Wrong About Everything, All the Time

You’d think it would be more difficult to maintain a record of being perfectly wrong about everything, but apparently that distinction is not out of reach. A few weeks ago, in the comments to a mostly unrelated post, JimC assured me that I could swing on over to Iraq, take all the photos I wanted of whatever I wanted, and not face censorship or review. He even quoted serial hack and admitted propagandist Pat Dollard in support of his assertions. The whole thing was more irritating than normal because of the topic — being able to shoot part of the biggest news story of the last several years is something any documentary photographer should want to do — and my idea of what journalism is and isn’t. In short, and quoting The Wire, “if I hear music, I’m gon’ dance.” And forget the 18″ gap between me and my partner.

So imagine the shock (and monocle dropping) that followed this piece on media coverage, and yes, restrictions in Iraq, by San Antonio Express-News reporter Sig Christenson:

Petraeus has refused to rescind a 2006 ground rule requiring photographers to receive the permission of wounded soldiers before running their photos. It is a difficult and often impossible requirement, if only because wounded troops are whisked to hospitals far from the photographers and the battlefields they were on.

This policy is officially based on the premise that a wounded soldier’s privacy ought not to be compromised by embedded media. But the problem here is the assumption that soldiers have privacy rights in a firefight. Battlefields, like the street, are public places.

Or they have been until now. The new regulation deviates from a less restrictive rule used during the invasion. That rule guaranteed families wouldn’t see the faces of their wounded relatives before getting word from the government.

What the new rule does is prevent Americans from seeing the reality of war. I believe that is what it is designed to do, although I am sure Petraeus would beg to differ. But couple it with the new Iraqi effort to suppress negative images by forbidding photography for the first hour after a bombing, and the picture we get from Iraq is underexposed and out of focus.

Blurred images of the Iraq war, like fuzzy math, suit both governments just fine. It’s harder to find a Katrina Moment in this development, for the rule hampering the work of embedded photographers is so obscure that even most journalists aren’t aware of it. But it will have a substantial, if subtle, impact. Seeing fewer graphic images makes it harder for photojournalists to accurately convey the war that is being fought in our name. The danger of that ought to be fresh in mind.

Yet all we hear about is how the media won’t cover all the schools we’re painting. Well, they aren’t really covering the war either, and they don’t have a say in it. So I wonder, because JimC dropped some Latin, (velle est posse – to be willing is to be able) wouldn’t my will to shoot anything I wanted be against U.S. military rules and Iraqi law? And since velle est posse, how’s the reenlistment effort coming?

Comments

  1. JimC says:

    I love being mentioned in your top level posts. The reenlistment effort, as in having already served and been honorably discharged from military service, is exactly where it was before….

  2. matt says:

    as in having already served and been honorably discharged from military service

    in the war you so strongly support? didn’t think so.

    exactly where it was before

    nowhere. hypocrite.

    i won’t hold my breath for the admission that you were wrong on the substance. that would take a level of intellectual honesty quite beyond your meager abilities.

  3. JimC says:

    in the war you so strongly support? didn’t think so.

    Ahhh…

    i won’t hold my breath for the admission that you were wrong on the substance. that would take a level of intellectual honesty quite beyond your meager abilities.

    Actually, I was browsing and finding many pictures of war and combat from Iraq (and videos), along with images of soldiers who are wounded….not sure who took them or how they made it onto the net, maybe in violation of the rules, but they are there…

  4. matt says:

    pathetic. having been made aware of the rules from a journalist who had to follow them, you still refuse to admit that you are wrong.

    what’s wrong with you?

  5. eponymagain says:

    I am fairly certain that Dollard’s work would be more accurately defined by modern aesthetic theory as pornography. While his work may intend and even possess some propagandistic power of persuasion, it is primarily constituted of a delight in the obscene.

  6. matt says:

    good point. war porn is still porn, and this doesn’t get the attention it deserves.

  7. JimC says:

    What are your thoughts on these photos?

    http://www.militarytimes.com/multimedia/photo/AdhamiyahSS/

    http://www.fotos.geschichtsthemen.de/iraq-war/iraq.htm

    Are these sort of the thing you are wanting to do? Just trying to get a feel for the kinds of photos that you feel would get you into trouble over there with the censors…

    war porn is still porn

    If so, what kind of photos are you concerned you can’t get? Wounded soldiers, raw combat, wounded civilians? I find examples of all, or are all of these in violations of the rules being pushed now?

  8. matt says:

    What are your thoughts on these photos?

    who cares?

