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Straits Times caught editing statistics and words

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
<TABLE class=forumline border=0 cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD class=row1 vAlign=top width=150 align=left>sbee1



Joined: 18 Dec 2010
Posts: 316

</TD><TD class=row1 height=28 vAlign=top width="100%"><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%"> Posted: Sun Apr 17, 2011 1:07 am Post subject: Straits Times caught editing statistics and words</TD><TD vAlign=top noWrap> </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2>http://theonlinecitizen.com/2011/03/straits-times-why-you-edit-until-like-that/

Straits Times! Why you edit until like that?
Posted by theonlinecitizen on March 24, 2011 40 Comments

Be very afraid. The ST Forum Editor is here
Muhammad Hydar/

The Straits Times (ST) has been regularly accused of recontextualising letters in its forum section. People in the realms of alternative opinion have shown as to how letters of a critical yet constructive nature (particularly at the establishment) have been edited to a point where the intended meaning is either blunted or removed.

Critics of ST and the PAP would have scoffed at Mr Samuel Wee’s letter published in ST.

The letter tells of Mr Wee’s emphatic approval of Education Minister Dr Ng Eng Han’s comments on Singapore’s education system.
However, Mr Wee’s original letter has now been circulating around the web.

A quick read would reveal the most obvious of ST’s biased editing and fabrication.

The original article had Mr Wee describing the misleading presentation of statistics made by the ST report on social mobility.

Here are some excerpts:

Original Letter – It is indeed heartwarming to learn that only 90% of children from one-to-three-room flats do not make it to university.
ST-edited Letter – It is indeed heartwarming to learn that almost 50 per cent of children from one- to three-room flats make it to university and polytechnics.
————-

Original Letter – His statement is backed up with the statistic that 50% of children from the bottom third of the socio-economic ladder score in the bottom third of the Primary School Leaving Examination.
ST-edited Letter – His statement is backed by the statistic that about 50 per cent of children from the bottom third of the socio-economic bracket score within the top two-thirds of their Primary School Leaving Examination cohort.
————

There’s even a paragraph that didn’t exist in the original letter.

Original Letter – Therefore, it was greatly reassuring to read about Dr Ng’s great faith in our “unique, meritocratic Singapore system”, which ensures that good, able students from the middle-and-high income groups are not circumscribed or restricted in any way in the name of helping financially disadvantaged students.
ST-edited Letter - Therefore, it was reassuring to read about Dr Ng’s own experience of the ‘unique, meritocratic Singapore system’: he grew up in a three-room flat with five other siblings, and his medical studies at the National University of Singapore were heavily subsidised; later, he trained as a cancer surgeon in the United States using a government scholarship.
——————-

The original letter is satirical. Obviously, it is atypical in terms of ST’s writing style. This begs the question as to why the letter was published on paper and screen and with such a extreme make-over.

Knowing ST’s tendency to ‘change’ letters, the original letter should have been written in a unambiguous and clear manner. This would leave little room for the forum editors to wriggle out and ‘interpret’ the letter to the establishment’s liking.

Nevertheless, it still doesn’t excuse the hack job the letter received.

Any counter-argument of ST’s forum editors not understanding the satirical nature of the letter is ludicrous seeing that, as editors of the country’s award-winning and highest-selling newspaper, they should clearly recognize and understand satire.

With such prestigious industrial standing, the editors should know not to drastically edit, fabricate and completely change the meaning of the letter.

If the letter is too satirical for ST or that the editors are doubtful (highly improbable), then it shouldn’t be published. It’s simple as that.

The late author and New York Times columnist, William Safire, defined spin as “deliberate shading of news perception; attempted control of political reaction.”

Is ST’s editing of Mr Wee’s letter an example of journalistic spin?

Well yes, a close one. It’s no secret that our education system favours students of a upper socio-economic status. Often, we are thrown statistics to demonstrate otherwise. Mr Wee’s original letter challenged ST’s framing of such statistics.

Is ST’s editing of Mr Wee’s letter an example of bad journalism?

Yes, in every sense of the word. In this case, any journalism student would know that it’s a fundamental no-no to alter the entire meaning of a reader’s letter.

This raises more questions. How many of ST’s forum letters have received such manufactured make-overs? Why was Mr Wee’s edited letter published when it is significantly different from the original?

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said, “If you read something in the Straits Times or on CNA, you must know that it’s real”.

