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Editorial: President Trump, we are not the enemy of the people

Editorial: President Trump, we are not the enemy of the people
Editorial: President Trump, we are not the enemy of the people
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On May 30, 1783, the Pennsylvania Evening Post and Daily Advertiser published its first daily edition, becoming the first daily newspaper not only in Pennsylvania, but in our young nation.

Today, more than 200 daily and weekly newspapers across the commonwealth carry on the ideals of not only that newspaper, but the Constitution and the free press it ensures.

That includes the one you are reading right now, the Delaware County Daily Times, which has been in existence since 1876.

Today, we stand with many other newspapers across the country to defend our profession and the communities we serve.

We are not “fake news.” And we most certainly are not the “enemy of the people,” as President Donald Trump has suggested more than once.

Journalists pledge to report real, honest and credible news. We go to school to learn how to tell people’s stories, record history, sift through the haze of propaganda and uncover the truth. We cover the stories and uncover the information citizens in our communities need to make informed decisions on who to vote for, where to eat, and what to buy.

We take that essential mission – that of a watchdog for the public – very seriously. A vibrant, free press and fourth estate protects the public and guarantees that the public’s business be conducted exactly that way – in public. The role of the press is to cast light and seek out the facts in reporting on the public’s money, where it is going, who is spending it and on what.

That does not mean we are perfect. Nor that we do not make mistakes.

Mistakes are not “fake news.” Journalists do their best to report truthful information. In today’s world of the 24-hour news cycle, sometimes we make a mistake in the rush to sort through conflicting information and tell a story. We then do our best to correct the error and learn from it. This misinformation happens for a variety of reasons, but the mistake is not deliberate, nor is it malicious.

News you don’t like is not “fake news.” Not all news is happy news. We cover the tragedies, the crime, the tax hikes, the shady backroom deals. Just because it makes us uncomfortable, or angry, doesn’t mean it’s any less true. Journalists would not be doing their jobs if they didn’t cover the things that unsettle us. Many times, those are the things that impact our lives the most.

Opinions are not “fake news.” The editorials and opeds we write and publish are just that – opinion. We sometimes endorse candidates based on the information we have and who we think will best serve our community. You may agree with us, or you may not. That’s OK. Our job is to provide you with the facts so you can form your own opinion and make your own informed decisions.

Journalists are not the enemy of the people. We are the people. We live in the communities we cover and, just like everyone else, want those communities to succeed. For communities to be at their best, the people who live in them need to know what is happening. Journalists are the eyes, ears and voice of the people we serve. We sit at the school board meetings so you know who the next principal will be. We attend the town council meetings so you know which company is building in your backyard. We ask tough questions of government officials so you know where and how your tax dollars are being spent.

For every candidate we investigate, there’s a small business owner we profile. For every tax hike we report, there’s a high school football/basketball/soccer win we celebrate. For every congressman we question, there’s a charitable event we share. There is nothing fake about the communities, the people, the businesses we cover. There is nothing fake about our loyalty to those same communities, people and businesses.

We are not perfect. We know that. We also know that the news we provide can play a vital role in keeping our communities safe and economically sound. We cannot allow our leaders to erode the public’s trust in the media. Doing so would also erode the quality of information you receive, affecting the decisions you make.

The First Amendment is just 45 words in length, but they are mighty. It guarantees our freedom of speech and freedom of the press. Journalists are your safety valves, whistleblowers and reporters-in-chief who cover everything from what is going on in your town, to the cat stuck in the tree. And, we are passionate about our duties to document the history of our communities and serve as watchdogs to protect the public’s interests … your interests.

We are the Delaware County Daily Times. We were here yesterday. We are here today. We will be here tomorrow.

We don’t do fake news. We’re not the enemy of the people.

We are doing our job, one we take very seriously.