College Removes Word “Freedom” From ID Cards After Student Petition Citing ‘Slavery’

College Removes Word “Freedom” From ID Cards After Student Petition Citing ‘Slavery’

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 21:05

Authored by Maria Copeland via CampusReform.org,

While colleges across the country are removing statues and nixing traditions in the name of “inclusivity,” one university is removing the word “freedom” from its student identification cards because it is “has made minority students” feel “dehumanized.”

Robert Morris University in Pennsylvania will change its student, faculty, and staff ID cards from “Freedom Cards” to “RMU ID Cards,” Campus Reform has learned.

The decision follows the circulation of an online petition initiated by student Melanie Hall, who asked the university to rename its ID cards, arguing that the choice of “Freedom Cards” for minority students (who make up 24 percent of students at RMU, according to the petition) was a “poorly named form of identification.” 

It “has made minority students (black students in particular) feel like we are being dehumanized. Gifting us with IDs that grant us our ‘freedom’ is of extremely poor taste. Especially coming from a University that is named after a slave owner,” Hall wrote. 

“We would like to rename our Freedom Cards to something that is not insensitive,” reads the petition.

“If Robert Morris University is the welcoming place that the other 76 percent of students know and love; we ask that these changes be made so that minority students can also feel that same pride in being a Colonial.”

At least 130 people signed the petition before the RMU Dean of Students notified Hall that the name and design of the cards would be changed. 

John Michalenko, Vice President of Student Life and Dean of Students, told Hall in an email obtained by Campus Reform that “the Freedom Card is changing its name. The Robert Morris University ID is now the RMU ID Card.”

The college will update the technology of the card as well, Michalenko said.

Jonathan Potts, Vice President of Marketing and Public Relations at RMU, told Campus Reform that the change had been discussed before the circulation of the petition. 

“We had already been planning to redesign and rename our student, faculty, and staff identification cards to make them more widely recognized on campus and more easily communicate their purpose,” Potts said, adding that the school “nonetheless thought the time was right to communicate it to the students for whom it was a concern.” 

“Success!” Michalenko concluded his email to Hall. “Tell your mom.” 

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As 3 US Carriers Patrol Western Pacific, Chinese Analysts Warn US-China Stumbling Toward War

As 3 US Carriers Patrol Western Pacific, Chinese Analysts Warn US-China Stumbling Toward War

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 20:45

No less than two new separate reports in The South China Morning Post are warning of a coming US-China military conflict, saying the prospect is now higher than ever given that amid a rising number of naval incidents, including a recent near-collision incident, communication channels used for deconfliction have fallen silent.

The observation is based in large part on new studies by China’s National Institute for South China Sea showing a steep drop-off in intergovernmental communications channels between the two sides.

This observed sharp decline in communication is also in regard to the military hotline between the Chinese and Taiwan defense ministries. No doubt the report was released in response the no less than three US carriers patrolling the western Pacific this week, including the USS Ronald Reagan, the USS Theodore Roosevelt, and the USS Nimitz. Needless to say, Beijing and the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) are pissed.

The SCMP cites Wu Shicun, the president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies, who explains that “with Beijing and Washington locked in a rivalry on multiple fronts, the political distrust that had built up between them had led to hundreds of ‘track one’ intergovernmental communication channels shutting down.”

The deterioration in communications is traced to two years ago when the US rebuffed an invitation from Beijing to participate in major multinational naval exercises called ‘Rim of the Pacific’. The Pentagon had cited the Chinese PLA’s militarization of the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, also designed to assert expansive claims over what makes up Chinese territorial waters. 

And further, Wu Shicun explains, “I think the risks of conflict are rising, especially after the near-collision between the USS Decatur guided-missile destroyer and China’s destroyer the Lanzhou in September in the South China Sea,” according to the report.

Video of the tense standoff and close call close-call was released at the time:  

In a tense face-off in September 2018, the USS Decatur, which was performing a “freedom of navigation” operation, came within 41 metres (130 feet) of the Lanzhou close to Gaven Reef, which China claims as its territory, according to the US Navy, though Beijing accused the US of taking “provocative actions”.

