Ninety percent (90%) of the opinion in the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (WCIJ) report on high speed rail is status quo, anti-public investment, and emphatically Cato Institute doctrine.
This essay presents eleven (11) charges that WCIJ failed their ethical principles. And twelve (12) characteristics of sloppy writing that denigrate journalism as a profession.
This blog! is the fourth in a series about a WCIJ Report High Speed Rail broadcast on Wisconsin Public Radio July 22, 2009:
Part 1. The WCIJ Fraud. WCIJ falsified the conclusion in a US Government Accountability Office report.
Part 2. The WCIJ Virus - the Fraud over the GAO text has spread far and wide in the media.
... Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism Violates 3 Principles in its Code of Ethics....
A Series of Commentaries.
Introduction. Open Letter to WPR.
Part 1. The WCIJ Fraud.
Part 2. The WCIJ Virus.
Part 3. "Nobody Knows..."
WCIJ Screenshot
WCIJ Says Nobody Knows...
I point.
Notice the second sentence, beginning "Nobody knows..."?
This short sentence deserves attention but please don't quote it.
... Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism has created a tenacious anti-rail virus, a "feathers-to-the-wind" media story that the U.S. Government Accountability Office is opposed to inter-city rail projects....
By Bill Sell
A Series of Commentaries.
Introduction. Open Letter to WPR.
Part 1. The Fraud.
(more to come)
Part 2. The Virus
Wikipedia:
A computer virus is a computer program that can copy itself and infect a computer without the permission or knowledge of the owner.
I advocate for public transportation and so I am familiar with the benefits and limits of rail, and the proper role of government.
The efficiencies of bus and rail are well-known. WPR underwriter CSX touts that its trains can move 426 tons of freight on one gallon of gas. Even the old Milwaukee buses qualify:
One full bus takes 30 cars off the road reducing congestion and making the air healthier to breathe. That's comparable to a line of cars six blocks long traveling at 25 mph.
And so it happened, that when I visited the WCIJ website, I found myself staring in disbelief at what WCIJ calls the 'conclusion' in the U.S. GAO Report on High Speed Rail: I know the work of the GAO; and it commands respect.
Screen Shot of WCIJ Website
Part 1. UW Journalists Fabricate the US Government Accountability Office's Conclusion on High Speed Rail
... WCIJ finds a 'useful' phrase buried in the GAO report and represents those 17 words as the whole of the GAO report....
By Bill Sell
Introduction to this Series of Reports
Part 1. The Fraud
From Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism Code of Ethics:
Test the accuracy of information from all sources and exercise care to avoid inadvertent error. Deliberate distortion is never permissible.
Did they? Draw your own conclusion:
GAO Report