Jim Poling Sr.'s Blog, page 44
January 28, 2015
Miffed, Unapologetic and Hopefully Gone
A last word, hopefully, on the disappointing, if not scandalous, happenings inside the CBC's news operations.
Business reporter Amanda Lang is still there, miffed and unapologetic, even after the CBC finally has banned its reporters from taking money for speaking engagements. Lang and chief news reader Peter Mansbridge have been getting big outside bucks for speaking at events sponsored by associations and companies they report on.
CBC had refused to admit that reporters taking outside money is unethical. However, last week it finally folded that hand and ordered the ban. As columnist John Doyle wrote in the Globe and Mail: “Barn door closed after the horse left.”
Lang wrote a supercilious and embarrassing 1,600-word defence of herself in the Globe. Interestingly, more than 300 Globe online readers so far have commented on her defensive piece, almost all of them deriding her and indicating that she should resign.
Her resignation might just be in the works. Her bosses did not approve the Globe piece. Also, her defence has not appeared on any CBC news site.
There are rumours that the CBC bosses are discussing how to cut her loose. If they are, there are others whose ties should be snipped. These should include Mansbridge and CBC President Hubert Lacroix who has had to pay back $30,000 in expense money he was not entitled to receive and who has dozed through all the CBC news crises.
The shame of the Lang and other CBC scandals is the hurt laid on its many other dedicated reporters, editors and other news workers. They don't deserve any of this and CBC needs to clean house to restore their pride and the confidence of Canadians, most of who do not want to see the CBC rot and die.
Published on January 28, 2015 16:19
January 11, 2015
Personality Journalism Fails Again
Canadian journalism received another body blow to its credibility this week. Leslie Roberts, anchor and executive editor of Global News Hour in Toronto, was suspended indefinitely for trying to be a journalist and a public relations flack at the same time.
The Toronto Star revealed that Roberts, who presents the day's news to 118,000 Toronto-area television viewers each evening, is a part owner of a public relations firm whose clients often appear on Global. Some have been interviewed by Roberts.
The Roberts affair is yet another example of journalistic integrity being run over by personality journalism promoted in the desperate efforts to garner more viewers, listeners, or readers. The personalities become bigger than the news operation itself. Bigger than the decades-old rules designed to protect integrity, accuracy, and fairness in the news.
Last year the CBC was forced to change policies that allowed on-air personalities to make paid speeches to groups that they report on. For example, millionaire news reader Peter Mansbridge took big bucks for speaking to lobby groups that often are in the news.
Too often journalists these days forget their purpose: to watch, listen and to report as fairly as possible what they see and hear. Those who want more than that - power, prestige, adulation, and an expensive suit with an Order of Canada pin in the lapel should be pursuing other lines of work.
The Toronto Star revealed that Roberts, who presents the day's news to 118,000 Toronto-area television viewers each evening, is a part owner of a public relations firm whose clients often appear on Global. Some have been interviewed by Roberts.

Last year the CBC was forced to change policies that allowed on-air personalities to make paid speeches to groups that they report on. For example, millionaire news reader Peter Mansbridge took big bucks for speaking to lobby groups that often are in the news.
Too often journalists these days forget their purpose: to watch, listen and to report as fairly as possible what they see and hear. Those who want more than that - power, prestige, adulation, and an expensive suit with an Order of Canada pin in the lapel should be pursuing other lines of work.
Published on January 11, 2015 07:11
December 24, 2014
O Night Divine
Fresh-fallen snow protested beneath the crush of my gumboots breaking trail down the unploughed lane. Dry, sharp squeaks, not unlike the cries of cheap chalk cruelly scrapped against too clean a blackboard. Skuur-eek, skuur-eek. The boots ignored the sounds. They moved on, ribbed rubber bottoms and laced high leather tops creating a meandering wake in the ankle deep snow. From each side of the trail, drifted snow leaned tiredly against the backsides of the bungalows, dropped there to rest by an impatient blizzard just passed through. Their crests were indistinguishable against the white stucco walls but nearly reached tufted piles of fluffy snow clinging nervously to windowsills and eaves trough lips. The squeaks flew through the still night air, dodging fat flakes that fell heavy and straight onto my cap bill, but occasionally splashing into my face flushed warm from the walk. I could have rode back home from Christmas Eve Mass with the family, but the teenage mind always prefers independence, and it was a chance to visit friends along the way.
