Posted by Randy Barnett:
Accurate But Fake:  

   Over the past few weeks, I have had two interesting experiences with
   the fact checking process of the MSM: the New Yorker and the New York
   Times to be precise. The New Yorker was the first to contact me to
   fact check Margaret Talbot's story on Justice Scalia. In order to show
   that the Justice was exaggerating the history of originalism, the
   original story contained some questionable claims. I found it
   interesting, and reassuring, that the fact checkers sought out a
   professor like me who subscribes to originalism to double check these
   claims. All the errors I noted were corrected in the final story,
   though of course this did not unduly affect its overall negative
   slant. A week later, I was having dinner in Princeton with a group of
   professors and graduate students after my talk there. When I asked if
   anyone had seen the article, Keith Whittington piped up that he had
   been contacted to fact check it. So not one but TWO originalist
   scholars had been contacted. Very impressive indeed.
   Last week, I was contacted by the NYT to fact check what was going to
   be said about me in Jeff Rosen's Sunday Magazine story on the
   so-called "Constitution in Exile" movement. Like others, I had never
   heard this phrase until long after it was being used by "moderates"
   like Cass Sunstein. As the blogosphere is already effectively
   dismembering the substance of Rosen's in-depth report on the VLC (Vast
   Libertarian Conspiracy), I thought I would confine myself to my
   experience with the Times fact checking process.
   Almost all the claims the fact checker wanted to confirm had some sort
   of minor defect, most of which had nothing to do with the obviously
   negative slant of the piece. For example, it described Angel Raich as
   formerly paralyzed; it had the wrong number of states adopting medical
   cannabis statutes.
   One erroneous claim, however, was definitely part of the story's slant
   that I was a part of an organized "Constitution In Exile" movement:
   that the Cato Institute had either paid for or published my book,
   [1]Restoring the Lost Constitution. This claim was removed from the
   finished article after I explained that the book had been published by
   Princeton in its normal acquisition process, but that Cato had
   assisted me during my university sabbatical year when I wrote the
   first draft of the manuscript (as I acknowledge in the book). Score
   one for the fact checking process.
   The only accurate but misleading claim that remained was that my "book
   identifies a series of regulations that he says the courts should
   consider constitutionally suspect, from environmental laws to laws
   forbidding the mere possession of ordinary firearms, therapeutic drugs
   or pornography."
   I knew about the environmental law issue, of course, as I mentioned it
   to Jeff and offered it in the book as an example of an "unhappy
   ending" that I think represents an oversight in the original
   Constitution. Jeff had tried very hard to get me to say what laws
   would be unconstitutional under my approach. As my approach is
   presumptive, however, this is hard to answer in the abstract, as the
   success of any challenge to a particular law will depend a lot on
   specifics. An analysis of the constitutionality of any particular law
   would require a lengthy analysis.
   So I pointed to the section of my book where I discuss what I think is
   the unfortunate consequence that some environmental activities would
   be within the jurisdiction of state not federal regulation. In the
   book, I offer this as one of the very rare instances in which the
   Founders did not anticipate a genuine cross-border national problem
   properly handled at the national level. He ended up using this in his
   story, of course, as I knew he would--albeit without my disclaimer
   that I offered this as an example of a bad consequence I would like to
   see corrected by constitutional amendment (that would pass in a week
   if the Court ever held Congress to its Commerce Clause power on this
   issue).
   I had to ask the fact checker for the pages where I discuss "firearms,
   therapeutic drugs, and pornography" as I did not recall having done
   so. Sure enough all three examples are in one single sentence as
   illustrations of the sort of pure "possessory" laws that would be
   suspect under the conception of the state police power that I defend
   in the book. When I read the fact checker the entire paragraph (he did
   not have the whole sentence or a copy of the book), I stressed that it
   applied only to pure "possessory" crimes. I told him that, contrary to
   what the use of these examples implied, I never claimed that the
   manufacture or sale of these items could not, constitutionally, be
   regulated. He said that he would consult with the editors and get back
   to me. Over dinner, it occurred to me that if they added "mere"
   possession, this would ameliorate (though not entirely eliminate) the
   implication that my approach ruled out all regulation. After dinner,
   the phone rang and the fact checker informed me that the editors had
   decided to insert the word "mere" in front of possession (without my
   even suggesting they do so).
   What is interesting about having experienced this fact checking
   process first hand is that, in both cases, there was a sincere effort
   by the fact checkers to verify suspect claims--claims that really were
   inaccurate. In each case, where I explained my objections, these
   claims were then corrected. Yet the overall misleading slant of the
   NYT story was preserved. None of this is the fact checker's fault, or
   even the fault of the fact checking process, which I found to be
   admirable. With both the New Yorker and NYT, the fact checkers were
   sincere in their desire to get the facts correct. Both were very
   impressive and the resulting articles were more accurate as a result.
   But an important lesson here is that accurate facts can still be used
   to compile a highly distorted story like the one by Jeff Rosen, a
   person I have known and respected for many years--dating back to his
   very useful student article on the founders' conception of
   unenumerated rights. It was out of this respect for Jeff that I gave
   him a long and candid phone interview last February, but I could tell
   from the questions what the slant would ultimately be.
   Despite the MSM's claim to greater accuracy than blogs, fact checkers
   cannot alter the spin an author can put on what the National Lampoon
   used to call "true facts"--especially when this is the very spin the
   editors had in mind when they solicited the article. Apart from the
   inaccurate constitutional history noted by David, I cannot quarrel
   with any of the facts reported in Jeff's piece. They are true, even if
   the impression given by the story to credulous readers of the New York
   Times is false. Fittingly, the "accurate but fake" nature of the
   "Constitution in Exile" story is best illustrated--literally--by the
   unrecognizable morgue photos of Richard Epstein and Michael
   Greve--both are literally unrecognizable to me if I did not know who
   they were supposed to be--and the "Snidely Whiplash" picture of Chip
   Mellor.
   Yes this Really is Richard Epstein Michael Greve IJ's Chip Mellor AKA
   While all were certainly actual photos taken these three men by the
   Times photographer, at the same time they all were fake. How fitting.

References

   1. 
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0691115850/ref=ase_randyebarnetbost/103-5416531-4350254?v=glance&s=books

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