December 27, 2005
The New York Times Vs. America
By
Michelle Malkin
2005 was a banner year for the
nation's Idiotarian newspaper of record, The New York
Times.
What's "Idiotarian"? Popular
warblogger Charles Johnson of Little Green Footballs (littlegreenfootballs.com)
and Pajamas Media (pajamasmedia.com)
coined
the useful term to describe stubborn blame-America
ideologues hopelessly stuck in a pre-September 11
mindset. The Times crusaded tirelessly this year
for the cut-and-run, troop-undermining, Bush-bashing,
reality-denying cause. Let's review:
On July 6, Army reserve officer
Phillip Carter authored a freelance op-ed for the
Times calling on President Bush to promote military
recruitment efforts. The next day, the paper was
forced to admit that one of its editors had inserted
misleading language into the piece against Carter's
wishes. The "correction":
"The
Op-Ed page in some copies yesterday carried an incorrect
version of an article about military recruitment. The
writer, an Army reserve officer, did not say, 'Imagine
my surprise the other day when I received orders to
report to Fort Campbell, Ky., next Sunday,' nor did he
characterize his recent call-up to active duty as the
precursor to a 'surprise tour of Iraq.' That language
was added by an editor and was to have been removed
before the article was published. Because of a
production error, it was not. The Times regrets
the error."
Carter told Times
ombudsman Byron Calame: "Those were not words I
would have said. It left the impression that I was
conscripted" when, in fact, Carter volunteered for
active duty.
Funny how the "production
errors" of the Times' truth doctors always
put the Bush administration and the war in the worst
light.
Not content to meddle with the
words of a living soldier, the Times published a
disgraceful distortion of a fallen soldier's last words
on Oct. 26. As
reported in this column and in the news pages of the
New York Post, Times reporter James Dao
unapologetically abused the late Corporal Jeffrey B.
Starr, whose letter to his girlfriend in case of death
in Iraq was selectively edited to convey a bogus sense
of "fatalism" for a massive piece marking the
anti-war movement's
"2,000 dead in Iraq" campaign. The Times
added insult to injury by ignoring President Bush's
tribute to Starr on Nov. 30 during his
Naval Academy speech defending the war in Iraq.
After Starr died, Bush said,
"a
letter was found on his laptop computer. Here's what he
wrote. He said, '[I]f you're reading this, then I've
died in Iraq. I don't regret going. Everybody dies, but
few get to do it for something as important as freedom.
It may seem confusing why we're in Iraq; it's not to me.
I'm here helping these people so they can live the way
we live, not to have to worry about tyrants or vicious
dictators. Others have died for my freedom; now this is
my mark.'"
Stirring words deemed unfit to
print by the Times.
The Times did find space to
print the year's most
insipid op-ed piece by paranoid Harvard student
Fatina Abdrabboh, who
praised Al Gore for overcoming America's allegedly
rampant anti-Muslim bias by picking up her car keys,
which she dropped while running on a gym treadmill:
" . . .
Mr. Gore's act represented all that I yearned for --
acceptance and acknowledgment. . . . I left the gym with
a renewed sense of spirit, reassured that I belong to
America and that America belongs to me."
I kid you not.
In June, Debra Burlingame, sister
of Charles F. "Chic" Burlingame III, pilot of downed
American Airlines Flight 77, blew the whistle on plans
by civil liberties zealots to turn Ground Zero in New
York into a Blame America monument. On July 29, the
Times editorial page, stocked with liberals who
snort and stamp whenever their patriotism is questioned,
slammed Burlingame and her supporters at Take Back
the Memorial as "un-American"—for exercising
their free speech rights.
Yes, "un-American." This
from a newspaper that
smeared female interrogators at Guantanamo Bay as
"sex workers," sympathetically portrayed
military deserters as "un-volunteers," apologized
for terror suspects and illegal aliens at every turn,
enabled the Bush Derangement Syndrome-driven crusade of
the
lying Joe Wilson, and recklessly endangered national
security by publishing illegally obtained information
about classified counterterrorism programs.
So, which side is The New
York Times on? Let 2005 go down as the year the Gray
Lady wrapped herself permanently in a White Flag.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.