Remember when the New York Times was lecturing us
about “civility”? Neither do I, but I wrote about it recently (“A
Week in the Death of the New York Times,” TAS,
March 2011). In January the Times seized on the Tucson
massacre to blame “Republicans and particularly their most virulent
supporters in the media” for “the gale of anger” that had “produced
violent threats against scores of politicians and infected the
political mainstream with violent imagery”-even though it was clear
that suspect Jared Loughner had no recognizable political
motive.
By “supporters in the media,” the Times seemed mostly
to mean people at Fox News Channel. At a National Press Club event
January 31, Times executive editor Bill Keller was asked
about the competitive threat from the Wall Street Journal.
He ducked the question and talked instead about the
Journal’s corporate cousin:
I think the effect of Fox News on American public life has been
to create a level of cynicism about the news in general. It has
contributed to the sense that they are all just out there with a
political agenda, but Fox is just more overt about it. And I think
that’s unhealthy.
We have had a lot of talk since the Gabby Giffords attempted
murder about civility in our national discourse, and I make no
connection between the guy who shot those people in Tucson and the
national discourse. But it is true that the national discourse is
more polarized and strident than it has been in the past, and to
some extent, I would lay that at the feet of Rupert Murdoch.
The week before, the Times had targeted a Fox host in a
news story titled “Spotlight from Glenn Beck Brings a CUNY
Professor Threats.” That professor, Frances Fox Piven, is a
hard-left sociologist. Her name, the Times reported, “has
become a kind of shorthand for ‘enemy’ ” on Beck’s program. A
three-part, 15-letter, five-syllable name is “shorthand” for a
five-letter word? That wasn’t the only thing the Times got
backward.
Piven claimed to have received at least three threatening
e-mails, which an editorial in the Nation quoted. All
three were hostile and offensive, two of them wished her dead, and
two used adult language. (The one that is printable read: “May
cancer find you soon.”) But none included a direct threat. Neither
the Times nor the Nation reported that police
were treating any of the e-mails as a true threat. According to the
Times, some direct threats were posted in comments on
Beck’s website, TheBlaze.com, but they were quickly deleted.
What prompted the outpouring of anger at Piven, as the
Times was forced to acknowledge, was an earlier article in
the Nation in which she called for unemployed Americans
“to develop a proud and angry identity” and “mobilize for
collective action.” What did she mean by this? “An effective
movement of the unemployed will have to look something like the
strikes and riots that have spread across Greece in response to the
austerity measures forced on the Greek government by the European
Union.”
On May 5, 2010, rioters threw Molotov cocktails into an Athens
bank, setting it ablaze. A man and two women, one of whom was four
months pregnant, died from asphyxiation. Piven was advocating
violence; Beck was merely criticizing her for doing so-and yet, in
the Times’s telling, he was the uncivil one.
In Madison, Wisconsin, in February and March, something like
what Piven was hoping for came true-only the “collective action”
was on behalf of the overprivileged: unionized government workers
who have job security, are handsomely paid, and enjoy fringe
benefits far more generous than is customary in the private sector.
Protesters at the Wisconsin capitol carried signs equating Governor
Scott Walker with Hitler, accusing him of “raping public
employees,” and declaring that he “terrorizes families.”
A boilerplate note on the website of the Service Employees
International Union informed readers that “SEIU welcomes civil
discussion about Richard Negri’s article Dropkick Murphys
release new song in support of Wisconsin workers!” The song is
titled “Take ‘Em Down,” and here’s a sample of the lyrics:
When the boss comes callin’ we gotta organize
Let em know
We gotta take the bastards down
Let them know
We gotta smash them to the ground
There were threats as well. In March, Walker and seven
Republican state senators received a 300-word e-mail that read, in
part:
We feel that you and your republican dictators have to die. This
is how it’s going to happen: I as well as many others know where
you and your family live, it’s a matter of public records. We have
all planned to assult [sic] you by arriving at your house and
putting a nice little bullet in your head. However, this isn’t
enough. We also have decided that this may not be enough to send
the message. So we have built several bombs that we have placed in
various locations around the areas in which we know that you
frequent.… We will “get rid of” (in which I mean kill) the 8 of
you.
Unionized police interviewed 26-year-old Katherine Windels, who
admitted having sent the message. They concluded that it was not a
true threat and did not arrest her even after prosecutors charged
her with two felonies. In any case, this message was at least as
menacing as any of the e-mails Frances Fox Piven was reported to
have received.
ANN ALTHOUSE, a politically moderate law professor at the
University of Wisconsin, was targeted for her blogging, which was
sympathetic to Walker. “Whoever video taped this has no life and
should be shot in the head,” wrote a commenter on YouTube. A young
union hanger-on, Jim Shankman, posted a lengthy “manifesto”
directed at Althouse and her husband: “We will harrass [sic] the
ever loving sh— out of you all the time.… Because we aren’t
anti-social, life-denying, world-sterilizing pieces of human
garbage like the two of you. WE WILL F—- YOU UP.” Shankman told an
interviewer he had no intention of making good on the threat, and
he eventually deleted the manifesto.