Faint strains of music joined the squeaking as I approached our back fence. I stopped to hear the music more clearly, now identifiable as singing voices escaping through an open window. I shuffled forward and listened to the notes float out crisply and clearly, then mingle with smoke rising from the chimneys. Notes and smoke rose together into an icy sky illuminated by frost crystals set shimmering by thousands of stars and the frosty moon the Ojibwe called Minidoo Geezis, the little spirit moon that appears small and cold early in winter. I held my breath to hear better and determined that the music was “O Holy Night,” and the notes came from the window in my grandmother’s room. It was open to the cold because most people smoked cigarettes back then and at gatherings cracked a window to thin the smoke. They sang the first verse, and, when they reached the sixth line, the other voices ceased and one voice carried on alone: “Fall on your knees! Oh, hear the angel voices! O Niiii ... iiight Diii...vine! ...” That’s the part where the notes rise higher and higher until the singer reaches an awesome note. The solo voice belonged to my grandmother, and I knew she was hitting that high note while sitting on the edge of the bed that crippling rheumatoid arthritis had made her prison for sixteen years. She was unable to walk without assistance and had trouble holding a cigarette between her gnarled fingers. The others had stopped singing to listen to her. The second time she hit the high notes at the words “O Night Divine,” a shiver danced on my spine. When she finished singing “O Holy Night,” the other voices started up again, this time with “Silent Night” and other favourite carols. I went into the house and found Christmas Eve celebrants — my mom, dad, and some neighbours — crowded into the ten-by-ten bedroom that was my grandmother’s world. They sang long into the night, mostly in French because the neighbours were the Gauthiers who seldom spoke English to my grandmother and my mother. After the singing ended my mother served tourtière, which I slathered with mustard. Then we gathered at the tree and opened our gifts. I have long forgotten what I got, and it doesn’t matter, because my real gift came many years later: the gift of realization that those high notes were not solely the products of the lungs. They were driven by something stronger than flesh — an unbreakable spirit. They came from strength far beyond anything that a mere body can produce. (This column was adapted from my book Waking Nanabijou: Uncovering a Secret Past– Dundurn Group 2007)

Published on December 24, 2014 17:30
December 21, 2014
Propaganda Posing As Journalism
Canada’s federal government continues to pour millions of taxpayer dollars into one of its most notable successes: blurring the line between journalism and propaganda. Public Works Canada is paying $1.25 million for a publicity outfit, which looks like a real news operation, to write and distribute powder puff stories that “inform and educate” Canadians. This is nothing new or unusual. Governments for decades have used our taxes to buy distorted stories that make them look good. Usually government departments have staff publicity people to do this. Now there is a trend to contract out flacking to private companies that try to look like genuine news operations. One of those companies is News Canada Ltd., which is writing and distributing “news” for Public Works Canada. The company name is part of the illusion that this is a real news agency, which it is not. The company president, Shelley Middlebrook, aids the illusion by referencing her company’s work to The Canadian Press (CP), a genuine news service that has been providing professional journalism to print and broadcast media for 100 years. Ms. Middlebrook told Blacklock’s Reporter recently that News Canada gives media outlets free stories, paid for and vetted by the federal government, bearing a “News Canada” credit – “just like Canadian Press. . . . We follow Canadian Press-style rules of writing, and articles have to be marked as ‘News Canada’ just like CP.” I’m sure Ms. Middlebrook was not trying to indicate that her company is the same type of professional journalism agency as The Canadian Press. No doubt she was just trying to show that her company follows high standards of writing style. The government, however, wants the public to think that its bought stories are balanced just like the real journalism produced by real journalists working for real news operations like The Canadian Press. Regrettably, the government is becoming successful at blurring that line between propaganda and journalism because more and more people no longer see the difference. Here is the difference: A recent government-paid-for “news story” on Aboriginal land claims extolls how “Canada has made a commitment to reconciling relationships with First Nations people . . . . The future looks bright. More win-win solutions are in the works to bring closure and justice for all.” At about the same time, the Toronto Globe and Mail produced a major piece of journalism on the suicide of Eddie Snowshoe in a federal prison. The story noted that the suicide rate in federal prisons is seven times higher than in the public at large. This was one of a number of news stories produced by real news operations this year telling how federal government policies and practices are harming, even killing, Canada’s native people. Canadians are doing little to stop the government from using their tax dollars to distribute information that is not balanced and not completely accurate. The more we accept the use of government propaganda, the more we lessen our democracy.
