[It demands an amazing level of command over the English language to
bracket "pliable" and "presstitute" together.
In fact, it speaks for itself.
Rather eloquently.

And, no less enlightening is the fact that one needed a "pliable" to wake
up to the "presstitute".
A very pathetic state of affairs.

<<The joint statement by the Press Club of India, Indian Women's Press
Corps and Press Association says: “Terms like ‘presstitute’ used by a
former union minister and more recently ‘pliable’ by the president of a
political party for the media are inappropriate and lower the dignity of
discourse in general.”
...
By reading the Guild’s own statement, it’s clear that they believe
“civilised criticism is okay” at the same time that they find Rahul
Gandhi’s criticism problematic, which leads me to conclude that the Guild
believes the word “pliable” is uncivilised or inappropriate. In the very
same statement, the Guild has thrown in presstitute, bazaaru and dalal as
other objectionable terms used in the past by the BJP and AAP to attack
news media. So basically it’s one general complaint against politicians
with Rahul Gandhi as the “peg” of the story, if I were to use a newsy
approach. Same with the joint statement throwing in a mention of the
incarcerated Kishorechand Wangkhem as the side-show to the discourtesy
shown to Smita Prakash by Rahul Gandhi.》t the same time that they find
Rahul Gandhi’s criticism problematic, which leads me to conclude that the
Guild believes the word “pliable” is uncivilised or inappropriate. In the
very same statement, the Guild has thrown in presstitute, bazaaru and dalal
as other objectionable terms used in the past by the BJP and AAP to attack
news media. So basically it’s one general complaint against politicians
with Rahul Gandhi as the “peg” of the story, if I were to use a newsy
approach. Same with the joint statement throwing in a mention of the
incarcerated Kishorechand Wangkhem as the side-show to the discourtesy
shown to Smita Prakash by Rahul Gandhi.>>

Btw,here is the "offensive" comment: <
https://twitter.com/INCIndia/status/1080807824840478721>.]

https://www.newslaundry.com/2019/01/04/pliablejournalist-the-problem-with-the-editors-guilds-intervention?fbclid=IwAR3H31lRrdVKNYN8SXNQtjVVikMo6l8wWD_2UKhFuY92PjgOblpGip5oxRU

#PliableJournalist: The problem with the Editors Guild’s intervention
Bodies that represent journalists need to be discerning while speaking up.

By Abhinandan Sekhri | Jan 4, 2019 0 Comments

Rahul Gandhi’s jibe at ANI Editor Smita Prakash has caused a bit of a
furore. This is unsurprising at a time when anything and everything is
outrage-worthy. However, in this specific case, the Editors Guild has
stepped into the melee and issued a statement chastising Rahul Gandhi, as
has the Press Club of India, Indian Women's Press Corps and Press
Association.

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Editors Guild of India
✔
@IndEditorsGuild
 The Editors Guild of India has issued a statement.

2,494
7:26 PM - Jan 3, 2019
2,765 people are talking about this
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The joint statement by the Press Club of India, Indian Women's Press Corps
and Press Association says: “Terms like ‘presstitute’ used by a former
union minister and more recently ‘pliable’ by the president of a political
party for the media are inappropriate and lower the dignity of discourse in
general.”

View image on Twitter
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Anita Joshua
@anitajoshua
 Joint statement of Press Club of India, Indian Women's Press Corps & Press
Association on politicians using terms like "presstitute" and "pliable" for
journalists. Also calls for dropping of charges against Manipur journalist
#KishoreWangkhem .

1
6:11 PM - Jan 3, 2019
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In the same statement, the organisations also threw in: “We note with deep
concern the continued incarceration of Manipur journalist Kishorechand
Wangkhem under the NSA for his social media post criticising members of the
ruling party at the state and centre. We reiterate our demand that the
charges against Mr Wangkhem be dropped...” Possibly because both offenses
are seen as similar or equivalent by the body.

The Editors Guild is a “bipartisan body” (as mentioned in the statement)
and has a very important role that impacts all news professionals. Its
functioning and standing up for journalism and journalists is of way more
consequence than we realise and that the organisation is often given credit
for. How relevant it chooses to remain will be determined by its own
conduct and wisdom. When bodies that represent journalists put out
statements, they must be for reasons serious enough to warrant them—an
incarceration, an assault, using police or public institutions to bully,
and anything that prevents journalists from doing their jobs.

In this particular case, I was not sure what the purpose of the
intervention was. The way I see it, one could have any of the following
concerns.

- That news organisations or journalists should not be criticised by
politicians at all.

- That politicians can criticise journalists but the words used should not
be abusive or insulting. In this case the word used was “pliable”.

- The third possibility is that criticism is okay and the word “pliable” is
also fine, but the Editors Guild feels it’s unfair in this case. This could
be because the Guild finds the interview appropriately probing and robust
as a journalistic exercise.

By reading the Guild’s own statement, it’s clear that they believe
“civilised criticism is okay” at the same time that they find Rahul
Gandhi’s criticism problematic, which leads me to conclude that the Guild
believes the word “pliable” is uncivilised or inappropriate. In the very
same statement, the Guild has thrown in presstitute,  bazaaru and dalal as
other objectionable terms used in the past by the BJP and AAP to attack
news media. So basically it’s one general complaint against politicians
with Rahul Gandhi as the “peg” of the story, if I were to use a newsy
approach. Same with the joint statement throwing in a mention of the
incarcerated Kishorechand Wangkhem as the side-show to the discourtesy
shown to Smita Prakash by Rahul Gandhi.

If the suggestion is that the word “pliable” falls in the same category of
insults or attacks as “presstitute” or incarceration, then what constitutes
civilised criticism may be significantly narrow.

The problem with this intervention by these organisations is that it seems
to stem from trying the “there are good/bad people on all sides” type
balancing act and/or overcompensating for an expected backlash from Rahul
haters. It also has the hint of the over wokeness-inspired paranoia some
millennials demonstrate. This flies in the face of the claim of the “thick
skin” that the Guild congratulates itself for in the last paragraph of the
statement issued.

Personally, I thought that Smita Prakash’s interview of Narendra Modi was
the toughest he has faced since 2013. That may not be something to
celebrate, considering the ones by Arnab Goswami, Sudhir Chaudhry and some
other pliable journalists were so cringe-inducing that even I—who is
otherwise happy to see them embarrassed—winced. Ms Prakash’s interview may
not have been aggressive and combative, which is fine, considering Mr Modi
is the Prime Minister, but it was not a suck-up interview either. It was
certainly tougher than any interview Sonia Gandhi negotiated. I disagree
with Rahul Gandhi on his take. We can all react as individuals which is a
good thing but does Gandhi’s criticism warrant this intervention by
journalism bodies?

If every quip needs a statement, then the Guild will have to issue one on a
daily basis. The fear of being called out by whatabouters cannot be a
reason to put their weight behind an observation (even if inaccurate,
though very subjective) about journalists by politicians. There are far
bigger assaults happening like the one on Shajila Ali Fathima of Kairali TV
or those reporters arrested and put behind bars.

For a body that represents journalists to be relevant in its upholding the
rights and values of news professionals, it needs to be discerning while
speaking up. If everything is uncivilised, then nothing is uncivilised. If
everything is an assault, then nothing is an assault. A statement about
everything (prison, presstitute, bazaaru, pliable, etc.) becomes a
statement about nothing.

Complaining about the media is easy and often justified. But hey, it’s the
model that's flawed.
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