Point of View
‘Alienated journalists’ ponder moral values
By TERRY MATTINGLY
Baptist Press
Published December 2, 2004
One perk of covering a White House race from day one is that
early bird journalists snag lots of one-on-one time with the
candidate.
Thus, Candy Crowley of CNN found herself sitting with John
Kerry in a super-ordinary coffee shop in Dubuque, Iowa. The
veteran political correspondent ordered coffee. The senator, from
Massachusetts, ordered green tea.
The waitress, from Iowa, was puzzled.
I advised the senator that he would need to carry his
own green tea in Iowa and probably several other states as well,
Crowley quipped, speaking at the Forum Club of the Palm Beaches
in south Florida.
Yes, its time for post mortems on 2004. So
far, Crowley said, the experts insist the race was decided bytake
your pickthe 22 percent of the voters that yearned for
moral values or the 23 percent that were white
evangelical Christians.
Crowley grew up in the Midwest and she thinks she can tell red
zones from blue zones. Democrats have cornered the green-tea
crowd, she said. Republicans are winning what Capital Beltway
insiders now call the Applebees vote. This
schism may have as much to do with cappuccinos and chainsaws as
with The New York Times and the Southern Baptist
Convention.
Faith played a major role, but its simplistic to say
that religious people voted for President George W. Bush and
secularists for Kerry, Crowley said. The religious left has its
own moral and spiritual beliefs and it will, in future elections,
find ways to express them in the public square.
It also would be inaccurate to claim that evangelicals marched
into voting booths and seized control. Bush won 52 percent of
Catholic voters, facing a Catholic candidate, and 59 percent of
the overall Protestant vote. The New York Times noted
that the president, in four years, raised his share of the Jewish
vote from 19 to 25 percent, winning two-thirds of the Orthodox
Jewish votes.
The elites just didnt get it. Somewhere along the
line, all of us missed this moral values thing, Crowley
said.
This will be painful for journalists to hear. It is one thing,
after decades of dissecting media-bias statistics, to know that
armies of religious conservatives believe American newsrooms are
packed with God-forsaken libertines. It will be harder for
journalists to admit that they are blind to important stories.
Nevertheless, its time to face the facts, said Roy Peter
Clark, senior scholar at the Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg.
I am now taking seriously the theory that we mainstream
journalists are different from mainstream America. Different
is too pale a word. We are alienated. We may live in the same
country, but we treat each other like aliens, he said in an
essay titled Confessions of an Alienated Journalist.
The churched people who embrace Bush, in spite of a
bumbling war and a stumbling economy, are more than alien to me.
They are invisible. ... My blind spots blot out half of America.
And that makes me less of a citizen, and less of a journalist.
As a Catholic progressive, Clark said he finds it hard to hear
moral values without thinking of showy piety
and patriotism, with more than a dash of racism and homophobia.
He knows all about Queer Eye for the Straight Guy and
Bubba the Love Sponge. How come so many other Americans know what
it means to be evangelical, charismatic
and born again and feel at home at church suppers?
Right now, there needs to be more self-doubt in the
journalistic system, as opposed to arrogance, said Clark,
reached at his office. We need to be able to say that we
dont know it all and that we need to learn. We need to take
a step back.
Most of all, Crowley said, journalists and blue-zone leaders
must grasp that many parents feel threatened by the coarsening
of American culture. They feel attacked.
Its like they are saying, I was made to feel
like a freak because I go to church or I was made to
feel like I was an idiot because I believe in God,
she said. Theyre telling us, I want my family
safe and I want to be able to teach my children what I believe is
true. ... Its time to listen to them.
Terry Mattingly (www.tmatt.net)
teaches at Palm Beach Atlantic University and is senior fellow
for journalism at the Council for Christian Colleges &
Universities. He writes this weekly column for the Scripps Howard
News Service. Used with permission.