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Why liberal journalists need to be heroes Fifty years ago, Nixon's downfall spawned a million monsters

Richard Nixon gives a televised address in 1973. (Ernst Haas/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Richard Nixon gives a televised address in 1973. (Ernst Haas/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)


August 8, 2024   7 mins

When Richard Nixon resigned as president 50 years ago, the country witnessed the birth of a monster. I am not talking about some sinister influence he exerted after his fall. I am talking about the media.

Having gratifyingly removed a leader who had become dangerous and unstable, the media, like a grizzly bear that kills its first human and will only eat human flesh from then on, shifted its purpose from investigate, report and expose, to search and destroy. In the process, it has normalised disaster thinking about American life, from the most ordinary experiences — love and work — to the highest echelons of human activity. If America is on the verge of political calamity, it is because for the past five decades, the media has kept the country on the edge of its seat expecting no less.

Unable to come up with another Watergate, the media tried to force every story it could into the Watergate template. Someone big had to be exposed as doing something really bad, with the result that they had to be made to fall exceptionally hard. There was some precious, honest, public-spirited journalistic work as a result. But the media, as befit its proud new image as heroic saviour of democracy, gradually robbed democracy of its vital essence: the freedom to live life privately, secretly, incalculably. (When Socrates said that “the unexamined life is not worth living”, he did not have in mind 24/7 cable news.)

It was, of course, Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, in particular, whose doggedness exposed the connections between the Republican burglars of the Democratic National Headquarters and figures close to the paranoid, self-destructing Nixon. Their bestselling memoir, All the President’s Men, along with its blockbuster movie, made the men’s names synonymous with Watergate and media heroism. Never mind that had it not been for countless law enforcement figures, politicians and the Supreme Court, which ordered Nixon to give up the notorious tapes that incriminated him, Nixon might well have never been impeached. Woodward and Bernstein caught but the tip of the iceberg, yet it proved enough to keep the self-celebrating media’s champagne cold for two generations.

Like parents who refuse to allow their adult children to grow up, the liberal media has spent 50 years in a stage of arrested development. It continues to pretend that the country is a wayward child of the Sixties and Seventies, in need of the corrective hand of death-defying journalism. Indeed, the “woke” turn in the liberal media, now in the process of artfully incorporating criticisms of its pious effusions into its pious effusions, was really just an attempt to find a dramatically clear-cut moral issue, like Watergate, to get all heroic about, again. This desperation has been all the more intense since the media itself was discredited by its advocacy of the invasion of Iraq: having exposed the politicians as scoundrels, the credulous, war-mongering media got themselves indicted as same by the bloggers. Now, alternate universes of news on social media proclaim little Watergates every day.

In 2016, it was breath-taking to watch the media hurl itself at Trump in the hope of recapturing its pursuit of Nixon. It was hardly a coincidence that the movie The Post, about The Washington Post’s publication of the Pentagon Papers, came out just over a year after Trump was elected.

Yet the Nixon era seemed like innocence itself, as the epithet “Tricky Dick” mutated into “Hitler”, “Tiberius” and “Peron” as monikers for Trump. We longed for the bad old days, when the humble legwork of reporters like W and B, and sober, investigative columns by the likes of Jack Anderson, had not yet given way to the sniping, middle-school groupthink that too often passed for reporting after Trump’s ascent. In the Watergate era, the media exposed Nixon as a petty criminal. Now, in its longing to recapture its glorious past, the media has pummelled the petty criminal from Queens into a kind of Christ. Where Proust had his madeleine, nostalgic American journalism has its Trump.

Trump gave the “failing media”, as he calls it, a second life. But it was Nixon who elevated the media into a role that it had long hungered for: democracy’s indispensable eyes and ears. The invitation rang out among the protestors at the Chicago convention in 1968. “The whole world is watching” was an ironic slogan from a New Left that sought to deflate self-centred American arrogance. But the whole world cannot watch unless it has a medium to watch on. Enter TV news, and a new era of media domination.

Nixon himself, in his famous “Checkers” speech of 1952 — where he successfully debunked accusations of misusing campaign funds — made an end run around the dominant print media of the time by delivering his speech on television, just as Trump when he entered politics made an end run around TV and print journalism by resorting to Twitter. John F. Kennedy later used his photogenic charm to vanquish Nixon in the first televised debate in 1960, and TV news later helped serve as handmaiden to Nixon’s demise.

