The number of times I have read/heard journalists refer to Mark as an ex discjockey - which implies that somehow he is less qualified to research and write an opinion -that only people who have gone through journalism schools can do that. Wake up journalists!!! Have you not heard of the internet - suddenly ordinary people can research, write and publish writings. Yes some are bizarre, but mose are well thoughtout positions that the MSM probably does not want to hear. There are no special skills required to be a journalist other than a mind that is willing to ask questions. The number of 'stories' that have been broken on blogs is growing (witness the increasingly negative views of HRCs). What 'journalists' are annoyed at is that the great unwashed can do their jobs probably better and with relevance to the man on the street because bloggers are men on the streets - go to The Black Rod for a more complete view of citizen journalists. More people are reading blogs that newspapers and that threatens the status of journalists.
The real issue is that people will pay money to read, hear and see Mark Steyn ($500 a head at Fraser Institue dinner last month). John Miller would have to pay me a lot of money before I would go anywhere his stuff judging by this article.
I think you forgot to count Miller's citation of the Economist article on European demographics, as another "source". However, the Economist article gives faint hope, at best, arguing that PERHAPS several countries in Europe will beat the demographic death spiral. It is full of doom and gloom along the lines that Steyn. It does not provide too much information about the fecundity of European Muslims, therefore this question is still open. (It does mention that French immigrants out-procreate the French, but argues that the effect is small. But this data is incomplete and inconclusive. What is needed is a study of European Muslim fecundity, specifically.
Sean,
Excellent points throughout. John Miller clearly has a hate-on for Mark Steyn, as does Johann Hari by the way. After all, Mark has said some pretty biting things about journalists ... as most other Canadians have said or felt at one time.
I find it deeply disturbing that Miller violated his own rules in his hit piece. And I challenge anyone to logically defend the recent news story by the T.O. Star's western "star", Petti Fong. I outline all of this here.
The only thing I'm surprised about is that you haven't yet been attacked by Ottawa's Communist immigrant "Dr" Dawg. Probably because he can only do so much spinning at one time!
"Barring some historic collapse..." -- as it happens, that is precisely what is underway in Russia, a collapse of population on a scale unprecedented in history.
I actually took Miller's figures of 22 million vs. 141 million and plugged in Yemen's current growth rate of 3.13% (declining to 3.01% in 2015) and Russia's of minus 0.46% (accelerating to minus 0.48
% in 2015) [figures from the UN's "Global Virtual University"]. I had the Yemeni population overtaking Russia's in 2061 rather than 2050 -- making Steyn's figure hardly the staggeringly irresponsible claim that Miller would have us believe.
Mike Baughman
Chicago, Illinois, USA (land of bigots and xenophobes)
The thing Miller forgets to keep in mind is that different "rules" apply to journalists and columnists.
When I write pieces of journalism, I am trained to keep my opinion out. To marshall facts, and let the people I quote be the ones expressing opinion.
Mark Steyn is a columnist. I am sure if he were paid to go do straight reporting on a story he would write it very differently than he does his columns.
Deborah
Could this guy actually have written this;
It [Steyn's article] is contrary to the value of keeping the news comprehensive and proportional – specifically by “inflating events for sensation, neglecting others, stereotyping or being disproportionately negative.”with a straight face? Has Miller never been exposed to the CBC? If he has, has he ever taken them to task for decades of doing exactly what he complains Steyn has done? And what is meant by keeping the news proportional? Is it Miller's job, as a journalist, to somehow add proportion to the news? How is that different from "spin"? And one last point, its not going to be a case of some CAJ member's career "could" be on the line in a future scenario,if these dangerous tribunals aren't stopped, there will be msm journos dragged before them by some thin-skinned interest group. Fraser Valley
John Miller is what passes for a professor of journalism at Ryerson? Someone who is more interested in shutting someone else up than putting his own ideas forth? Someone whose "research" is so lacking that he apparently doesn't even know that Steyn is not a news reporter but an opinion columnist? Someone who demonstrates all his criticisms of Steyn within his own shoddy hatchet job?
Well if Miller is turning out journalism students who copy him instead of being revolted by him, then that explains a lot about the flagrant leftist bias in mainstream media. What a surprise that his previous home was at the Toronto Star...
