Nowhere did I dispute that he lied, both about his content, and what he construed himself as, and that he shouldn't have. I'm just trying to ensure that people don't rail so hard against Daisy that they forget that the undeniably true core of his story- That Consumerism's Led to Horrible Manufacturing Conditions in China and Other Places- shouldn't be drowned out.
This is why I'm so mad that he lied in the first place. Complete fabrications are easy to deal with, because you just dismiss them. Things like this are harder to deal with, because you don't
know how much you can believe about his experience. I heard the story, and it affected me pretty strongly, and now I have no idea how much of it even happened. I don't know how much I believe Mike Daisy, or hell, how much I believe his interpreter either. The whole thing is basically shot.
On the other hand, I'm glad TAL's retraction episode did touch upon the actual issues represented in the story; some good
should come out of this, and it's nice to walk away from the situation with at least some trustworthy information.
Nowhere did I dispute that he lied, both about his content, and what he construed himself as, and that he shouldn't have. I'm just trying to ensure that people don't rail so hard against Daisy that they forget that the undeniably true core of his story- That Consumerism's Led to Horrible Manufacturing Conditions in China and Other Places- shouldn't be drowned out.
Fair point. I'm actually perfectly ok with "ends justifies the means," in many but not all situations. If lying is what it takes to get a bunch of price obsessed tech consumers to consider that their toys are "cheap" due to slave labor, then fine.
So if lying is necessary to get people to care about the truth, you're okay with that? That's pretty ironic, especially when a major part of the problem is lack of transparency/awareness in the first place.
I also believe that in this case, the truth of the matter was sufficiently powerful that there was really no need to lie about it. There are ways to dramatize something other than making shit up.
Also: Please bear in mind your own argument here the next time you feel the need to complain about Fox News or any other organization or individual fabricating stories or not engaging in good journalism, because they're doing the exact same thing you're encouraging here: Deciding that if you feel the need to push an agenda, cause, or effect some sort of social change, that it's okay to lie in order to do it. It doesn't matter how "right" you are; when you start lying in order to promote your views, it ceases to
matter how "correct" your views are, because you've effectively removed yourself from rational discussion. We both see the effects of bad journalism and misrepresentation in the media pretty much constantly, and it's pretty hypocritical to say that it's okay as long as the people doing it are the ones we agree with.
I just keep seeing a lot of really weird contrarian arguments lately, and it's doubly odd that when I put forth a purposefully even-handed analysis of the situation, people still take it upon themselves to split hairs that I'm not as angry as I should apparently be. I mean, this is a minor scandal compared to the huge wealth of straight up counterfactual, purposefully crafted lies being taken not just as truth, but as Gospel, that are spewed out by, say, FOX news, every single minute. Many of them are also catalogued in this thread. So yeah, TAL fucked up, but on their part it was an honest mistake. Daisy fucked up by not being upfront with TAL and misconstruing himself in general, but his actions are infinitely less malicious than so many other things that the despise I feel for him is so much less than I feel for, say, Goldman Sachs or Monsanto or Alice Walton that it's negligible.
Of course those other things are worse, which is why people complain about them. However, I'm a bit more personally and directly affected by this because I did not expect this to happen on TAL, and the story was pretty hard-hitting. Fox News is more of a problem by orders of magnitude, but they haven't violated my trust because I have none in them. For what it's worth, I don't really think TAL specifically violated my trust a hell of a lot; they got a bit lax with the fact-checking, but they owned up to it and rebounded pretty well and honestly. But the
story certainly did.