Is Eva Bartlett credible? Quora
Eva
Bartlett's border crossing journalism showed at long last the people’s
perspective of the Syrian war against terrorism. Bartlett talks figures
and proportions, and expands your desk research with facts that she
documented as a witness on site. Her stark observations have upset an
entire media industry. But she engages in dialogue, and she documents
her observations in detail; a stress test for integrity and coherence.
Bartlett is outspoken about social injustice and inaccurate media. Her
engagement and candor can be seen as a bonus. An heretic partisan will
be challenged and has to work harder. Taking position means you welcome
the scrutiny of critics and it enables a reader to find opposition and
do more effective fact checking. Bartlett has exposed a tradition of
lazy research and poor journalism in prominent mainstream-media, but now
she seems to be subjected to a smear campaign for lack of a better
argument. Observe her fact finding ability and analysis, while she
politely shatters a bastion of pretentiousness.
Compare
this well-documented single engine press mosquito to a corporate
newscaster from CNN where fact-checking is often entirely absent, as the
news is served as it was delivered by media affiliates or special
interest groups - often through an uneducated mouthpiece or an
establishment associate. (Who knew for instance Mrs. Amanpour’s married a
government PR-man? That Anderson Cooper was affiliated to the CIA? That
Murdoch himself has a stake in occupied Golan - co-owning mining firm Genie. Who’d thought state agencies took a deceptive role qr.ae/TUTNE7.)
Mind you, a free press is also free to ignore the truth. A free market
does not guarantee a balanced flow of relevant information in public
channels especially if the public is the product. Our corporate media
have too often parotted the War party (Neocons), and their co-owners in
the military-industrial complex. That is how the Iraq war could be waged
on faulty intelligence, according to regretful WashPo and CBS
journalists (2004). And that apparently is not a thing of the past.
Bartlett’s
on-site reports have countered a media narrative that has been leaning
on assumptions. Her determination to go off-limits to find the facts,
and her measured, nuanced choice of words seem to reveal a passion for
truth. What is credible or not credible was explained by Bartlett
herself when she scoured a media colleague for ‘'Building conclusions
on allegations citing dubious and unknown sources, time and again..
One, two times maybe, but every time? Not Credible."
I’d
say, hats off for a courageous investigator who has shed a light on an
issue littered with deception, perhaps as complex as the Vietnam war was
in the time of ‘the Pentagon papers’ (1971).
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