We clearly have a different viewpoint on exactly what the principle of photojournalistic integrity is.
Yes, we do. Seriously different viewpoints.
My expectation is that within the context of news reportage the individual doing that reporting does not alter the facts of the event being reported upon. You seem to feel that as long as the so-called spirit of the report matches what the reporter
thinks should be happening at the event,* then that reporter can freely modify the facts of the event to produce what he may feel is a clearer and more easily understood report.
Adding or removing elements in a reportage photograph is absolutely no different than adding or removing facts in a reportage article.
Should a reporter change the name of a witness to something easier to pronounce, without changing what that witness said? You know, more difficult names (say, like my own) only makes the report harder to read. If all difficult names were just changed to "Smith" or "Jones" then the report would be far less cluttered. Doing so would not alter the testimony. And besides, no one reading the report cares about stranger's names, right? They only care about what they said.
What's the big deal?
Should Mr. Rosenthal have Photoshopped in an even
larger flag? Perhaps with more stars clearly visible? And maybe also added a better background, since the factual one really sucks? Doing so would not have altered the essential meaning of the flag-raising event. A flag was still going up. Altering those two supporting facts would only have made the essence of that event easier to grasp for the viewer. Or perhaps easier to reproduce in newsprint.
What's the big deal?
Does the photo honestly represent what was going on and being reported on?
By simple basic definition, no. Not if elements of the composition have been added or removed after the photo was created. This is not a subtle distinction. There is no wiggle room in the definition of
honest. Partially honest is also partially
dishonest. This is not rocket science.
What I do find more dishonest however, is the insistence that this foot was somehow vitally important and somehow makes all the difference in the world.
The partial foot is utterly meaningless, regardless of whether it is included or excluded. This should have been apparent from the very beginning. The issues arising from its intentionally unacknowledged removal are the critical issues here. It concerns me greatly that a significant number of posters to this thread apparently cannot see beyond their feet. Both literally and figuratively.
Ken
* In the case here, people standing in the background of photographs
should be keeping their shoes out of locations in a composition where they might appear to be extra fingers...