Read My Minden News column @ http://mindentimes.ca/?p=5759
Read My Minden News column @ http://mindentimes.ca/?p=5759
Published on December 21, 2014 06:33
December 2, 2014
Wake Up and Cut the Taxes

See My Minden Times column - http://mindentimes.ca/?p=5566
Published on December 02, 2014 08:01
November 13, 2014
Canada's Unfortunate Personality Trait
November is a month in which we talk much about freedom, and the sacrifices made to ensure we keep it. Canadians are so thankful for the freedoms we do have, but there remains one area in which freedom is sadly lacking: Freedom of Information. Withholding information, or not sharing it fully, has become a Canadian personality trait. Two recent examples illustrate this. When Michael Zehaf-Bibeau killed Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at the national war memorial, then stormed the Parliament buildings, the public learned his name from American news media. Our law enforcement bosses withheld his name despite knowing it almost from the beginning of the rampage. Americans are more forthcoming with information the public should know. Reporters in the U.S. got Zehaf-Bibeau’s name from the FBI. The FBI knew the name because the RCMP called them and asked if they had any information on this guy as a terrorist. Our law enforcement officials had no reason not to tell us the shooter’s name and did so only after American news reports named him. Earlier this month when Canadian fighter planes made their first strike against ISIS in Iraq, the military brass refused to give details of the mission. The strike took place Sunday and the military waited until Tuesday to say what happened. In the meantime, Canadians learned from the U.S. military that our planes had destroyed a Jeep and some bulldozers. That information produced smirks in many quarters: Canada goes to war and takes out a Jeep and some bulldozers! Typically Canadian! The mission, we learned later, was an important one. ISIS was using the construction equipment to divert water from the Euphrates River in an effort to flood areas and force civilians and Iraqi military to use mined roads. Our military bosses should have released the results of the mission quickly instead of sitting on them. Then Canadians would have had full information on what their pilots achieved instead of the sketchy American-supplied information that made the mission look like a bit of a joke. Those are two relatively minor examples. However, every day our governments and others withhold or slant information important to Canadians. Canadian government folks always get it backwards when discussing public news releases. Reasons for notreleasing information always come first. The reasons for releasing information come last. It should be the other way around.
My Minden Times column: mindentimes.ca/?p=5520
My Minden Times column: mindentimes.ca/?p=5520
Published on November 13, 2014 04:50
October 17, 2014
Will Viewing Carmen Start Me Smoking?
I planned on watching The Metropolitan Opera’s new production of Carmen, being broadcast at movie houses next month, but now I’m worried. Will watching it make me start smoking? The Western Australia Opera Company believes so. It has banned performances of Carmenbecause the opera is set in and around a cigarette factory in Seville, Spain. The characters in the opera smoke cigarettes. The head of the opera company said she is concerned about the health and well-being of the performers, stage hands and others. However, she also said the performers would not have been smoking real cigarettes.
