The Marketplace Reader
Bad days for newspapers, democracy
It’s almost not news anymore that newspapers’ revenues are plummeting, they’re cutting staffs of talented journalists, and the news — locally, nationally and internationally — just isn’t getting covered as well as it had been during journalism’s last several decades. But Christopher Hedges has a very thoughtful and detailed opinion piece on the dangers of this trend, posted on the TruthDig website.
The decline of newspapers is not about the replacement of the antiquated technology of news print with the lightning speed of the Internet. It does not signal an inevitable and salutary change. It is not a form of progress. The decline of newspapers is about the rise of the corporate state, the loss of civic and public responsibility on the part of much of our entrepreneurial class and the intellectual poverty of our post-literate world, a world where information is conveyed primarily through rapidly moving images rather than print.
As someone who grew up reading and delivering newspapers, writing columns and stories and editing his middle school, high school and college papers and spending most of his career working for newspapers before, yes, moving to the Internet, I think Hedges makes some very good arguments.
- July 23, 2008 — Richard Core
- 0 comments
Latest Posts
- Delta, Northwest shareholders voting today on joining together
- Start your engines -- with a cell phone
- Goldman Sachs gets big boost from Buffett
- More victims of the Wall Street crisis
- An Emmy's theme
- What's your opinion on the bailout?
- Going soft on us
- Thanks for the memories
- The sweet deal
- Botox might help migraines
- The new Beatles Monopoly game -- Yeah, yeah, yeah!
- Heads up: Air New Zealand is looking for a few bald men
- United stock plunges on really big oops
- Bad buzz on Seinfeld and Gates ad
- Will it be easy being green -- and red?
- More hot wheels
- Hot wheels
- Google unveils new browser
- California lawmakers push for carbon-reduction planning
- GM to salaried workers: Why not retire now?
- Scientists develop cells that could be disease fighters
- Want to invest in rock 'n' roll?
- Dell to offer low-cost computers to emerging markets
- Profits in the airline industry!
- Fewer textbooks to carry with Kindle?
- Colleges dropping food trays
- Tropicana down one Indiana riverboat
- Wii have your technology
- Bicycle roundup
- Target adjusts its aim at market
- Treo has a new deal-o
- Tire rolling resistance standards and your fuel efficiency
- Vioxx clinical study influenced by marketing
- Wine expert: boxed wine better for the environment
- Open-source textbooks
- Rupert Murdoch is now frenemies with Facebook
- Technology is the new retail therapy
- I deflate you kindly and anonymously
- Ex-Apple lawyer settles backdating case
- Spain eliminates wealth tax
- Heat pump business is hot, naturally
- iPhone coming to Best Buy
- Money can't buy you love, but . . .
- High-speed Net service hits slowdown
- Hydrogen vehicles go cross-country
- $100 billion to Iraq War contractors
- Scientists: Turning invisible might be possible
- 'Natural' plastic on the horizon?
- Rolling Stone just wants to fit in
- Despite Internet, Yellow Pages multiply
- YouTube's advertising picture still fuzzy
- UBS joins the buy-back brigade
- Putting the brakes on discs?
- Doing something about the weather
- Your start-up's future earnings report, today
- Olympic-size marketing blunders
- Athletic budgets face tough travel costs
- Preparing for the downside of oil
- GM gives battered biofuels a push
- YouTube's going for broadcast gold
- Cablevision wins appeals court ruling on DVRs
- Venture capital growing in green space
- They must have meant 'Fee' Credit Report
- Yahoo annual meeting a quiet affair
- Prius on the high road
- 'Exercise in a pill' still needs a workout
- TSA pockets over $1 million in change
- Watchful eye sponsored by . . . the people of Flint
- All a-Twitter over L.A. quake
- Quake update
- Shake-up at Marketplace -- and all L.A.
- JetBlue CEO latest to suffer with industry
- Slow down, your auto-insurer is watching
- Brits' economic indicator: Fewer pub visits
- What search is 'cooler' than Google?
- Random act of greenness or a job well done?
- Hold on, that may be cancer calling
- Plugging electric cars
- Moscow may be difficult for U.S. expats
- Google does Wikipedia one better -- $
- Hershey's not melting away yet
- Bad days for newspapers, democracy
- Global warming? Just pass the lime
- Adapting to a bleak oil crunch scenario
- Lots of barking over Verizon ad
- Los Angeles keeps it trim
- Another reason not to drive
- Is mystery meat on the menu?
- Reverting to 'booze culture'
- "Borrowers Betrayed"
- At least a temporary drop in oil pressure
- Simon says, 'No more'
- Computers 1, Humans 0
- Espresso-over-ice request heats up online
- Now boarding: passengers holding ads
- Social networking, baby style
- Microsoft, Netflix in streaming deal
- Women CEOs in Silicon Valley at zero
- Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac up for government takeover
- If it barks, send it back
sponsor