On the same day as SCMP highlighted the breakdown in communications leaving a greater opportunity for Washington and Beijing to stumble into war via a future ‘mishap’ in waters off China, the same Hong Kong-based newspaper featured another similarly alarming report.

US President Donald Trump needs China’s cooperation on the phase one trade deal, or a military conflict, to take his chances of winning re-election later this year to over 50 per cent, a Chinese investment brokerage has concluded after conducting modelling research using data since 1870,” the Tuesday report said.

Meanwhile, fears of a ratcheting Cold War level tensions as US carriers sail into the region.

“Led by Hua Changchun, a Shenzhen-based economist at the Guotai Junan Securities, the research claims Trump currently has only a 30 per cent chance of being re-elected in November against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden having studied previous US presidential elections.”

Hua sets up what he sees as the central Trump reelection dilemma vis-a-vis Beijing: “Trump may take extreme measures. He could either expand international cooperation, such as pressing China to buy American commodities in bulk, to help jobs and the economy, or he can opt for extreme military conflicts.”

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Defund The Thought Police

Defund The Thought Police

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 20:25

Authored by Charles Lipson via RealClearPolitics.com,

Due process is not the strong suit of mobs. Neither is nuance, open discussion, or disagreement. These inherent defects should be painfully obvious as mobs pull down statues, seize sections of cities, and demand the public approach them on bended knee, literally. Anyone who dares push back, perhaps with a mild tweet saying “All lives matter,” faces immediate censure. If the mob is successful, any offenders will lose their jobs. Feckless employers are all too eager to appease the mob and hope it turns on another target.

In this perilous environment, the most frenzied voices do more than dominate the public square. They monopolize it by silencing dissent. They have received full-throated support from the tech giants that control electronic discussion and the media giants determined to shape the narrative rather than report the news. Twitter and NBC are the poster children for this assault on free and open discussion. Their suppression in the name of “social justice” betrays the idea, best articulated in John Stuart Mill’s “On Liberty,” that competing, divergent views lead to greater understanding and better decisions.

The idea of an open forum, so basic to democracies, already lies a-moldering in the grave of academia, at least in the humanities and social sciences. Imagine applying for a job in Gender Studies and saying you oppose abortions after, say, Week 38. The term for such a person is “unemployed.” Imagine merely calling for a discussion on the pros and cons of affirmative action, taking the negative side, and hoping to win tenure in political science, sociology, anthropology, or history. Bad career move. There is more robust political debate at the Academy Awards.

University administrations are equally rigid. Rejecting affirmative action, questioning the implementation of Title 9, or opposing Black Lives Matter would end your chances of being hired by the admissions office or dean of students at nearly every American university. Yet all of them proudly tout, with no sense of irony, their “office of diversity and inclusion,” fully staffed and generously funded. For them, of course, diversity never includes diverse viewpoints. It’s all about DNA and gender identity. Modern universities are now well-oiled machines to stamp out dissenting views. That’s been true for decades. What’s new, and disturbing, is seeing this orthodoxy spread to K-12 education, corporate HR departments, mainline churches, and newsrooms. The “thought police” are on patrol and ever-vigilant, twirling the twin batons of guilt and moral superiority.

Dissent from their approved views is not just considered an error, much less an innocent one. It is considered immoral, illegitimate, and unworthy of a public hearing. Although both left and right have moved steadily toward this abyss, the worst excesses today come from the left, just as they came from the right in the 1950s. Opponents are seen in religious terms, as dangerous apostates who deserve to be burned at the stake, at least symbolically. You never expect the Spanish Inquisition. Yet here it is. That is the powerful iconography behind torching police cars and neighborhood stores.

The last time we saw this frenzy (without the arson) was during the dark days of Joe McCarthy and the Hollywood Blacklist. Audiences flocked to Arthur Miller’s play, “The Crucible,” because it likened the moment to the Salem witch trials. Today’s audiences would be appalled to hear the same critique now applies to them. Alas, it does.

Suppressing free speech is not the same as violence, but the two are invariably intertwined. The threat of violence not only underscores the intensity of particular views — it heightens the danger of voicing any disagreement. Large-scale violence, whatever its source, whatever its purpose, undermines social stability and assails democratic procedures. It won’t stand for long because the public won’t tolerate it. They will demand leaders who restore order. The only question is what kind of order and at what cost.

