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Slanted
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The New York Times
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runs a lot of headlines about scandals, but rarely does it run a headline that
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is a scandal. On Saturday, Dec. 28, it came pretty close. The headline
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over its lead Page One story read: "DEMOCRATS HOPED TO RAISE $7 MILLION FROM
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ASIANS IN U.S." On the inside page where the story continued, the headline was:
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"DEMOCRATS' GOAL: MILLIONS FROM ASIANS." Both headlines were wrong. The story
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was actually about a 1996 Democratic National Committee document outlining a
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plan to raise (as the lead paragraph put it) "$7 million from
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Asian-Americans."
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Memo to
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the New York Times : "Asian-Americans" are American citizens of Asian
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ancestry. "Asians," in contrast, are Asians--citizens of some Asian nation. And
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"Asians in U.S." are citizens of some Asian nation who are visiting or residing
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in the United States. This is not . It gets at the heart of the subtle,
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probably subconscious racial prejudice that has turned a legitimately
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medium-sized scandal into a journalistic blockbuster.
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Would a Times headline call Polish-Americans "East
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Europeans in U.S."? (Or, in the jump headline, just "East Europeans"?) And the
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headline was only half the problem with Saturday's story. The story itself was
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wrongheaded, implying that there's something inherently scandalous about
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Asian-Americans giving money to a political campaign. In fact, the inaccurate
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headline was necessary to prevent the story from seeming absurd. Can you
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imagine the Times running--over its lead story--the headline
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"DEMOCRATS HOPED TO RAISE MILLIONS FROM U.S. JEWS"?
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Political parties target
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ethnic groups for fund-raising all the time (as Jacob Weisberg recently showed
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in these pages). They target Hispanics, they target Jews, they pass the hat at
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Polish-American dinners. To be sure, the Asian-American fund-raising plan was,
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in retrospect, no ordinary plan. It went quite awry. Some of the projected $7
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million--at least $1.2 million, according to the Times --wound up coming
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in the form of improper or illegal donations (which, of course, we already knew
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about). Foreign citizens or companies funneled money through domestic front men
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or front companies. And sometimes foreigners thus got to rub elbows with
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President Clinton. For all we know, they influenced policy.
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But the
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truly scandalous stuff was old news by Dec. 27. What that day's story added was
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news of the existence of this document outlining a plan to raise money from
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Americans of Asian descent. And that alone was considered worthy of the
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high-scandal treatment.
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Leave aside this particular story, and consider
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the "campaign-gate" scandal as a whole. What if the same thing had happened
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with Europeans and Americans of European descent? It would be just as improper
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and/or illegal. But would we really be so worked up about it? Would William
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Safire write a column about it every 15 minutes and use the loaded word
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"aliens" to describe European noncitizens? If Indonesian magnate James Riady
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looked like John Major, would Newsweek have put a huge, ominous, grainy
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black-and-white photo of him on its cover? ("Clinton's European connection"
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wouldn't pack quite the same punch as "Clinton's Asian connection"--the phrase
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that Newsweek put on its cover and Safire has used 16 times in 13
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weeks.) Would the Times be billing minor investigative twists as lead
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stories?
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Indeed,
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would its reporters even write stories like that Saturday's? The lead
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paragraph, which is supposed to crystallize the story's news value, is this: "A
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White House official and a leading fund-raiser for the Democratic National
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Committee helped devise a strategy to raise an unprecedented $7 million from
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Asian-Americans partly by offering rewards to the largest donors, including
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special access to the White House, the committee's records show." You mean
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Democrats actually offered White House visits to Americans who cough up big
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campaign dough? I'm shocked. Wait until the Republicans discover this tactic!
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The Friday after Christmas is a slow news day, but it's not that slow.
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And as for the "unprecedented" scale of the fund-raising goal: Virtually every
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dimension of Clinton's 1996 fund-raising was on an unprecedented scale, as
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we've long known.
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There are some interesting nuggets in the Times
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story. But among them isn't the fact, repeated in the third paragraph, that
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fund-raisers told Asian-American donors that "political contributions were the
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path to power." And among them isn't the fact, repeated (again) in the fourth
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paragraph, that "the quid pro quo promised" to Asian-American donors was "in
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many cases a face-to-face meeting with the President." And, anyway, none of
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these nuggets is interesting enough to make this the day's main story. The only
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way to do that is to first file Asian-Americans in the "alien" section of your
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brain. That's why the story's headline is so telling.
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The funny
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thing about this scandal is that its root cause and its mitigating circumstance
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are one and the same. Its root cause is economic globalization--the fact that
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more and more foreign companies have an interest in U.S. policy. But
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globalization is also the reason that the scandal's premise--the illegality of
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contributions from "foreign" interests--is increasingly meaningless. Both the
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Times and the Washington Post (in its blockbuster-lite
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front-page story, the next day) cited already-reported evidence that a $185,000
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donation (since returned) may have originated ultimately with the C.P. Group.
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The C.P. Group is "a huge Thai conglomerate with interests in China and
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elsewhere in Asia" (the Times ) and is "among the largest foreign
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investors in China" (the Post ). But of course, Nike, Boeing, General
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Motors, Microsoft, IBM, and so on are also huge companies with interests in
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China and elsewhere in Asia. They, no less than Asian companies, at times have
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an interest in low U.S. tariffs, treating oppressive Asian dictators with kid
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gloves, and so on. Yet it is perfectly legal for them to lubricate such
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lobbying with big campaign donations.
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Why no journalistic outrage about that ?
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Well, for starters, try looking at a grainy newsweekly-sized photo of Lou
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Gerstner and see if it makes you remember Pearl Harbor. (By the way, neither
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the Times nor the Post noted that the ominous C.P. Group is
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involved in joint ventures with Ford and Nynex.)
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You might think that, in an
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age of globalization and with the United States' fate increasingly tied to the
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fate of other nations, the United States' best newspaper would be careful not
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to run articles that needlessly feed xenophobia. Guess again. Six weeks ago a
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Times op-ed piece by political scientist Lucian Pye explored the
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formidable mindset that governs China today. Current Chinese leaders have
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"distinctive characteristics" that give them "significant advantages" over the
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United States in foreign policy. They "see politics as exclusively combative
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contests, involving haggling, maneuvering, bargaining and manipulating. The
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winner is the master of the cleverest ploys and strategems [ sic ]."
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Moreover, Chinese leaders are "quick to find fault in others" and try "always
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to appear bold and fearless." Finally ("in a holdover from classical Chinese
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political theory"), China's leaders "insist on claiming the moral high ground,
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because top leaders are supposed to be morally superior men." In short, China's
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"distinctive" edge lies in combative, Machiavellian, mud-slinging, blustery,
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self-righteous politicians. Gosh, why didn't we think of that?
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These peculiar traits, Pye
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noted, aggravate another disturbing feature of modern China. It seems that the
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Chinese people vacillate "between craving foreign goods and giving vent to
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anti-foreign passions." In other respects, too, they evince a "prickly
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xenophobic nationalism." Imagine that.
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