Really clarifies things.
Writing about it happening in other countries? Well that's just
fine. In fact, what Sulzberger has produced in this end-of-the-summer
essay is a long and otherwise-admirable essay on the threats to democracy and
the free press...in other countries.
Like India. And Brazil. And Turkey.
And all of those high-minded sentiments leak away into the gutter through this
very large hole near the top of his mountain of words:
As someone who strongly believes in the foundational importance of
journalistic independence, I have no interest in wading into politics. I
disagree with those who have suggested that the risk Trump poses to the
free press is so high that news organizations such as mine should cast
aside neutrality and directly oppose his reelection. It is beyond
shortsighted to give up journalistic independence out of fear that it
might later be taken away. At The Times, we are committed to following the
facts and presenting a full, fair and accurate picture of November’s
election and the candidates and issues shaping it. Our democratic model
asks different institutions to play different roles; this is ours.
You see, the actual fight for our democracy here and now is very
grubby and déclassé. Best left to others.
Also, before retiring to his Thinking Chamber to commune with the ghosts of
his ancestors, Sulzberger could not resist taking one, final, petty swipe at
the president who wouldn't give him what he'd stamped his feet and demanded:
Make no mistake, no American political leader likes the scrutiny of the
media or has a perfect record on press freedom. Every president since the
country’s founding has complained about the pesky questions of reporters
who seek to keep the public informed. This includes President Joe Biden,
who spoke glowingly about the importance of the free press but whose
systematic avoidance of unscripted encounters with independent journalists
has defied long-standing precedent and allowed him to evade questions
about his age and fitness.
Alert readers all over social media have noted the massive drop in the Times'
interest in the "age and fitness" of candidates once it became an issue
for only one of the candidates. Because the Times' is manifestly
not interested in "journalistic independence" today, any more than they were 20 years ago when I started writing
about the mainstream media's fetish for bending over backwards to appease the
escalating derangement of the Right by Both Sidesing every goddamn thing.
Alert readers will also note that even as Sulzberger was whinging on about
following facts and full, fair and accurate pictures, his loyal underlings were experienced enough to know a wink and a nudge from the executive suite when they see it. So they went right on using what remains of the the
Times' threadbare reputation to "sanewash" the ravings of a doddering madman
into something resembling a policy brief.
From
The New Republic:
How the Media Sanitizes Trump’s Insanity
The political press’s efforts to rationalize Trump’s incoherent statements
are eroding our shared reality and threatening informed democracy.
In its write-up of that portion of Trump’s speech, The New York Times
omitted Trump’s mention of autism, simply writing that “Mr. Trump said
that, if elected to a second term, a panel of experts ‘working with Bobby’
would investigate obesity rates and other chronic health issues in
the United States.” By removing the mention of autism, which should be a
red flag whenever paired with a mention of Kennedy, the Times took an
obvious nod to a conspiracy theory and turned it into a normal-sounding
policy proposal.
While speaking at an event put on by the extremist group Moms for
Liberty, Trump spread a baseless conspiracy theory that “your kid goes to
school and comes home a few days later with an operation,” referring to
transition-related surgeries for trans people. In their write-up of the
event, a glowing piece about how Trump “charmed” this group of
“conservative moms,” the Times didn’t even mention the moment where he
blathered on and on about a crazy conspiracy that has and will never
happen.
This “sanewashing” of Trump’s statements isn’t just poor journalism; it’s
a form of misinformation that poses a threat to democracy...
Voters who rely solely on traditional news sources are presented with a
version of Trump that bears little resemblance to reality. They see a
former president who, while controversial, appears to operate within the
bounds of normal political discourse—or at worst, is breaking with it in
some kind of refreshing manner. You can see this folie à deux at work in a
recent Times piece occasioned by Trump’s amplification of social media
posts alleging that Harris owed her career to the provision of “blowjobs”:
“Though he has a history of making crass insults about his opponents, the
reposts signal Mr. Trump’s willingness to continue to shatter longstanding
norms of political speech.” Meanwhile, those who seek out primary sources
encounter a starkly different figure—one prone to conspiracy theories,
personal attacks, and extreme rhetoric...
Over the weekend, the Times seemed intent on validating
[Jeffrey] Goldberg’s words
with a questionable “campaign notebook” article titled “Meandering?
Off-Script? Trump Insists His ‘Weave’ Is Oratorical Genius.”
Writer Shawn McCreesh drew generous parallels between Trump’s speaking
style and celebrated wordsmiths:
Certainly, in the history of narrative, there have been writers celebrated
for their ability to be discursive only to cleverly tie together all their
themes with a neat bow at the end—William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens and
Larry David come to mind.
He then added, “But in the case of Mr. Trump, it is difficult to find the
hermeneutic methods with which to parse the linguistic flights that take
him from electrocuted sharks to Hannibal Lecter’s cannibalism, windmills
and Rosie O’Donnell.”
McCreesh didn’t stop there. He went on to liken Trump to literary giants
James Joyce and William Faulkner, and even psychoanalyst Sigmund
Freud...
The chasm between what Sulzberger keeps touting as the Times'
principles and the garbage the Times consistently produces cannot be
bridged by chalking it up to his either not noticing what's going on at the
Times or not caring. This wild disparity can only be reconciled by
understanding that Sulzberger's primary role in the legacy media is not as the
steward of a newspaper, but as the patriarch of a cult.
A cult every bit as smothering and addictive as the MAGA is a cult.
The cult of Both Sides Do It.
A cult in which "fairness" means blaming Both Sides. "Independence"
means blaming Both Sides. Journalism itself means blaming Both
Sides.
If Both Sides don't have age and fitness issues, then Trump's age and fitness
is no longer an issue.
If Both Sides don't have candidates who are publicly decompensating into
rambling incoherence, then Trump's rambling incoherence must be barbered into
something that sounds like an intelligible policy position.
If Both Sides don't have candidates who are vomiting lies 24/7, then,
well, why bother covering Trump's 24/7 lying?
I have no reason to doubt that, as the patriarch of the cult of Both Sides Do
It, Sulzberger believes that he has "no interest in wading into politics" even as the huge sweaty hand of The New York Times presses firmly down
on the Right side of the political scale.
And that should alarm the hell out of anyone who gives a damn about the future
of democracy in America.
Burn The Lifeboats