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June 18, 2013
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Flashback: WaPo Was For 'Fair Game' Untruths Before It Was Against Them

By Lachlan Markay | December 06, 2010 | 14:58

A  A

As NB's Noel Sheppard noted on Sunday, the new film "Fair Game" is so full of falsehoods and is such an affront to historical accuracy that even the Washington Post's editorial staff felt obligated to debunk the many untruths it presents.

Click through to that post for details about the many lies (some of which have been consciously pushed by many on the left since the scandal erupted) on which the film's plot rests. You can also check out this NB post for another roundup.

While it's certainly refreshing to see even the liberal WaPo editorial page debunking the "Fair Game" nonsense, the Post's newsroom staff have unfortunately been among those lauding the film for - believe it or not - speaking to "larger truths" (paraphrasing) by, well, lying (h/t Ed Driscoll).

NB's P.J. Gladnick caught Post staff writer Ann Hornaday praising the film in August for creating what she calls a "usable past".

As long as dramatists seek to make protagonists out of mere humans -- to reduce their tangled webs of contradictions, complexities and banalities to a set of single-minded motivations and fatal flaws -- audiences will need to approach these narratives with a blend of sophistication and skepticism. But maybe the best way to understand these films isn't as narrative at all, but an experience more akin to ritual. When religious pilgrims travel to the sacred sites of the Holy Land, for example, the locations they visit often aren't the literal places where a biblical figure was born or baptized. Instead, they're the sites that, through centuries of use and shared meaning, have become infused with a spiritual reality all their own.

Thus, the movies about Washington that get the right stuff right -- or get some stuff wrong but in the right way -- become their own form of consensus history. "Follow the money," then, assumes its own totemic truth. Ratified through repeated viewings in theaters, on Netflix and beyond, these films become a mutual exercise in creating a usable past. We watch them to be entertained, surely, and maybe educated. But we keep watching them in order to remember.

That phrase "usable past" is shocking both in its candor - Hornaday is quite matter-of-fact about her lack of concern over the numerous inaccuracies in "Fair Game" - and, as Gladnick noted, its Orwellian disregard for truth. Richard Armitage, the man who leaked Plame's name, is never mentioned. But so what? Film creates a "usable" past, not an accurate past.

The Post has presented two distinct positions on "Fair Game", The first, expressed by Hornaday, applauds film for perpetuating falsehoods - a usable past, instead of an accurate past, and one that "we keep watching in order to remember." Never mind that what we remember is not actually what took place.

The paper's second stance advocates truth over "zeitgeist" and accuracy over political or cultural expediency. The line "We certainly hope that is not the case" could well have been directed at Hornaday herself, and anyone else who believes that falsehood is actually fact where it serves some higher "truth" than the simple facts under examination.

Exit question: On December 1, Democratic strategists released a memo warning against what they call "Politics as Warfare". In the Politics as Warfare mindset, they wrote, "standard norms of honesty are irrelevant. Lying and the use of false propaganda are considered necessary and acceptable. The 'truth' is what serves to advance the party's objectives."

The Post's editorial department seems to understand the problems inherent in a journalist advocating anything but the absolute factual accuracy of any historical account. But is the paper's newsroom so steeped in this sort of philosophy that it considers lying acceptable as long as it is done in the service of some greater truth - say, that the Bush administration was corrupt and dishonest?

About the Author

Lachlan Markay is an associate with Dialog New Media. Click here to follow Lachlan Markay on Twitter.
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Comments

A 'usable past'

Submitted by Galvanic on Mon, 12/06/2010 - 2:15pm.

Hmmmm.

Would a corollary of that be a 'usable thruth?'

We've certainly seen a lot of that coming out of Washington.

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One must ask the next question....

Submitted by c5then on Mon, 12/06/2010 - 3:54pm.

Useable for what or to what end. When is a lie or a misrepresentation of facts useable?

Only in propaganda. Only in creating and/or perpetuating a false "reality" to further some ideology or purpose. The Soviets were very good at this as are the Chinese. Is this the company that the Washington Post is comfortable with it's reporters keeping?

This is along the same lines as the meme that the SCOTUS helped G.W. Bush "steal" the 2000 presidential election in Florida. It isn't true, but it is a"useable past" for the left.

 

Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it! 

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Mulville Rule #1

Submitted by KC Mulville on Mon, 12/06/2010 - 4:20pm.

Mulville Rule #1: There is reality. There is belief. There is knowledge. Do not confuse the three.

When you argue about usable pasts, higher truths, or Dan Rather-type "inaccurate but true" nonsense, you've violated Mulville Rule #1 ... you've confused belief for knowledge. You've confused belief-about-reality for knowledge-about-reality.

Consider ...

  • If you put brooms in a closet and close the closet door, are the brooms still there? Whatever you answer is "mere" belief. You cannot claim to have knowledge, because you have no way to justify your belief. Knowledge implies justification. You have to offer some corroboration for your belief to call it knowledge, otherwise it's "mere" belief.
  • This distinction about knowledge matters, because it's what professionals peddle as their stock in trade. For example, journalism and law both claim to offer more than mere beliefs. Both journalists and lawyers claim to offer beliefs backed up by justification, or some kind of compelling evidence. 

If you put out a movie and claim that it's just a fictional thrill-ride, no one looks for evidence. But if you want to push it as expressing truth, we'll take it as a mere belief, unless you offer evidence or justification. When a movie-maker claims to express truth, but then fills his movie with "artistic" short-cuts (i.e., convenient lies), then we treat the movie with the same respect that we treat a lawyer who pounds the table because he has no facts. All the movie expresses is a belief, and a belief isn't the same as knowledge. (Both beliefs and knowledge could be equally true, but knowledge compels agreement.) 

Unfortunately, when artists, film-makers, and media reporters can't assemble genuine evidence, they resort to the tricks of fiction to compensate for lack of justification. They justify their beliefs with passion and sarcasm, instead of genuine evidence. Would you believe a lawyer who had nothing other than passion and sarcasm? Then why would anyone believe a media reporter or a film-maker who doesn't offer facts, but only passion and sarcasm?

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