WASHINGTON — The declining state of the American newspaper
apparently warms a lot of hearts. Polls tell us about the general
public’s disrelish for Congress. Equally disrelished are
journalists and newspapers. Frankly I sympathize. The American
journalist is an odd creature. Most are as arrogant and
provincial as the average American college professor. Curiously,
many journalists even look like university professors, especially
journalists from the major liberal newspapers.
There was a day when the average newspaper reporter was a
bit of a roughneck and looked the part. Now many are frankly
nerdy, though it is not their nerdy looks that inflame the
general public. It is the arrogance and insularity. Well, as I
say I am in sympathy with the general public, but that does not
mean I rejoice in the present sickliness of newspapers.
Newspapers are essential to the public discourse of any nation
and to the public record.
I most recently expressed these wayward views in a
discussion of the notoriously Liberal New York Times. I
was being interviewed by that very fine conservative journalist
Terry Jeffrey, former editor of Human Events and now
editor and chief of CNS News at that bastion of conservative
media bashing, the Media Research Center (MRC). Terry was
delighting in regaling me with a burlesque he had observed at New
York’s Penn Station. The Times was conducting a
subscription drive, with an employee handing commuters gifts
emblazoned with the Times logo for subscribing.
Prospective subscribers treated the poor sap as though he were
carrying the plague. They ducked around him, hastening down the
hallway, grateful to be free of the New York Times
bacterium.
Well, it is an amusing story, but there on the hallowed
conservative ground of the MRC headquarters I had to express my
sympathy for the glum journalists at the Times. I want
the newspaper to survive. Even in its ideologically perfervid
condition it is better than no newspaper at all. We conservatives
have our own newspapers, led nationally by the Wall Street
Journal. Actually, against mainstream Liberal media we have
our own conservative counterculture led by the
Journal, Fox News, talk radio, our
think tanks and magazines. We can hold our own against the
Kultursmog the mainstream media culture besmogged as it
is by Liberal prejudice and bugaboos.
I read the Liberal press every day, the Times
along with the Washington Post. What is most troubling
about the Times is not its ideology or even its
inaccuracies. Those of us who read widely can generally spot a
newspaper’s inaccuracies. The problem with the Times is
its ethics. Just the other day it claimed to have broken through
its aggressive reporting a very significant story. It claimed to
break the story that a Democratic Senate candidate in
Connecticut, the state’s attorney general Richard Blumenthal,
repeatedly made false claims about having served in combat during
the Vietnam War.
Now we find out that some of the information used by the
Times came from one of Blumenthal’s potential opponents,
a Republican Linda McMahon. Once the story was published McMahon
boasted of it. Surely it was the duty of the newspaper to inform
us of its reporters’ use of McMahon’s material. For that matter
surely the newspaper’s editors should have expected that McMahon
would blow their cover. As I say, modern journalists tend to be
arrogant and provincial. Here is a good example of it.