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Coincidentally enough, I’ve been contemplating something similar to the thesis of this article for my own website. I’ve been seeking an expansion beyond blogging that includes forums and blogs for visitors. But I also want my site to have a component of breking news. I’m not sure if I want to become a news site or to investigate news stories broken by mainstream sources. Most outlets parrot the press releases and news conferences from their government sources, then don’t ask any deeper questions than that, and I’d like to ask the questions that question government’s authority.
But I’m neither right nor left. I’m a sovereign individualist (think Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, Thomas Paine, Adam Smith…). I don’t want to be the libertarian Bill Buckley, nor do I want to be the libertarian NYT. My goal is to be a citizen journalist and an activist. I wonder how someone like me fits into the model that the Politico article has built here.
I don’t think Politico’s comments are restricted to the blogosphere. Republicans in general don’t flood the news industry trying to be reporters.
Journalists are people who report what other people are doing. Maybe Republicans are too busy actually doing than to spend their lives reporting what other people do.
I suppose that might be related to my point. I just don’t think there are enough journalists questioning what government people are doing to us. The current crop of journalists just assume government has whatever authority it claims to have, and doesn’t force the bureaucrats to explain themselves enough. If the “journalists” aren’t going to be the watchdogs, citizen journalists will have to be.
Then again, citizen journalists apparently aren’t journalist enough for bureaucrats in Suffolk, or police in Chesapeake.
I think the current crop of jouranlists desire to “build a relationship” with government sources and therefore they stay away from reporting on situations that might cause their government sources to stop retruning their calls.