Reporters
in sentence
270 examples of Reporters in a sentence
Such terms always ensnare, early on, reporters, editors, and newspaper publishers with threats that they are jeopardizing “national security” or, by reporting on them, showing “support” for outlawed and nefarious forces.
My own affidavit agrees with Hedges’ argument that US
reporters
are already modifying their behavior in response to such laws – and to frightening recent examples that have been made of controversial publishers like WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange.
I know that many other US
reporters
are making similar decisions as a result of the NDAA, and I hope that they join this lawsuit whether with affidavits of their own, or as plaintiffs.
Such laws make otherwise conscientious
reporters
hesitate to do what is professionally right.
Some 6000 domestic election monitors have been training for the event, while hundreds of foreign
reporters
are converging on the country this week.
The Globe’s one-source report proved nothing – and was unverifiable by other
reporters
or citizens – but it suggested much, leading to a spate of equally unverifiable reports that New York had been targeted.
As
reporters
Warren Strobel and Jonathan Landay later explained, their middle-tier news service was not granted top-level access, so they had to rely on sources from inside the intelligence community, who forthrightly pointed out the flaws in the Bush administration’s claims.
Do political
reporters
ever take Newt Gingrich to task for, say, being overweight, unfit, and a poor dresser?
reporters
asked.
Moreover, American journalists know perfectly well that they, too, traffic in classified material constantly – indeed, many prominent US
reporters
have built lucrative careers doing exactly what Assange is doing.
Why do all these reporters, who get praise and money for doing what Assange has done, maintain a cowardly silence (at best) while a fellow publisher faces threats of extradition, banning, and espionage charges (which can incur the death penalty), not to mention calls for his assassination?
No mass arrests or further threats are required, because other
reporters
immediately start to police and censor themselves – and to attack the “traitor” in their midst.
According to Bloomberg, a French official told
reporters
at the summit that there was no question of that after the retirement age was lifted to 62 from 60 last year.
Oddly, Séralini permitted access to his paper to only a select group of reporters, and demanded that they sign a confidentiality agreement preventing them from interviewing other experts about the research before publication.
And, as if being called “Octamom” weren’t bad enough, pop stars such as Cher have come forward to denounce her; blogs have been created to track the details of her plastic surgery; and entertainment Web sites have sent
reporters
to stalk her and write shaming exposés of her sojourn at an expensive cosmetics counter.
President George W. Bush, for example, despised American
reporters
who spoke French.
That is why
Reporters
Without Borders (RSF) is joining with Nobel laureates, technology specialists, journalists, and human rights activists to launch the Information and Democracy Commission.
Foreign
reporters
are under constant surveillance and risk compromising their contacts.
Under the AIPPA,
reporters
are required to file their home addresses with the government; presumably this is what the word "privacy" in the law's title means.
Reporters
may face criminal prosecution for publishing inaccurate information; apparently, this is the basis for the reference to "access to information."
Obama officials assured me that Simpson had, indeed, had a change of heart; that he was a smart man with a sophisticated understanding of the issues; that he could sway
reporters
and get them to describe the commission’s advice as “bipartisan” (even though he could not sway actual legislators); and that he would be a genuine asset to the substantive work of the commission.
A police doctor working with forensic teams left the scene in shock, telling
reporters
of seeing bodies beheaded, and others bearing clear evidence of unspeakable torture.
There has been much complaining from foreign observers, aid teams, reporters, and government spokesmen about the lack of clarity, not to mention reliability, of official Japanese statements about the various disasters following the massive earthquake that struck northeastern Japan on March 11.
He sarcastically told
reporters
that he sensed the “the hand of God” guiding his silicon opponent.
Since July, Fair Trials and
Reporters
Without Borders (RSF) have responded to a number of cases in which
reporters
have been arrested and detained on the basis of Interpol information.
These authoritarian regimes think nothing of using Interpol to target
reporters
in exile.
The international community must show its commitment to free speech by making it clear that
reporters
forced to flee their homelands will be protected and allowed to continue their work.
Reporters
need the rule of law to work effectively.
Brave
reporters
who have refused to be cowed have paid with their lives, and cartel-linked killings have had the intended effect of silencing others.
Journalists know that democracy and a free press are mutually dependent, and that when
reporters
are silenced, embezzlement, extortion, and environmental crimes increase.
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