Re: USCF Blames Budget Cuts on Board Members

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Rob

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Jun 5, 2009, 1:30:36 PM6/5/09
to uscf-...@googlegroups.com, uscf-...@googlegroups.com
On Jun 4, 2:19 pm, MrVidmar <vid...@nowhere.com> wrote:
> Rob wrote:
> > I believe this posting to be a cheap shot,personally. They have never
> > made such an announcement in the past as it relates to the serial sue -
> > er  , Mr. Sloan.
>
> >http://www.linkedin.com/news?actionBar=&sik=1244137146245&aIdx=0&arti...
>
> Not a cheap shot.  Try truth and/or reality, instead.
>
>  vidmar.vcf
> < 1KViewDownload

Brian,

It may in fact be accurate that these lawsuits are costing the USCF
money. I do not doubt that. However the article fails to meet most
journalistic standards on non bias and accurate reporting.

The Rules

Conflict of Interest:

The injunction to avoid conflicts of interest means that a reporter
must maintain independence from sources. In reality, however, news-
gathering involves an inextricable inter-dependence between reporters
and sources. Reporters must cultivate sources and are keenly aware
that future access to information depends on how they handle today's
story. Sources, in turn, cultivate reporters. The most valuable gifts
that reporters and sources can exchange - scoops and favorable
coverage - simply aren't recognized as gifts. And somehow, the rules
about conflict of interest seem to apply only to journalists, never to
publishers or parent corporations.

Accuracy:

Journalists are supposed to strive for accuracy, but accuracy has an
ambiguous relationship to truth. For example, a report quoting a
Pentagon spokesperson on the number of casualties in an invasion can
simultaneously be an accurate report of what the spokesperson said,
but an inaccurate representation of what actually happened.

Objectivity:

Objectivity supposedly eliminates personal prejudice and separates
fact from value and interpretation. This assumes that only facts
remain; it doesn't acknowledge unconscious, cultural or institutional
biases, or sources' biases.

Fairness:

Is it fair to report the arrest or indictment of a person accused but
not yet found guilty of a crime? That is illegal in some countries
because it may damage an innocent person wrongly accused. Does
fairness require treating all competing viewpoints as equally valid?
Does fairness extend to all? In practice it stops at the U.S. border.
The right of Castro or Ghadafi or Hussein to a balanced airing of
their perspectives is rarely acknowledged, except, perhaps, in a token
paragraph whose credibility suffers from the context within which it
appears.

Sensationalism:

Journalists are supposed to avoid sensationalism, but sensationalism
is built into the concept of news. Events are seen as newsworthy
because they deviate from the ordinary, and good reporting is seen as
presenting events in an emotionally compelling way.

Given these fundamental conflicts and ambiguities within the core
concepts of ethics codes, how the rules get applied to particular
cases often depends upon whose interests are at stake. The USCF has an
interest in the outcome. (Conflict of Interest) The USCF is the
publisher of the magazine. The USCF has used it's position as a
publisher to attack and influence opinions against parties they are
undertaking legal proceedings against.

The lack of the equal airings of all sides of this debate in the
article is therefore biased in it's presentation. The overt lack of
fairness could be seen as proof that the USCF and/or many of it's
officers are undertaking an organized attempt to destroy
professionally and/or personally the reputations of Paul Truong and
Susan Polgar.

By publishing this article the USCF could have made the case against
themselves stronger. I don't know. As a judge how would you view a
personal attack in a magazine? If say John Doe claimed had a
reputation for being a great scoker player and had the record to prove
it. And people paid him lots of money because of his skills and his
reputation. Then The soccer organization began to discredit him for
political reasons. John sues them and says they are attempting to
destroy my ability to make a living by ruining my reputation. The the
Soccer Association prints a magazine and says "John Doe is suing us
and we are losing money because of the suit." How would you view that?

The reality of the report was that the Soccer Association did not
operationally have positive cash flow and the lawsuit was simply an
amplification of current ooperational conditions.

Sorry for such a long post. I just things can be factual and still be
inaccurate by ommissions of important details.

Rob

unread,
Jun 5, 2009, 4:37:43 PM6/5/09
to USCF Chess
Still, it could have been written and been just as accurate to say"
'various lawsuits' the USCF ha become entangle with have caused us to
resort to temporary budget cuts to meet our ongoing financial
obligations".

It would still have been as accurate yet not construed as an attack
against anyone.
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