By James Bowman on 2.16.04 @ 12:08AM
The media rabble is really asking for it now.
Full marks to the mainstream media for refusing to report even a
single word of the scurrilous gossip going around about John
Kerry's love-life. They're not even reporting that Matt Drudge is
reporting it, which is the usual way which these ugly rumors get
into circulation by the back door. It reminds me of the CBS
producers at the Super Bowl who refused to turn their cameras, even
with discreet editing, on a streaker -- so automatically removing
the incentive for anyone else who might be tempted to try the same
thing.
But just as it would have been expecting too much for the CBS
bosses to have provided a similar disincentive to the Janet
Jacksons of the world by banning any subsequent appearances by her
on the network after her breast-baring stunt during the live
half-time show, so it is apparently expecting too much of the news
media to extend their courtesy to Senator Kerry also to President
Bush. This they could have done by refusing to report the equally
scurrilous, and at least equally unfounded allegations about Bush's
having been AWOL during his National Guard service in Alabama.
Of course there are no prizes for guessing the reason for this
disparity of discretion. It is not news either that the politics of
media-folk are overwhelmingly Democratic or that the Democrats
really, really hate George W. Bush. What is new is the
openness of their contempt, the refusal even to pretend to show the
President -- never mind the courtesy, even the basic respect that
ought to be his due as the holder of the highest office in the
land. Here, for example, is a little snippet of a White House press
conference, taken from the website of the invaluable Media Research
Center, in which John Roberts of CBS News was interrogating the
President's spokesman, Scott McClellan, about his service
records:
McClellan: "John, the records that
you're pointing to, these records are the payroll records; they're
the point summaries. These records verify that he met the
requirements necessary to fulfill his duties. These records --"
Roberts: "That wasn't my question, Scott."
McClellan: "These payroll records --"
Roberts: "Scott, that wasn't my question, and
you know it wasn't my question. Where was he in December of '72,
February and March of '73? And why did he not fulfill the medical
requirements to remain on active flight duty status?"
McClellan: "These records -- these records I'm
holding here clearly document the President fulfilling his duties
in the National Guard. The President was proud of his service. The
President --"
Roberts: "I asked a simple question. How about
a simple answer?"
McClellan: "John, if you'll let me address the
question, I'm coming to your answer, and I'd like - "
Roberts: "Well, if you would address it --
maybe you could."
And it goes on like that as several other reporters throw in
their equally disrespectful two cents' worth. It's worth noting
that we expect some deference to be shown to civil magistrates not
because we like them or agree with their politics but because
without it the foundations of civic culture are undermined. That's
why judges and other officials are designated "the honorable":
because it is essential for the functioning of authority in a
democracy continually to remind ourselves that power is not merely
arbitrary. President Bush should appear at the next press
conference in person in a Lear-like passion to ask: "Who stocked my
servant?" And with more than Lear-like power, he should clear out
this nest of vipers and revoke the press credentials of those who
behaved so disrespectfully.
Of course he won't do it. Admirable as the President is in many
ways, even he hasn't the nerve so to defy the media, whose
overweening arrogance seems to grow more offensive with each
passing day. A lovely illustration of this arrogance was to be
found in the Washington Post earlier in the week when
Howard Kurtz tried to make a scandal out of the
fact that Donald Rumsfeld's daily press briefing routinely excludes
the press's criticisms of him -- as if the media's own conceit of
its constitutional role as watchdog on the government required him
to pay minute attention to the strategic insights of a pack of
jumped-up scribblers who -- as Colin Powell put it in a related
case of Bush-bashing this week -- don't know what they're talking
about. That Kurtz tried to sell this as a case of "censorship" is
so grotesque an example of media self-importance that it is time
for us reluctantly to conclude that the lot of them should be
packed off for a spell in Guantanamo.
topics:
Mainstream Media, Constitution, NATO