Opera: Tempting Our Morals? The real reason for not staging the opera is money. Fear of losing it. Carmen was banned after the opera company signed a sponsorship contract with a government health agency. The contract is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars and the agency believes that depictions of smoking are not a good thing. Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said the opera company's ban is "political correctness gone crazy." It is not known what opera will be staged in place of Carmen. The choices are limited if the opera company and the health agency sponsor are concerned about guarding the morals of audiences. Surely they will have to ban Macbeth because it promotes murder. Madam Butterfly is out because its heroine commits suicide. La Traviata and The Merry Widow shouldn’t be staged because they surely would persuade people to drink alcohol. And, what about Rigoletto in which the leacherous duke’s kidnapping of a young lady leads to murder? I think I'll skip Carmen at the movie theatre and see one of those Terminator movies instead.
(My Minden Times weekly column is at: mindentimes.ca in the commentary section)

(My Minden Times weekly column is at: mindentimes.ca in the commentary section)
Published on October 17, 2014 05:47
October 6, 2014
Good News for Journalism
What a shocker! But a very pleasant one.
Postmedia’s purchase of Sun Media’s English language newspapers is the best news the Canadian news industry has had in the last two to three decades.
Back in the late 80s and early 90s the Canadian newspaper industry suffered the appearance of newspaper owners and operators who had no business being in the game. They were bad for the business, people who did not understand, or refused to accept, the traditional principles and practices of newspapering.
What followed were years of turmoil, downsizing and diminishment of good journalism. Editors, who for the most part were dedicated to doing a public good, were told what to do and how to do it by newcomers interested only in boosting profits.
Postmedia has emerged from the turmoil as a company with solid business sense, plus a dedication to building new platforms on which to deliver good journalism. Sun Media was a good idea when it was formed by a group of intrepid journalists. Then it was bought by Quebecor and since then has not done much to improve, or even sustain, good journalism.
Postmedia has a strong core of journalism leaders. Some of the best that I have ever known.
The company says it will operate the Sun papers in major markets where it has competing newspapers. There will be some public screaming about media monopolization, but ignore that. The bottom line is that the Postmedia deal creates the possibility of better journalism in an industry that has been struggling to find its way through the Information Revolution.
Postmedia’s purchase of Sun Media’s English language newspapers is the best news the Canadian news industry has had in the last two to three decades.

What followed were years of turmoil, downsizing and diminishment of good journalism. Editors, who for the most part were dedicated to doing a public good, were told what to do and how to do it by newcomers interested only in boosting profits.
Postmedia has emerged from the turmoil as a company with solid business sense, plus a dedication to building new platforms on which to deliver good journalism. Sun Media was a good idea when it was formed by a group of intrepid journalists. Then it was bought by Quebecor and since then has not done much to improve, or even sustain, good journalism.
Postmedia has a strong core of journalism leaders. Some of the best that I have ever known.
The company says it will operate the Sun papers in major markets where it has competing newspapers. There will be some public screaming about media monopolization, but ignore that. The bottom line is that the Postmedia deal creates the possibility of better journalism in an industry that has been struggling to find its way through the Information Revolution.
Published on October 06, 2014 08:20
September 24, 2014
Governments Addicted to Tobacco Money
Mounting evidence shows that governments need radical new thinking to stop the contraband cigarette industry. The latest evidence comes from New York City where the city health department reports that the number of adult smokers has risen to 16.1 per cent from 14 per cent in the last three years. That is the highest percentage since 2007. Taxes on a pack of cigarettes in New York City now total close to $7. The price for a legal pack of cigarettes in the city is $10.50 to $12. Contraband packs cost about $5.A new U.S. Tax Foundation study shows that 57 per cent of cigarettes smoked in the State of New York are contraband. The studies join stacks of others illustrating how contraband cigarette trafficking, one of the world’s most extensive and profitable industries, continues to foil extensive efforts to reduce smoking rates.
