Media pacifists are jumping all over Mark Yost for complaining about the biased coverage of the war in Iraq, but the good people aren’t just rolling over and taking it. Here’s an excellent defense of Yost: Anytime someone dares to call into question the motives of the media, we can count on Lovelady to come … Continue reading “Pacifist violence”
Media pacifists are jumping all over Mark Yost for complaining about the biased coverage of the war in Iraq, but the good people aren’t just rolling over and taking it. Here’s an excellent defense of Yost:
Anytime someone dares to call into question the motives of the media, we can count on Lovelady to come to the defense of the far-left extreme — anyone out there remember the Eason Jordan affair? Easongate was all the fault of the “wacko neo-fascist bloggers,” or so Lovelady would have had us believe in the dozens of posts he made in cyberspace.
I don’t doubt for one moment that President Bush and his advisers made mistakes in the run-up to the Iraq war. I do not, for one minute, believe that he purposefully lied to the American public about the need to remove Saddam Hussein from power or the importance of introducing democracy in the Middle East as a way to stem radical Islamist terrorism. I believe with all my heart that the Iraqi people are better off today and will be better off in the future because of the American intervention to remove Saddam. Just peer into the dozens of mass graves uncovered in the last couple of years and tell me you disagree with me, Steve.
What America is attempting to do in the Middle East is nothing short of revolutionary. After years of supporting regimes that were friendly to our interests but suppressed their own people, President Bush has decided that the only course of action is for America to do all it can to foster self-determination in a vital region of the world. Not American-style democracy, mind you, but true local self-determination. And each day, on the ground in Iraq, there are dozens of small steps taken toward that goal. Yes, there are missteps and miscalculations … yes, there are setbacks as today’s suicide bombing of U.S. soldiers giving candy to Iraqi CHILDREN, but the ultimate success of the mission is not in doubt in my mind because of the determination of this president.
The predictability of Steve Lovelady and the Columbia Journalism Review has become something of a joke over the course of the last few years. They’re preaching to the choir while lecturing a public that increasingly writes off both of them as useless relics.
The media can’t play the same game with Iraq they played with Vietnam because there are too many alternate routes for news to take these days, but they’re certainly trying, relics that they are.