Posted on 10/25/2005 10:12:43 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob
Beginning in the Middle Ages, there was a widely popular puppet show called Punch and Judy. Most of its content and humor were based on two characters flailing away at each other with slap sticks. Today, we have a verbal equivalent of the same thing, occurring in the pages of the New York Times. These protagonists are Arthur (Pinch) Sulzberger Jr., boy-publisher of the Times, and Judith (Judy) Miller, one-time rising star writer for that paper.
Judy says she told the truth and upheld the values of the Times. Slap! Pinch says she misled her editors and brought the reputation of the Times into question. Slap! Slap! But unlike its medieval ancestor, the Pinch and Judy Show has four participants. And they are not evenly matched.
Like tag team wrestling matches when the referee is looking the other way, Judy is being attacked by three people at one time. In addition to Pinch, there is Bill (Petrushka) Keller, the editor of the Times, and Maureen (Cruella) Dowd, who is Don Rickles in drag for those who like to think - or think they think - and sneer, rather than get the gag and laugh.
Bill Keller has weighed in with comments that Judy has drifted into covering stories shed been removed from, and that she has misled the editors of the paper. Slap! Slap! Slap! Drifted? Isnt it part of the job description of an Editor in Chief to keep the staff from drifting?
But the biggest whacks are taken by Maureen. In her column, Woman of Mass Destruction, she says that Judy has a peculiar mixture of hard work and hauteur, that she is in need of a tight editorial leash, [but] was kept on no leash at all, and implies that she in part slept her way to the top by calling her the Fourth Estate's Becky Sharp. Slap! Slap! Slap! Slap!
Since the Times in its infinite wisdom has sought to make Internet users pay for access to the screeds of its stable of literary egos, Maureens column is now theoretically unavailable for free on the Internet. Thanks to the efforts of a blogger known as Peking Duck, here is that column:
Source: http://www.pekingduck.org/archives/003038.php#003038
Is this whole imbroglio merely a source of entertainment, like the original Punch and Judy Show? Not that pure slap stick is an unworthy purpose. That Show led to vaudeville, the Three Stooges, Chevy Chase and Gerald Ford, among others. Surely thats a greater contribution to Western Civilization than the collected works of Professor Noam Chomsky, for instance.
But there is a real point in the Pinch and Judy Show. Judy went to jail for 85 days to protect her sources, and thereby to protect all reporters, all newspapers, and truth, justice and the American way. But after a pas de deux about the adequacy of her releases from her sources, she rolled the stone away from her tomb and came out and testified that she didnt know who gave her the name of Valerie Plame, wife of discredited Ambassador Joe Wilson.
Hellooo? Didnt know? That doesnt pass the sniff test, as we lawyers describe it. Truth is not yet on the table. And it may or may not be, when prosecutor Fitzgerald issues his indictments, vel non, on Friday. It may take some time to get to the bottom of this story. And based on its coverage so far, the Times will probably be the last to report it, even though the facts are already inside its own walls.
As for the title of this piece, it is perfect. The credit goes not to me, but to Leni, known on the Internet as MinuteGal, who came up with it.
John_Armor@aya.yale.edu
John / Billybob
Excellent!
To me, all at the NY Slimes are "Jayson Blairs".
This is like the old military document joke: "Confidential: Destroy Before Reading".
The utter fog and confusion of this whole case reminds me of the penultimate scene in "Absence of Malice", where Judge James J. Wells (Wilford Brimley) is called in to figure out what in the Good Christ (excuse me) is going on, and to get someone's ass in his briefcase.
My modesty is exceeded only by your many talents.
(.....wait, that doesn't come out quite right, does it......LOL).
Seriously, you're an outstanding freeper and one of our most gifted writers.
Leni
Great!
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