Well sir, I have read Mr Wee’s letter in ST and I know for a fact that it is not real nor is it the truth.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another one sometime back:

ST: 1 in 5 Gen Y wish to emigrate.
http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_652766.html

CNA: 50% of Sporeans have intention to leave:

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...120591/1/.html

Last edited by sbee1 on Sun Apr 17, 2011 1:10 am; edited 1 time in total</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD class=row1 vAlign=center width=150 align=left>Back to top</TD><TD class=row1 height=28 vAlign=bottom width="100%" noWrap><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=18 height=18><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=center noWrap> <SCRIPT language=JavaScript type=text/javascript><!-- if ( navigator.userAgent.toLowerCase().indexOf('mozilla') != -1 && navigator.userAgent.indexOf('5.') == -1 && navigator.userAgent.indexOf('6.') == -1 ) document.write(' '); else document.write('</td><td> </td><td valign="top" nowrap="nowrap">


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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=row2 vAlign=top width=150 align=left>sbee1



Joined: 18 Dec 2010
Posts: 316

</TD><TD class=row2 height=28 vAlign=top width="100%"><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%"> Posted: Sun Apr 17, 2011 1:09 am Post subject: </TD><TD vAlign=top noWrap> </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2>Another one with scanned pics:

Straits Times does hack job on forum letter?
http://theonlinecitizen.com/2011/03/straits-times-does-hack-job-on-forum-letter/</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
<TABLE class=forumline border=0 cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD class=row2 vAlign=top width=150 align=left>spermwars



Joined: 04 Nov 2010
Posts: 294
Location: Putting down PAP Running Dogs who destroyed local born Singaporeans' future.

</TD><TD class=row2 height=28 vAlign=top width="100%"><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD width="100%"> Posted: Sun Apr 17, 2011 3:11 am Post subject: </TD><TD vAlign=top noWrap> </TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD colSpan=2><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width="90%" align=center><TBODY><TR><TD>calvin89 wrote:</TD></TR><TR><TD class=quote>haha... they are a well known PAP mouth piece... Open secret where their allegiance is during election time...</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

Double confirmed by all the Press of the World that SPH & STRAITS TIMES deserved their latest 154th ranking. Shame on them when all their peers and contemporaries exposed them as the mouthpiece of the PAP Govt.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Straits_Times

The Newspaper and Printing Presses Act of 1974 requires all newspapers to be publicly listed into both ordinary and management shares, with management shares having 200 times the voting rights of ordinary shares and approval from the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts needed for any management share transfers. Hence, past chairpersons of Singapore Press Holdings have all been civil servants. In particular, SPH's former executive president Tjong Yik Min served as the head of the Internal Security Department from 1986 to 1993 and prominent political columnist and current political editor Chua Lee Hoong and as well as ex-journalists Irene Ho and Susan Sim are all former ISD employees.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranked Singapore 144th out of 173 countries in its annual World Press Freedom Ranking in 2008, in line with previous assessments. Lee Boon Yang the Singapore Minister for Information, Communications and the Arts publicly protested against the basis on which Singapore was given the low ranking. He asserted that the local press was running on a "Different media model" from many of the countries gauged by RSF, that has "Evolved out of our (Singapore's) special circumstances" and was being "Non-adversarial" towards the government. George Yeo, when he held the same portfolio as Lee, also stressed that the media was not to be a "fourth estate" in ruling the country (presumably because the media lacks the mandate from the electors); instead, the role of the press was to aid "nation building", in view of Singapore's heterogeneous society and peculiar vulnerabilities as a small nation.

Cherian George, a former art editor of the paper, described press workings in Singapore in a convention conference in 1998 at the University of California, Berkeley:

... the PAP power is hegemonic power, in the Gramscian sense: it is a perfect blend of coercion and consent ... Singapore's newspapers are, at least in part, willing partners, of the state ... the PAP did not suppress the press in order to cover up corruption or hide its mistakes. It did so out of a sincere belief that the press as an institution had a narrow and short-term view of the public interest, and that it could obstruct good government. Singapore's press model thus reverses the equation of your First Amendment. Here, the press, seen as the pure expression of democracy, is protected from the government, which, despite having been elected democratically, is assumed automatically by your political culture to have undemocratic tendencies. In the Singapore model, the elected government is the expression of democracy, and it is protected from the press, which is unelected and therefore undemocratic ... "the 'freedom from the press' model does mean that newspapers must operate within much narrower perimeters than their counterparts in most parts of the world. It must accept its subordinate role in society...The tone of stories must be respectful towards the country's leaders. They can be critical, but they cannot ridicule or lampoon.
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