09-06-2014, 09:19 AM
Interesting observation, Rob.
As I said somewhere else here, I have a good friend with irreproachable ethics who worked with Alan at the HIJ, and she has nothing but good to say about him, so I am rooting for Alan.
PauHana, lol, true. Tiffany does style herself a journalist, and I bought into it at first. She was a news reporter, with a bachelor's degree. Journalism, where a person studies journalistic ethics and history and trains to be a real journalist, is a master's program.
While I don't at all believe that a college degree makes or breaks a talent, it does relate to what kind of professional study a person has done. A reporter must be given a set of rules to follow, but a journalism student spends much more time studying the ethics and philosophy of journalism.
Tiffany was a reporter, and it is fine to be proud of becoming a reporter, but she seems to have no clue about ethics. She thinks she can just switch hats all the time and that makes it OK to behave in a way that would be unethical if one were wearing the other hat.
And seems to have extended the "switchable hat" MO to her theory of what constitutes a permanent primary residence.
Kathy
As I said somewhere else here, I have a good friend with irreproachable ethics who worked with Alan at the HIJ, and she has nothing but good to say about him, so I am rooting for Alan.
PauHana, lol, true. Tiffany does style herself a journalist, and I bought into it at first. She was a news reporter, with a bachelor's degree. Journalism, where a person studies journalistic ethics and history and trains to be a real journalist, is a master's program.
While I don't at all believe that a college degree makes or breaks a talent, it does relate to what kind of professional study a person has done. A reporter must be given a set of rules to follow, but a journalism student spends much more time studying the ethics and philosophy of journalism.
Tiffany was a reporter, and it is fine to be proud of becoming a reporter, but she seems to have no clue about ethics. She thinks she can just switch hats all the time and that makes it OK to behave in a way that would be unethical if one were wearing the other hat.
And seems to have extended the "switchable hat" MO to her theory of what constitutes a permanent primary residence.
Kathy