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Columnist Describes Her Experience of Being Censored

Thread ID: 14059 | Posts: 2 | Started: 2004-06-05

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PaleoconAvatar [OP]

2004-06-05 02:08 | User Profile

Censored

By Rory O'Connor

MediaChannel.org

NEW YORK, June 3, 2004 -- There are at least two constants in the opinion column trade. The first is that it's usually bad news when you get a call from your publisher prior to publication. The second is that it's almost always bad news when you opine about Israeli-Palestinian relations.

Last Sunday, when my phone rang, I got the double whammy.

Russel Pergament was calling. Pergament publishes AM New York, a new daily newspaper, aimed primarily at 18-34 year olds, with a circulation of 210,000. This column appears every Monday in AM New York -- or almost every Monday, as I was about to find out.

"I'm killing this week's column," Pergament began without preface.

The column in question (Good News, Bad News) examined the writing of David Brooks, an op-ed columnist for The New York Times. But to Pergament, it was all about Israel, and his perception that my opinions were anti-Israeli.

I had half-expected the call, since Brooks' column extolled the "Good News" behind an Israeli incursion into Gaza that left forty Palestinians dead and hundreds more homeless. Moreover, I knew from previous discussions about columns concerning Israel that Pergament's political views were conservative in general and, on the subject of Israel in particular, veered even further to the right.

I told Pergament that his aggressive response seemed inappropriate, and asked what his specific concerns were. He responded by claiming that my column was unbalanced and that there was "nothing in there about the Israeli soldiers who had been killed in Gaza recently, or why the troops had to be there in the first place."

Rather than 'killing' the column, I suggested a more journalistic approach-namely, editing it. I pointed out that no AM New York editor had been in touch with me about any perceived problems with the column; that I was open to a discussion about changes that might improve it; and that refusing to run an opinion column because you don't agree with the opinions expressed amounted to censorship. In the end, I thought I had persuaded Pergament not to kill the piece, but instead to delay its publication for a day until we could iron out any problems. He even agreed to run a note in Monday's paper explaining that my regularly scheduled column would run on Tuesday instead.

After consulting with several trusted regular readers -- some of whom agreed with Pergament's assertion that the column suffered from not placing the Israeli incursion in proper context -- I rewrote it to add details about the killing of thirteen Israeli soldiers in Gaza and the Palestinian weapons-smuggling tunnels that had led to the incursion. In the end, I thought the column was improved by the additions.

But Pergament apparently didn't agree, since Tuesday came and went with no column in AM New York, and no explanation from Pergament. At week's end, as I was still puzzling over what would be an appropriate response to being censored -- Should I resign in protest? Should I leak the details to the press? Then I received an email from Pergament stating, "I appreciate the trouble you went to respond to my comments--you did as I asked and, despite that, I had an uncomfortable instinct."

Pergament's "instinctual" response of summarily "killing" my column called to mind once again Liebling's famous remark about the power of the press belonging only to those who own one.After all, it is Pergament's paper -- but then again, it's MY column.

And you are my readers -- thanks to power of the Internet, where anyone can be a publisher, and where control of the means of distribution is (not yet) reserved only to the powerful. So I ask you: How should WE respond to AM New York and its publisher?

Enter the debate on O'Connor's censorship at MediaChannel's Citizen's Media Watch.

-- Rory O'Connor of MediaChannel.org writes a weekly column on the media for AM New York. Read other columns by O'Connor.

© MediaCHannel.org, 2004. All rights reserved.


il ragno

2004-06-05 03:24 | User Profile

[QUOTE]To Pergament, it was all about Israel, and his perception that my opinions were anti-Israeli. I had half-expected the call, since I knew from previous discussions about columns concerning Israel that Pergament's political views were conservative in general and, on the subject of Israel in particular, veered even further to the right.[/QUOTE]

If I didn't know she'd slam the phone down in horror - and disinfect the mouthpiece besides - I'd call this woman to tell her, "So long as you continue to meet your Jewish overlords halfway, so long as you continue to use the labels and terminology they've thoughtfully suggested you use: [I]conservative [/I] for 'embedded leftist', and [I]right-wing [/I] for 'Judeo-supremacist'; you will be fretting at the unfairness of it all until the end of your days."

Jewish media has been a reality now for over a century and in fact has been the ONLY reality on the menu for almost as long. Do none of these shabgoys comprehend this? Do they never stop to think: if my children follow in [I]my [/I] footsteps, and [I]their [/I] kids as well, that will make [I]three generations of my family [/I] cavorting like circus monkeys for the amusement of hook-nosed oligarchs in the hope that - if we do real [I]good [/I] - they'll throw loose change at us, and we can come back and do it again?

But white people never think like that. They never consider that they might toil for Hymie endlessly, one generation following the next, each more afraid of being called 'racist' than the last. They never consider it - so instead they end up [I]living [/I] it.

[QUOTE]You are my readers -- thanks to power of the Internet, where anyone can be a publisher, and where control of the means of distribution is B [/B] reserved only to the powerful. [/QUOTE]

Boy, that 'not yet' is scary, innit? You can just feel her clenching her rectum in anticipation of the inevitable impact.

Ms O'Connor: you know perfectly well what a term like 'the powerful', in media terms, is code for. Have you ever considered that the [I]only hope [/I] we have of turning 'not yet' into 'not ever' is dropping the code and [I]saying that terrible three-letter word?[/I]