The first duty of any government is to establish public order and safety, ideally with popular support. In constitutional democracies, we have well-defined procedures to establish that order, determine its content (such the speed limit or right to carry a weapon), proper ways to enforce it, and penalties for violating it. In the United States, we have one additional constraint, a fundamentally important one: personal rights, such as freedom of speech and religion, cannot be overridden, even by large majorities. This social and political order is not static — it is always evolving — but there are well-established procedures to make those changes, ensure all voices are heard, and protect each citizen’s inalienable rights. (Even using the term “citizen” is contentious these days. The language police don’t like it because it excludes some people.)

Calls to “Defund the police,” if they are serious, attack the very idea of establishing this peaceful public order. Cities foolish enough to attempt it will unleash violence, arson, and predation and meet a predictable backlash from citizens determined to protect their lives and property. They will either stand and fight or flee to safer spaces.

Although mobs are not always violent, rule by mobs is always a threat to constitutional democracy. Even peaceful protests can morph into mob rule when they stamp out dissenting voices or quash democratic procedures. We are seeing some of that today, where peaceful protests, guaranteed under the First Amendment’s rights to free speech and assembly, attempt to suppress others’ speech, demand obedience from public officials, topple symbols they claim to hate, and smear anyone bold enough to disagree. Corporations and universities have folded under these attacks as quickly as a cheap umbrella, or Seattle’s city council.

To preserve our democracy, we must resist the mob. That begins with understanding the gravity of the threat and standing up to it. They have no claim to moral superiority and no right to use violence to achieve their ends. Yielding the public square to this “thought police,” however powerful and intimidating they are, is the road to tyranny. It leads away from our country’s hard-won achievement of ordered liberty and constitutional democracy. Remember, the mob aims to do more than pull down statues of the Founding Fathers. It aims to pull down their historic achievements.

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FX Traders Brace For The “Unthinkable”: An Election With No Clear Winner

FX Traders Brace For The “Unthinkable”: An Election With No Clear Winner

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 20:05

With various polls showing Joe Biden commanding a sizable lead over Donald Trump ahead of the November presidential election, and even online betting sites such as PredictIt representing Biden as a 14 point favorite, the stock market has clearly been surprisingly sanguine about a change in leadership to a Democratic president, even if it entails higher corporate taxes (some possible reasons for this were discussed here).

However, while stocks appear unfazed so far by political events, the same can not be said for FX traders who according to Bloomberg are “starting to contemplate the unthinkable”: The possibility that the U.S. presidential election produces no clear winner, leading to protracted uncertainty.

According to yen implied volatility, there is a sharp jump in expected price moves around election day which is expected to persist into 2021. That is in contrast with the run-up to the 2016 election, when turmoil indicator in FX land reflected only a temporary minor uptick in volatility as investors broadly overlooked the likelihood of a Trump presidency – or any controversy surrounding the results – leaving them painfully exposed to those events.

This time however, traders are far more cautious and according to the spread between 3M and 6M JPY vol, they are concerned the election could spill into late November due to recounts and court challenges, according to Greg Anderson, Bank of Montreal’s global head of FX strategy. This added political uncertainty – which may also be due to fears over the coronavirus or the economy – has lifted the premium on dollar-yen options for just after the November elections to an eight year-high versus shorter-term counterparts.

Which means that unlike equities, where so far the Fed remains fully in control, investors will “have to consider how the FX market would react to a protracted phase of uncertainty if the outcome was unclear,” said Ned Rumpeltin, European head of FX strategy at Toronto-Dominion Bank.

A possible delay in the election results brings up memories of the 2000 election match-up between George Bush and Al Gore, when a recount dispute fueled a month-long legal fight.

It was a wake-up call for traders, who’d seen the options premium remain subdued throughout the vote and suddenly had to price in political uncertainty.

One potential complication this time around is the rise in requests by Americans to vote by mail, which according to Bloomberg could complicate the tallying process. And in what could be a hint of things to come, New York State’s election board said it won’t begin counting votes in Tuesday’s Democratic primary until July 1, so that it can double-check county records. Indicatively, the state has seen a 10-fold increase in requests for absentee ballots.

