CNN is confused about sex

February 1, 2024 • 10:50 am

Here’s a headline at CNN Health that is seemingly confused about what a “woman” is.  Note that the word, which means “adult human female” appears blatantly in the headlines, but perhaps the headline writer was ideologically different from the authors:

(click on screenshot to read)

 

This is the gist of the article, and, indeed, the word “women” appears seven times in the article. But look at the part in bold (my emphasis):

Polycystic ovary syndrome, known as PCOS, has long been known for symptoms such as missed periods or excess body hair. Now, new research has revealed another potential effect: cognitive dysfunction later in life.

The scientific report “is one of the few studies to investigate cognitive functioning and brain outcomes in those women at midlife,” said Dr. Pauline Maki, a professor and director of the Women’s Mental Health Research Program at the University of Illinois Chicago, via email. Maki wasn’t involved in the study, published Wednesday in the journal Neurology.

Polycystic ovary syndrome refers to symptoms related to a hormonal imbalance in people assigned female at birth. Telltale signs can include “menstrual cycle changes, skin changes such as increased facial and body hair and acne, abnormal growths in the ovaries, and infertility,” according to the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

The chronic condition affects around 8% to 13% of women and girls of reproductive age worldwide, according to the World Health Organization, but as many as 70% could be experiencing PCOS while undiagnosed.

So they use “women and girls” throughout, but slip in the “people assigned female at birth,” as if sex is assigned rather than observed.  As Luana Maroja and I wrote:

Even in apparently objective discussions of sex and gender, individuals are often said to have been assigned their sex at birth (e.g., “AFAB”: assigned female at birth), as if this were an arbitrary decision by doctors—a “social construct”—rather than an observation of biological reality.

Yes, secondary sexual characteristics like genitals are usually used as a way to determine biological sex—a proxy for gamete type—but the annoying implication that sex is “assigned” is unnecessary.  Why can’t they just stick with “girls” and “women”? What would have been wrong with using, in the sentence, “related to a hormonal imbalance in females”?

h/t: Reese

The BBC apologizes for making false and defamatory claims about the IDF executing Palestinian civilians

January 11, 2024 • 12:30 pm

I believe I mentioned this faux pas by the BBC earlier today, but here are the hard, cold facts.

On Christmas Eve, BBC radio repeated, six times, a completely false report that Israeli troops had executed 137 Palestinian civilians and buried them in unmarked graves. This of course came from a notice by the ever-reliable Hamas, which loves to fabricate such stuff.  Eventually the BBC corrected itself (see below), but this shows the willingness of its journalistic chowderheads to lap up and regurgitate to the public whatever saucer of cream Hamas sets before them.  The BBC and the Guardian, it seems, are doing the absolute worst and most biased reporting on the Israel/Hamas war among all mainstream media.

Click below to read the archived report, which of course isn’t in the BBC online but in the Times of London.

The story:

The BBC has apologised for reporting Hamas claims that the Israeli army was responsible for carrying out “summary executions” in the Gaza strip without seeking sufficient corroborating evidence.

The broadcaster has issued an apology via its website for the Christmas Eve report, which is understood to have aired six times on the BBC World Service and Radio 4 before being pulled.

The story, which appears to have been based on a report from the news agency AFP [Agence France-Presse], centered on a statement from the Hamas terror group. It accused Israeli troops of illegally killing 137 Palestinian civilians since the war started on October 7 and burying them in a pit in northern Gaza.

The BBC said that it had failed to “make sufficient effort to seek corroborating evidence to justify reporting the Hamas claim”.

It added that its accusations were attributed and its story contained a response from the Israeli military saying that it was unaware of the incident and that Hamas was a terrorist organisation that did not value truth.

Some staff considered that by posting the report on its corrections and clarifications web page, the BBC had not gone far enough to rectify its mistake.

“Unless this apology is public and broadcast in the same arena as the original mistake, the damage is done,” said one Jewish employee.

A second staffer added: “They have taken the Hamas line — a terror organisation — at face value, far too much since October 7. And nothing has changed. And again it’s an apology about a very serious accusation against Israel hidden on a corrections page.”

The BBC has previously apologised for a television report that Israeli troops had targeted medical staff during a raid on a hospital in Gaza in November.

The previous month it had admitted that it was wrong of one of its correspondents to speculate that that a rocket that fell outside al-Ahli hospital in Gaza had been fired by Israel.

So there you have it: a completely bogus report, originating from Hamas, that the BBC apologized for because it didn’t do “due diligence”. But crikey, the story sounds so fishy from the outset—the IDF doesn’t really do stuff like that—that serious fact-checking would be required. Apparently there was none, just a lifting of the story from the AFP followed by an online apology that was so hard to find that reader Jez, who saw the Times story, had to sniff all around the BBC website, using various permutations of words like “Gaza” and “apology” to even find the apology.

