By George Neumayr on 1.11.05 @ 12:10PM
CBS’s blue-ribbon panel on journalistic fraud at the network has extended rather than ended the fraud.
CBS's blue-ribbon panel on journalistic fraud at the network has
extended rather than ended the fraud. Instead of exposing a fraud
the panel advances a new one: that Dan Rather's fabricated National
Guard story wasn't influenced by liberal bias. The panel's report
contains a heading called "Factors that Support a Conclusion that a
Political Agenda Did Not Motivate the September 8 Segment." Guess
what the panel puts under it? "The Previous Work of Rather and
Mapes." In other words, the panel considers their previous stories
evidence of political neutrality. Are they kidding? The previous
work of Rather and Mapes is a glaring factor that supports the
conclusion of motivating liberal bias.
Straining at the gnat and swallowing the donkey, the panel
produces over 200 pages of Columbia Journalism School-style
navel-gazing without bothering to mention the salient fact that Dan
Rather has a direct political tie to the Texas Democratic circle
from which the forgery came. Nowhere in the report will one find --
even in its pro forma "Information that Might Suggest a Political
Agenda" section -- that Dan Rather had helped raised $20,000 for
the Travis County Democrats in 2001. David Van Os, the lawyer for
Bill Burkett, the crackpot who gave Rather the fabricated
documents, is a former chairman of the Travis County Democrats.
Like a Politburo report exonerating a Communist crook, the panel
treats Dan Rather's denial of bias as dogmatic proof in his favor.
"The Panel asked Rather directly to comment on whether he was
motivated in any way by a political animus in pursuing the
September 8 Segment. He responded, 'absolutely, unequivocally
untrue.'"
Yet the same panel that accepts this denial without question has
to admit that it finds Rather's refusal to disavow his fabricated
story "troubling." In questioning before the panel, Rather stood by
his forgery. And so what does CBS do? It sends him back into the
field. That's right: CBS is willing to continue to entrust its
anchor's chair and high-profile reporting assignments to the only
journalist in America who still believes those documents could be
real.
The report calls the National Guard story "myopic" -- a quality
on display in the report itself. To blame the story on bumbling
bureaucracy and competitive pressures rather than bias is the
height of obtuseness. Look at what Mary Mapes wrote when she
thought she had George Bush nailed: "Lots of goodies…we are
in pursuit…as are Vanity Fair, New York Times, New Republic,
various others." This desire to beat other liberal publications to
the punch is obvious evidence of liberal bias. And where did CBS
hear inklings of the existence of the fabricated documents with
which to smear Bush? From a website with the banner, "Bush Lied,
Americans Died."
And look at CBS's criterion for determining the credibility of
its source for the story, Bill Burkett. Mapes had persuaded CBS's
vetters to accept the fabricated story because Burkett was a "Texas
Republican of a different chromosome" and a "John McCain
supporter." This was Mary Mapes's way of saying: Here's a
Republican you guys can trust. Under CBS's mode of thinking, a
Republican who criticizes George Bush must be credible. And it goes
without saying that support for media mascot John McCain confers
instant authority on a source.
By a "Republican of a different chromosome," Mapes didn't mean
what Al Gore meant when he said that conservative Republicans have
an "extra chromosome." She meant that Burkett was a Republican who
thinks like CBS. Panel member Dick Thornburgh apparently fits into
the category of a Republican of a different chromosome. He was the
tame Republican CBS needed to give its white-wash a patina of
fairness. Lou Boccardi, a friend of Dan Rather, added another paint
layer of "respectability." This veteran of bias-denying panels had
performed the same service for the New York Times after
the Jayson Blair debacle. Boccardi contributed to a report that
insisted affirmative action played no role whatsoever in that
scandal.
But while Boccardi and Thornburgh are skeptical to the point of
stupidity on the question of CBS's political bias, they have no
problem dismissing those who first exposed the forgery as "bloggers
with a conservative agenda." CBS's panel can authoritatively muse
on the motives of Rather's critics while interpreting his motives
in the most generous light possible.
Yes, bloggers were "partisan" -- partial to the truth.
But so what? CBS's blue-ribbon panelists can turn up their noses at
pajama-clad partisans on the Internet, but the fact is they
ferreted out a forgery liberal partisans faked up -- and CBS's
unpunished star reporter still won't admit it.
George Neumayr is executive editor of The American
Spectator.
topics:
John McCain, Law