A surge in absentee voting in November, which may be unavoidable if the nation is gripped by a second covid wave, will cause delays in certifying races up and down the ballot, said former New York State Board of Elections deputy director Joe Burns said in a conference call organized by the Lawyers Democracy Fund, a conservative group that works on elections issues.

It is no wonder then that traders are racing to take cover, and as Bloomberg notes, implied volatilities for this year’s Election Day are as elevated as they were during the height of the turmoil seen in mid-March, at over 30%. Four years ago, overnight volatility in the dollar-yen pair spiked past 50% the night election results were being tallied.

And while there has been a modest increase in equity options hedges against losses around the Nov. 3 voting period,
for investors across asset classes there may be no better place to express a view on the U.S. outlook months down the road than the currency market, which offers a way to bet on America’s prospects relative to practically every other country.

SocGen FX strategist Olivier Korber suggests watching the options spread between the dollar-yuan and dollar-yen currency pairs as one way to track investors’ perception of the Trump-Biden match-up, as these pairs capture global risk sentiment, geopolitical tensions and trade relations.

“Past elections did not have such geopolitical implications” given Trump’s actions on trade and tariffs, Korber said. “Compared to past elections, the economic agenda of the two candidates will matter more than ever because 2020 will be a recession year.”

The real question now is what kind of year will 2021 be: “Economic uncertainty is likely to be compounded by political uncertainty” said JPM strategist Paul Meggyesi who said that investors should buy a six-month dollar-yen versus dollar-franc correlation swap to take advantage of an increase in implied volatility around that time. And as volatility increases, correlations usually follow, resulting in weakness across all asset classes.

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Navy Destroyer Sails Close To Venezuela In “Message” To Maduro & Ally Iran

Navy Destroyer Sails Close To Venezuela In “Message” To Maduro & Ally Iran

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 19:45

Via AlMasdarNews.com,

The US Naval Command in the southern region announced in statements Tuesday and Wednesday that a US guided missile destroyer sailed near the Venezuelan coast, hours after an Iranian tanker was docked in the port of Caracas.

According to the Southern Command’s official website, the U.S.S. Nitze sailed in an area outside Venezuelan territorial waters, which extends for approximately 12 nautical miles from its coast.

US Navy Arleigh Burke Class Guided Missile Destroyer USS Nitze, via US National Archives.

“Today, while peacefully operating in the Caribbean Sea, the U.S. Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Nitze (DDG 94) conducted a freedom of navigation operation, contesting an excessive maritime claim by Venezuela,” they said.

The Southern Naval Command indicated that “U.S. Navy ship conducted the operation in international waters outside Venezuela’s 12 nautical-mile territorial jurisdiction.”

“The United States will continue to fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows, preserving the rights, freedoms and lawful use of the sea and airspace guaranteed to all nations,” said Adm. Craig Faller, Commander of U.S. Southern Command.

“These freedoms are the bedrock of ongoing security efforts, and essential to regional peace and stability,” the statement added. 

The move comes after President Trump’s decision to send and increase the military presence in the Caribbean, for military and security purposes related to U.S. national security.

On Tuesday, an Iranian oil tanker entered Venezuelan waters to deliver its contents to the South American nation.

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Credit Suisse Probes Funds Linked To SoftBank ‘Circular Financing’ Scheme

Credit Suisse Probes Funds Linked To SoftBank ‘Circular Financing’ Scheme

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 19:25

Credit Suisse is apparently moving to ensure that a potentially lucrative new business doesn’t become forever besmirched by its association with SoftBank, the Japanese telecoms conglomerate with a venture-capital arm attached that has seen bets on more than a dozen companies go sour since the collapse of the WeWork IPO, which helped destroy the reputations of both the firm and its founder and current chairman Masayoshi Son.

Last week, the FT reported that SoftBank was using a couple of Credit Suisse funds focused on a new business line: so-called supply-chain finance. But rather than simply buying accounts payables for a diverse group of companies, these funds – which happened to be advised by the Softbank-backed Greensill Capital – essentially served as a low-key route for SoftBank to pour more capital into its struggling investments. The FT we shared last week found 4 of the funds’ top 10 exposure were Softbank-backed startups.

