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Democracies ultimately function through the power of
the people to elect their leaders. But in between elections it is primarily the press that
holds the politicos' feet to the fire. An independent and ethical press is crucial in the
best of times; it is indispensable at a time when governments (and the corporate
oligarchies) display an arrogant disregard for the law and for the truth. Even as the
facts are reported on the front pages, the current administration deals in the most
egregious doublespeak, nothing less than Orwellian in its audaciousness. Most of the
corporate crooks are going unpunished, left to enjoy their millions of misbegotten moolah.
The quality daily press has reported regularly on all of these abuses--how much worse
might it be if the light wasn't shone on these shenanigans?
What happens, then, if the morally bankrupt behavior of our
political and economic leaders, their self-serving greed, their ambition-driven, corrosive
corruption of ethical standards infiltrates, like a virus, the fourth estate itself? It
has done so, of course, as recent scandals at the New York Times and The New
Republic make evident. It is the latter that is the subject of the pointed and
alarming film, Shattered Glass.