
13/07/2025
THE DOGE REPORT: PRESS REPORTING
Depending on the medium and sources by which one receives one’s news, there is discussion whether or not the reporting of DOGE’s actions and effects is accurate.
“Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a hundred thousand bayonets.” — Napoleon Bonaparte*
“If the government wishes some fact to remain unknown, almost all major organs of publicity will assist in concealment. In such cases it often happens that the truth can only be made known, if at all, by persistent and self-sacrificing efforts involving obloquy and perhaps disgrace. Sometimes, if the matter rouses sufficient passion, the truth comes to be known in the end.” — Bertrand Russell.**
“…without fairness and balance journalism may become indistinguishable from vigilantism.” — Don Kowet***
“Partial truths are divisive; comments out of context, destructive. Carefully chosen words that obfuscate facts are lying. The selective elimination of pertinent details a willful misrepresentation. These are sins of omission.…Discourse must be truthful….Failure to do so only feeds the continual distrustful narrative.” — Augustus Lincoln Treatise****
*(Appears to be fabricated, as it is not known from surviving print before 19 March 1845 when it appeared in “Mississippi Democrat” in an article titled 'The Press' and in “The North-Carolina Standard” on its own as a column filler. On April 17, 1845 a longer version of ‘The Press’ article appeared in “The Guard” (Holly Springs, Miss.) crediting the article to the “New Orleans Jeffersonian,” a newspaper edited by Col J F H Claiborne (Life of Col. J.F.H. Claiborne by Franklin L. Riley, p.232). The relevant issue of the Jeffersonian does not appear to have survived but is possibly the original source of the invented quote. Claiborne again uses the "quote" in 1846 in a tribute to Professor Thomas R. Dew, (Richmond Enquirer (Richmond, Va.), October 20, 1846). The "quote" then quickly spreads across the english-speaking world, arriving in England by 26 April and appearing in “The Sentinel” (Sydney, Australia) on 5 November 1845. It appears to be unknown in french. Source: Napoleon - Wikiquote as of 29 June 2025.)
** (Russell, Bertrand. Essay titled “On Civil Disobedience” (undated), page 3. It accompanied a letter dated 17 September 1961 to Clara Urquhart for the essay’s inclusion in her work “A Matter of Life,” pages 189-196. Mrs. Urquhart did not include Russell’s title. Edited by Clara Urquhart, © 1963 by Clara Urquhart, published by Jonathan Cape, Thirty Bedford Square, London, printed in Great Britain by Billing & Sons Limited, Guildford and London on paper made by John Dickinson & Co., Bound by A.W. Bain & Co. Ltd., London.
Russell’s essay was extracted from “A Matter of Life” and titled [The Committee of 100] in “The Borzoi College Reader: Shorter Edition,” 1968, pages 180-185. Edited by Charles Muscatine, University of California, Berkeley, and Marlene Griffith, Laney College, © 1966 by Charles Muscatine and Marlene Griffith. Published by Alfred A. Knopf: New York, published simultaneously in Toronto, Canada, by Random House of Canada, Limited, distributed by Random House, Inc.)
***(Kowet, Don. ‘Inside Story,’ in “A Matter of Honor: General William C. Westmorland versus CBS News,” Page 263, Macmillan Publishing Company, New York, 1984, and Collier Macmillan Publishers, London, 1984.)
****(Williams, Tom. ‘State of the Union,’ in “President You: How a Thoughtful Ordinary Citizen Could Change the Most Complex Government on Earth,” Page 49, All Wet Publishing, LLC, © 2019)