In my personal opinion, Mooney is
correct in his article in saying that the increasing ‘cheapness’ of the media
in finding many reporters, most of which have received little to no training in
specific areas of coverage (ex. Science journalism), has lead to a great demise
in the accuracy of reporting. On one
hand, we have journalists that acknowledge their lacking scientific knowledge,
and compensate by covering several scientific opinions on an issue despite the
lack of evidence for some certain opinions.
These journalists introduce unfounded opinions to the general public,
and can create huge misinterpretations of studies and of the facts discovered
from those studies in doing so. On the
other hand, there are journalists that do not acknowledge their lack of
scientific knowledge and can easily be fooled into publishing a story that may
come from a disreputable source or have questionable data backing their
claim. These can be equally, if not more
damaging to the general public because of the lack of the presentation of other
options, which would at least allow the scientifically literate community to
decipher which studies are accurate.
It is through the study of both of
these extremes that one cannot tell a journalist to either publish many ideas
on the same topic nor to publish one opinion on the topic. It seems that a reactionary action is
necessary to revive science journalism to where Mooney indicated it had been
during the ‘space race’. It is
NECESSARY to have trained scientific journalists that can use their own
training and expertise to identify newsworthy stories, assess their reliability
and to convey the scientific information from these studies in an accurate
way. This would eliminate a large
portion of the misinformation out there on any vast array of topics. If journalists publishing articles were held
to the same standards that scientists were in publishing scientific papers, the
media would be a much more useful tool, as opposed to a circus that will spin a
story to benefit the interests of the highest bidder or publish an article with
the facts of the news completely rearranged due to a lack of understanding.