Posted on 05/13/2003 1:26:17 AM PDT by fightinJAG
Are racial preferences a factor in scandal involving reporter? Tuesday, May 13, 2003 By John Leo Universal Press Syndicate The New York Times has acted honorably in dealing with the wreckage of the Jayson Blair scandal. It published corrections, 54 in all, on Blairs inaccurate reporting. When at last it became obvious that Blair was plagiarizing stories, making up quotes and filing stories from places he never visited, the Times applied pressure and Blair resigned. And at this writing, the Times is preparing a long article detailing Blairs checkered career. This is the way newspapers are supposed to behave put it all out on the table.
But there is an issue that the Times may not be ready to discuss: whether racial preferences are implicated in what went wrong. Blair was editor of the University of Maryland student newspaper. After dropping out of college as a senior, he was installed as a Times reporter at age 23, with little experience, just some free-lancing and brief internships at the Times and The Boston Globe. Question: Isnt this too far, too fast, and would this meteoric rise to staff reporter be likely for a white reporter with comparable credentials?
Mickey Kaus, writing at slate.com, raised the preference issue by offering this analogy: Lets suppose, to promote commerce in Utah, federal trucking standards were relaxed on Utah trucks and a disastrous crash occurred when a trucks brakes failed. Would the press, politicians and the public say, But non-Utah trucks crash all the time, or You havent proved a direct causal connection between the Utah-preference program and this crash? No, Kaus wrote. They would just demand that preferences be abolished so that all trucks everywhere would have to meet the same standards.
This has to happen in journalism, too.
Everybody knows that this argument tends to trigger cries of Racism! Lets stipulate that the overwhelming majority of plagiarism cases and journalistic scandals have been the work of whites. As a reminder, look who is back in the news Stephen Glass, retired fabricator of gripping but totally false news stories for The New Republic.
But once you create preferences, you run the risk of increasing the number of screw-ups among the preferred group. Relaxing standards or pushing an unprepared candidate into a high-pressure job tends to increase the odds of trouble. All of us figure this out rather quickly when the preferred group is relatives of the boss, or people who went to the boss college. Its true of identity groups as well.
Another factor is that preference programs carry an implication that lower-quality work will be tolerated. Max Frankel, the former executive editor at The New York Times, admitted this in 1990, though minus the clear reference to preferences. Since blacks are a precious few at the Times, he said, If they were less than good, Id probably stay my hand at removing them too quickly.
He obviously meant this to be tolerant and generous, as part of an effort to make up for the long years in which blacks were totally absent or very rare in the newsroom. But he increased resentment all around blacks knew they were being demeaned in a kindly way; whites heard an announcement of double standards.
It seems as if the Times was inordinately tolerant of Blair. His bosses say they leaned on him repeatedly about his inaccuracies. Fair enough. Blair said recently his work was hampered by recurring personal issues. Earlier he told his bosses he suffered from the shock of losing a relative in the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon.
But sources at the Times say Blairs problems go back well before 9/11. One source said the charge that Blair was making up quotes goes back to his earliest days at the paper. Two reporters said protective staff members would do Blairs reporting for him when he didnt show up for work. Another reporter, who refused to work with Blair any longer, told the metro desk about his erratic behavior. My assistant here at US News, Margaret Menge, turned up a Boston Globe article by Blair (April 18, 1999) that contains quotes nearly identical to those published in The Washington Post a week before.
Alarm bells should have been going off at the Times years ago. Or perhaps we should say that the bells were going off, but the Times seemed unwilling to hear or to do anything about what it knew. Last week, Howard Kurtz of The Washington Post interviewed a Times editor who said that the paper had come to realize that Blair was compiling a substandard record.
The Blair scandal is not just evidence that reporters can go off track. Its a reminder that diversity programs can undermine the standards that made great institutions great.
There's more here, but I'm not sure what.
This out of slate?
Amazing how, when affirmative action hits a lefty's personal and professional buttons---after all, who among journalists would not kill for a spot writing for the New York Times---suddenly there's a hue and cry that "preferences be abolished" so that everyone has "to meet the same standards."
You forget that liberals are the most racist people on the planet. They're the ones who patronizingly believe that blacks need the charity of white people to succeed; many liberals keep as far away from blacks as they possibly can.
To give Jayson Blair a job, the Times may well have held its nose, or it may have at least thought it was carrying its white man's burden.
You've heard the phrase, "the soft bigotry of low expectations"? It may well apply here.
NY Times has an agenda and hires largely on that basis just as in the old Soviet Union.
The least credible and complete portion of the Times' account is its categorical denial that the unusual tolerance and solicitude the paper accorded Blair, who is African American, had anything to do with his race. Like other major American news organizations, the Times has in recent years made strenuous efforts to compensate for the decades of discrimination that kept women and minority reporters out of their newsrooms. The New York Times, in particular, has had demonstrable difficulties recruiting and retaining black reporters and editors.
The Times report is candid about the severe criticisms directed at Blair by the two metropolitan editors Joyce Purnick and Jonathan Landman prior to his assignment to the paper's national staff. It is less forthcoming about the close mentor-protégé relationship that apparently existed between Blair and the Times' managing editor, Gerald Boyd, who also is African American. By the Times' account, Boyd was head of a committee that recommended Blair be hired, despite the reservations of other editors. Boyd, along with Raines, pushed the inexperienced reporter with a poor record onto the prestigious national staff.
What the Times does not note is that in 2001 it was the tyro Blair who nominated Boyd for the National Assn. of Black Journalists' journalist of the year award for his role in producing the Pulitzer Prize-winning series "How Race Is Lived in America." When Boyd subsequently was promoted to managing editor, according to sources at the Times, Blair was selected to write the announcement for the paper's in-house newsletter.
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