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Consider (Exposing) the Source Oct. 6, 2003 -- SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA (apj.us) -- This whole Bushistas' leaks hoo-ha -- WilsonGate, IntimiGate, whatever you choose to call it -- is somewhat farcial on its face. We have the Bush White House and Justice Department sitting on an urgent CIA request for over two months, only to be prodded into action when the CIA's rank-and-filers, apparently disgusted at Tenet's letting the Bushies get away with burning an operative, her network of informants, and the front company for which she and several others were officially working, pressured Tenet to pull his spine out of the sock drawer and confront the Rove-Cheney axis. We have the FBI re-directing the focus of the probe away from Bob Novak and the Bush team to look instead at the State Department and two Newsday journalists who weren't leakers, but whistleblowers. We have a whole host of press persons wringing their hands over who the leakers could be, when most of them know full well who the leakers are -- and many of them were in fact among the original recipients of the Plame leak -- but won't tell us. Why? The official reason is a sort of professional courtesy: Journalists never, ever, EVER, we are told, reveal their sources. So, even if it's to root out corruption and treason in the Bush Junta, they won't burn their Bushista sources. Well, fine. Except that journalists do, indeed, reveal their sources on occasion. Exhibit A was provided by none other than Newsweek's Jonathan Alter. Writing this week , he states the following (thanks to Atrios for catching this, by the way):
Alter goes on, much like Richard Cohen did earlier this week, to note that the real targets of the "fair and balanced" Ashcroft DoJ investigation seem to be, not the leakers, but the persons who blew the whistle on the leaking:
Now, you'd think that fellow reporters would of course leap to defend Newsday's Phelps and Royce, and rush to expose the real criminals here -- the leakers -- and so end this tawdry charade. Buuuuuut nooooooooo, as Alter notes:
Now, this is pretty heavy stuff -- and a very good suggestion from Alter. I'm amazed that Alter, who is a Member in Good Standing of CelebCorps DC branch, has the cojones to type it. I mean, normally he'd be busy trying to figure out a way to pin this all on the Clintons. And even now, he has to throw a sop to his fellow Heathers by making a few cheap flings against the Clintons as well as The Nation's David Corn, an APJ alumnus and the man who blew the whistle first and loudest on IntimiGate -- but who, you will note, is NOT being probed, probably because the Bushistas know that trying to cow him in this way is a waste of time and effort. Speaking of the Clintons, that brings me to Exhibit B: On the October 2, 2003 edition of PBS NewsHour, it was revealed by Bruce Yannet, who was himself part of the Independent Counsel team that probed Iran-Contra, that the reporters right to protect sources, even White House sources, is not carved in stone -- and that reporters were, in at least one high-profile case from the past few years, forced to divulge White House sources. Check it out, here -- and here's the pertinent portion thereof:
So, reporters will expose White House sources, so long as the White House in question is occupied by a legitimately-elected Democratic president. (By the way: Mike Espy was later acquitted, but the damage was already done. By the time his name was cleared, he had lost his job as the first African-American chief of USDA.) This all points to what I suspect is the real reason that CelebCorps won't burn their Bushista sources: They're afraid to burn the Bushies, and/or in cahoots with them. Take yer pick. If you want to know why Paul Krugman is the best hire the New York Times has made in the past thirty years, you need to look no further than this passage in the introduction to his splendid new book, "The Great Unraveling":
Now hold it right there. Krugman hits upon how the media, under the guise of "impartiality" but actually out of laziness, ignorance and/or a fear of offending the wrong people, lets the GOP get away, literally as is the case in Iraq, with murder. He sums up in a few expertly-chosen words what it would take me seven hundred words to say. But that's not the end of it. Krugman describes how he, an Op-Ed guy who didn't need to hew to the standards of a journalist (and Lord knows Bill "I make it up and no one dares call me on it" Safire sure doesn't), did his own legwork and wouldn't just take the received wisdom from the Bushistas at face value:
It's true. Besides the Krugster, the strongest US condemnation of Bush's policies has come, not from the mainstream dailies, but from the pages of mags like Business Week and Barron's and even Fortune. (The Wall Street Journal would be among these luminaries, but even their own top-class news room has been hobbled of late by the half-baked right-wing nutcases in the editorial section.) None of these magazines are run by wild-eyed Socialists -- but they're not run by wild-eyed scam artists, either. And they resent the idea that, thanks to George W. Bush and his buddies at Halliburton, Enron and Edison, Americans from this day forward will believe that the only way to succeed in the business world is to be a lying, cheating sack of human fertilizer. In fact, real business experts despise the headlines-grabbing scam artists that hollow out their companies like maggots despoiling a body. Unfortunately, most Americans don't read the financial sections of their own daily newspapers, much less subscribe to Business Week or Barron's. So they never see a strong, fact-based, numbers-grounded debunking of Bush's policies -- unless they are lucky enough either to read the New York Times, or to read a paper that runs a certain column from the Times. That column, of course, is Paul Krugman's. Krugman is quite literally one of the things standing between us and total oncological Gilded-Age corruption and barbarism. For that reason, he is under attack as is no other American writer. Even as his fellow Op-Edder Safire is allowed to state the most bizarre and improvable tripe, Krugman must mind his Ps and Qs more carefully than any NYT journalist ever has -- even though, as I mentioned earlier, Op-Ed columnists aren't supposed to have to hew to the same standards as regular journalists. Witness how the NYT raked Krugman over the coals last year concerning his citing a Jason Leopold story in Salon -- even as they continued to ignore Safire's various crimes against journalism. If I could name any one incident to show that, far from being liberally-biased, the American media in fact kowtows to the right wing, this incident would be it. You know what to do, everyone. Go buy Paul's book. You'll be doing him, and all of us, a big favor. | ||||
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