Reading Miller's post and the importance he attaches to sources and documentation and the like, I noticed he quotes, but doesn't provide links to, a US Census Bureau projection for Russia's population, which he says shows their population "will decline marginally before reversing itself and registering a low rate of growth in the early part of this century."
I'm not sure what Census projection he's using since he doesn't provide it.
Using the US Census International Database (found here: http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/), I pulled up their handy tables and country rankings. The Bureau has Russia's population in 2008 at 140 million, in 2050 at 109 million. A decline of 31 million is marginal? And I'm not sure how that classifies as a "reverse".
Also, his "marginal decline and reversal" goes against the numbers that the very Economist article he linked to presented for Russia, which showed similar declines to the US Census IDB.
So I was left confused: what source did he use? He is a responsible journalist after all.
Taking his advice and using Google, I found this quote from a US Census Document:
"Current projections indicate that
Russia’s population will decline
somewhat by the turn of the century
and that growth will resume at a
low rate during the first part of the
21st century (table 1)."
from:
http://www.census.gov/ipc/prod/ib96-2.pdf
Sounds almost exactly like what he had written and is likely his source. This would really back up his case...except it was published in February, 1997!!!!!
I'm sure it's still accurate and reliable though. Plus, it's coming from a responsible journalist, so we can trust him.
Let's look at the facts here.
A professor of journalism - many veterans of the profession might argue that the itile itself is an oxymoron - with a financial stake in the status quo ventures into the human rights debate as it is reflected in the maintsream media and turns his perspective into an undeniable screed.
May I suggest the genesis of Professor Miller's screed?
Mark Steyn is probably among the world's most respected internationally published INVESTIGAVE JOURNALISTS in an era whe "investigative journalism" has been abondoned by the mainstream media in favor of the partisan acreed or polemic which denies the reality on the ground. In this context, Mark Steyn had been nominated for numerous international journalism awards over the past few years. Mark Steyn CONTINUES to garner nominations for awards for journalistic excellence. Marke Steyn is Canadian, and did not enjoy access to a formal education in journalism - for which the world will be forever thankful!
Enter professor Miller - a Canadian professor of journalism who is unknown to all but the unfortunates who are committed to listening to the wise man's screeds at regular intervals as part of their "education" in "jopunalism" - comes down form his academic perch to deliver a "negative judgement" of Mark Steyn's worth as a journalist.
Can you spell "second-rate also ran cultivates sour grapes toward naturally talented professional peer whose performance delivers unto the latter the kind of global admiration and respect that the former can only ever dream of.
Professor Miller, intellectual and professional penis envy is such an ugly thing for us observers to see unfold before our eyes. Have you no shame?
Sean,
I don't know about you, but all I can say is "Wow"! How come you have such brilliant anonymous commenters? His/her rant is worthy of replacing Dennis Miller ... and that's a huge compliment, I assure you!
All I ever get in the form of Anonymous commenters are people who can't spell and seem to have removed their punctuation & Shift keys. Maybe this is purposely done to the computers in our prisons so we can more easily identify the source?!
Robert
And, of course, where is it written that the right to an opinion is reserved to journalists? Even those self-styled gatekeepers to the "profession?
One other thing that seems to be left out when people argue the validity of the population numbers... the age of the population. If the majority of Russia's citizens are pre- or post- child bearing age, and those of Yemen are of child bearing age, that will have a direct and definite impact on the demographics.
Anon: "If the majority of Russia's citizens are pre- or post- child bearing age, and those of Yemen are of child bearing age, that will have a direct and definite impact on the demographics."
Very true. Consider the following from "Russia, the Sick Man of Europe" by Nicholas Eberstadt (2005 ) (click here to view the full article -- it is highly informative), for instance:
"In the decades immediately ahead ... Russia looks set to contend with a sharp fall-off in the nation's youth population. Between 1975 and 2000, for example, the number of young men aged 15 to 24 ranged between 10 million and 13 million--but by 2025 ... the total will be down to barely 6 million. Those figures would imply a 45 percent decrease between 2000 and 2025 in the size of this pivotal population group--as compared with a projected 15 percent decline in Russia's overall population."
But Mike, lest we forget, "Truth is No Defense and Facts are No Defense".
Oh wait, you're not Kangacouver, Kanuckistan. Forget what I just said. LOL
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