by
Kevin L. Martin
24 Apr 2013
Earlier this week, the blogosphere lit up with the news that
President Obama's official weekly schedule did not include a visit to
the devastated town of West, Texas, despite the fact that the President
will be visiting the region this week.
The initial schedule put out by the White House for the President
included attending the opening of the George W. Bush Presidential
Library and a fundraiser in Austin, coupled with an overnight stay, but
no mention of a visit to the town of West. More than a dozen people were
killed and more than 200 were hurt following an explosion at a
fertilizer plant in the town on April 17th. A week late, over 50 people
remain missing.
The White House seemed to change course by Monday afternoon and
publicly stated that Obama would attend a memorial for all the victims
after several websites reported the initial schedule.
While many can speculate on the White House’s sudden reversal of
course, one thing that can be said is that the blogosphere was
responsible for applying pressure in that decision. This stands as
further proof that more and more Americans are turning to new media to
hold elected officials accountable over the propaganda presented by the
old media.
It is a shame that it has fallen to the new media to now do the job
the old media use to do: to hold our elected officials accountable to
the very people who put them in office.
Big Journalism