Roger’s Rules

April 29th, 2008 10:29 am

More wacko than wacky: The NY Times vs. The Washington Post on Rev. Wright

What, if anything, was objectionable about Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s performance at the National Press Club yesterday? If you learned about the event exclusively from reading The New York Times, you would probably believe that the only real issue was the damage it did to Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. In an op-ed column today, Bob Herbert complained that Wright went to Washington “not to praise Barack Obama, but to bury him.” How’s that? You won’t find out from Herbert’s column. Indeed, you will sift in vain through our paper of record for some record of what Rev. Wright actually said. Alessandra Stanley seems to regard Obama’s former pastor as a charming eccentric, “cocky, defiant, declamatory, inflammatory and mischievous,” as she put it in her news report, a born performer who “revealed himself to be the compelling but slightly wacky uncle who unsettles strangers but really just craves attention.”

Aw, shucks. But before you run to fetch the old chap’s slippers, take a look at today’s Washington Post. There you’ll be reminded that Rev. Wright thinks that HIV was invented by the U.S. government to cull minorities. You’ll also learn that he admires Louis Farrakhan, the leader of Nation of Islam, and that he believes the United States is a “terrorist” state that got what it deserved on 9/11 (”America’s chickens are coming home to roost”). The Post, unlike the Times, quoted from some of Rev. Wright’s more incendiary sermons, e.g., the one in which he said that blacks, because of the legacy of slavery, should sing “God damn America” instead of “God Bless America.”

Pace Ms Stanley, this is more wacko than wacky. But perhaps the most disturbing thing about the Times’s new memory-hole approach to the news is what it tells us about its approach to basic reporting of the facts. It’s no longer “all the news that fits” but “only news that sits well with our editorial line.”

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3 Comments

1. Paul:

In the Times accounts, you are seeing what will henceforth be the canonical version (for most of the with-it left) of Wright / Obama.

To wit: Wright is a jolly, feisty old curmudgeon who mixes crisp jabs and jokes with some home truths uncomfortable to the benighted white majority. Obama is a brilliant and heartbreakingly loyal young fellow who knows those home truths very well but must now — sadly — ask the old guy to cool it with the jabs and jokes. And, the old boy understands! He understands that the boy understands! The boy Obama, the apostle of Hope and change (ideas never heard before in American politics) is just doing politics, that’s all.

Never mind that the sweet old guy is a racist and a devoted follower of the leading black-American Fascist, and that he repeats for his massed audiences a set of libels just as vicious as the old Czarist blood libels that proved so popular with Nazis and, now, with Farrakhan and the media of most Islamic states.

Apr 30, 2008 - 9:16 am 2. Futureman:

I find it amazing that no one (as far as I’ve seen) has pointed out that Obama was ‘appalled’ at the comments Rev. Wright made ONLY at the National Press Club. Those comments were pretty tame compared to the ‘God Damn America’ and/or ‘Chickens coming home to roost’ talk which Obama shrugged off a few weeks ago. The only difference is that Wright was supposed to be speaking (albeit indirectly) on Obama’s behalf. Obama was ‘appalled’ that Wright took an opportunity he hoped would be full of contrition and apologetic speech as a showcase for his defiant bravado. It’s clear that Obama is only repulsed by words or actions which are not politically expedient to him, and not of those which oppose his supposed affection for America.

Apr 30, 2008 - 5:20 pm 3. asdasdasdasdadsas:

Mar 17, 2009 - 3:05 pm

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