A flurry of newsroom revolts has transformed the
American press
By Matt TaibbiJune 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Sometimes it seems
life can’t get any worse in this country. Already in
terror of a pandemic, Americans have lately been
bombarded with images of grotesque state-sponsored
violence, from the murder of George Floyd to countless
scenes of police clubbing and brutalizing
protesters.
Our president, Donald Trump, is a clown who makes a
great reality-show villain but is uniquely toolless as
the leader of a superpower nation. Watching him try to
think through two society-imperiling crises is like
waiting for a gerbil to solve Fermat’s theorem.
Calls to “dominate” marchers and ad-libbed
speculations about Floyd’s “great day” looking down from
heaven at Trump’s crisis management and new unemployment
numbers (“only”
21 million out of work!) were pure gasoline at a
tinderbox moment. The man seems determined to talk us
into civil war.
But police violence, and Trump’s daily assaults on
the presidential competence standard, are only part of
the disaster. On the other side of the political aisle,
among self-described liberals, we’re watching an
intellectual revolution. It feels liberating to say
after years of tiptoeing around the fact, but the
American left has lost its mind. It’s become a cowardly
mob of upper-class social media addicts, Twitter
Robespierres who move from discipline to discipline
torching reputations and jobs with breathtaking
casualness.
The leaders of this new movement are replacing
traditional liberal beliefs about tolerance, free
inquiry, and even racial harmony with ideas so toxic and
unattractive that they eschew debate, moving straight to
shaming, threats, and intimidation. They are counting on
the guilt-ridden, self-flagellating nature of
traditional American progressives, who will not stand up
for themselves, and will walk to the Razor voluntarily.
They’ve conned organization after organization into
empowering panels to search out thoughtcrime, and it’s
established now that anything can be an offense, from a
UCLA professor placed under investigation for
reading Martin Luther King’s “Letter from a Birmingham
Jail” out loud to a data scientist
fired* from a research firm for — get this —
retweeting an academic study
suggesting nonviolent protests may be more politically
effective than violent ones!
Now, this madness is coming for journalism. Beginning
on Friday, June 5th, a series of controversies rocked
the media. By my count, at least eight news
organizations dealt with internal uprisings (it was
likely more). Most involved groups of reporters and
staffers demanding the firing or reprimand of colleagues
who’d made politically “problematic” editorial or social
media decisions.
The New York Times, the Intercept,
Vox, the Philadelphia Inquirier, Variety,
and others saw challenges to management.
Probably the most disturbing story involved
Intercept writer Lee Fang, one of a fast-shrinking
number of young reporters actually skilled in
investigative journalism. Fang’s work in the area of
campaign finance especially has led to concrete impact,
including a
record fine to a conservative Super PAC: few young
reporters have done more to combat corruption.
Yet Fang found himself denounced online as a racist,
then hauled before H.R. His crime? During protests, he
tweeted this
interview with an African-American man named Maximum
Fr, who described having two cousins murdered in the
East Oakland neighborhood where he grew up. Saying his
aunt is still not over those killings, Max asked:
I always question, why does a Black life
matter only when a white man takes it?... Like, if a
white man takes my life tonight, it’s going to be
national news, but if a Black man takes my life, it
might not even be spoken of… It’s stuff just like
that that I just want in the mix.
Shortly after, a co-worker of Fang’s, Akela Lacy,
wrote, “Tired of being made to deal continually with my
co-worker @lhfang continuing to push black on black
crime narratives after being repeatedly asked not to.
This isn’t about me and him, it’s about institutional
racism and using free speech to couch anti-blackness. I
am so fucking tired.” She followed with, “Stop being
racist Lee.”
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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The tweet received tens of thousands of likes and
responses along the lines of, “Lee
Fang has been like this for years, but the current
moment only makes his anti-Blackness more glaring,”
and “Lee
Fang spouting racist bullshit it must be a day
ending in day.” A significant number of Fang’s
co-workers, nearly all white, as well as reporters
from other major news organizations like the New
York Times and MSNBC and political
activists (one
former Elizabeth Warren staffer tweeted, “Get
him!”), issued likes and messages of support for
the notion that Fang was a racist. Though he had
support within the organization, no one among his
co-workers was willing to say anything in his
defense publicly.