Greensill, for what it’s worth, employs former British PM David Cameron as an advisor.

Now, Bloomberg reports that CS is investigating these funds, and Greensill’s relationship with SoftBank.

Credit Suisse Group AG has started a probe into funds that invest in loans arranged by billionaire financier Lex Greensill and are backed by Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank Vision Fund.

Switzerland’s second-largest bank is looking into its supply-chain finance funds, which hold short-term corporate loans and finance a number of startups backed by the Vision Fund, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. The loans are sourced by Greensill Capital, which is also backed by Softbank.

[…]

Former Morgan Stanley banker Greensill partnered with Credit Suisse in 2017 to create bespoke investment funds that bought corporate invoices. The idea is for such funds to buy loans — arranged by middlemen such as Greensill — so companies can pay their bills early while boosting cash flow. The business accelerated last year when the SoftBank Vision Fund invested almost $1.5 billion in Greensill Capital.

Four of the 10 largest bets of Credit Suisse’s main supply-chain finance fund were Vision Fund companies at the end of March, including Oyo and Fair, making up 15% of its $5.2 billion assets, the FT wrote.

For those who aren’t familiar with the new niche industry of supply chain finance (it seems some more-savvy asset managers, including fellow Swiss institution GAM, are marshaling a new universe of ‘alternatives’ to market into the next boom), Bloomberg explains:

Supply-chain finance has been a fast-growing niche area for Credit Suisse, which managed 437.9 billion Swiss francs ($454 billion) at the end of last year in its asset management unit. Assets in the bank supply-chain funds rose last year as Greensill sought companies to finance before packaging the short-term loans into bundles and selling them to institutional investors.

While the funds quickly drew billions in investment since inception, they have been hit by outflows throughout the pandemic crisis. Credit Suisse clients pulled $1.6 billion from the funds earlier this year, as they rushed to free up cash in the market rout spurred by the spread of coronavirus, Bloomberg reported in April.

Plus, as some of its former bankers begin to hold the company at arms length, allowing the Japanese conglomerate to get away with this kind of skullduggery is not longer offset by the increased goodwill from a (soon-to-be-former) national champion.

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“This Is Madness” – MSM Angry That They Lost Sway Over The Gun-Control Narrative

“This Is Madness” – MSM Angry That They Lost Sway Over The Gun-Control Narrative

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 19:05

Authored by Mac Slavo via SHTFplan.com,

At least one major mainstream media outlet, the LA Times, has been reportedly “angry” that gun sales have shot up because of the tyrannical takeover of government in response to the COVID-19 panic they induced. Apparently, fear can have effects on the public that the MSM and government do no want – more self-reliance.

According to a report by Big League Politics, the LA Times is “throwing a fit” that other humans are buying weapons to defend themselves against the obvious tyranny.  Remember, this follows their theme.  The more dependent you are on them and the system they set up against you, the easier you will be to control. Taking your self-defense into your own hands was never a part of their plans.

In fact, the LA Times editorial board described the increase in gun sales as follows:

Since the start of the pandemic, Americans are buying more guns. The FBI says it conducted a record 3.7 million background checks for would-be gun buyers, a loose proxy for firearm sales, in March as lockdown orders spread across the nation.

In April the checks dropped to 2.9 million but rebounded to 3.1 million in May. The monthly average for 2019 – itself a record year for background checks — was 2.4 million. So even as we get fresh studies connecting possession of firearms with increased risk of gun violence, accidental shootings (usually by children) and suicides, we are adding more firearms to the nation’s already numbingly large privately owned arsenal of some 300 million guns (no reliable count is available) owned by about a third of the population. 

-LA Times

The board goes on to say that this amount of gun sales can be considered “madness.”

Breitbart News reported Small Arms Analytics & Forecasting’s chief economist Jurgen Brauer noted

“the ratio of handguns to long-gun sold…[set] a new record of 1.94” in April. That ratio “[broke] the previous high of 1.84 set just one month ago.”

The uptick in handgun purchases are indicative of a populace feeling like an extra layer of self-defense in warranted.

