Journalism
demands a reporter to give facts, not paint a narrative to fit their own
political world view. If Nick Sandmann does nothing else with his life, he will
have accomplished teaching a lesson to some of the least ethical members of the
fourth estate ever to don a press badge.
You remember
Sandmann. He’s the 16-year-old who was slandered by a host of media outlets in
March of last year while his Kentucky Catholic High School attended a pro-life
rally in our nation’s capital. This week CNN settled a lawsuit brought by his
family for falsely attacking him.
CNN and many
other media giants painted Sandmann and his classmates as menacing and racist
for standing and smiling as an elderly Native American man drummed and chanted
in front of them. It was only later that it became obvious the media had edited
the video of the event to sell the idea that the students had pushed the
encounter. Actually, it was the other way around.
Sandmann’s
greatest sin was wearing a “Make America Great Again” red hat. That made the
poor reporting totally acceptable to the folks who run CNN. Attorneys for him filed
suit against CNN, NBC and the Washington Post asking for $800-million dollars
in damages. CNN decided to settle fast, throwing their colleagues under the
bus. The amount of the settlement wasn’t disclosed.
Facts are
damnable things. Just ask members of the Duke Lacrosse team who were wrongly
accused of rape back in 2006. Duke ended up paying for millions of dollars in
damages because the story just wasn’t true.
Neither was
CNN’s coverage of the Covington Catholic High School students and Nick
Sandmann.
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