But the new media reality of constant vigilance and the pursuit of truth and justice had been established. Before Nixon, the news was just the news. There had been newspaper crusades; there was Edward R. Murrow’s truly heroic pursuit of Senator Joseph McCarthy. But the American press had never taken down a president. That was big game.

After Watergate, the press acquired a gravitational force usually possessed by sheerly political forms of power. It possessed a level of authority and reality all its own. Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, the creators of the Superman comic strip, had known what they were doing when they made Superman’s alter ego a newspaperman named Clark Kent. They knew that the newspaper editors they were hoping to convince to publish their comic strip harboured their own alter egos as the Supermen who would protect the republic from harm.

“After Watergate, the press acquired a gravitational force usually possessed by sheerly political forms of power.”

Today, the media obsession with Nixon, sensationally lucrative and ego-gratifying, has mutated into a trillion-eyed media obsession with everything. The effect has been to turn democracy against itself. Here is Edward Shils in his classic work, The Torment of Secrecy, explaining why, “without the willingness to disregard much of what our fellow citizens do… there could be no freedom”:

“Democracy could not function if politics and the state of the social order were always on everyone’s mind. If most men, most of the time, regarded themselves as their brother-citizens’ keepers, freedom, which flourished in the indifference of privacy, would be abolished, and representative institutions would be inundated by the swirl of plebiscitary emotions — by aggressiveness, acclamation and alarm.”

Well, nowadays, most people, modelling themselves on the aggressive, acclimating and alarm-ringing media that Watergate created, regard themselves as just that. With Watergate, the American media established a style of never disregarding what our fellow citizens do, no matter how trivial or irrelevant. Of course, this has been taken up with fury by social media, where reducing the secrets of politics to everyday stuff is on everyone’s mind every minute, day and night. And once you declare secrecy an intolerable torment — the secrecy of the “deep state”, of hidden thoughts, of words and actions buried in the past — then any seeming exposure of truth has the liberating force of not being a secret. Exposing a secret has now become the sole criterion of truth. Even if it is a lie. Especially if it contradicts an official fact, which is by definition, something born in the realm of official secrets. Populism is thriving now not least because at the heart of populism is an abhorrence of secrets, which for some time has been at the heart of culture.

Unlike Trump, Ivy-educated, born to wealth, bathed in wealth, schooled and quickened in the sybaritic dens of sophisticated New York, Nixon was a born populist. Trump falsely believed that the 2020 election was stolen from him because he felt entitled to remain president; Nixon believed the Kennedys stole the election from him in 1960 because he felt humiliated by coastal elites all his life.

His pursuit of Alger Hiss for betraying American secrets to the Russians probably had as much to do with Hiss’s elite WASP background as with his treachery. Nixon’s eyes gleamed with satisfaction during his Checkers speech when he, accurately, accused Democrat presidential candidate, and mandarin of mandarins, Adlai Stevenson of misusing campaign funds. The root of Nixon’s populism was his feeling of smallness, of being an impostor always grabbing for more.

Yet this product of a world-historical inferiority complex established the Environmental Protection Agency, passed the Occupational Health and Safety Act, signed the Equal Rights Act into law, temporarily imposed wage and price controls, expanded the Food Stamp programme, and tried, unsuccessfully, to pass the Family Assistance Plan, which was an attempt at a guaranteed basic income that even Biden never pretended to espouse. He decreased troop levels in Vietnam, drastically reduced American casualties and extricated the country in 1974 from a war that had been created by liberal idealist opportunists, a war that had started with “military advisors’ in 1961. Even as he illegally expanded the war into Cambodia and Laos; even as he authorised Kissinger, long American high society’s favourite war criminal, to commit or enable atrocities in Cambodia, Chile, Bangladesh, Cyprus and East Timor; even as he tried to destroy his critics — he called them “enemies” — at home.

Nixon is routinely referred to as an enigma, a mystery, a cipher, a fungible opportunist. This is accurate, probably, but it is a tedious and tired narrative line that illuminates very little.