    Just trying to get a feel for the kinds of photos that you feel would get you into trouble over there with the censors…

    what part of “no rules” don’t you get? aside from breaking the geneva conventions, which i’d rather not do in stark contrast from the govt which breaks them every day, the only thing it seems should be covered by any restrictions is not giving away tactics or position. any other restrictions makes it not journalism.

    or are all of these in violations of the rules being pushed now?

    you don’t think the military times isn’t exempt?

  9. JimC says:

    Petraeus has refused to rescind a 2006 ground rule requiring photographers to receive the permission of wounded soldiers before running their photos. It is a difficult and often impossible requirement, if only because wounded troops are whisked to hospitals far from the photographers and the battlefields they were on.

    Ok maybe I’m misunderstanding something here but getting permission to run their photos implies that taking them is ok and if you have to wait for the soldier to be accessible to get his permission ro “run” the photos, isn’t that far less than blanket censorship? Granted you may have to wait (probably longer than you would deem timely) to run your photos but you could still possibly get permission quickly and run them in a timely fashion. Or are you saying that you would never be able to get permission and never be able to show your photos?

    Look, I’m all for you going to Iraq and taking an iconic photo, that way I can claim I spurred you on to greatness ;-)

  10. matt says:

    Granted you may have to wait (probably longer than you would deem timely) to run your photos but you could still possibly get permission quickly and run them in a timely fashion.

    look, we can argue around the margins all day, but none of this is the point. the war is news, and putting all these rules on it is clearly meant to obstruct coverage. yes, you could try to identify a soldier, find out which hospital he was taken to, and if he is conscious, try to get permission to run the photo. by then, even in the quickest of processes, it wouldn’t be news anymore, and would only be relevant for a long lead story for some journal or as a part of my portfolio. neither seems worth going to a war zone, no?

    this war is being fought in our names, with our money, and the very same privacy which you have slagged here repeatedly is the fig leaf for why journalists can’t do their jobs properly? i can be photographed on surveillance cameras on a public street, my email can be stored at NSA, my international calls (and probably domestic too) can be tapped, but i can’t shoot photos of a news story without permission because of their privacy? what rights as americans do they have that i don’t have?

  11. sarabeth says:

    Or are you saying that you would never be able to get permission and never be able to show your photos?

    Actually, Sig Christenson himself said it pretty clearly, didn’t he?

    It is a difficult and often impossible requirement, if only because wounded troops are whisked to hospitals far from the photographers and the battlefields they were on.

    You cited that yourself, JimC. What part of it don’t you understand?

  12. matt says:

    What part of it don’t you understand?

    words.

  13. JimC says:

    No the “timely” aspect. I assumed that eventually you would get your permission or not to publish the photos but if the desire is to take a photo and publish it immediately, then well I agree that is hindered, but not impossible (all the time), I would imagine that more often than not, it may take longer than desired to get said permission. So it is not that you can’t take the photos and later publish them, it is being able to publish them as “news”, so in that respect, yes photojournalism is hindered. Sig said that one way to help this is for more people go to Iraq to cover it….

    Matt, on your analogy about your privacy being invaded with surveillance, how often do you encounter your image on the news? Even if you were injured in a car accident, usually, your picture is not splashed across the TV. So I think the analogy is a bit off the mark with respect to the soldiers. A more proper analogy would be: Is your privacy breached if someone photos your body after a car accident and then profits from it (monetarily or with recognition)? I think most Americans would agree that no one should have the right to photo your broken body after a car accident and publish it as news without your or your family’s permission so why then would we not extend that courtesy to wounded troops? Especially if their image was going to be used for anything other than news of the specific incident that caused them to be wounded.

  14. matt says:

    how often do you encounter your image on the news?

    not often. but the odds of me shooting a picture of anyone, posting it here and flickr would put the odds of that soldier or anyone in his family seeing it at about 0.16%. so if the standard is “encounter your image on the news” then i should be able to shoot whatever i damn please.

    A more proper analogy would be: Is your privacy breached if someone photos your body after a car accident and then profits from it (monetarily or with recognition)?

    well, in the case that Christenson used, it was people wounded. i agree that identifiable dead bodies are different. but news is news, and you don’t need permission to shoot that here, and shouldn’t there.

    Especially if their image was going to be used for anything other than news of the specific incident that caused them to be wounded.

    this has exactly nothing to do with anything.

  15. sarabeth says:

    how can it be possible for a man to be this sick and not seek help? for his loved ones to not take steps to stop him from embarrassing himself on a daily basis?