Ethics of Journalism - Questioned by Jimmy Gerum

By CrisHam, 20 November, 2024

Text author: Jimmy Gerum

Foreword by Christian Hamann

Jimmy Gerum is a freedom hero whose citizens' initiative "Leuchtturm ARD" deserves more attention. At first glance, the name of the movement seems like a joke, because only a few people with sound judgment would see the ARD, the association of public broadcasters, as a beacon that provides reliable orientation in difficult times - quite the opposite. But there is a vastly underestimated potential in the ARD to be developed into such a beacon. This requires commitment from citizens - a very manageable commitment, as is explained in more detail on the citizens' movement's website. https://leuchtturmard.de Jimmy Gerum and his initiative have already achieved a lot, including winning a groundbreaking case before the Federal Administrative Court. https://www.faz.net/aktuell/feuilleton/medien/rundfunkbeitrag-bundesverwaltungsgericht-will-ard-und-zdf-pruefen-19783691.html 

The citizens' initiative welcomes feedback and inquiries, please call +49-151-5055 2062

 

 

Lighthouse Media Evolution
The Ethics of Journalism - Questioned by Jimmy Gerum

1. Humanity Desires Peace, Understanding, and Diplomacy

This desire is one of the greatest achievements of our civilization's history. Our elected officials are advised and influenced by very powerful lobbyists, in particular by lobbyists of the military-industrial complex, major pharmaceutical companies and other corporate, profit driven interests. People's opinions are influenced by mainstream media, in Europe especially by taxpayer funded public broadcasters. How can it be that the public broadcasters and other leading media predominantly convey the opinions of lobbyists to the people? 

Where are the ethical principles in support of peace (instead of more military conflict), understanding (instead of the vilification of other opinions) and diplomacy (instead of disrespect)? These should all have much greater weight than corporate interests.

2. Loss of Trust

The presence of high-quality, independent, and investigative news portals on the internet has clearly been making the bias of mainstream media reporting obvious to viewers. This is the leading reason for loss of trust in the mainstream media today. Why do you, as mainstream media, not follow the example of these internet offerings which touch topics of vital importance without the bias of corporate lobby interests? Why have your programs been ignoring or defaming this development already for years, a development that has increasingly provided the urgently needed multiplicity of perspectives?

3. Journalism Often Misused by Political Interests

When critical viewers can see how journalists are misused by political interests, one has to ask why the journalists themselves are not aware of the abuse in which they are involved.The misuse often becomes apparent or is properly identified and investigated only after many years. There are plenty of examples of government funded media pushing geopolitical and military interests at the expense of human lives. Examples include the Balkan Wars, the Incubator Lie during the Iraq War in 1991, the prehistory of the Ukraine conflict, Libya, and more. Why does the mainstream media not engage in historical reappraisal to regain trust in public broadcasting?

4. Lack of Courage in Journalism

Why does government and corporate backed journalism lack the courage to interpret and present the latest findings of historical events? For example, addressing topics like the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and 9/11 with the latest findings can help regain the people’s trust in the media. The more detailed information like the study of the collapse of the third building on 9/11 by Professor Leroy Hulsey at the University of Fairbanks remains unaddressed, the less trust there is in your independence.

5. Marginalization of Brave Journalists

Why are courageous journalists like Patrik Baab (of the NDR in Germany) or dual Canadian/American journalist Eva Bartlett, marginalized instead of being honoured for their courage and investigative work?  Where are the days of journalists like Gary Webb (featured in the movie “Kill the Messenger”)?

6. Avoidance of Open Discussion in Talk Shows

Why do all talk shows avoid open discussion with critics of Western hegemony? How can trust arise when Western values are merely given lip service and hypocrisy abounds?

7. Implications of Political Manipulation

Being aware of political manipulation in the past can help people recognize manipulation in the present. Therefore, Good journalism must always make the underlying interests visible. (For example, whose interests were served when Boris Johnson interfered in the nearly completed Ukraine Russia peace deal in 2022? Or when the Nordstream Pipeline was sabotaged, creating the largest ever unreported environmental disaster of our time?) Historical reappraisal, i.e. looking back on past events without bias, can create new trust in the media outlets that dare to report on political manipulation of events. Who bears the responsibility when this almost never happens?

8. Wikipedia and Political Manipulation

Wikipedia is now the world's leading encyclopedia. Unfortunately, many of its articles demonstrate political manipulation. This is a matter of general interest. There are privately funded, hour-long documentaries on the internet about this. When will public broadcasters take on the necessary educational work and present similar documentaries taking a critical look at modern day censorship in all its forms?

9. Job Security for Journalists

Journalists working for public broadcasters without permanent contracts cannot be brave and independent without risking their assignments. When will a supportive incentive system and strong legal backing for investigative journalism be established? When will you ensure job security for those editors who authorize inconvenient investigations?

10. Reporting on the Lighthouse Media Evolution Initiative

When will there be reporting on the serious intentions of the Lighthouse initiative, which has been demanding balanced and state-independent public broadcasting with vigils in over 50 cities for 100 weeks?

11. Violation of Broadcasting Standards and Journalism Ethics During the COVID Crisis

When will there be an open reappraisal of the significant violations of press ethics codes that have occurred throughout the COVID crisis?

12. Importance of Financial Transactions

When will there be reporting on the importance of financial transactions and the resulting significant dangers to our democracy? For example, which foundations with which political interests finance “fact-checkers”? Which of the “non-state actors” of the World Health Organizations have which sway on behalf of which backers? To what degree is editorial content of which media organizations, which publishers, which scientific and medical journals, reliant upon advertising and sponsorship revenue from which sources?  What impact does the “money trail” have on the objectivity of the media?

13. Organizations Constructing International Narratives

When will there be reporting on organizations like the "Trusted News Initiative," "Project Syndicate," or "Google News Initiative" that demonstrably reinforce bias and construct international narratives contrary to the general interest? Who is investigating the investment interests of the social media companies who have partnered with media organizations in the pursuit of “Truth”, given their capabilities to monitor their users and manipulating content in directions that primarily serve their own, not the public interest?

14. Narrowing of Discourse Among Editors

We hear from many editors about the narrowing of discourse, with critical topics increasingly being rejected. The resulting self-censorship is a serious and worsening issue. When will this be publicly discussed?

15. Need for Independent Public Broadcasting

We urgently need public broadcasting, with balanced reporting independent of the state and without regard to individual political and economic interests. Why can't publicly funded media achieve independence, especially in countries where citizens are compelled to pay for this service through mandatory government directed fee payments?

A creative and democratic future society needs dialogue and an open and fair discourse about the evident ethical failings in global journalism. 

For 100 weeks, we have invited you, our publicly funded broadcasters, to join us in finding solutions to the above list of problems. We have proposed round tables mediated by competent experts in order to work through these problems jointly. Unfortunately, for 100 weeks, we have documented your choice to ignore our invitation - your silence towards this dialogue offer is a sad testament to a democracy that needs revival!