I’ve often suggested stocking up on three metals: gold, silver, and lead.

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Housing Rebound? Under Armour Founder Unloads Mansion At 41% Below Asking Price

Housing Rebound? Under Armour Founder Unloads Mansion At 41% Below Asking Price

Tyler Durden

Wed, 06/24/2020 – 18:45

Under Armour founder Kevin Plank sold his Georgetown, Washington, D.C. mansion for $17.25 million – a steep discount to its initial asking price, reported The Baltimore Sun.

Plank first listed the 200-year-old Federal-style mansion for $29.5 million in 2018. Unable to sell it, he lowered the list price to $24.5 million. 

Plank and his wife Desiree bought the home, which was constructed in 1810, for $7.85 million in 2013. It has eight bedrooms, eight full baths, and four half-baths, and sits on a third of an acre of land in Georgetown’s ritzy area.

Variety notes, the new “mysterious buyer paid cash, though his or her identity remains cloaked behind something called the Priory Holdings Trust, an enigmatic entity that traces back to a CPA office on the outskirts of Dallas, Texas.” 

The buyer bought the home in an all-cash transaction for $17.25 million, or at a 41% discount to the original list price. 

Plank is not the only wealthy person unloading real estate as the recession crushes households and decimates businesses – Elon Musk recently sold one of his mansions and has listed five others. Kylie Jenner just sold her Beverly Hills home for $17 million in a cash deal. Khloe Kardashian listed her mansion not too long ago. 

Wealth managers are likely informing clients that now is the time to sell real estate before the market cools and shifts lower. 

The confluence of high unemployment and the end of the forbearance program could unleash hell on the real estate market by 2021. This all suggests a surge in defaults and foreclosures are ahead. 

Our latest coverage on the real estate market does not bode well for the industry: 

A seismic shift in the real estate market could be ahead… 

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Robby Soave on the New York Times / Slate Star Codex Controversy

I thought the piece (“The New York Times‘s Inconsistent Standards Drove Slate Star Codex To Self-Cancel“) was thoughtful and sober, and I suspect correct, so I thought I’d pass along a link.

Note that there isn’t anything tortious or otherwise illegal about the New York Times‘ plan to identify Slate Star Codex’s author. There’s no general law against “doxxing,” which is good because there’s no really clear definition of “doxxing” (at least outside the narrowest ones, which focus on publishing highly private and almost always irrelevant information, such as social security numbers or bank account numbers). But it is good to think about when identifying a pseudonymous author is the right call.

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Journalists Abandoning ‘Objectivity’ for ‘Moral Clarity’ Really Just Want To Call People Immoral

WesleyLowery

Wesley Lowery, a Pulitzer-prize-winning correspondent for the 60 Minutes offshoot 60 in 6, has the latest and perhaps loudest in a recent series of think-pieces extolling the virtues of newsroom revolts such as the one that erupted at The New York Times earlier this month after its opinion pages published a controversial piece by Sen. Tom Cotton (R – Ark.).

Lowery and his industry allies contend that the national tumult stemming from the police killing of George Floyd is a prime opportunity to overhaul journalism’s very mission statement. “Neutral objectivity” as an aspiration, he argues in a Times essay, has failed, and should be replaced by “moral clarity.”

“Moral clarity would insist that politicians who traffic in racist stereotypes and tropes—however cleverly—be labeled such with clear language and unburied evidence,” Lowery writes. “Racism, as we know, is not about what lies in the depths of a human’s heart. It is about word and deed. And a more aggressive commitment to truth from the press would empower our industry to finally admit that.”

This proposed objectivity-for-morality swap is gaining momentum in the spaces where professional journalists congregate, pontificate, and/or swarm on Twitter to get senior managers fired.

Newsrooms “are really struggling to cover…in a way that appears to be nonpartisan a kind of political landscape where one political party in many ways has gone rogue and is not following the rules,” the Times’ Pulitzer-Prize-winning Nikole Hannah-Jones said on CNN’s Reliable Sources after the Cotton flap, in which she was a driving figure. “This adherence to even-handedness, both-sidesism, the View from Nowhere, doesn’t actually work in the political circumstances that we’re in.”

