Thursday, December 22, 2011

WATERGATE FORCES THE PRESIDENT TO HIS KNEES

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Although I am ashamed to admit it, the first time I ever heard about the Watergate scandal was from watching the movie “Dick” starring Michelle Williams and Kirsten Dunst. I can’t recall a lot about that movie, but I do remember that Nixon came across as a scumbag. In every article, book, movie, etc. I’ve come in contact with since “Dick,” they all depict him as just that, a scumbag. It amazes me that the general public couldn’t see that while he was in office. I guess that is the whole point of politics; who can be the best actor as well as be responsible for an entire country? But I digress.

I chose this chapter for a few reasons. 1. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein are the Frank Sinatra and James Dean of journalism; translation, they are legends. They are a constant reminder that a journalist is responsible for providing the public with the information they need to lead free and self-governing lives. They also set the bar and redefined “Investigative Journalism.” 2. I can’t imagine what would go down if a Watergate type scandal happened today. And if it did, I hope their would be some journalists willing to ignore the dollar signs, and find the truth.

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Within the first four paragraphs of this chapter Streitmatter states “The reporters and the courageous newspaper (Bernstein, Woodward, & the Washington Post) they worked for demonstrated, perhaps more clearly than at any other time in history, the value of the Fourth Estate joining the official branches of the government to serve the American people.” While this is true, the entire chapter makes it very clear that when it comes to the government, especially in modern day, the Fourth Estate can be easily shut out.

Maybe that isn’t what was supposed to be taken away from the chapter, but it is certainly what I got out of it. Yes, Bernstein and Woodward were on the case from the beginning. For those of you who live under a rock, the Watergate scandal was all kicked off by the “third-rate burglary” or whatever you want to refer to it as, when five men were caught inside the Democratic National Committee offices in the Watergate office complex in Washington D.C. These men were attempting to place listening devices inside the complex. While most newspapers thought it was just that, a burglary, the post and it’s now infamous journalists, Bernstein and Woodward, decided to dig a little deeper.
The inclination to dig a little deeper is what I call a journalistic instinct. When you are a great journalist, you know that nothing comes at face value, ESPECIALLY in politics. When all the other newspapers turned their backs on the post, the post stayed true to fulfilling their duty as part of the Fourth Estate.
While the other three branches of the government ultimately led to Nixon’s resignation (the only U.S. president to ever resign from presidency), it was the Fourth Estate, and the journalists who stayed dedicated to their duties as part of the Fourth Estate, which left the trail of breadcrumbs for the government to find.

I find it fitting to end this blog on this note. Katharine Graham, publisher of the Washington Post, was quoted saying this when accepting an award for her contributions to American Journalism, “Constitution singled out the press as an institution whose freedom could not be limited… Nothing illustrates better that the Founding Fathers sought to keep the forces of inquiry—the transmitters of information, the instruments of free debate—as varied, numerous, and independent as possible. Freedom of speech and of the press was the essential counterweight to government, the basic check against abuses of official power.” If ever there was a quote to reinforce the “watchdog” duty which comes from being a journalist and therefore part of the Fourth Estate, this quote would be it.
I guess the only way I can tie this to the present is that most reporters nowadays are playing “mouthpiece journalism,” mainly because we have become a society that is obsessed with money. That is why I have so much respect for independent journalists, they risk their lives every single day just to stay true to our motto “a journalist is responsible for providing the public with the information they need to lead free and self-governing lives.”

May we all go forward and take advantage of the rights we as a country were so luckily given. “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” The first amendment is the reason our country differs from so many others, and yet we are all too afraid to exercise our rights.
Or we were too afraid. My generation, the generation of pampered children and adulterous presidents, are raising their voices to change the course the world is on right now. And I believe it is journalists like Bernstein and Woodward that give us the confidence to speak when everyone else is silent, and point fingers when everyone else is looking the other way. That is America.

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