Rove has managed to put the entire free press under his thumb by spreading so many lies that no one will trust anything the media says. Also, the media has been bashed and persecuted to the point that reporters will be fearful to publish news.
Potential whistle-blowers will never come forward for fear of being exposed as a leak and suffer retribution.
I found a few articles regarding the death:
Kids, don't fall for 'free press' hype
July 8, 2005
BY CAROL MARIN SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
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Just about every week, the phone rings with an earnest, young journalism student at the other end asking what he or she needs to do to become a reporter. Some have already given it a great deal of thought. Most have not.
For a while now, I've toyed with the notion of one day writing a book, a kind of road map for would-be reporters on some of the obstacles ahead. I'm not sure what I'd call it. Maybe, Hey, Kid, So You Wanna Be A Reporter? I was forced to abandon my original title, News Reporting For Dummies, after a media-bashing friend of mine sneered that it was redundant.
Lesson No. 1: Even your friends will despise you.
Reporters have long since lost the luster of the glory days of Woodward and Bernstein and Watergate. Journalists, in the eye of the public, have gone from swashbuckling to scum-sucking. Some of our wounds are self-inflicted. The Jayson Blair affair at the New York Times and the CBS/Dan Rather case of questionable documents are just two of too many.
http://www.suntimes.com/output/marin/cst-edt-carol081.htmlBad Case for a Fight
By David Ignatius
Friday, July 8, 2005; Page A23
As a journalist, I'm angry that Judith Miller of the New York Times is in jail today for trying to protect a confidential source. But I am also angry that the press has allowed itself to be dragged into a no-win case that will weaken our ability to protect true whistle-blowers and thereby serve the public.
With the Valerie Plame leak investigation, the press has planted its flag on the least favorable ground to fight the larger battle for confidentiality. This is a case in which the sources weren't disclosing wrongdoing by others but were allegedly doing wrong themselves by blowing the cover of a CIA officer.
The journalists' position became even more awkward after special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald compelled sworn testimony from senior White House officials who were the likely leakers. If one of them had confessed, the case would be over. But what seems possible is that one or more White House officials who leaked information has denied under oath being the source. If so, this is now an investigation of perjury or obstruction of justice.
For months it has been clear that this case was likely to make bad law: appellate rulings that would erode journalists' ability to protect their sources. That's one reason why some prominent reporters -- including ones with The Post and NBC News -- let their lawyers work out arrangements that would provide Fitzgerald with information he wanted, without compromising the confidentiality agreements the reporters had made with their sources. These negotiations were delicate, involving sources' consent that reporters testify about their conversations. But they allowed both sides to preserve the essential points of principle -- and avoid the train wreck that obviously lay ahead.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/07/07/AR2005070701900.htmlFrameshop: The Dan Rather Effect
For the past week, the media has been obsessing over one reporter who, due to her refusal to give up one confidential source, has been sent to jail for one week. Over and over we've been hearing the same thing: "Judith miller sent to jail!" "Freedom of the press gone!" "The end of independent journalism is upon us!" "Send the kinds home from school!" "Lower the flags to half mast!"
Unfortunately, the media is stuck in the wrong story. Or rather, they have been distracted by one detail of a much, much larger story.
This larger story is so big that it worries the entire country--everyone who watches the news and reads the newspaper and listens to the radio and reads the Internet. We are all biting our nails, waiting for the media to start focusing on the big story instead of the sideshow about a reporter forced to spend one week in prison for standing up for her principles.
Here is the larger story as it might appear in a newspaper:
WHITE HOUSE BREAKS LAW TO SILENCE POLITICAL OPPONENT
by Jeffrey Feldman
Washington, July 7 - In a scandal reminiscent of the Watergate break-in that led to the resignation of President Nixon, it has come to light that a Bush White House official broke the law to silence a political opponent who spoke out against the invasion of Iraq. The incident, in which a White House official gave top secret U.S. intelligence to a reporter, took place in mid-2003 or just prior to President Bush's re-election. It has not been confirmed who committed this crime against the American people. Many signs point to special White House adviser Karl Rove, who has just been directed by his lawyers to remain silent on the matter. As this scandal unfolds, Americans have begun to ask if President Bush himself was involved. Did the President break the law? Americans wait anxiously for answers.
http://jeffrey-feldman.typepad.com/frameshop/2005/07/frameshop_the_d.html