Editorial Roundup: On Newspapers and Democracy, Republicans and Race
November 19th, 2007As every reader in Blogland already knows, newspapers and democracy are both at risk in Bush’s America.
And there is a war going on besides the one’s in Iraq and Afghanistan. It’s a war for the trust of the American people.
As we finish off the last of the morning coffee over here in Locust Forkland, we have a few thoughts on this war for the hearts and minds…
For starters, the editorial page editor at the Seattle Times got the lead story at the number one online outlet for media news this morning, Jim Romenesko’s links section at the Poynter Institute down in sunny Florida.
(BTW: I heard a great joke about Florida on cable this weekend. Can’t remember who said it, but looking at the state of Florida on a map, doesn’t it look like a giant penis ready to spray all over Cuba? Sorry. Back to the column.)
So anyway, the Seattle Times editorial page editor James Vesely wrote, among other silly and print defensive things in this column: The Handoff: Newspapers in the Digital Age.
“I see Craigslist as a negative-editorial product. Why? Because it claims the profits normally shifted to the newsroom. Without the obligations of journalism, e-commerce becomes the anti-newspaper.”
My reply to him in e-mail?
“So get innovative and do it better. The people are not going to save print for that reason.”
Then, he says: “Media companies, especially newspapers, are by default nearly the lone agents of the democratic form of government.”
My reply:
“Not in my part of the world. They are hand and glove with Bush and the GOP destroying democracy and complicit in trying to turn America into a Christian nation with no separation of church and state. The same is true of local TV news stations, corporate monopolies all.
“You are just being defensive trying to save your job. It’s understandable.
“But so is the public’s antipathy toward your print product. I defend more democracy around here than all the Newhouse papers combined.”
Then on another subject designed to save another newspaper, Editor and Publisher editor Greg Mitchell wrote an interesting column the other day about a Columnist War at The New York Times.
“The New York Times Op-Ed page hasn’t been this hot in a long time. Now we are experiencing Columnist Wars, with Bob Herbert this week joining in a rapidly escalating battle between Paul Krugman and David Brooks - largely over an incident involving Ronald Reagan at a local fair over 27 years ago.”
The “war” continues today with a missive from Paul Krugman headlined: Republicans and Race.
“Over the past few weeks there have been a number of commentaries about Ronald Reagan’s legacy, specifically about whether he exploited the white backlash against the civil rights movement,” Krugman writes. “The controversy unfortunately obscures the larger point, which should be undeniable: the central role of this backlash in the rise of the modern conservative movement. The centrality of race - and, in particular, of the switch of Southern whites from overwhelming support of Democrats to overwhelming support of Republicans - is obvious from voting data.”
As my regular readers know, we were against the dumb idea to charge for New York Times columnist’s posts online from the outset two years ago, but they created the now defunct Times Select anyway. Since most of our readers would not be able to afford to pay for that service, and even the one’s who could afford it were not likely to join in that endeaver, we stopped linking to the Times for the most part.
Now that someone up there in Manhattan has seen the light about the FREE free Web Press, we are willing to reconsider and take them under consideration. Also, an editorial writer there who I know personally has done a great job of writing editorials on the Bush Justice Department’s political manipulation of justice, especially in the case of former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman.
You can follow more on this columnist war from the newly free New York Times Op/Ed section.
All I have to say about it is this. Of course the Republican Party figured out how to use the politics of race to turn the South into a GOP stronghold, just as they used the wedge gay marriage issue in the 2004 election cycle to turn the tide. The very idea that columnist David Brooks would argue with that point just shows it is true what I said about him when he was first hired to replace conservative columnist William Safire. He doesn’t know what the fuck he is talking about.
I have written about race and the Republicans many times before. We are glad some of the columnists at the Times have finally figured this out.
I guess with former Times editor and Alabama native Howell Raines gone from the Old Grey Lady, it takes a Princeton economist to point this out in the Internet Age.
Will it rescue the Times and get people reading it online again? We will see…