Fundamentally, Nixon was a watershed figure who led America away from any sort of shared reality into the obscure recesses of the American mind. That is to say, you couldn’t make sense of America during Nixon’s reign unless you turned away from the chaos in America and towards what made Nixon tick. That was when mind began to trump matter; when who a leader really was started to matter more than the context they acted in. That is another shift in the direction of populism. Populists prize personality, the more intriguing the better, in their leaders above all else.

After Nixon Aenigmaticus, the political question of our time is not: What does this person believe? No one, after all, believes anyone’s profession of belief anymore, least of all a politician’s. No, after Nixon, the question of our time, when it comes to democratic leaders, is not what, or who. It is when, and how, will a particular “who” begin to unravel. And, depending on your goals, or mere desires, what you can do to hasten it along. We are all our brother-citizens’ keepers now. We are all, that is to say, Woodward and Bernstein. Thanks to the self-anointed hero-journalists of yore, we are condemned to ceaseless, remorseless vigilance — all in the name of democracy.


Lee Siegel is an American writer and cultural critic. In 2002, he received a National Magazine Award. His most recent book is Why Argument Matters


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Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago

IDK. This is an interesting story and all, but I think it completely misses the point when it comes to Watergate and its impact on journalism.

Watergate did make journalism seem like an exciting and heroic profession. Suddenly, everyone wanted to be a reporter. With such demand, journalism became a credentialed profession with university programs. It ended the era when journalism was considered a working class profession. It sparked the era when journalism became a noble career for the wealthy elite and the eventual domination of the profession by Ivy League schools like Columbia.

Eventually, national journalists had more in common with the political figures they were covering, rather than the working and middle class people who were consuming their journalism.

Also missed in this essay was the profound structural changes to the industry caused by the internet and social media. Basically, the industry is no longer profitable. With the move to subscribers instead of advertisers, the media must now pander to its readers, who push them to the far end of the political spectrum. Whereas advertisers insisted that media stick to the centre.

You could write a book on this subject, and there are some excellent ones out there. The downfall of the corporate media is a long and complex story. Anyway, interesting essay, but one that misses the mark bigtime IMO.

Emmanuel MARTIN
Emmanuel MARTIN
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

An excellent comment, much better than the bootlicking article it replies to.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
1 month ago

Bizarre comment. Whose boots was the author licking? Did you actually READ the article?

Brendan O'Leary
Brendan O'Leary
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

I was about to write something very similar. Bernstein started as a 16yo copyboy. Woodward was from a small percentage of Ivy League educated journalists but did 5 years service in the US Navy in-between. Now it seems to be all grads who’ve done nothing else.
The internet effect started in the 90s when advertising migrated to other platforms, papers and broadcast media slashed reporting staff and foreign bureaus etc. Now we have many outlets but the number and diversity of original reporting sources has been greatly diminished, result being that media is full of opinion writers extrapolating on the small scraps of actual reporting.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
1 month ago

It is my understanding that Woodward was likely an intelligence asset deliberately placed at the Post, despite his lack of background in journalism. He and cub reporter Bernstein were given the roles as young crusaders by the CIA in order to take Nixon out.

Anyway, to quote the popular meme, no matter how much you hate the media, you don’t hate it enough, including this guy.

Paddy Taylor
Paddy Taylor
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Quite a lot more insightful than the article.

Philip Hanna
Philip Hanna
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Very interesting, I would like to read more about this. Can you recommend offhand a good book on the subject? Thanks for the insightful comment.

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago
Reply to  Philip Hanna

This is an excellent book:
Ungar-Sargon, Batya (2021). Bad News: How Woke Media Is Undermining Democracy. New York City: Encounter Books. ISBN 978-1641772068.[15]

Obadiah B Long
Obadiah B Long
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Note also that as it became a noble, Ivy League profession, it thereby became overwhelmingly Leftist.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 month ago

Wow, this article is brilliant! My thanks to the author.

Indeed, the media fell in love with the media, and began to take themselves and their role far, far too seriously. Consider the laughably pretentious motto of the Washington Post: “Democracy Dies in Darkness”.

Left unstated is the assumption – that only the Washington Post can save you from the “Darkness”.


Harrydog
Harrydog
1 month ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

Now many journalist professors believe and teach that journalism is and should be a form of activism.

Peter B
Peter B
1 month ago
Reply to  Harrydog

Or politics for people who don’t want the inconvenience of getting elected – and the risk of getting voted out.
When you can clearly tell the political affiliation of a writer from their reporting and realise they are actively pursing political agendas, that’s no longer journalism.

