Too much irony for one day – or one year.
First, the editor of The New Republic, formerly a nonfiction magazine, complains about leaks to the press and is seconded by a multitude of left-wing bloggers,
What this incident establishes is that the sinistrosphere agrees that some secrets are worth protecting. It just disagrees with the rest of us about what they are. Government strategies to catch terrorists: nah. Transcripts showing that liberal journalists have engaged in a dishonest cover-up: yeah.
And then the New York Times insinuates that John Podhoretz got his new job as editor of Commentary through nepotism. Let’s do a quick comparison:
Norman Podhoretz retired as Commentary’s editor 12 years ago. He doesn’t own or control the magazine, which is published by an not-for-profit foundation. John, his son, is inter alia a newspaper columnist, the author of several books, a former speech writer for President Reagan and a former managing editor of the Weekly Standard, about whose performance David Frum writes, “John was one of the most effective editors I have ever known, brilliantly capable in every aspect of the job, from conceptualizing new directions for the magazine to fixing commas.”
The current publisher of the New York Times is the son and grandson of former publishers. His family owns a majority of the paper’s voting stock. Four years after graduating from college, he was hired by the Times and has worked there ever since. He has been the publisher for the past 15 years, chairman of the New York Times Company for ten. Based on performance, he would have been fired years ago if the public stockholders’ economic interests played any role in corporate decisions. He has never written anything of substance, though he did manage last year to deliver one of history’s weirdest commencement addresses.
Talk about the pot calling the polished porcelain black!
BTW, Michael Yon reports that Private Beauchamp was offered a chance to transfer out of Iraq and declined it, choosing to stay with his unit and fight for his country. So far as I’m concerned, that act washes away any and all prior misdeeds. Deus tecum, Scott.
Comments