Like many reporters, Fang has always viewed it as
part of his job to ask questions in all directions. He’s
written critically of political figures on the
center-left, the left, and “obviously on the right,” and
his reporting has inspired serious threats in the past.
None of those past experiences were as terrifying as
this blitz by would-be colleagues, which he described as
“jarring,” “deeply isolating,” and “unique in my
professional experience.”
To save his career, Fang had to craft a
public apology for “insensitivity to the lived
experience of others.” According to one friend of his,
it’s been communicated to Fang that his continued
employment at The Intercept is contingent upon
avoiding comments that may upset colleagues. Lacy to her
credit
publicly thanked Fang for his statement and
expressed willingness to have a conversation;
unfortunately, the throng of Intercept
co-workers who piled on her initial accusation did not
join her in this.
I first met Lee Fang in 2014 and have never known him
to be anything but kind, gracious, and easygoing. He
also appears earnestly committed to making the world a
better place through his work. It’s stunning that so
many colleagues are comfortable using a word as extreme
and villainous as racist to describe him.
Though he describes his upbringing as “solidly
middle-class,” Fang grew up in up in a diverse community
in Prince George's County, Maryland, and attended public
schools where he was frequently among the few
non-African Americans in his class. As a teenager, he
was witness to the murder of a young man outside his
home by police who were never prosecuted, and also
volunteered at a shelter for trafficked women, two of
whom were murdered. If there’s an edge to Fang at all,
it seems geared toward people in our business who grew
up in affluent circumstances and might intellectualize
topics that have personal meaning for him.
In the tweets that got him in trouble with Lacy and
other co-workers, he questioned the logic of protesters
attacking immigrant-owned businesses “with
no connection to police brutality at all.” He also
offered his opinion on
Martin Luther King’s attitude toward violent protest
(Fang’s take was that King did not support it; Lacy
responded, “you know they killed him too right”). These
are issues around which there is still considerable
disagreement among self-described liberals, even among
self-described leftists. Fang also commented,
presciently as it turns out, that many reporters were
“terrified of openly challenging the lefty conventional
wisdom around riots.”
Lacy says she never intended for Fang to be “fired,
‘canceled,’ or deplatformed,” but appeared irritated by
questions on the subject, which she says suggest, “there
is more concern about naming racism than letting it
persist.”
Max himself was stunned to find out that his comments
on all this had created a Twitter firestorm. “I couldn’t
believe they were coming for the man’s job over
something I said,” he recounts. “It was not Lee’s
opinion. It was my opinion.”
By phone, Max spoke of a responsibility he feels
Black people have to speak out against all forms of
violence, “precisely because we experience it the most.”
He described being affected by the Floyd story, but also
by the story of retired African-American police captain
David Dorn,
shot to death in recent protests in St. Louis. He
also mentioned Tony Timpa, a white man whose 2016
asphyxiation by police was only uncovered last year. In
body-camera footage, police are heard joking after Timpa
passed out and stopped moving, “I
don’t want to go to school! Five more minutes, Mom!”
“If it happens to anyone, it has to be called out,”
Max says.
Max described discussions in which it was argued to
him that bringing up these other incidents now is not
helpful to the causes being articulated at the protests.
He understands that point of view. He just disagrees.
“They say, there has to be the right time and a place
to talk about that,” he says. “But my point is, when? I
want to speak out now.” He pauses. “We’ve taken the
narrative, and instead of being inclusive with it, we’ve
become exclusive with it. Why?”
There were other incidents. The editors of
Bon Apetit and
Refinery29 both resigned amid accusations of
toxic workplace culture. The editor of Variety,
Claudia Eller, was
placed on leave after calling a South Asian
freelance writer “bitter” in a Twitter exchange about
minority hiring at her company. The self-abasing apology
(“I have tried to diversify our newsroom over the past
seven years, but I HAVE NOT DONE ENOUGH”) was
insufficient. Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Inquirer’s
editor, Stan Wischowski, was
forced out after approving a headline, “Buildings
matter, too.”
