Posted on 01/11/2002 6:34:31 PM PST by kattracks
Retired New York City firefighter Kevin O'Kane says that reporters from all the major news organizations were present when a clay sculpture of three of his FDNY brethren raising the American flag over Ground Zero was unveiled on Dec. 20 in Brooklyn.
But only one reporter bothered to mention that the racial make-up of the trio had been altered, he told NewsMax.com in an email complaining about the cover-up on Monday.
For the next three weeks the mainstream press breathed not a word of the fraudulent tribute, even as firefighter O'Kane struggled in vain to get coverage of what he and many of his brethren felt was a politically correct travesty that cheated three rightful FDNY heroes out of their due.
"I called one newspaper after another," O'Kane told NewsMax.com Friday. "Nobody wanted to cover this story."
On Tuesday NewsMax.com broke the story of the hero firefighter's complaint; how he and his brethren were livid that higher-ups in the FDNY had decided to tamper with reality to reflect - not the world famous photograph of the three Caucasian fireman who actually performed the deed - but a more politically correct version that replaced two of the white firemen with an African-American and a Hispanic. (See: Racial Changes Made in Ground Zero Firefighter Tribute)
After the NewsMax report, the story caught fire on talk radio in venues like Al Rantel's KABC broadcast in Los Angeles. By Thursday the Weekly Standard had its own version of the story on its web site, where it was picked up by Fox News Channel's Brit Hume.
But it took till Friday for the story to explode, when WABC radio's Sean Hannity featured a full hour interview with firefighter O'Kane and civil rights activist Lawrence Guyot, who argued that replacing the white firefighters was a good idea. (O'Kane and Guyot will continue the debate on Fox News Channel's cablecast "Hannity & Colmes" Friday night.)
Minutes after Hannity's interview ended, the Associated Press picked up the news that NewsMax.com reported three days earlier, sending the story richocheting around newsrooms all across the country.
"Given that those who died were of all races and all ethnicities and that the statue was to be symbolic of those sacrifices, ultimately a decision was made to honor no one in particular," Fire Department spokesman Frank Gribbon told the AP.
But the three firefighters who actually raised the flag - Dan McWilliams, George Johnson and Billy Eisengrein said through their lawyer that they were "disappointed."
"It's become something political as opposed to historical," attorney Bill Kelly told the AP.
The bogus sculpture unveiled in December will be cast in bronze in April and put on permanent display at FDNY headquarters unless enough public pressure is brought to bear, O'Kane told NewsMax.
"My fear is that the word won't get out and that this fraud will be erected and future generations will come to regard this politically correct sculpture as a historic fact."
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
I wish this happened more often.
They are a credit to their country and deserve to have themselves represented honestly instead of others getting credit for something they did not do.
Not true. At least one NY paper had a story on it. VermiciousKnid posted a link to a Dec. 22 Newsday story on this thread.
I'll pledge $20, right here, right now.
How can we make this happen?
Joaquin
What, and let them escape from the DemocRAT plantation? Never!
If it were three Hispanic firefighters that raised that flag, then it should be the three Hispanic firefighters in the statue.
If it were three gay firefighters that raised that flag, then it should be the gay black firefighters in the statue.
If it were three Native American firefighters that raised that flag, then it should be the three Native American firefighters in the statue.
Whoever did it, their images should be used.
Another case that proves PC=Stupid.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.