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You're Another
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Steven Brill to last
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week's "Strange Bedfellow" column on Brill's Content .
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Last week, the Wall
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Street Journal editorial page accused Salon of shilling for
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President Clinton. Please pay close attention as I try to explain the charge.
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Salon has run a series of articles alleging that right-wing
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philanthropist Richard Mellon Scaife paid off David Hale, a Whitewater witness.
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According to the Journal , the real motivation for these stories is
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partisan. How so? One of Salon 's investors is Adobe Ventures. A partner
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in Adobe Ventures is William Hambrecht. Hambrecht hosted a fund-raiser for
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Clinton this year and has given several hundred thousand dollars to the
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Democratic Party. In addition, the editorial notes that board members of Adobe
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Systems, the software company that is the other partner in Adobe Ventures, have
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contributed $130,000 to Democratic candidates over the past several years. The
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editors of the Journal think this background discredits Salon 's
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accusations against Scaife. What's more, the editorial suggests that Brill's
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Content neglected to point out this bias in a story about Salon
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because Clinton gave Steven Brill a plug in his speech at the White House
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Correspondents' Dinner.
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Anybody
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still with me? This editorial is noteworthy not just as a gleaning from
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Flytrap's baroque phase, but as an example of cascading allegations of bad
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faith that now envelop the Clinton scandals. If you follow this stuff
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closely--not something I necessarily advise--what you have been hearing for the
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past several weeks is mostly a volley of charges and countercharges about bias,
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partisanship, and conflict of interest. Everyone who has anything to say about
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Monica Lewinsky, Whitewater, or the China connection, on either side of the
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issue, has by now been accused not just of being wrong, not just of being
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unfair, but also of essentially acting as a lackey for either Kenneth Starr or
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Bill Clinton.
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The notion that actors in this drama are motivated by
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loyalty to the president or his party is merely implausible in most cases. The
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notion that anyone is moved to the point of bias by emotional ties to the
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person of Starr or the Office of the Independent Counsel is simply bizarre. Yet
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in Salon this week is a column by Joe Conason, one of those reporters
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frequently accused of fronting for Clinton by folks on the right. Conason,
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echoing Brill, argues that the Washington Post and the New York
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Times have been "taking dictation from the independent counsel." Conason
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says this bias doesn't come only from the press's hunger for a big story. "At
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both papers," Conason writes, "there exists a feeling of indebtedness to Starr,
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who helped the Times and the Post escape libel judgments in the
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not-so-distant past."
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In a fight
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saturated with spin, you might call this sort of accusation "topspin." It is an
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attempt to trump the other side's facts and arguments by smearing them as a
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shill for the man behind the curtain. Under the rules of the game, if you can
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connect the teller to an interested party, you don't have to credit the tale.
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This mode of discourse has thoroughly poisoned the atmosphere in which the
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scandal is discussed. Of course, to say that a charge is disagreeable doesn't
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mean it's unjustified. A toxic atmosphere can result from the release of poison
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gas. In this case, however, the casual accusations that various journalists are
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cutouts for the principal combatants are largely baseless.
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This type of accusation is reminiscent of the
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1930s, the days when fronting, fellow traveling, and agitprop were genuine
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phenomena in American politics. But we now live in the least ideological period
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in recent memory. Perhaps the ingestion of too much corporate PR has made us
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all suspicious. Or perhaps an omnipresent air of "investigation" breeds
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paranoia. But for whatever reason, the view that members of the media have a
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special propensity for corruption has grown in intensity since Clinton ran for
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president in 1992.
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Since the
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Lewinsky scandal broke, and in particular since Brill happened upon the scene,
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this culture of mistrust has gone radioactive. In his own much-discussed
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article about press coverage of the scandal, Brill injected topspin by accusing
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various reporters of being "lapdogs" for Starr. The conservative Weekly
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Standard promptly hit back with a cover story that didn't just argue that
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Brill was overstating his case but also accused him of being "Clinton's lapdog"
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and a "White House mouthpiece." This is a vicious cycle. You accuse me of bad
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faith, so I accuse you back.
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Let's return to the Journal 's article about
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Salon . What's missing from it is any sense of how journalists
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think--something you might think editorial writers at a large metropolitan
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daily would have. If you ask why Salon would publish a story accusing
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Scaife of tampering with a Whitewater witness, you could come up with a number
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of plausible reasons. The chief one would probably be that journalists at
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Salon believed the story was true, important, and interesting. A bit
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more cynically, you might mention that these same editors and writers hoped the
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scoop would bring them attention. Another reason would be that the story suits
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their political views. The Salonistas pretty clearly think Scaife and
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Starr are bad men. They might be right or wrong, but this motive would not make
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their articles inherently corrupt or dishonest. (The ideologically fevered
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writers of the Wall Street Journal editorials ought to be able to grasp
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this point.)
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You could list lots of other
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reasons why Salon would print such a story before reaching the financial
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interests or ideological biases of some of its investors. Most newspapers have
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elaborate church-state segregation to prevent even the suggestion of influence
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from the corporate side. Smaller magazines sometimes do and sometimes don't.
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Some (such as the New Republic and the National Review ) openly
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reflect the views of their owners. Others (such as
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Slate
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) do not.
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But even in those cases where magazines speak openly for the owner's point of
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view, it's not fair to assume that a third party with whom the owner
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sympathizes calls the shots. What this kind of assumption misses is that
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journalists are journalists. They take their independence seriously, and--to be
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less noble about it--they love trouble. When there's a conflict between a great
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story and some other factor, the great story almost always carries the day. For
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example, the Starr-lovin' Matt Drudge showed no compunction about blowing up
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the independent counsel's Lewinsky investigation by posting gossip about it on
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the Web. I'm sure that if Salon got its mitts on the Linda Tripp tapes,
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it would post them on the Web and take credit for the scoop, even if they
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served to further humiliate Clinton and vindicate Starr.
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In this instance, the charge
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of bad faith is even more absurd. To make its case about Salon , the
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Journal ignores the fact that Adobe board members, like those of most
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big corporations, give money to both parties. I think neglecting to mention
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this shows that the Journal 's editorial page lacks intellectual
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integrity. But I don't think that even the Journal 's editors, who come
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as close to being propagandists as anyone in the mass media, should be accused
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of trying to run interference for Starr. Like their counterparts on the left,
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they seem fully capable of reducing a reasoned argument to a war of insults for
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reasons of their own.
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