In the most discussed incident, Times
editorial page editor James Bennet was ousted for
green-lighting an anti-protest editorial by Arkansas
Republican Senator Tom Cotton entitled, “Send
in the troops.”
I’m no fan of Cotton, but as was the case with
Michael Moore’s documentary and many other controversial
speech episodes, it’s not clear that many of the people
angriest about the piece in question even read it. In
classic Times fashion, the paper has already
scrubbed a mistake they made misreporting what their own
editorial said, in an article about Bennet’s ouster.
Here’s how the piece by Marc Tracy
read originally (emphasis mine):
James Bennet, the editorial page editor of The
New York Times, has resigned after a controversy
over an Op-Ed by a senator calling for
military force against protesters in
American cities.
Here’s how the piece
reads now:
James Bennet resigned on Sunday from his job as
the editorial page editor of The New York Times,
days after the newspaper’s opinion section, which he
oversaw, published a much-criticized Op-Ed by a
United States senator calling for a military
response to civic unrest in American
cities.
Cotton did not call for “military force against
protesters in American cities.” He spoke of a “show of
force,” to rectify a situation a significant portion of
the country saw as spiraling out of control. It’s an
important distinction. Cotton was presenting one side of
the most important question on the most important issue
of a critically important day in American history.
As Cotton points out in the piece, he was advancing a
view arguably held by a majority of the country. A
Morning Consult poll showed
58% of Americans either strongly or somewhat
supported the idea of “calling in the U.S. military to
supplement city police forces.” That survey included 40%
of self-described “liberals” and 37% of
African-Americans. To declare a point of view held by
that many people not only not worthy of discussion, but
so toxic that publication of it without even necessarily
agreeing requires dismissal, is a dramatic reversal for
a newspaper that long cast itself as the national paper
of record.
Incidentally, that
same poll cited by Cotton showed that 73% of
Americans described protecting property as “very
important,” while an additional 16% considered it
“somewhat important.” This means the Philadelphia
Inquirer editor was fired for running a headline –
“Buildings matter, too” – that the poll said expressed a
view held by 89% of the population, including 64% of
African-Americans.
(Would I have run the Inquirer headline? No.
In the context of the moment, the use of the word
“matter” especially sounds like the paper is equating
“Black lives” and “buildings,” an odious and
indefensible comparison. But why not just make this case
in a rebuttal editorial? Make it a teaching moment? How
can any editor operate knowing that airing opinions
shared by a majority of readers might cost his or her
job?)
The main thing accomplished by removing those types
of editorials from newspapers — apart from scaring the
hell out of editors — is to shield readers from
knowledge of what a major segment of American society is
thinking.
It also guarantees that opinion writers and editors
alike will shape views to avoid upsetting colleagues,
which means that instead of hearing what our differences
are and how we might address those issues, newspaper
readers will instead be presented with page after page
of people professing to agree with one another. That’s
not agitation, that’s misinformation.
The instinct to shield audiences from views or facts
deemed politically uncomfortable has been in evidence
since Trump became a national phenomenon. We saw it when
reporters told audiences Hillary Clinton’s small crowds
were a “wholly
intentional” campaign decision. I listened to
colleagues that summer of 2016 talk about ignoring poll
results, or anecdotes about Hillary’s troubled campaign,
on the grounds that doing otherwise might “help Trump”
(or, worse, be perceived that way).
Even if you embrace a wholly politically utilitarian
vision of the news media – I don’t, but let’s say –
non-reporting of that “enthusiasm” story, or ignoring
adverse poll results, didn’t help Hillary’s campaign.
I’d argue it more likely accomplished the opposite,
contributing to voter apathy by conveying the false
impression that her victory was secure.
