http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tim-gr...-public-radio-employee-canned-occupy-activism
>>She was canned for promoting herself as an activist instead of a journalist. Her only understandable confusion is that line gets awfully blurry in the liberal land of public radio.
Waiting for the first situation of a public radio employee/JOURNALIST being canned for taking part in
a Tea Party event...Note: NPR fired Juan Williams for making a controversial comment but he was an
analyst not a journalist. Williams argues that the action was not in the spirit of "honest debate". But
again, this woman is a journalist and she was taking part in the movement.
Scroll down to comments and you'll see an excerpt from the NPR Code of Ethics
>>The purpose of this code is to protect the credibility of NPR's programming by ensuring high standards of honesty, integrity, impartiality(emphasis mine) and staff conduct. We accomplish this by...(b) setting rules and policies that prevent conflicts of interest, (c) establishing guidelines for outside work and activities that may reflect on NPR, and (d) establishing policies and procedures to ensure that the activities of NPR that fall outside journalism and daily production - corporate underwriting, foundation funding, marketing and promotional activities - do not jeopardize our journalistic independence
or involve NPR journalists in activities inappropriate to their roles (emphasis mine)
>>She was canned for promoting herself as an activist instead of a journalist. Her only understandable confusion is that line gets awfully blurry in the liberal land of public radio.
Waiting for the first situation of a public radio employee/JOURNALIST being canned for taking part in
a Tea Party event...Note: NPR fired Juan Williams for making a controversial comment but he was an
analyst not a journalist. Williams argues that the action was not in the spirit of "honest debate". But
again, this woman is a journalist and she was taking part in the movement.
Scroll down to comments and you'll see an excerpt from the NPR Code of Ethics
>>The purpose of this code is to protect the credibility of NPR's programming by ensuring high standards of honesty, integrity, impartiality(emphasis mine) and staff conduct. We accomplish this by...(b) setting rules and policies that prevent conflicts of interest, (c) establishing guidelines for outside work and activities that may reflect on NPR, and (d) establishing policies and procedures to ensure that the activities of NPR that fall outside journalism and daily production - corporate underwriting, foundation funding, marketing and promotional activities - do not jeopardize our journalistic independence
or involve NPR journalists in activities inappropriate to their roles (emphasis mine)