Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jul 2010
Source: Reno News & Review (NV)
Copyright: 2010, Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsreview.com/issues/reno/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2524
Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n530/a06.html
Author: D. Brian Burghart

DRUG WARES

Welcome to this week's Reno News & Review.

I'm still getting a hard time over last week's cover story, "Drug
tests," in which I sampled some of the legal substances available at
local head shops. It's not from the expected sources--you know, I
expected my dad to call, "What do you mean you took coke in the early
`80s?" or from some distraught parent, "I never heard of this stuff.
Why are you doing telling my kids about it?" (And by the way, I'd
never heard of some of this stuff, either, but I'm willing to bet any
kid who'd be inclined toward experimenting already knew about it.)

No, I'm getting a hard time about the one I didn't try, Salvia
divinorum. The argument is since I didn't try it, I shouldn't have
written about it. Some of these are people I respect. Now, not to
split hairs here, but I have two points I'd like to make. First,
journalists rarely speak from personal knowledge, and second, I wrote
about my experience, which included doing the research, talking to
people I considered experts, and then making my decision based on the
information I had.

This is an interesting concept that basically could be summed up as
the question, "What is truth?" I do a lot of first-person experiential
writing. I've found that it doesn't usually reflect too well on me
because an accurate story requires the whole truth, at least as it
relates to the article. So those human inconsistencies, blunders and
ambivalences make the person writing the story look stupid, uncertain
and weak. My bullshit detector rings loud when I read a first-person
story in which the writer portrays himself as first-person omniscient.

This will give me food for thought. I know journalists can write about
space without being astronauts, but when a writer steps up to say, "I
think my experience is universal enough that it can inform other
people's ideas," is it acceptable to forgo almost any action?
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MAP posted-by: Matt