Philip Hanna
Philip Hanna
1 month ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

Yeah, that motto, these days, may be one of the biggest ironies out there.

David Yetter
David Yetter
1 month ago

Interesting take. I’m not sure I buy it. One criticism: Nixon’s pursuit of Alger Hiss for betraying American secrets was based on Alger Hiss betraying American secrets. We now know Hiss’s GRU codename was “Ales”.

Christopher Chantrill
Christopher Chantrill
1 month ago

I guess I live in an alternate universe from the revered Lee Siegel:
That there really were Commie spies back in the day, and Nixon and McCarthy did what politicians do when their blood is up.
That Nixon was taken down by the Intelligence Community (Woodward had been in Navy intelligence). (But we still don’t know why the IC took him down).
That the media ever since Nixon has been a wholly-owned subsidiary of the ruling-class apparatus.
That Trump was the victim of the ruling-class apparatus, featuring the noble and pure Intelligence Community.
And I believe, with Kant, that we cannot know things-in-themselves but only appearances.
And, to paraphrase Nietzsche, Democracy is dead and we have killed it.
Your mileage may vary.
“Ain’t I a stinker!” (c)1950 Bugs Bunny.

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago

Looking back, it appears that Kennedy did some underhanded vote stealing in Chicago as well.

Harrydog
Harrydog
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Yes….some Mafia vote manipulation. And when Kennedy put RFK on them, we get Oswald and Dallas.

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Yes, the 1960 election was decided by Mayor Daley of Chicago about 6 am the following morning when he allowed Cook County’s votes to be turned in, after having contacted BOTH Kennedy and Nixon campaigns.
Nixon might well have never been impeached. 
Nixon was not impeached. After the tapes came out, and his role was clear, a group of senior Republicans, understanding that he would be impeached, went to Nixon and told him he had to resign.
IF ONLY the Democrats had such honor and duty to country today, and had told Biden to go back in 2023, they could have had a real democratic contest. Instead they have far left, incompetent, horrible Kamala, and the further left, noxious, oppressive, Walz.
IF ONLY the MSM was anywhere near as balanced as in the ’60’s, Biden would never have been elected in the first place and the country would be much less divided.

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
1 month ago

Joseph Mccarthy, a much maligned figure, was right: Washington DC was awash with Russian spies. The problem he had was that infiltration had meant that part of the Federal Government was working for ‘the other side’.  Sounds familiar?

Diana West’s ‘American Betrayal: The Secret Assault on Our Nation’s Character’, describes the difficulties in revealing the malevolence, and how the US hasn’t recovered, resulting in a nation ‘unable to know truth from lies’.

And in her (much shorter) book, ‘The Red Thread: A Search for Ideological Drivers Inside the Anti-Trump Conspiracy’, she asks the simple question: Why? What was the motivation? And she finds plenty of trails, with some going back to the Cold War, and some more modern. For example, Russiagate was done to hide Uranium One, which still hasn’t hit the headlines.

Her evidence includes material from Moscow, read after the USSR fell, that ties in with accounts of events in the US.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
1 month ago

Uranium One was a headline in The NY Times in 2015 and was quickly memory holed.

Brett H
Brett H
1 month ago

Thanks for a very thoughtful, persuasive piece of writing, I’d like to see more of this quality, even if I didn’t agree with it.
I had followed Watergate very closely when I was younger, and most of us probably did, and read a lot over the years as more was revealed. Without a doubt it was an exciting period to watch what was happening in the moment. Woodward and Bernstein were obviously capable reporters. But it seemed to me that it was “Deepthroat” pointing them in the right direction, and correcting that when they got a bit lost. So I wonder how effective they would have been without that source, which in the end turned out to be the FBI.
So journalism became a heroic pursuit and the nature of that influenced editors and reporters from then on. But Lee is correct on how things panned out.
“we are condemned to ceaseless, remorseless vigilance — all in the name of democracy.”

And that sounds very much like vigilantes. Put one foot wrong and you’ll be exposed and then punished, not necessarily for a crime but for the pleasure of it. We’re all gossips now.

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
1 month ago
Reply to  Brett H

W and B weren’t “capable reporters”. They were actors playing their parts.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
1 month ago

At least one of them was from the intel community. Nixon figured out some things that he was not supposed to figure out and certainly not supposed to discuss.

