Wall Street Journal
 
 
 _OPINION_ (http://online.wsj.com/public/page/news-opinion-commentary.html) 
 January 1, 2000 
About Us 
A Newspaper's Philosophy

 
The Wall Street Journal, January 2, 1951  
The following editorial appears in today's Chicago Journal of Commerce  
which with this issue becomes an edition of The Wall Street Journal. It sums up 
 for our readers new and old our philosophy in producing a national 
business  newspaper. 
The new publishers of the Chicago Journal of Commerce will not change its  
basic character. It will remain a business newspaper. There will be changes 
in  the makeup and in the presentation of news. We cannot forecast what they 
will  be, for they will be determined largely by the wishes and suggestions 
of  readers.  
What we can tell you now--indeed, what we think is due you--is an account 
of  the principles and standards which guide us in the making of a business  
newspaper; a statement of our publication philosophy.  
A business newspaper must be two things at one and the same time. It must 
be  specialized. Yet the interests and activities of its editors must be as 
diverse  as the American landscape. The editors are specialists in the way 
that a medical  diagnostician is a specialist; the diagnostician has a certain 
function, but to  perform that function he must have an accurate and 
detailed knowledge of the  human anatomy. Just so the business editor must have 
access to all the news. His  specialty is selection and treatment.  
We are like the diagnostician in another respect. We must tell what we find 
 and not merely what will be pleasing.  
There was once a legend that a business newspaper must be a perpetual  
Pollyanna, never admitting that things were other than good or, at the very  
least, stressing those facts which might indicate that they will soon get  
better. We have no truck with any such idea. We don't make the news; we report  
it. We feel no obligation to ask the reader to view it through rose colored  
lenses. If the news is good, we are glad. If it is otherwise, we feel it 
our  obligation to report it otherwise.  
It is not always easy to hew to that line. We have had readers who insisted 
 that if we would just neglect the fact that things are not as good as they 
might  be, the pretense would somehow make them better. We merely reply 
that the  weatherman who predicts a storm is not motivated by some innate 
churlishness.  Indeed he may induce some people to put on their overshoes and 
avoid pneumonia.  
There was another legend about business editors. This one was that they 
were  men surrounded by calculating machines which they used to produce 
statistics. We  do not adhere to that idea either.  
Statistics are handy things and we present a good many of them. Indeed we 
are  the parents of some of the better known statistical indexes. But we 
remember  that by their nature statistics are history. And a newspaper is not a 
history  book. It is the place for live information, telling what is going 
on now and if  possible assembling those facts which may be the basis of 
judgment of what will  be going on tomorrow.  
Then this legend went on. After the business editor had his statistics  
assembled he wrote about them. But he clothed his discourse in a sort of queer  
jargon which had a remote relation to everyday English. The reader was 
supposed  to be impressed and if he did not understand, then it must be due to 
his own  limitations. Some place there must be somebody who knew the meaning 
of the array  of technicalities. We doubt that there was. In fact we doubt 
that the writer  himself always knew what he was talking about and we suspect 
abstruse terms were  used to cover his own confusion.  
We like to have our editors and reporters experts in just one field, which 
is  the field of making a newspaper, of finding information and telling it. 
We  insist that they know what they are writing about and that they tell 
their story  in the simplest language possible. If they can't do that latter, 
it indicates to  us that their own knowledge is incomplete and we send them 
back for the rest of  the information.  
And still more legends. There was one that business was something  
compartmentalized. There was "Big Business" and "Little Business." Within these 
 
categories were other divisions. The man who made mouse traps was basically a  
different fellow than the man who made clothespins. The man who ran a store 
in  New York had different interests than the one who ran a store in San 
Francisco.  
We think that in so far as its information wants are concerned business is  
universal. The information on which a great automobile manufacturer acts is 
the  same information which influences the man who buys his trucks. If 
retail trade  in New York booms or slumps, there is a man in San Francisco who 
wants to know  the whys and wherefores.  
It does not pay to be too certain of anything, but we think we have pretty  
strong evidence that business is a national community. We publish The Wall  
Street Journal in New York and we publish it also in San Francisco and in  
Dallas. Each of those editions is essentially a national newspaper. The 
readers  seem to like it that way. The reason we think they like it is because 
their  number steadily increases.  
To finish with legends. It was said that a national newspaper was 
impractical  in the United States because the country was too vast; that the 
mere 
problem of  distribution would be insuperable. We do have a national 
circulation. We have  been printing in three key cities. Now there is added a 
fourth 
and that is  something to which we have long looked forward. We can now 
deliver to most parts  of the country on the date of publication  
We are a business newspaper. Yet in our subscription lists there are many  
subscribers--many college students for instance--who are not usually 
considered  as business people. They like a publication which presents the 
meaningful news  and the news interpretations of the day, which presents them 
without bias, which  omits the fires, the assaults and the murders and does not 
club them over the  head with black type.  
On our editorial page we make no pretense of walking down the middle of the 
 road. Our comments and interpretations are made from a definite point of 
view.  We believe in the individual, in his wisdom and his decency. We oppose 
all  infringements on individual rights, whether they stem from attempts at 
private  monopoly, labor union monopoly or from an overgrowing government. 
People will  say we are conservative or even reactionary. We are not much 
interested in  labels but if we were to choose one, we would say we are 
radical. Just as  radical as the Christian doctrine.  
We have friends but they have not been made by silence or pussyfooting. If 
we  have enemies, we do not placate them.  
--William H. Grimes, Editor, The Wall Street  Journal

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