By James Bowman on 5.25.05 @ 12:07AM
Lend an ear to the self-restrained victims of Toiletgate.
The pampered darlings of the media are feeling sorry for
themselves again over the Newsweek Koran-flushing story.
Look how those intellectual thugs of the right-wing blogosphere and
the Bush administration are criticizing them for getting a silly
little story about Koran desecration wrong while they themselves
are so decent, so saintly that they would sooner engage in
self-criticism than fight back. Such at least is the opinion of
Michelle Cottle of the New Republic who claims that
on some level, many journalists lack the instinct to
fight for themselves. By nature, we are a hypercritical bunch,
eternally nitpicking and dwelling on the negative side of humanity.
(Remember: No news is good news.) But despite our collective
reputation for arrogance, journalists' harsh nature absolutely
extends to endless, obsessive dissection of our own industry and
work, to a degree that risks becoming self- destructive....My
suspicion is that journalists somehow believe that our
high-mindedness, our self-restraint, our willingness to take all
this abuse -- even to dish it out -- somehow will win us
credibility in the eyes of the public.
This high-mindedness and self-restr -- excuse me but the gag
reflex won't quite allow me to get the words out -- um, restraint,
reminds Miss Cottle of the equally mild and gentle John Kerry who
was similarly forbearing in "not fighting back fiercely or quickly
enough against the Republicans' dirty campaigning last election."
So that's why he lost!
Needless to say, Miss Cottle herself is no milquetoast. In fact,
she incited her readers to commit assault against a "gasbag"
Republican congressman for suggesting that Newsweek's
reporters and editors might be guilty of a criminal act if their
false report led to a public disturbance that cost several human
lives. I don't think the congressman is likely to be successful in
making any such charge stick, but his choosing this method of
expressing his disgust with the magazine seems a pretty poor reason
for her to urge someone to "pop" him "squarely in the nose." It
almost begins to look as if the media, having tasted the blood of
some dozen and a half Afghan rioters, are only emboldened to become
even more aggressive, especially against the Bush administration
and its supporters for suggesting that Newsweek might want
to make some amends for the damage which its false report had
caused to America's image in Muslim lands.
Oh wait. It's not a false report after all. Or not
really a false report. Like the forged documents on the
basis of which Dan Rather accused President Bush of misconduct when
he was a member of the Texas Air National Guard, the evidence may
be tainted but that doesn't necessarily mean that the substance of
the report is false. "The most vigorous defenses" of the media,
Miss Cottle writes, "have tended to be on political grounds and (as
with the '60 Minutes II' blowup) run along the lines of: Well,
sure, Newsweek got the details of this particular item
wrong, but the real issue is why this story was so believable in
the first place." In other words, the high-mindedness and
self-restraint of the media ought to fight back against critics by
asserting that it's more important ("the real issue") that a story
should be believable -- believable to the media folk themselves, of
course -- than that it should be true.
Wisely, perhaps, she doesn't pursue this suggestion much further
but instead echoes a number of other loud defenders of the
allegedly meek and mild media such as Richard Cohen and Frank Rich by charging us conservatives with
hypocrisy:
Conservative activists and pundits, meanwhile, have
been loudly insisting that Newsweek's screw up is some
morally debased, unpatriotic, politically motivated attempt to
damage the Bush administration -- nay, the Armed Forces themselves
-- in the eyes of the world. And though less vitriolic, even the
White House is proclaiming a little too much self-righteous
astonishment that anyone anywhere could have possibly contemplated
running such an obviously untrue, unfounded story based on the word
of one measly government source. (This is, after all, the same
administration that swore Saddam Hussein had a bioweapons program
based on the word of a single Iraqi defector, nicknamed Curveball,
whom the CIA had been warned was crazy and most likely a liar. So
if the Bushies really want to have a debate about poor sourcing and
inaccurate claims that have contributed to massive bloodshed, I'd
say Newsweek still holds the high ground.)
Too much high-mindedness and self-restraint must have addled her
brain, for otherwise she could hardly have been unaware that "poor
sourcing" is not a concept which has any meaning when applied to
intelligence matters. All the spy's sources are poor, by the
journalist's standards. If he had good sources, sources that came
up to the standard for publication rightly demanded by the media --
at least before Miss Cottle's championing of the standard of mere
believability -- he could just let the media do his sleuthing for
him. But the journalist always thinks he knows better. Hence the
outrage when President Bush revealed that he rarely read the
newspapers. How dare he! Could any more proof be asked either of
his stupidity or his remoteness from reality? Of course the
information in newspapers -- even insofar as it may be accurate,
which as the Newsweek story reminds us is not always very
far -- is only what everybody knows by the next morning. Pretty
obviously, I would have thought, that can only be the starting
point in the dangerous world our governments always live in, where
life-and-death decisions are routinely made on the basis of what
most people don't know, while the few people who do know it can
never be sure of how accurate their information is. They have not
that luxury.
It is therefore the cheapest of cheap shots for high-minded and
self-restrained people like Michelle Cottle and Frank Rich to get
on their high horses about their own superiority and that of their
gentle and unassuming colleagues in the media to any politician who
has the temerity to criticize them. Them!
Richard Boucher [writes Mr. Rich], the State Department
spokesman whose previous boss, Colin Powell, delivered a fictional
recitation of Saddam Hussein's weapon capabilities before the
United Nations Security Council, said it's "shocking" that
Newsweek used "facts that have not been substantiated."
Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, attacked Newsweek for
hiding "behind anonymous sources," yet it was an anonymous source,
an Iraqi defector known as Curveball, who fed the fictions that Mr.
Powell spouted to gin up America for war. Psychological
displacement of this magnitude might give even Freud
pause.
And so we arrive, almost inevitably as it might seem, at the
place where the high-minded and self-restrained media so often do
arrive: namely, the point at which they must contemplate either the
criminality or the insanity of those entrusted with the government
of their country. To any intelligence less eaten-up with
self-importance than that of your average White House reporter,
that in itself would be a danger signal. Yet you couldn't help
feeling that, when Terry Moran of ABC snapped "Who made you the
editor of Newsweek?" at the presidential spokesman Scott
McClellan for suggesting that the magazine make an apology, that
Mr. Moran considered the editorship of that magazine a far more
exalted position than that of any mere politician. At any rate the
question seemed just a bit odd, considering how much free advice
these arrogant Bozos routinely dump on President Bush about how to
run the country. Mr. McClellan should have answered: "And who made
you the President of the United States?"
topics:
Iraq, United Nations