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago

Yet the Nixon era seemed like innocence itself, as the epithet “Tricky d**k” mutated into “Hitler”, “Tiberius” and “Peron” as monikers for Trump“. I hadn’t heard the “Tiberius” one. I like it!

Dermot O'Sullivan
Dermot O'Sullivan
1 month ago

More of this please, Unherd, a real meaty, well written article. Even though there are things in there with which I do not agree, it encourages me to broaden my thinking and re-thin some (lazy) opinions I hold on to. In short, it is real journalism.

Daniel Lee
Daniel Lee
1 month ago

Ironically, what Woodward and Bernstein revealed wasn’t so much Republican criminality as Republican incompetence in pursuing the kind of political criminality that Democrats are so expert at and continue to practice, still, without any kind of media opposition.

Liakoura
Liakoura
1 month ago
Reply to  Daniel Lee

A couple examples “of political criminality that Democrats are so expert at and continue to practice”, please.

mike flynn
mike flynn
1 month ago

Was Nixon really dangerous and unstable? Really?

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
1 month ago

Nixon also won re-election in 1972 in a landslide, making the Watergate affair look more stupid than criminal. It was pointless; he was going to win. Nixon’s problem was not the break-in itself but the cover-up that followed it. Let’s not revise history to make him into some Mafia-like figure.
As to the media, it has strayed so far from the years that followed Watergate as to be unrecognizable. The one-time eyes and ears of the public has morphed into an openly activist mouthpiece for one of the major parties, to the point that alternative media have sprung up to either take up the mantle of the other party or attempt to present something resembling straight news. The end result is that news consuming public does not know who or what to believe and often ends up watching or reading sources that confirm individual biases.

Andy Griffiths
Andy Griffiths
1 month ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Excellent comment, especially your point re the burglary itself – a pointless and ultimately self-immolating exercise given Nixon wasn’t in danger of losing.

Maybe I’m naive to think impartial news reporting ever truly existed, but it certainly feels like the modern media consists mostly of activists masquerading as journalists. Little wonder trust is so low and we have become so polarised.
.

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago
Reply to  Andy Griffiths

News was never truly impartial. But in the past news organizations were much less aggressive in their activism.

Stephanie Surface
Stephanie Surface
1 month ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

I only follow individual journalists and online magazines like UnHerd. I quit listening to anything coming from MSM

Steven Hintz
Steven Hintz
1 month ago

As a former newspaper reporter, I think the author “buried the lede” as the cliche goes in the latter part of the article. American society survived decades of self-important reporters (I was one for 5 years), but what it won’t survive is corrosive social media. As others have said, it takes the mean-spirited busy bodies of small town life (which many of us couldn’t wait to flee) and has made it global. Social media has caused the death of privacy. Nixon isn’t the watershed figure, but Mark Zuckerberg.

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago
Reply to  Steven Hintz

Social media is largely inflamed by the MSM activists. They are ying and yang of the destruction of civil discourse in the USA.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
1 month ago

“the media exposed Nixon as a petty criminal”
So exactly was Nixon’s crime? He was no worse than Kennedy, Johnson or Clinton.
He antagonised the wrong people, but Hiss was guilty.
He had an unprecedent mandate and was intent on curtailing the power and influence of big business and the blob.
He had to go

Peter B
Peter B
1 month ago

Criminal conspiracy presumably in being involved in the Watergate break in. Likely a few other things as well. Not an expert in the history here, but lying under oath might also feature.
Not sure if some of the stuff he got up to in Latin America in the 1950s was on the statute book at the time. But might be looking at a trip to the Hague if replicated today.
The “Milhouse” documentary about Nixon is worth a watch to help dilute any illusions about the man.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
1 month ago
Reply to  Peter B

You do not even know that he no involvement in the Watergate break-in. His alleged crime was obstruction of justice for engaging in a cover-up which might have been difficult to prove in a Court of law.
What stuff did he get up to in Latin America or was it just stuff stuff with no specific details.
Nixon is the most maligned President of the 20th Century. His enemies we out to get him got and that is exactly what they did.

