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Monday, June 26, 2006

The Anti-War Press Against the Military 

Others have written brilliantly about the recent offenses committed by the New York and LA Times in their articles disclosing a government financial transactions tracking program. For the record, I am hopeful that the leakers will be identified, apprehended, charged and put on trial, in front of a jury. We need a clear, black and white case put before a judge and jury on this subject so we can dispose of this issue already. Other than this opinion, I don't have much to add to the debate.

Except perhaps to add a question. It strikes me as far too obvious to say that the liberal media has it "in for" the Bush Administration. I tend to think they have it "in for" authority in general, and seek to weaken it wherever possible, regardless of party. The same MSM weakened Clinton when he contemplated or utilized military action in Somalia, Bosnia, Iraq and Afghanistan. This wasn't partisan, simply anti-war and anti-authority.

During World War II, members of the press were available to be drafted. They certainly knew or were often close to members of the military. They undoubtedly respected the challenges the military confronted. This was equally true during the Korean War. However, with the advent of professional draft avoidance during Vietnam, and the subsequent elimination of the draft, the US military has ceased to be connected in a personal way with the press. The current editors of the major liberal media organs have no personal connection to today's military. They act with a blatant disregard for the safety of American military members (or, for that matter, American civilians, but that's a separate matter). To reveal the various classified, clandestine programs the liberal press has revealed endangers the lives of real people. There is now no doubt about this claim. It is easy to make. Any banking system dollar now that converts to weaponry used against our soldiers can legitimately be argued to have been at least in part a consequence of the disclosure of this program. Money is fungible.

Not long ago, an LA Times reporter foolishly, but honestly, said he "hated the troops." He felt it was intellectually dishonest to say he was anti-war, but supported the troops. Eason Jordan, the former head of CNN's News Division, accused the US military of "targetting journalists." He lost his job over it. I think the flap this weekend over the financial transactions tracking program is evidence of the same latent (or overt?) hostility to the military.

Here's the botton line. The liberal press detests authority, save for its own. It views its mission as eroding authority. Press freedom erodes authority, except that of the press of course. Well, to the press, what has more authority that the Executive Branch of the United States Government, and the US military? Taking on these forces of authority drives knuckleheads like Dan Rather, for instance, who blathers on about "courage" and "speaking truth to power." It's all the silliest, most arrogant crapola I can imagine. It's like some of the stupidity you deal with when you have children. Small children.

One almost thinks the liberal press would delight in the next act of terror on US soil almost as much as they seem to relish body counts of our military.

3 Comments:

By Blogger Cassandra, at Mon Jun 26, 05:46:00 PM:

Charlotte makes a good point.

In researching posts about the NSA scandal (and now this one) I've run into instance after instance of similar "outrages" during the Clinton administration that were reported once or twice, but then dropped.

This 'below the fold' coverage allows them to say they covered it. But saturation matters to. We've all seen the media relentlessly hype even old stories when it suits their advantage.

It is not coverage of 'bad news' that I resent so much. It is the sheer disproportionality of coverage. News has a short shelf life. If you report something once or twice it is quickly forgotten, but if day after day you hammer on a story, even when there've been no new developments, it sticks in people's minds and assumes outsized importance.  

By Blogger Cassandra, at Mon Jun 26, 05:47:00 PM:

"saturation matters too"

Preview, then post.  

By Blogger Dawnfire82, at Mon Jun 26, 10:22:00 PM:

"One almost thinks the liberal press would delight in the next act of terror on US soil almost as much as they seem to relish body counts of our military."

No doubt. I can see the lead sentence now.

'Despite two wars on foreign soil, harsh interrogation methods, length detainments for terror suspects, and many secret (some would say sinister) 'defense' programs, the Bush administration has failed to prevent Such-and-Such Catastrophic Terrorist Attack Exhibit A.'

Mark my words.  

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