Posted on 04/15/2013 3:26:31 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Plenty of outrage coming from Twitter about this and other instances of media speculation in the wake of the multiple explosions in Boston today, and it's worth discussing separately from Allahpundit's excellent tracking post on the main story. Wolf Blitzer is covering the story for CNN at its headquarters, and he filled the time by speculating that today's Patriot Day holiday in Massachusetts might have something to do with the apparent bombing of the Boston Marathon:
One intriguing notion, one intriguing thought here, and Im curious, Mike, and Ill ask Matt to weigh in as well, Blitzer said. It is a state holiday, in addition to the Boston Marathon. It is a state holiday in Massachusetts today called Patriots Day, and who knows if that has anything at all to deal to do with these, these twin explosions.
Patriots Day is a holiday meant to commemorate the anniversary of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the first battles of the Revolutionary War. Blitzer continued to inquire to about that possibility, asking if there might have been an event to mark the anniversary.
As part of Bostons Massachusetts, I should say Patriots Day, did you notice earlier in the day, Matt, any special Patriots Day events going on, anything pointing to a special day in Massachusetts?
This is the problem with sitting in a studio with no information and three hours to fill. It’s the reason that I canceled my show today after the reports from Boston began to flood the zone, much of them unsubstantiated, contradictory, and impossible to verify quickly. Even in the five minutes in which I spoke, I felt the urge to offer all sorts of “analysis” based on no solid and substantiated evidence at all. It’s a human impulse to fill the unknown with spot analysis that attempts to make sense of the incomprehensible. Unfortunately, just as with the Tucson and Aurora shootings, that speculation by mainstream-media figures seems to fall very quickly into political paradigms and biases.
And perhaps Blitzer may be correct. Who knows? Well, Blitzer cannot know either, so any connection to his patter and reality would only be strictly coincidental. That’s why it’s better to refrain from speculating while an event unfolds. As the saying goes, it’s better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.
Having done radio and television, I understand the urge that Blitzer didn’t resist. That doesn’t translate to Twitter and Nicholas Krystof’s inane politicking within minutes of the blast, though:
https://twitter.com/NickKristof/status/323891060927512576
After getting reamed about it, Krystof admitted it was a “low blow”:
People jumping on me for criticizing Sen Repubs for blocking ATF appointments. ok, that was low blow. i take it back
— Nicholas Kristof (@NickKristof) April 15, 2013
Leave aside the fact that there may be good reasons for opposition to ATF nominations; how does Krystof think a confirmation hearing would have stopped the bombing from happening? I’d like to see the diagram for that process.
Erik Wemple wrote a few minutes ago that Twitter acts as a red light on bad reporting:
As if the media needed any reminder not to jump to conclusions about what was happening on the ground in Boston, Twitter came to the rescue, with numerous folks pleading for caution. …
Theres a lot more of this stuff out there, setting up an interesting social-media juxtaposition: The platform thats most effective at churning out breaking news has become a place that preaches caution in breaking-news scenarios. Just in case editors and reporters need any reminders.
Well, apparently they do.
I think that some on the Left actually believe their own lies.
Old Ben watches a lot of Jeopardy, and it is very unusual for the players to ever get in that deep a hole.
Isn’t it Israel’s Independence Day?: On May 14, 1948 didn’t Israel Became a Nation?
It COULD be about Patriot’s Day, but not for the reasons the liberals think. It could be because that is when America first began to fight for our independence, and was the first step toward our becoming the great nation we are today, and our terrorist enemies might want to strike a blow against that.
Shep smith of fox did the same exact thing
But look on the bright side, Andy Richter is doing quite well. I wonder what his take on the situation might be.
How did patriotism become a dirty four letter word?
Blitzer is just one of today’s active Tokyo Roses broadcasting now from within the U. S.
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