Peter B
Peter B
1 month ago

Your sentences make no sense …
Nixon didn’t need any enemies to destroy his own reputation. He did it all himself. Much like Boris Johnson.
If you don’t know what Nixon got up to in Latin America in the 1950s, I’m not really sure you’re that well qualified to pass judgement. And it’s not my job to do your homework for you. I gave you one reference already.

Philip Hanna
Philip Hanna
1 month ago

My understanding is that the crime was the coverup. Not disagreeing that there were other forces at play (there always are), but I think he was guilty of an actual crime as well.

Direct Democrat
Direct Democrat
1 month ago

It’s ‘democracy’ in the same sense as this word is used in every dictatorship across the world. It’s pan-institutional government, media and corporate dictatorship.
The obvious alternative for the USA, the UK and the rest of the West? That’s easy. The alternative is Swiss Direct Democracy. Campaign for it now in every way, everybody, everywhere!

Cecil Skell
Cecil Skell
1 month ago

“If America is on the verge of political calamity, it is because for the past five decades, the media has kept the country on the edge of its seat expecting no less.”

Bullseye!

“After Nixon Aenigmaticus, the political question of our time is not: What does this person believe? No one, after all, believes anyone’s profession of belief anymore, least of all a politician’s.”

Nah. Belief remains everything, from MAGA to wokeness. It doesn’t matter what the politician believes, but what the politician represents as belief, because we fear that the others (whoever they are) are stupid enough to vote for the representation.

This matters because the article misses the main point, which is expressed with absolute clarity in the comment by Jim Veenbaas: the media retains its power, even while being so fragmented and dissipated by “everybody can be a reporter” journalism, because it only serves sensationalism and lowest common denominator intelligence—both among journalists and consumers.

For example, my teenage daughter told me yesterday that TikTok was showing her polls that say that 90%+ of girls like her want Harris to be President.

Yes, there’s a trail from Watergate to TikTok populism, but it doesn’t pass through a lack of concern about what a politician believes. Rather, belief is the only thing that matters in 2024. And if you’re a teenage girl, you believe in all the right things—not because of legacy media, but because of some evil Zeitgeist permeating nearly all forms of media.

Y Chromosome
Y Chromosome
1 month ago

Much better focused than so much of what I see on this site, but one sentence jumped out at me: “His pursuit of Alger Hiss for betraying American secrets to the Russians probably had as much to do with Hiss’s elite WASP background as with his treachery.” This arrogant declaration suggests the writer envisions himself as having near psychic abilities to psychoanalyze a man he presumably never met. 

Bryan Dale
Bryan Dale
1 month ago

Thanks to independent media we now Know Woodward and Bernstein are just Democrat party hacks seeking to destroy Republicans.

Robert
Robert
1 month ago

“…like a grizzly bear that kills its first human and will only eat human flesh from then on…”
I’m fairly certain this is not true. However! Other than that, I thought this was a very interesting article about how the legacy/mainstream media, as we know it today, came to be.

David Jory
David Jory
1 month ago

I have had a good chuckle at the two clay footed journalists Woodward and Bernstein. Lauded for Watergate,they were complicit in the 4 year cover up of President Biden’s dementia.
What a way to finish a career,not as journalists but propagandists.

G M
G M
1 month ago

Unfortunately nowadays too much of the media support the powerful elitists and the authorities instead of looking out for the ordinary citizen and reporting unbiased facts.

Too much of the media are on an ideological crusade and spent too much time looking in the mirror at themselves.

David Harris
David Harris
1 month ago

News media’s ‘power without responsibility’. The privilege of prostitutes since the dawn of time.

Martin Johnson
Martin Johnson
1 month ago

Some interesting points, esp. the Shils quote, but the author misses the real story–that all this investigative fervor is almost solely in service of the Democratic Party. The only Democrats who get the treatment are involved in internal Democratic Party fights (think, Gary Hart) and whose sins are truly egregious. When it is anything where a Democrat’s failings might help a Republican, it just does not happen unless utterly forced (Clinton-Lewinsky), and then reluctant and delayed media story minimizes it and even blames the Republican–as in the frequent locution of reporting a Democrat’s problems not in terms of the Democrat’s problems, but as “Republicans pounce.”
As for investigating non-politicians and making loss of privacy as big a change as the author says, Watergate didn’t change anything. Post-1974 journalism has not produced anything remotely like Sinclair’s “The Jungle” or the work of Progressive Era muckrakers like Tarbell or scholars like Veblen.
No, the real lesson that we see in the actions of journalists since 1974 was that aggressive journalism can hurt Republicans. And the current loss of privacy is due in part to technology, and in part that the Democrats are now so empowered by the media that they do things they would never have been able to before the media became their sock puppet.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 month ago
Reply to  Martin Johnson

Indeed, I’ve seen this man a time – if a Democrat does a misdeed, the (liberal) journalist states that: Republicans “pounce”, “seize upon”, “attack”, and that then becomes 90% of the story, instead of the misdeed which the fellow Democrat had done.

