Review the How to Strategically Align Employee Compensation with Your Company’s Objectives  article. According to Stevens-Huffman (2012), “While compensation alone won’t ensure the attainment of the b

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/how-nellie-bly-went-undercover-to-expose-abuse-of-the-mentally-ill

How Nellie Bly went undercover to expose abuse of the mentally ill

Nation May 5, 2018 12:17 PM EDT

Today, we celebrate the 154th birthday of Elizabeth Cochrane Seaman. Better known by her nom de plume Nellie Bly (taken–and misspelled–from the title of a Stephen Foster tune, “Nelly Bly”), she was the pioneering, if not the very first, American investigative journalist.

Bly was born in Cochran’s Mills, Pennsylvania, just outside of Pittsburgh. In 1889, she made a famous, widely reported and intrepid 72-day trip around the globe. It was the fastest journey of her era and one that shattered the fictional record of Jules Verne’s wanderer, Phineas Fogg, in his novel “Around the World in 80 Days.”

Medical historians and patient advocates, however, rightly revere Bly for her infamous exposé of the New York City Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell’s (now Roosevelt) Island in the East River.

First reported in October 1887 on the pages of Joseph Pulitzer’s flagship newspaper, the New York World, Bly subsequently published her daring dispatches as a book, “Ten Days in a Mad-House.” It is a slim volume that remains a classic in the annals of psychiatry and a cogent warning against inhumane treatment of the mentally ill. It proved so embarrassing to the city aldermen that they appropriated an extra “$1,000,000 per annum” to correct many of the abuses Bly exposed.

After Nellie Bly’s investigation was published, a grand jury was impaneled to investigate the abuses and poor treatments she uncovered at the asylum. Photo via Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons

The fascinating question to answer, of course, is how did she do it?

Bly began her journalistic career in 1880 at the age of 16, writing “women’s columns” on home, hearth, gardening, society and childrearing for the Pittsburgh Dispatch. Soon enough, she convinced her editor to investigate such vanguard topics as how divorce affected women. Too impatient to be restricted only to domestic matters, she spent six months in Mexico as a special correspondent. Soon after her return, she flew the constraining coop of Pittsburgh, leaving behind a note, “I am off for New York. Look out for me. —Bly”

After talking her way into the city room of the New York World, she impressed the editors there enough to leave with a plum assignment: “I was asked by the World if I could have myself committed to one of the asylums for the insane in New York, with a view to writing a plain and unvarnished narrative of the treatment of the patients therein.”

Getting committed proved rather easy, even if neither Bly nor her editors had a clear plan of getting her released once the story was filed. She took a room at a cheap boarding house, “Temporary Home for Females, No. 84 Second Avenue,” under the name Bly Brown and began questioning and imitating the women who seemed most insane to her. Soon enough, it was Bly who was deemed crazy. The matron of the house enlisted a few cops to escort Bly to the Essex Market Police Courtroom, where an impatient judge named Duffy pronounced her insane and ordered her to the famed insane ward at Bellevue Hospital, the city’s largest charitable hospital. A few days later, she boarded a ferry boat filled stem to stern with unwashed and uncomprehending women for Blackwell’s Island, “an insane place,” one ambulance driver told her, “where you’ll never get out of.”

Taking careful notes of both her own experiences and those of her fellow inmates, Bly painted a dire picture in which 16 doctors were assigned to the care of some 1,600 inmates. “Excepting two,” she recorded, “I have never seen them pay any attention to the patients.” She also questioned the judge’s ability to pronounce a woman insane “by merely bidding her good morning and refusing to hear her pleas of release? Even the sick ones know it is useless to say anything for the answer will be that it is their imagination.” She also reported on the cultural insensitivity and language barriers experienced by immigrant women who spoke little or no English and a host of hostile and abusive treatments, from mandatory cold baths to confinement in small, damp, vermin-infested, locked rooms.

After a few days on Blackwell’s Island, Bly dropped her act of “acting crazy” and tried to present herself in a more fit mental state. Such efforts were all for naught until the New York World sent an attorney to arrange for her release. Two days later, on Sunday, Oct. 9, 1887, the World ran the first installment of her story, titled “Behind Asylum Bars,” and Bly became an overnight sensation. The psychiatrists who had erroneously diagnosed her as insane offered profuse apologies, even as the remaining stories were widely syndicated across the nation.

Not only did the New York City municipal government appropriate more money to the care of the mentally ill on Blackwell’s Island, a grand jury was impaneled to investigate the abuses and poor treatments Bly uncovered at the asylum. Approximately one month after her articles ran in print, many of the most glaring problems she reported had improved: better living and sanitary conditions were instituted, more nourishing meals were provided, translators were hired for the foreign born who were not necessarily mentally ill but simply could not understand their keepers, and the most abusive nurses and physicians were fired and replaced.

Bly sailed from one journalistic triumph to the next, including her whirlwind trip around the world in 72 days in 1889 (a journey she primarily made while traveling by herself rather than with a chaperone), a series of dispatches from the Eastern Front during World War I, and reports on the women’s suffrage movement. In 1895, at age 31, she married the 73-year-old millionaire Robert Seaman, who ran the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company, which made steel milk cans, stacking garbage cans and boilers. Due to her husband’s failing health (he died in 1904), she retired from journalism and took over the reins of the company.

