Overrated Objectivity - Chemical & Engineering News Archive (ACS

Letters complaining about a story in C&EN often conclude with a statement along the lines of, "I expect a more objective treatment of controversial su...
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CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS 1155—16th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 (202) 872-4600 Letters to Editor: [email protected] C&EN home page: http://pubs.acs.org/cen EDITOR: Madeleine Jacobs MANAGING EDITOR: Rudy M. Baum SENIOR CORRESPONDENTS: Lois R. Ember, Wilbert C. Lepkowski NEWS EDITOR: Janice R. Long EDITOR-AT-LARGE: Michael Heylin CONTRIBUTING EDITOR: James H. Krieger ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Patricia Oates BUSINESS William J. Storck, Assistant Managing Editor Northeast: (732) 906S300. Marc S. Reisch (Senior Editor), Elisabeth Kirschner (Associate Editor), George Pearl (Associate Editor), Rachel Eskenazi (Administrative Assistant). Houston: (281) 486-3900, Ann M. Thayer (Bureau Head), (281) 496-6382, Paige Marie Morse (Associate Editor). Hong Kong: 8522984-9072. Jean-Francois Tremblay (Associate Editor). London: 44 181 87CXS884. Patricia Layman (Senior Editor). GOVERNMENT David J. Hanson, Assistant Managing Editor Washington: (202) 8724495. Bette Hileman (Senior Editor), Jeffrey W. Johnson (Senior Editor), Linda R. Raber (Associate Editor) SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY/EDUCATION Pamela S. Zurer, Assistant Managing Editor Washington: (202) 8724505. Rebecca L. Rawls (Senior Correspondent), Stuart A. Borman (Senior Editor), Mairin B. Brennan (Senior Editor), Doron Dagani (Senior Editor), A. Maureen Rouhi (Senior Editor), Sophie L. Wilkinson (Associate Editor). Northeast: (732) 906S301. Stephen C. Stinson (Senior Editor). Chicago: (773) 463-2371. Mitch Jacoby (Assistant Editor). West Coast: (510) 8494)575. Elizabeth K. Wilson (Associate Editor). London: 44 1256811052. Michael Freemantle (Senior Editor). ACS NEWS William G. Schulz (ACS News Editor), Diana L. Slade (Editorial Assistant) EDITING & PRODUCTION Ernest L. Carpenter, Assistant Managing Editor Robin M. Giroux (Senior Editor). Janet S. Dodd (Associate Editor), Arlene Goldberg-Gist (Associate Editor), Julie L. Grisham (Associate Editor), Stephen K. Ritter (Associate Editor), Rita E. Johnson (Assistant Editor). GRAPHICS & PRODUCTION Alan Kahan (Head), Phillip Payette (Art Director), Linda Mattingly (Staff Artist) Composition Systems: Vincent L. Parker (Manager), Robin L. Braverman (Assistant) CIRCULATION Circulation Manager: Scott Nathan ADVISORY BOARD Jeannene Ackerman, Steven W. Baldwin, Marvin Cassman, E. Gary Cook, Debbie C. Crans, Samuel J. Danishefsky, James E. Evans, Slayton A. Evans Jr., Michael J. Ferris, xMarye Anne Fox, Man' L. Good, Carlos G. Gutierrez, Dudley R. Herschbach, J. Roger Hirl, Robert J. Huggett, Robert S. Langer, Stephen J. Lippard, Leo E. Manzer, Gary L. Mossman, Hans C. Noetzli, Jane Margaret O'Brien, Don H. Olsen, Janet G. Osteryoung, Gregory A. Petsko, Alan Schriesheim, Richard E. Smalley, Enrique J. Sosa, Peter J. Stang, Kathleen C. Taylor, David A. Tirrell, Tamae Maeda Wong Published by AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY (202) 8724600; TDD (202) 8724432 John Kistler Crum, Executive Director Robert D. Bovenschulte, Director, Publications Division EDITORIAL BOARD Michael P. Doyle (Chair); ACS Board of Directors Chair: Joan E. Shields; ACS President: Paul S. Anderson; Ronald Breslow, Lura J. Powell, Elsa Reichmanis, Paul H. L. Walter

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Overrated Objectivity

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etters complaining about a story in C&EN often conclude with a statement along the lines of, "I expect a more objective treatment of controversial subjects in my profession's official newsmagazine." It's a criticism journalists often hear—that we're not objective enough. I've worked as a professional journalist for almost two decades, during which time I've learned two lessons about objectivity. One is that perfect objectivity is an illusion; it doesn't exist. The other is that the quest for perfect objectivity actually damages contemporary journalism. A reporter's job is to report honestly on a subject, usually one of some complexity. But a reporter is not a tape recorder or a video camera, playing back mindlessly the entire record of an event. A reporter assembles information, digests it, conducts interviews with knowledgeable subjects (on all sides of a topic, if it is a controversial one), brings to bear his or her expertise, and assembles a "story." That's what we invariably call what we are working on—a story. Not a report. Not an analysis. Because that's what we do, tell an honest story about a subject based on what we have learned. Good reporters have far more material assembled on a subject than can ever be used in a story. Deciding what to use involves analysis, synthesis, selection of facts and quotes—all subjective activities. If we are any good, we try to be honest storytellers, but we are not objective, at least not as defined by Webster's. A critic might respond that a reporter should simply present both sides of a story and let the reader (or viewer) come to his or her own conclusions. Some journalists do that, especially those reporting for nontechnical audiences on issues with a scientific or technical content. But this leads to problems, too. The first big story in my career was covering the trial in federal court in Little Rock, Ark., of the suit challenging Arkansas' law requiring creationism to be taught in public school science classes. I'll never forget watching a television reporter during a break in the Views expressed

trial interviewing Harvard University's Stephen Jay Gould, one of the world's foremost paleontologists, and Duane Gish, a Ph.D. biochemist who worked for the San Diego-based Institute for Creation Research, both of whom were witnesses at the trial. The reporter gave Gould and Gish each about 30 seconds to state their respective cases for evolution and creationism, turned to the camera, and said, in effect, "Eminent scientists disagree." Such a report may satisfy some standard of objectivity, but it is not honest. I am not saying the creationist arguments should have been ignored, but to present Gould and Gish as somehow equals in the scientific world is ludicrous. I know that many journalists disagree with me on this, but I think it is essential in situations such as this to take into account the credentials and credibility of subjects being interviewed. C&EN has covered many similar topics, including the effect of chlorofluorocarbons on stratospheric ozone, the use of laboratory animals in biomedical research, the toxicity of Alar, and currently, global climate change. In the case of the global climate, critics of our coverage maintain we don't present the views of the handful of scientists who publicly disagree that humans are affecting Earth's climate. But we have reported that critics exist, and we've reported their views when their criticism has been published in peer-reviewed journals or presented at scientific meetings. No, we do not give critics of global climate change the same amount of ink we give the far larger number of scientists who think global climate change is real. Quite bluntly, they don't deserve it. They are a tiny minority whose analysis of the available data is rejected by the vast majority of scientists who have reviewed that data. As good journalists, we acknowledge the critics' existence, and then move on to cover the dramatic story that is unfolding around us.

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