After the 2016 election, we began to see staff
uprisings. In one case, publishers at the Nation
faced a revolt – from the
Editor on down – after articles by Aaron Mate
and Patrick Lawrence questioning the evidentiary
basis for Russiagate claims was run. Subsequent events,
including the recent
declassification of congressional testimony,
revealed that Mate especially was right to point out
that officials had no evidence for a Trump-Russia
collusion case. It’s precisely because such unpopular
views often turn out to be valid that we stress
publishing and debating them in the press.
In a related incident, the New Yorker ran an
article about Glenn Greenwald’s Russiagate skepticism
that quoted that same Nation editor, Joan
Walsh, who had edited Greenwald at Salon. She
suggested to the New Yorker that Greenwald’s
reservations were rooted in “disdain” for the Democratic
Party, in part because of its closeness to Wall Street,
but also because of the “ascendance
of women and people of color.” The message was
clear: even if you win a Pulitzer Prize, you can be
accused of racism for deviating from approved
narratives, even on questions that have nothing to do
with race (the New Yorker piece also implied
Greenwald’s intransigence on Russia was pathological and
grounded in trauma from childhood).
In the case of Cotton, Times staffers
protested on the grounds that “Running
this puts Black @NYTimes staff in danger.” Bennet’s
editorial decision was not merely ill-considered, but
literally life-threatening (note pundits in the space of
a few weeks have told us that
protesting during lockdowns and
not
protesting
during lockdowns are both literally lethal). The
Times first attempted to rectify the situation by
apologizing,
adding a long Editor’s note to Cotton’s piece that
read, as so many recent “apologies” have, like a note
written by a hostage.
Editors begged forgiveness for not being more
involved, for not thinking to urge Cotton to sound less
like Cotton (“Editors should have offered suggestions”),
and for allowing rhetoric that was “needlessly harsh and
falls short of the thoughtful approach that advances
useful debate.” That last line is sadly funny, in the
context of an episode in which reporters were seeking to
pre-empt a debate rather than have one at all; of
course, no one got the joke, since a primary
characteristic of the current political climate is a
total absence of a sense of humor in any direction.
As many guessed, the “apology” was not enough, and
Bennet was whacked a day later in a terse
announcement.
His replacement, Kathleen Kingsbury, issued a staff
directive essentially telling employees they now had a
veto over
anything that made them uncomfortable: “Anyone who
sees any piece of Opinion journalism, headlines, social
posts, photos—you name it—that gives you the slightest
pause, please call or text me immediately.”
All these episodes sent a signal to everyone in a
business already shedding jobs at an extraordinary rate
that failure to toe certain editorial lines can and will
result in the loss of your job. Perhaps additionally,
you could face a public shaming campaign in which you
will be denounced as a racist and rendered unemployable.
These tensions led to amazing contradictions in
coverage. For all the extraordinary/inexplicable scenes
of police viciousness in recent weeks — and there was a
ton of it, ranging from police
slashing tires in Minneapolis, to Buffalo officers
knocking over an elderly man, to
Philadelphia police attacking protesters — there
were also
12 deaths in the first nine days of protests, only
one at the hands of a police officer (involving a man
who may or may not have been aiming a gun at police).
Looting in some communities has been so bad that
people have been left without banks to cash checks, or
pharmacies to fill prescriptions; business owners have
been wiped out (“My
life is gone,” commented one Philly store owner); a
car dealership in San Leandro, California saw
74 cars stolen in a single night. It isn’t the whole
story, but it’s demonstrably true that violence, arson,
and rioting are occurring.
However, because it is politically untenable to
discuss this in ways that do not suggest support,
reporters have been twisting themselves into knots. We
are seeing headlines previously imaginable only in
The Onion, e.g., “27
police officers injured during largely peaceful
anti-racism protests in London.”
Even people who try to keep up with protest goals
find themselves denounced the moment they fail to submit
to some new tenet of ever-evolving doctrine, via a
surprisingly consistent stream of retorts: fuck you,
shut up, send money, do better, check yourself, I’m
tired and racist.
Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey, who argued for police
reform and attempted to show solidarity with protesters
in his city, was
shouted down after he refused to commit to defunding
the police. Protesters shouted “Get the fuck out!” at
him, then chanted “Shame!” and threw refuse,
Game of Thrones-style,
as he skulked out of the gathering. Frey’s “shame” was
refusing to endorse a position polls show
65% of Americans oppose, including 62% of Democrats,
with just 15% of all people, and only 33% of
African-Americans, in support.
Each passing day sees more scenes that recall
something closer to cult religion than politics. White
protesters in Floyd’s Houston hometown
kneeling and praying to black residents for
“forgiveness… for years and years of racism” are one
thing, but what are we to make of white police in Cary,
North Carolina, kneeling and
washing the feet of Black pastors? What about
Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer kneeling while dressed in
“African
kente cloth scarves”?
There is symbolism here that goes beyond frustration
with police or even with racism: these are orgiastic,
quasi-religious, and most of all, deeply weird scenes,
and the press is too paralyzed to wonder at it. In a
business where the first job requirement was once the
willingness to ask tough questions, we’ve become afraid
to ask obvious ones.
On CNN, Minneapolis City Council President Lisa
Bender was asked a hypothetical question about a future
without police: “What if in the middle of the night, my
home is broken into? Who do I call?” When Bender, who is
white,
answered, “I know that comes from a place of
privilege,” questions popped to mind. Does privilege
mean one should let someone break into one’s home, or
that one shouldn’t ask that hypothetical question? (I
was genuinely confused). In any other situation, a media
person pounces on a provocative response to dig out its
meaning, but an increasingly long list of words and
topics are deemed too dangerous to discuss.
The media in the last four years has devolved into a
succession of moral manias. We are told the Most
Important Thing Ever is happening for days or weeks at a
time, until subjects are abruptly dropped and forgotten,
but the tone of warlike emergency remains: from James
Comey’s firing, to the deification of Robert Mueller, to
the Brett Kavanaugh nomination, to the
democracy-imperiling threat to intelligence
“whistleblowers,” all those interminable months of
Ukrainegate hearings (while Covid-19 advanced), to fury
at the death wish of lockdown violators, to the sudden
reversal on that same issue, etc.
It’s been learned in these episodes we may freely
misreport reality, so long as the political goal is
righteous. It was okay to publish the now-discredited
Steele dossier, because Trump is scum. MSNBC could put
Michael Avenatti
on live TV to air a gang rape allegation without
vetting, because who cared about Brett Kavanaugh –
except press airing of that wild story ended up being a
crucial factor in convincing key swing voter Maine
Senator Susan Collins the anti-Kavanaugh campaign was a
political hit job (the allegation illustrated, “why the
presumption of innocence is so important,”
she said). Reporters who were anxious to prevent
Kavanaugh’s appointment, in other words, ended up
helping it happen through overzealousness.
There were no press calls for self-audits after those
episodes, just as there won’t be a few weeks from now if
Covid-19 cases spike, or a few months from now if Donald
Trump wins re-election successfully painting the
Democrats as supporters of violent protest who want to
abolish police. No: press activism is limited to
denouncing and shaming colleagues for insufficient
fealty to the cheap knockoff of bullying campus Marxism
that passes for leftist thought these days.
The traditional view of the press was never based on
some contrived, mathematical notion of “balance,” i.e.
five paragraphs of Republicans for every five paragraphs
of Democrats. The ideal instead was that we showed you
everything we could see, good and bad, ugly and not,
trusting that a better-informed public would make better
decisions. This vision of media stressed accuracy,
truth, and trust in the reader’s judgment as the routes
to positive social change.
For all our infamous failings, journalists once had
some toughness to them. We were supposed to be willing
to go to jail for sources we might not even like, and
fly off to war zones or disaster areas without question
when editors asked. It was also once considered a virtue
to flout the disapproval of colleagues to fight for
stories we believed in (Watergate, for instance).
Today no one with a salary will stand up for
colleagues like Lee Fang. Our brave truth-tellers make
great shows of shaking fists
at our parody president, but not one of them will
talk honestly about the fear running through their own
newsrooms. People depend on us to tell them what we see,
not what we think. What good are we if we’re afraid to
do it?
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