Bly died of pneumonia at the age of 57 in 1922. One can only speculate what further triumphs and good deeds this remarkable woman might have achieved if only she lived a few years longer.

At the very least, she helped change the plights of the mentally ill in America–an issue, sadly, that still requires attention to this very day.

compare between Gonzo and Hobbes

http://criticalthinkingmendocino.com/ethics_-_case_studies

Case 12: Gonzo Journalism

The Society of Professional Journalists was started in 1909 by DePauw University students who were interested in careers in journalism, and wanted to “uphold high standards in the profession.”115 The group spread to other college campuses and evolved into a professional organization. In 1926 the group adopted its first code of ethics, borrowed from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. This code of ethics was revised five times, with the most recent revision in 2014. In the 1973 version of the code of ethics, the guidelines require being objective, free from bias, and avoiding morbid curiosity or excessive coverage of vice and crime.116 The 2014 code of ethics recommends avoiding pandering to lurid curiosity, and providing context but does not call for objectivity or avoidance of bias, except insofar as to require labeling of advocacy or commentary.117 One wonders why these rules have evolved over the past forty years. One famed journalist comes to mind: Hunter S. Thompson. He broke a lot of rules, including the general proposition in journalistic ethics that the reporter was not a part of the story, which is embodied in the prior code's calls for objectivity and biasavoidance. Instead of attempting to be the fly on the wall, he became part of the stories he reported, which upended journalistic history and tradition, and led to the notion of Gonzo journalism. Today's most famed journalists tend to be less flamboyant, but nonetheless involved in the story. Amy Goodman attended the protests in Standing Rock to cover them. She and members of Unicorn Riot, an indie news outlet, were arrested, and their arrests became part of the story, insofar as those arrests may have represented government oppression and/or intrusion on First Amendment rights.118

Many lauded the judge in Ms. Goodman's case for throwing out the riot charges against her,119 but some note that the proliferation of digital and social media and the advent of the “citizen journalist” have made it much harder to distinguish between those involved in the story and those merely seeking to cover it (and even those who may hope to make a story out of the police interactions with large groups).120 Similarly, during the inauguration in Washington, D.C. in 2017, a number of journalists were rounded up with “antifa” (i.e., anti-fascist) protesters, and some such journalists were charged with crimes for allegedly participating in the chaos that they were reporting.121 Some of these journalists claim that their footage would show that they were not participating in the riots, but merely covering the story.122 Even worse, however, are the more recent claims that some of these journalists were subjected to rape as punishment while under arrest.123 Clearly there are some instances when the journalist's involvement in the story is beyond their control, such as in the claimed rape during arrest. In other instances, however, upon running with “antifa” protesters using Facebook Live, occasionally cursing and otherwise using an informal voice, the journalist may become harder to recognize as he or she goes gonzo. We charge the police with a difficult task of deciding what “counts” as journalism when deciding who should be charged during a protest. The question remains whether the journalist has a duty not to become a part of the story, and/or whether there are contexts when proximity to the story is inappropriate.

115 Society of Professional Journalists, “Historic Moments: A Timeline of SPJ's Development,” Society of Professional Journalists, June 15, 2017, https://www.spj.org/spjhistory.asp.

116 Society of Professional Journalists, “Code of Ethics (1973),” Illinois Institute of Technology, August 8, 2017, http://ethics.iit.edu/ecodes/node/3702.

117 Society of Professional Journalists, “Code of Ethics,” Society of Professional Journalists, August 6, 2017, http://ethics.iit.edu/ecodes/node/3703.

118 Lizzy Ratner, “Amy Goodman Is Facing Jail Time for Reporting on the Dakota Access Pipeline. That Should Scare Us All,” The Nation, October 15, 2016, https://www.thenation.com/article/amy-goodmanis- facing-prison-for-reporting-on-the-dakota-access-pipeline-that-should-scare-us-all/.

119 Sam Levin, “Judge Rejects Riot Charges for Journalist Amy Goodman after Oil Pipeline Protest,” The Guardian, October 17, 2016, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/oct/17/amy-goodman-northdakota- oil-access-pipeline-protest-arrest-riot.

120 Alleen Brown, “Arrests of Journalists at Standing Rock Test the Boundaries of the First Amendment,” The Intercept, November 27, 2016, https://theintercept.com/2016/11/27/arrests-of-journalists-atstanding- rock-test-the-boundaries-of-the-first-amendment/.

121 Jon Swaine, “Riot Charges Dropped against Three more Journalists at Inauguration Protests,” The Guardian, January 30, 2017, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/jan/30/riot-charges-droppedthree- journalists-inauguration-protests.

122 Steven Nelson, “Independent Journalist Now Faces 70 Years in Prison after Inauguration Mass Arrest,” U.S. News & World Report, May 1, 2017, https://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2017-05- 01/independent-journalist-now-faces-70-years-in-prison-after-inauguration-mass-arrest.

123 “D.C. Police Accused of Using ‘Rape as Punishment’ Targeting Some Arrested during Trump Inauguration,” Democracy Now, June 28, 2017, https://www.democracynow.org/2017/6/28/dc_police_accused_of_using_rape.