Governments and anti-smoking groups refuse to accept that the most effective weapon against contraband tobacco is lowering tobacco taxes. They say that lower tobacco taxes encourage smoking. Perhaps, but no one has tested the question of whether taxes can be lowered to reduce contraband while at the same time instituting programs that will help ensure a continuing decline in smoking. Governments won’t reduce tobacco taxes because they are addicted to the revenue. In the U.S., federal and state taxes on tobacco bring in $35.3 billion a year. In Canada, the annual tax take is roughly $7 billion, not including sales taxes on tobacco. Contraband tobacco not only encourages smoking but the futile law enforcement fight against it costs huge amounts of money. New York City is just a recent example of the folly of high tobacco taxes. Contraband tobacco is in your neighbourhood, making it cheaper for people to smoke while building new criminal organizations. Governments need to try new approaches but addiction to the taxes and the constant shouting of narrowly focussed anti-smoking groups ties them to the same old thinking. More on contraband and the history of tobacco can be found in Smoke Signals: The Native Takeback of North America's Tobacco Industry. (Dundurn Press)

Published on September 24, 2014 07:46
September 8, 2014
The Anthropocene — the Human Age
So much to read. So much to absorb, but so little time. Never in human history has there been so much information and so little time to consume it. For those who won’t have time to get into the new book, The Human Age: The World Shaped by Us, here are some snippets of fascinating information. They are taken from the New York Times book review of The Human Age by Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor.
1. Concentrated body heat from 250,000 daily commuters is being harvested at Stockholm’s Central Station to warm a 13-storey office building nearby. 2. Incessant texting prompts a child’s brain map of the thumbs to expand.3. Studies of young people in Shanghai and Seoul reveal that 95 percent are near-sighted. This epidemic might be caused by the shift from children playing outside to indoors, hunched over screens. 4. Fruit flies share 70 percent of human disease genes, including those associated with Alzheimer's and Parkinson’s5. Reintroduction of mammoths to Siberia is envisioned by some de-extinction proponents.
That’s interesting fuzzy stuff. Here are some icy bits to suck on:
1. The net worth of the world’s 85 wealthiest individuals in 2013 equalled that of our planet’s 3.5 billion poorest people.2. Ninety corporations, primarily oil and coal companies, have generated two-thirds of humanity’s CO2 emissions since 1751.
And, a chilling comment that Nixon makes in his review:
“A technology’s emergence is no guarantee that its benefits will trickle down to humanity at large. When men attacked two teenage girls and hanged them from mango trees in India this May, the atrocity drew attention to the fact that the women had to defecate in the forest at night. Two and a half billion humans still lack access to a rudimentary latrine, a venerable technology developed over 3,000 years ago.”
The book is:
THE HUMAN AGEThe World Shaped by UsBy Diane Ackerman344 pp. W. W. Norton & Company. $27.95.
The review can be found at: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/07/books/review/the-human-age-by-diane-ackerman.html?_r=0

1. Concentrated body heat from 250,000 daily commuters is being harvested at Stockholm’s Central Station to warm a 13-storey office building nearby. 2. Incessant texting prompts a child’s brain map of the thumbs to expand.3. Studies of young people in Shanghai and Seoul reveal that 95 percent are near-sighted. This epidemic might be caused by the shift from children playing outside to indoors, hunched over screens. 4. Fruit flies share 70 percent of human disease genes, including those associated with Alzheimer's and Parkinson’s5. Reintroduction of mammoths to Siberia is envisioned by some de-extinction proponents.
That’s interesting fuzzy stuff. Here are some icy bits to suck on:
1. The net worth of the world’s 85 wealthiest individuals in 2013 equalled that of our planet’s 3.5 billion poorest people.2. Ninety corporations, primarily oil and coal companies, have generated two-thirds of humanity’s CO2 emissions since 1751.
And, a chilling comment that Nixon makes in his review:
“A technology’s emergence is no guarantee that its benefits will trickle down to humanity at large. When men attacked two teenage girls and hanged them from mango trees in India this May, the atrocity drew attention to the fact that the women had to defecate in the forest at night. Two and a half billion humans still lack access to a rudimentary latrine, a venerable technology developed over 3,000 years ago.”
The book is:
THE HUMAN AGEThe World Shaped by UsBy Diane Ackerman344 pp. W. W. Norton & Company. $27.95.
The review can be found at: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/07/books/review/the-human-age-by-diane-ackerman.html?_r=0
Published on September 08, 2014 05:39