<p>Reporter editor and lecturer&nbsp;Stanley Flink knows the news business. He has worked as a journalist and editor for many years in many different venues and platforms.</p><p>Flink&nbsp;knows as we all should&nbsp;that democracy has no life without truth. In&nbsp;<em>Due Diligence and the News</em> Stan reviews succinctly and gracefully the relationship between the press and American civic life from colonial days to the digital age. He shows that while opinions may differ&nbsp;facts are not optional. How it can be possible to&nbsp;assure publication based on verifiable facts without curtailing differing opinions is the issue addressed throughout this collection of linked essays.</p><p>Can internal verification earn the trust of the reading/listening public?</p><p>Can a voluntary body of experts like the Hutchins Commission make workable rules?</p><p>Can government&mdash;international national state or local&mdash;serve as a watchdog without violating the Constitution?</p><p>Can the press in the absence of malice do less than full due diligence in commenting on a public official?</p><p>These questions are addressed thoughtfully throughout this well written book but no one not even Stan can answer them conclusively and for all situations. Ultimately as&nbsp;Stan takes a look forward into the digital age the age of learned intelligence and poses unanswerable questions about the future of the press.</p>
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