
American Muckraker
Rethinking Journalism for the 21st Century
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Buy Now for $22.99
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Narrated by:
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James O'Keefe
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By:
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James O'Keefe
About this listen
This seminal work of nonfiction recounts the new, journalistic mass movement of today. Compiled from more than a decade of investigative reporting, coupled with a vast reference of philosophical research, American Muckraker is the definitive guide of truth-telling in the video age.
On power
They do have tremendous power. But in part, it is because we give it to them. We are nothing, but we are not alone. Awe cannot live in fear. The moment you stop caring about what the media establishment thinks of you is the moment you become truly free.
On insiders
The USPS whistleblower, a Marine Corps combat veteran, said, “I would rather be back in Afghanistan, getting shot at by Afghans, honest to God, than be interrogated by federal agent Russell Strasser," who coerced him by saying, “I am trying to twist you a little bit, because your mind will kick in.... I am not scaring you, but I am scaring you.”
On privacy
The right to record is closely tied to the right to speak, or even to take contemporaneous notes about what one sees and hears. As 60 Minutes producer Don Hewitt quipped, “People committing malfeasance don’t have any right to privacy.... What are we saying - that Upton Sinclair shouldn’t have smuggled his pencil in?”
On means and ends
Whereas the novelist Ernest Hemingway said, “What is moral is what you feel good after, and what is immoral is what you feel bad after,” Thomas B. Morgan of the 1960s New Journalism contends, “Morally defensible journalism is rarely what you feel good about afterward; it is only that which makes you feel better than you would otherwise.”
On litigation
“Polling does not decide the truth nor speak to evidence.... The New York Times have not met their burden to prove that Veritas is deceptive....claiming protections from an upstart competitor armed with a cell phone and a website. There is a substantial basis in law to proceed, to permit Project Veritas, to conduct discovery into The New York Times.” (Project Veritas v. New York Times Company; New York Supreme Court, March 18, 2021)
©2022 James O'Keefe (P)2022 Post Hill PressI wish all journalists had the integrity
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James is perhaps one of the most articulate young people alive today, driven by an absolute cause to improve the world. History will remember him like Churchill and Plato
Should be taught in schools
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Evidence based arguments and clear factual examples of good and bad journalism.
Relevant contemporary situations demonstrating the collapse of the mainstream media into a decadent state of normalisation of the lies to be passed as the convenient truth of the woke progressive liberalism, ingrained in the Democratic Party and their followers!
The importance of focusing on the message as stated by the one who spoke it, rather than focusing on the means by which it was sourced.
The exposure of the gradual loss of our freedoms under the First Amendment and the blatant collusion between government and the big tech and media at all levels.
But despite all the negativity we are encouraged by the principled and courageous Muckrakers who will not be broken by the evil of those who want to silence them. We salute you!
Stand by the truth
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Great listening to James
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How to book on bringing integrity back to Journalism
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