Tony Kilmister
Tony Kilmister
1 month ago

Well over a century ago Oscar Wilde stated ‘we are dominated by journalism’. He likened it to a moderately more humane version of the medieval rack. Admittedly, Wilde was having an anarchist moment. Yet there is truth to his sentiment.

It doesn’t require that the press be directed by the State. For the most part the organs of opinion forming gravitate to the interests and concerns of the ruling order because the journalists in-situ typically originate from the in-power classes. Even populist journalism – in the UK, The Sun, The Mirror, The Express and the like – propagate keeping the existing order fundamentally intact.

In recent times, largely due to abject policy failure by the upper orders coinciding with the anarchy of ideas that is social media, journalistic ‘independence’ has unravelled to a large degree. Hence, we see the outlets of classical journalism increasingly sympathetic towards notions of state policing of internet forums, the setting-up of idoelogically- driven ‘fact-checking’ departments, hire policies that effectively exclude lower-order recruitment and resort to pejorative and propagandist language to frame dissenting opinion.

Western media is having a Pravda-lite moment. Short of backing from governments going full authoritarian, it won’t work. It comes across as just too obviously misleading and desperate.

jane baker
jane baker
1 month ago

Id like to add a comment but at a much lower level of intellect you might say. I was a not yet 20 young adult at the Watergate time. I was aware of it but had not a clue what it was about. Mr Nixon did not seem like the monster they kept saying he was,to me. He seemed boring and dull and ordinary,and of course he was. So they had to dump him as they wanted to bring in the era of all singing,all dancing fools with razzle dazzle. His worst crime seemed to be that he swore a lot in private which just seemed normal what most people did to me. And as if our TV and radio (in UK) wasnt full of ‘blinding’ if not then,yet ‘effing’. What I found to this day,and a lot of other people too,is politicians being called out by prurient up themselves journalists who go on to write autobiogs about their crazy life on old Fleet st where they were in the pub most of the time,had a high old time with the local prossies and,being colourful bohos ignored the confining strictures of “middle class” morality. And it was outraged writings by these delicate flowers that brought down many a distinguished and honourable statesmen. Thanks to them we now have the unprincipled overgrown teenagers for our political administration.

Rob N
Rob N
1 month ago

Trump felt “that the 2020 election was stolen from him” because, to all intents and purposes, it was.

There definitely was fraud (there always is, but probably more than usual) but mainly because the media and IC worked to demonise Trump and praise Biden. Democracy needs an honest media and that plainly does not exist now in the US, (or the UK)

David Lindsay
David Lindsay
1 month ago

The Supreme Court now agrees with Richard Nixon that if the President does something, then it cannot be illegal. At least nominally, that prerogative is vested in Joe Biden. It will soon pass, either to Kamala Harris, or back to Donald Trump. What a time to be alive.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
1 month ago
Reply to  David Lindsay

Within the scope of his official duties and powers, yes. Those are clearly delineated in the Constitution.

Brett H
Brett H
1 month ago

Better still, why do Liberals need to be heroes?

Philip Broaddus
Philip Broaddus
1 month ago

Re Hiss, he grew up in difficult circumstances, like Chambers. His patrician wasp pose, was simply that, and explains why he offered his services. And of course, his wife was all in. She did the typing.

Liakoura
Liakoura
1 month ago

“Someone big had to be exposed as doing something really bad, with the result that they had to be made to fall exceptionally hard.”
And much to his surprise Bob Woodward, with whom this piece started, got Donald Trump not only to became the ninth President to agree a series of interviews, but even more surprisingly, got the former President to agree to them being taped, thereby providing the undeniable evidence for the Harris and Walz election campaign.
It’s going to be an interesting time between now and November 5th.