Freedom of the press? Or to make lots of cash?

By Weber Lai û®Ë‰U

Saturday, Nov 05, 2005,Page 8
As a result of its reporting of the Kaohsiung MRT corruption scandal, what 
started out as a simple issue of TVBS stock ownership has now developed into 
a question of freedom of the press. Even US officials have expressed hope 
that Taiwan will continue to protect the freedom of the press.

But is freedom of the press really under attack?

Before answering this, maybe we should ask what freedom of the press really 
is. Although countries around the world stress the importance of freedom of 
the press, no one -- including the International Press Organization and 
Reporters Without Borders -- has proposed a definition of "freedom of the 
press."

The 17th century writer John Milton, who is generally accepted as the 
originator of the concept, never mentioned freedom of the press, but rather 
proposed freedom of speech and print, since the press had not yet taken 
shape at the time. Although the nascent press had adopted the concept by the 
18th century, a complete academic field pertaining to the freedom of the 
press has yet to be established.

There are significant shortcomings even in the established "fourth estate" 
concept. This is the reason why there are so many examples in US judicial 
affairs that seem to go against the idea of freedom of the press. One 
obvious example is the current controversy surrounding the New York Times 
reporter Judith Miller.

Although freedom of the press can't be clearly defined, a majority of people 
know that "the government should not interfere with the press." This idea is 
grounded in 17th century liberalism. The dictatorial rule at the time meant 
that private groups were relatively weak, and that was the reason why 
academics advocated distancing the press from government and moving toward 
markets in order to avoid stifling the growth of a civil society.

Today, however, media markets are highly developed and many companies have 
developed into huge monsters. Domestically and internationally, big 
corporations lead the way. In this environment, "freedom of the press" often 
means freedom for the media-owning minority. With profit-making as the 
guiding light for the media industry, it becomes difficult to avoid reliance 
on sensationalism in the quest for viewers and readers. Freedom of the press 
becomes freedom for a minority to go to any lengths to make money.

When parents support anti-TV activities because they worry about "media 
pollution," we cannot help but ask who this market-led freedom is for, what 
its significance is to civic and social development, and whether freedom of 
the press in this country really is under attack.

Maybe freedom of the press doesn't exist in Taiwan. These are all questions 
that society at large should consider.

Freedom of the press does not mean that the state cannot oversee the media. 
Why else would there be a need to establish a national communications 
commission? The state must not interfere arbitrarily with the press, nor can 
political forces, including the opposition, interfere in their own 
interests.

As Taiwan has joined the WTO, the state should guarantee that domestic media 
outlets are not taken over by international forces to avoid losing a 
platform for expressing local public opinion and disseminating cultural 
values. At the same time, the state must finance research into the freedoms 
of speech and the press to let humanism replace raw capitalism and initiate 
the reconstruction of media order so that everyone can enjoy these rights.

This is what the UN's World Summit on the Information Society calls for and 
it should be at the core of media policy.


Weber Lai is an assistant professor in the department of mass communications 
at Chinese Culture University.

Translated by Perry Svensson

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2005/11/05/2003278870




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