Argument without invective
Reuters has a proud history of factual, unbiased news coverage. In our news articles we let the facts speak for themselves; opinions are clearly sourced to the experts whom we interview.
But we have our own experts as well. And I want to let them increasingly have their voice on Reuters services.
It is vitally important to me and to everything we stand for that news and comment are kept separate. It is also vitally important, however, that we use all forms of journalism available to us to communicate with our audience and engage in a vibrant conversation around ideas.
Recently here on Reuters.com youll have had the chance to read our new world affairs columnist Bernd Debusmann or our global finance columnist Jim Saft with their analyses on current events. Both use facts as their base but then use their many years of reporting experience to deliver an argument an argument I hope youll join via email.
If you read Chinese, you can see how our Chinese financial columnist Wei Gu puts her expertise to work on our Chinese-language pages.
And subscribers to our Brazilian Portuguese-language financial service can read Agela Bittencourt as she dissects that countrys economy.
What these columns, and the ones that will join them, have in common is a mixture of facts expertise and a point of view. They wont engage in screeching name-calling or invective; they will be challenging and controversial. Agree or disagree with them as you like, but please read, be stimulated and join in the debate.