Relying on the creaky tools of liberalism in the era of Donald Trump, the new argument goes, is like bringing a banana to a knife fight.

“Can the view-from-nowhere, tabula rasa, Objective Unbiased Journalism tradition survive the current moment?” Esquire Politics Editor Jack Holmes mused recently. “Is it capable of dealing with bad-faith actors, and of prioritizing the truth over concerns about accusations of bias? Can we psychically handle the task of saying one of our political parties has lost its mind, or will we Both Sides ourselves into oblivion?…[H]ow much bullshit can any one person stomach—and spread—in the interest of ‘norms’?”

For non-journalists, understanding this rapidly spreading sentiment (and the repetitive, in-group jargon that comes with it) is a key to basic media literacy. The institutional stuff you read, watch, and listen to will increasingly be shaped by people whose moral warning systems are on ever-higher alert to make sure valued “platforms” remain unsullied—and unmanipulated—by barbarians.

“Cotton’s views should be known, but not amplified and normalized within the prized real estate that is the op-ed page of the New York Times,” wrote influential Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan earlier this month. “What if we framed coverage with this question at the forefront: What journalism best serves the real interests of American citizens? Make decisions with that in mind, and at least some of the knotty problems get smoothed out.”

There is an obvious paradox at the heart of this project, one that is all the more glaring for passing undetected under the noses of its most prominent practitioners. In replacing their decidedly strawman version of the “objectivity” ideal with a more courageous “moral clarity,” journalists are trading the unattainable for the unknowable, and consciously elevating narrative “truths” over verified facts.

Wesley Lowery wants journalists to be unshackled so that they can positively identify individuals and organizations as “racist,” adding that: “Racism, as we know, is not about what lies in the depths of a human’s heart. It is about word and deed.” But there’s a wide swath of hotly contested territory within just that four-letter word deed.

Do policies, rules, and practices that correlate with comparatively poor outcomes among people of historically discriminated-against racial (or gender, or sexual, or national) classifications count automatically as racist, regardless of intent? You certainly hear that argument in New York City about public-school admissions criteria, for example:

But if that’s the standard then intellectual consistency requires it also be tested out on the War on Poverty, minimum wage laws, gun control, and—yes—the removal of public-school admissions criteria. The point here is neither to play racism gotcha nor argue ad absurdum that it’s fruitless to worry over unequal outcomes: it’s to observe that these assessments are very much under dispute, and rightly so. Difficult questions do not suddenly get “smoothed out” by the bold assertion that they belong to a binary category marked either “moral” or “immoral.”

A classic pitfall of such simplistic thinking, widely unremembered now on the journalistic left, is the presumption that a proposal born in moral virtue will retain its luster after coming in contact with the real world. Policy—particularly the thorny, emotional, life-and-death stuff like immigration, criminal justice, and war—is hard, with the wreckage of unintended consequences all around us.

Margaret Sullivan in her piece asserts that, “It’s more than acceptable that [journalists] should stand up for civil rights—for press rights, for racial justice, for gender equity and against economic inequality.” I agree! But these issues are not on-off switches, nor should their depiction be in the press.

Do “civil rights” include the individual right to keep and bear arms, or to grow your own medical marijuana for personal consumption? Do “press rights” include an extra “journalist privilege“? Does “gender equity” require government intervention to mandate wage levels? Does “economic equality” mean that an “ultra-millionaire tax” is a good idea? These are all heavily contested questions, not dividing lines between the virtuous and the deplorable.

You do not have to share the foundational anti-media animus of modern conservatism to guess from where the future errors of a newly emboldened journalism class will emanate. Wherever there is a preponderance of ideological sympathy—say, toward the cause of erasing the gender gap—there will be an abundance of journalistic sloppiness. Wherever there is a broad ideological or personal revulsion toward a person or group or class, there will be actual malfeasance.

Evidentiary standards, particularly as concerns the most radioactive of contemporary accusations—racism—threaten to become so one-sided that only journalists could fail to notice the double standard. Media critics have spent so long on the lookout for opportunistic conservatives “working the refs” that they have become slow to recognize the tactic when it comes from the left.

