I've written this elsewhere, and perhaps I've nibbled at it
here, too, but—prompted by one of Grim's comments in a thread below concerning
NLMSM integrity—I'm offering this in full.
If the NLMSM hopes to gain any measure of credibility at
all, it must do some things, and it must do them satisfactorily in the minds of observers and consumers of the NLMSM's output.
- a journalist must identify at least some of his sources, rather than hanging the thesis of his article exclusively on the claims of anonymous sources
- if an anonymous source refuses to be identified, the journalist must show with concrete, measurable evidence two things
b. why the source should be believed, given that by speaking publicly, even in anonymously, he's likely violating his terms of employment if not his oath of office
3. if the journalist is representing the anonymous source as a whistleblower, the journalist must provide concrete, measurable evidence that the source has used up all of his employer's internal whistleblowing channels before he decided to leak to the journalist.
All of this must be done in the opening paragraph(s) of his piece, even ahead of the Who, What, Where, When that used to form the lede (but seems to no longer).
And the largest question of all:
4. The press used to have a standard that required two on-the-record sources to corroborate the claims of a journalist's anonymous sources. The journalist's editor must explain why he's chosen to walk away from that standard of integrity.
Eric Hines