. . . to anonymous commenters #2 and 3 on my last post for their reflections on my question. Yes, the traditional journalistic instinct is to let "[truth] and falsehood grapple," but I am not sure if that precept should still govern. As anonymous commenter #1 demonstrated, the online model favors flippant remarks with little or no regard for truth. I fear that we are being overwhelmed by that model, in which the clever bullshitter wins out over the dull truth-teller in the attention-deficit world of the Web. Witness, for example, the decline in Quincy's blogs and discussion boards, and the rise of the tweet as the dominant mode of online communication. There is no place on Twitter for nuance or detailed examination.
Thus I look at the print media through different eyes today. It seems to me that if the print media have a future, it has to be in complete, utter devotion to accuracy at every turn. Think about the difference between a letter to the editor and an anonymous comment, for example. A letter to the editor is a document of some length, often composed in several sittings, to which the author must attach a name. It is a part of the public record. An anonymous comment is often a single sentence or less, tossed off in a moment, and with no personal accountability. The letter I referred to in my previous post was written by someone with a serious idea, a suggestion to be taken up by the public, and an invitation to reply. I wonder if the newspaper didn't owe it to her (and to us) to make sure her claims were correct and to give her the chance to revise her letter before it got printed.
The Internet's standards of accuracy are low indeed. I fear that the marketplace of ideas may turn out like most of the other marketplaces in our current economy: the fast, cheap and shoddy thrive, while the careful and well-crafted suffer. If the print media don't have a demonstrably better product to offer than their online competitors, the quality of our public discourse is in serious trouble. So I am starting to doubt a lot of the received wisdom that has governed print journalism for so many years.