In Lowery’s essay, he declaims Tom Cotton’s op-ed as being “beneath” the paper’s “standards,” due in part to its “inflammatory rhetoric,” “overstatements,” and “unsubstantiated assertions.” Lowery also makes such arguably inflammatory unsubstantiated assertions as:

* “The views and inclinations of whiteness are accepted as the objective neutral.”

* “[S]elective truths have been calibrated to avoid offending the sensibilities of white readers.”

* “Black journalists are speaking out because one of the nation’s major political parties and the current presidential administration are providing refuge to white supremacist rhetoric and policies, and our industry’s gatekeepers are preoccupied with seeming balanced, even ordering up glossy profiles of complicit actors.”

* “The turmoil at The Times and the simultaneous eruptions inside other newsrooms across the country are the predictable results of the mainstream media’s labored refusal to racially integrate.”

* “[I]t remains to be seen if the changes at The Times will include aggressively tackling a culture that leaves its own staff members so internally powerless that they have to battle their own publication in public.”

Even if all these statements are 100 percent accurate (which I doubt), they are not substantiated, nor given anything like the post-facto scrutiny applied to a single 700-word piece by a sitting U.S. senator. (The same day that the Gray Lady’s staff was melting down over Cotton’s allegedly harmful words, the paper published an op-ed encouraging people to tell their relatives and loved ones that “you will not be visiting them or answering phone calls until they take significant action in supporting black lives either through protest or financial contributions.”)

Times staffers will explode in public vitriol when presented with an utterly inoffensive Twitter recommendation from controversial Opinion staffer Bari Weiss, yet mostly sit on their hands when Nikole Hannah-Jones encourages people to read conspiratorial claptrap about possibly racist fireworks campaigns. More productive energy will continue to be spent policing the paper’s not-quite-anti-Trump-enough headlines and tweets than will for the same treatment of every elected Democrat combined. You don’t need a map to see the direction this all is heading.

“I fear a new misunderstanding is taking root in newsrooms today, one [that] could destroy the already weakened system of journalism,” wrote media historian Tom Rosenstiel, in a long and worthwhile Twitter thread in response to Lowery’s piece (which he praised repeatedly). “That misunderstanding is the idea that if we adopt subjectivity to replace a misunderstood concept of objectivity, we will have magically arrived at truth—that anything I am passionate about and believe deeply is a kind of real truth….If [moral clarity] invites people to think that simply opining is some kind of truer or more moral form of reporting, they would be wrong and the effect would be tragic. If journalists replace a flawed understanding of objectivity by taking refuge in subjectivity and think their opinions have more moral integrity than genuine inquiry, journalism will be lost.”

Lowery, who has done valuable work covering the criminal justice system, makes several good points in his op-ed about media bias and grotesque euphemism when it comes to portraying the perspective of those in power, particularly the police. There is, I think, an obvious truth in the critiques that elite journalism spent a half-century abandoning and alienating itself from entire communities, and overly fretting about giving off the surface appearance of bias.

But by my lights, that half-century ended around 2010 or so. An oddness about this contemporary journalistic discussion is that it largely carries on as if the past decade of industry navel-gazing and industry transformation hadn’t taken place. Ten years ago the Washington Post was agonizing over having hired a young (formerly of Reason!) political writer who was subsequently discovered to have said intemperate things about some conservatives. Now, David Weigel works comfortably at…the Washington Post.

Fifteen years ago, we were arguing about whether cable news should have an openly left-leaning network; now, it’s over which one has the sassiest chyrons. “False balance,” “View from Nowhere,” “both-sidesism,” “working the refs” … all of these notions were being vigorously debated among media observers and participants during the administration of President George W. Bush.

Meanwhile, Facebook launched in 2004, YouTube in 2005, Twitter in 2006, and the iPhone in 2007, combining to form the mother of all workarounds to legacy media inattention. As Peter Suderman recently put it, “We Filmed Cops. People Changed Their Minds.”

The genius of American media, from the penny daily to the illustrated monthly, national newsweekly to local alt-weekly, broadcaster to blogger, TED talker to podcaster, is that every new establishment quickly creates its own vibrant alternative. The emerging new establishment, busy overhauling a newsroom near you, is about to discover just how popular their interpretation of moral clarity is.

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