By Steve Yuhas
The Internet has proved its value again this week as a group of bloggers exposed a photo shot by a Reuters News Service photographer as a fraud. The photo was not just any photo and the photographer not just any photographer; rather, the photo was allegedly of damage done to Lebanon by Israeli military forces and the photographer, a Lebanese man named Adnan Hajj, a person that supplied other pictures to the news outlet to help turn world opinion against Israel in the most recent conflict.
Adding insult to injury another spectacle is going on behind the scenes at
Reuters as it attempts to deflect attention away from the fact that one of their
employees sent an anti-Semitic email to an Internet site (www.littlegreenfootballs.com).
As of this writing the employee has not been named, but was suspended after
Charles Johnson, the owner of the blog, was able to trace the email that said,
“I look forward to the day when you pigs get your throats cut."
The question now becomes obvious: Reuters is one of the largest news
organizations in the world with reporters and photographers all over the globe
making reports and taking pictures to share with the world; how many of them
have altered their photographs, made up their reporting or have such hate for
Jews that they are willing to taint their coverage?
If photographs cannot be believed and Reuters obviously has a problem with
anti-Semitism on their staff – how can they be believed in anything – especially
the important issues facing the world?
All of this began when bloggers first noticed that pictures coming out of Beirut
looked eerily similar to one another – not just because multiple people took
pictures of the same thing, but because smoke plumes were exactly alike and
buildings seemed to replicate themselves. Add to that the fact that the same
corpses seemed to be showing up in newspapers all over the country and on
television and any logical person would question how these things could happen.
Was it coincidence or an intentional decision to mislead people in order to
influence public opinion over the events taking place in the Middle East?
The answer, of course, is obvious: pictures were doctored and corpses of
children used and re-used in order to paint Israel as a nation of killers and
Lebanon and her people as a nation of peace loving folks who just happened to
vote Hezbollah into power without knowing their potential or previous connection
to terrorism.
Blogging became well known and respectable after, during the 2004 presidential
election, they made public the fact that CBS News used forged documents during a
news story that showed President Bush shirked his duty as a National Guard
pilot. After that blogging became serious as more and more stories were broke by
bloggers who can trace their heritage back to Matt Drudge of the
DrudgeReport.com – the man who made the blue dress and Monica Lewinsky a
household name.
Now enter bloggers who have access not only to a computer, but access to the
same software that can be used to alter photographs or to quickly call up audio,
video or text to compare to others. There was a time when a mainstream media
outlet like Reuters would never have been questioned and now bloggers are not
only questioning them, but calling them to account when they’re found to have
done something wrong. Blogging used to be looked at as a simple pajama clad
pastime, but now – after this most recent media embarrassment by a group of
bloggers – it has to be looked at as serious journalism and the mainstream media
should pay attention.
A story of this magnitude breaking in the New York Times would make a person
eligible for a Pulitzer, but what award do bloggers have to look forward to
after showing that Reuters was not only distributing fraudulent photos, but had
people on staff who have a vested interest in making sure these photographs and
gross exaggerations of Israeli aggression make the front pages of newspapers
across America?
Probably nothing, but I submit the bloggers of the nation have just taken a huge
chunk out of the iceberg that was the mainstream media. It is one thing to
expose an attempt to portray a sitting President of the United States as a draft
dodger and to sway a close election, but it is quite another to not only doctor
photos and video (or at least acquiesce to their distribution) of photos and
film of what may very well be the most important issue facing the world today.
There is no doubt that some blogs are partisan places where anything one party
does is good and the other party bad, but there are places where bloggers are
only looking for the truth and it appears that in the case of
LittleGreenFootballs.com, like the DrudgeReport.com, it has been found and the
sad truth is that Reuters cannot be trusted to bring the news about the conflict
in the Middle East to the world.
Reuters will have to take a long hard look at itself and do exactly what the New
York Times did when it was taken in by some of her columnists: an audit of her
pictures and stories as another photo is coming into question and other videos
that feature the same rescuers and victims over and over are again being played
for world consumption.
If Reuters does not take the time to review the work they have submitted to the
world then the world should abandon Reuters as a relic of the previous era when
news outlets were at least trustworthy and wanted to bring the story to the
people. Instead – today – Reuters can accurately be painted as an outlet wanting
to bring the story they want to bring and will do anything to bring it.
Even if it means faking photos and victims and not asking the questions about
pictures that anyone familiar with off the shelf photo-editing software asked at
a blog site in cyberspace.
About the Author
Steve Yuhas is a radio talk show host on KOGO AM 600 in southern California. He
may be reached at
www.steveyuhas.com or
steve@steveyuhas.com.