Daniel D. Covington is active in business and commercial law, litigating civil matters, estate and business planning, oil and gas, real estate, and advocating for creditors in bankruptcy proceedings.
Kansas Business Attorney
“first thing we do…let’s kill all the reporters.”
You are familiar with “let’s kills all the lawyers.” Not so fast. Think reporters. Think Global Voices Summit 08.
To be sure, if you’re a “speller of big words” (as my friend calls a good, critical thinker) you know the infamous “kill all the lawyers” line from Henry VI suggests that such a move will rid them of those who have an ability to find redress for grievances. Some even refer to attorneys as “guardians of independent thinking”.
Consider, however, the reporter. (Does a tree really fall in the woods if it isn’t reported?) One need not look far to recall a reporter who finds the right opening, really probes, digs into unfamiliar and uncomfortable territory, publishes her finding, and kaboom! It’s viral. If you read, you know how an important, well-reported story can sweep the earth, alter inertia, and move people so much more effectively than the best-crafted injunction, brought by capable counsel.
Even now, they’re gathered in Hungary at Global Voices Summit 08. You know how to google; try “gvsummit08″. They’re discussing fighting censorship around the globe. They’re blogging. They’re tweeting. IM’s, emails, qik video…they know their effort — the mere fact that they are convening — is important. They’re so right.
Sure, I want able counsel in my corner (or gone if I’m a conspiring malefactor). But if I’m gonna scheme the citizenry, sneak one past “the people”, the first thing we do, let’s kill all the reporters. Indeed.
Don’t stop here. Google blogs for gvsummit08. You have no excuse: click here. Or here (for tweets).
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