I hate that the Wall Street Journal charges for its online content.
And I’m so glad it does, too.
I hate it because I have to pay for it, and it seems weird to pay for Internet stuff.
But I developed the habit a long time ago of reading the editorial and opinion columnists from both the WSJ and the New York Times as often as I can.
And I like to read them on the same day, because it’s fun to see how really smart people can take the same topic that’s in the news and have completely different takes on it.
But the key is, you have to read both. If you just read the New York Times, you’ll end up like most of my friends, and lean so far over to the left when you walk, you’ll end up falling over like a drunk.
And if you only read the Wall Street Journal, you’ll soon find yourself listening to the likes of Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh all the time, and life is too short to spend any of it with those morons.
The New York Times doesn’t charge for content yet (they tried to move the opinion pieces behind a pay firewall years ago, but it didn’t work; I think they were just a little ahead of themselves, and could probably do it now).
So I still get that for free. But in order to achieve my fair and balanced view of the news, I have to pay for the WSJ.
But as much as I hate paying for online content, I also think it’s a good thing, and that all respectable newspapers should do it.
If you have good journalists and good editors and good fact checkers and good headline writers, you should charge for them.
And I believe people will pay for that talent. Maybe they wouldn’t have three years ago, or even a year ago, but I think they will now. And when that happens, when every respectable news organization starts charging for content, it will be a good thing.
Because here’s what will happen: Internet news will soon enough be divided into two categories: stuff that costs money, and stuff that’s free.
In the first category, you’ll have real journalists—the New York Times, the WSJ, CNN, etc. These people will be trained journalists grounded and ruled by ethics, whose job it is to research and report stories.
That first category will also have the great opinion columnists and editorial writers, of course . . . but all opinion will be clearly labeled as such.
The second category will have bloggers like this ass clown Andrew Breitbart, the joke “journalist” who did the hatchet job on Shirley Sherrod.
The second category will also have great opinion columnists and writers, of course. The established news organizations don’t have a monopoly on great writers and great thinkers. A lot of those people will still offer their opinions for free. Which is a good thing.
But when it comes to journalism, when it comes to getting facts right, when it comes to doing research and conducting interviews and checking facts and rechecking facts and developing credible sources and paying attention to ethics . . . . well, I’ll pay for that.
You don’t have to. But then don’t get pissed off when people like Breitbart make you look silly.
And make no mistake about it. There are Breitbarts all over the Internet. There are Breitbarts on the right, and Breitbarts on the left. There are Breitbarts shilling for corporations, and Breitbarts working for unions.
For every responsible Internet journalist out there doing the leg work and getting it right, there are a dozen Breitbarts playing fast and loose with the rules, and driving their own agenda. And getting it wrong . . . often on purpose.
For every one journalist who understands that “getting it right is more important than getting it first,” there are 25 Breitbarts out there who are shitting all over the Internet and calling it “news.”
I’m willing to pony up a couple of bucks for good old fashioned journalism. Are you?
If you’re not, then prepare to be Breitbarted on a regular basis.

