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Editorial: CULTURE WATCH: Scoundrel Times.


Scandals continue to rock the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times in the wake of the Jayson Blair Jayson Blair (born March 23, 1976, Columbia, Maryland) is a former New York Times reporter who was forced to resign from the newspaper in May 2003, after he was caught plagiarizing and fabricating elements of his stories.  affair -- some of them Blair aftershocks, some brand new.

The Times's anxious efforts to check other stories produced a correction to an atmospheric account, by Pulitzer-prize winner Rick Bragg, of oystermen in Apalachicola, Fla. Bragg, it turned out, had written the actual story after visiting Apalachicola briefly, but the legwork leg·work  
n. Informal
Work, such as collecting information or doing research in preparation for a project, that involves much walking or traveling about.
 was done by a stringer, J. Wes Yoder. Since Times policy requires that bylined reporters supply the bulk of the information in their articles, the Times announced that Yoder should have shared the byline. Bragg was suspended briefly, although he insisted that he followed the Times's regular practice, if not its official policy.

Old practices intersect here with modern realities. Newspapers and magazines have traditionally used rewrite men to cobble together stories from reported tidbits TidBITS is an award-winning electronic newsletter and web site dealing primarily with Apple Computer and Macintosh-related topics. Internet publication
TidBITS has been published weekly since April 16, 1990, which makes it one of the longest running Internet publications.
. As news stories become more like feature articles, star reporters become more like star book authors, deploying assistants and researchers. The division of labor in book-writing is noticed only when authorial teams stumble into plagiarism Using ideas, plots, text and other intellectual property developed by someone else while claiming it is your original work. ; journalism is actually stricter in assigning credit.

Jayson Blair, the 27-year-old con man who gamed his employers, emerged from (brief) seclusion seclusion Forensic psychiatry A strategy for managing disturbed and violent Pts in psychiatric units, which consists of supervised confinement of a Pt to a room–ie, involuntary isolation, to protect others from harm  to give an interview to the New York Observer. As might be expected from a bright psychopath psy·cho·path
n.
A person with an antisocial personality disorder, especially one manifested in perverted, criminal, or amoral behavior.
, his tale was compounded of pride, amorality a·mor·al  
adj.
1. Not admitting of moral distinctions or judgments; neither moral nor immoral.

2. Lacking moral sensibility; not caring about right and wrong.
, and surprising insights. Blair, an affirmative- action trophy hire, admitted that race "play[ed] a role" in his Times career. "Anyone who tells you" that it didn't "is lying to you." Blair felt both entitled and unmanned by his cosseted position, saying he "began to act out" in a "misguided attempt to punish" his editors. He said, tellingly, that the Times has "tried to put the blame on one man's shoulders without examining how the institution would allow" such a career as his "to happen."

Executive editor Howell Raines admitted that misguided racial attitudes sped Blair's ascent and led to his fall. "You have a right," he told his employees in a self-criticism session, "to ask if I, as a white man from Alabama with [liberal] convictions, gave [Blair] one chance too many. . . . When I look into my heart for the truth of that, the answer is yes." This is fine, as far as it goes. But since the attitudes will not change, can the reality?

Meanwhile, out in Illinois, Times reporter Chris Hedges gave a commencement speech at Rockford College that was an anti-war rant. Enraged en·rage  
tr.v. en·raged, en·rag·ing, en·rag·es
To put into a rage; infuriate.



[Middle English *enragen, from Old French enrager : en-, causative pref.
 audience members turned their backs, booed, shouted, rushed the stage, and cut the mike. Buried in Hedges's aria was half a point: War fosters a state of comradeship, which he distinguished from the true bond of friendship. Hedges did not of course ask whether totalitarian societies feel a more brutalizing wartime bond. He railed against the United States and Israel; his defining quotation was this echt Sixties sentiment: "Following our defeat in Vietnam we became a better nation." War is fine when Third World Communists win. Hedges also said, "This is a war of liberation
For the Napoleonic "War of Liberation", see War of the Sixth Coalition.
A War of liberation is a conflict which is primarily intended to bring freedom or independence to a nation or group.
 in Iraq -- but it is a war now of liberation by Iraqis from American occupation."

Both Hedges and the protestors violated the sense of the occasion. But Hedges's real problem is not rudeness, but his opinions. He is a boobish left-wing zealot. How many soulmates does he have, under the rule of Howell Raines?

The Washington Post has become a more serious organ of liberal establishment opinion. Yet as a business proposition, the Times under Raines and publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. is flourishing. The Times has become a national, even a global paper (it bought the Post out of the International Herald Tribune International Herald Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Paris. It has long been the staple source of English-language news for American expatriates, tourists, and businesspeople in Europe.
). Success will cause more problems. More money and a wider reach will create more stars, more self- indulgence, and more errors. Get used to the new Times; it is fated to become bigger, richer, and worse.
COPYRIGHT 2003 National Review, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 16, 2003
Words:641
Previous Article:Editorial: TAXES: A Victory.
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