Well, he finally did, and it’s below (click the link to see it, though I reproduce it in full):

Anyway, here it is in full:

I agree with the Times: this apology has to be broadcast (preferably six times) on the same radio station where the false report appeared.  And “they didn’t make sufficient effort to seek corroborating evidence”? They appear to have made NO effort!  How many people who heard the original radio report will even know about this correction?

Fortunately, the Times did the BBC’s work for them, also mentioning how the Beeb had falsely reported the Hamas line two times before this.  In the end, it shows the BBC’s anti-Israel and antisemitic tilt, something that becomes more evident every day.

Business Insider keeps bashing Neri Oxman for plagiarism. This time they’ve got her.

January 8, 2024 • 9:30 am

Two days ago I called attention to the crusade by the site Business Insider, of all places, against Neri Oxman, the wife of gazillionaire and Harvard-basher Bill Ackman. Ackman, you’l recall, was instrumental in the resignation of Harvard President Claudine Gay.  He had called attention to her lame performance before the House committee, and also said he would no longer donate to Harvard until it got rid of its antisemitic climate. Bit was Ackman’s repeated emphasis on Gay’s academic plagiarism that finally helped bring her down.

For some reason, Business Insider (BI) decided to examine the plagiarism not by Ackman, but by his wife, apparently as a way to get back at Ackman for attacking Gay (at least, that’s my theory, which is mine).  In two hit pieces (here and here), BI had found four instances in Oxman’s MIT Ph.D. thesis in which, while citing sources properly, she didn’t put quotation marks around the copied material. That is a technical violation of MIT’s code of conduct, and so, according to their lights, she plagiarized. Oxman admitted she erred, apologized, and asked MIT to correct the four excerpts lacking quotation marks.

Although Oxman was a professor at MIT, she left for good in 2021, so this doesn’t affect her career at all.  While it is grounds for criticism, it’s hardly relevant any more, and is surely not as important as Gay’s plagiarism, which was more widespread, arrant, and occurred in her published papers, which is more serious. Further, Gay was President of Harvard, and must be held to the highest standards, so her resignation for plagiarism was appropriate.

However, BI has kept digging, for they’re relentless. (The glee with which they revealed Oxman’s plagiarism was palpable, and they brought up other irrelevant stuff, like a present she gave to Jeffrey Epstein, to smear her in a way that seemed inappropriate.)

But this time BI struck pay dirt. As the article below shows (click on screenshot, or find it archived here), Oxman did something less palatable this time: she plagiarized at least 15 times in her thesis from Wikipedia, without any citation or attribution, as well as from two other sources. In addition, two of her published papers appear to have lifted material as well, also without either an inline citation or quotation marks. These are more serious matters:

Quotes from BI are indented, and I’ll give two examples of the Wikipedia plagiarism.

Neri Oxman, a former MIT professor and celebrity within the world of academia, stole sentences and whole paragraphs from Wikipedia, other scholars, and technical documents in her academic writing, Business Insider has found.

. . .But a thorough review of her published work revealed that Oxman’s failure to cite sources went beyond that — and included multiple instances of plagiarism in which she passed off writing from other sources as her own without citing the original in any way. At least 15 passages from her 2010 MIT doctoral dissertation were lifted without any citation from Wikipedia entries.

The instances of plagiarism BI found on Friday are closer to a more common definition of plagiarism — the use of someone else’s words without any indication that you are passing them off as your own.

Here are two examples, and the copying is almost word for word. WHY would anyone plagiarize from Wikipedia? And it’s hard to see this as just an error, since there are neither citations to the site nor quotation marks.

Others are shown, but the point is made. There are fifteen in toto, and that’s not good.

She also lifted an illustration:

But Oxman never acknowledged having pulled from Wikipedia. She didn’t just lift text, either: She also took an illustration from the article for “Heat flux” without citing a source, despite requirements in the image’s Creative Commons license to credit where the picture came from.

I’ve sometimes used Wikipedia illustrations without citing the Creative Commons License, but found out about the need for that only recently and will cite that unless the photo info says you don’t have to cite the source of the picture licensed by CC.

Some plagiarism from other papers in her thesis, without attribution or quotation marks:

Wikipedia wasn’t the only resource she cited without attribution in the paper that earned her a doctorate. In a footnote, she used 54 consecutive words without attribution from the website of the design-software maker Rhino to explain what a “Non-Uniform Rational B-Spline” is. She also used technical language about tessellations that matched language from the website Wolfram MathWorld — which, again, she didn’t cite.

And plagiarism in Oxman’s published papers, again without attribution, at least in some cases.

She plagiarized both before and after she received her Ph.D. in 2010. Of three peer-reviewed papers reviewed by BI, two — 2007’s “Get Real: Towards Performance Driven Computational Geometry” and 2011’s “Variable Property Rapid Prototyping” — also contained plagiarism.

The 2011 paper included more than 100 words exactly as they appeared in the 2005 book “Rapid Manufacturing: An Industrial Revolution for the Digital Age,” without quotation marks, citation, or a mention in Oxman’s bibliography. She pulled material from “Path planning of functionally graded material objects for layered manufacturing,” a 2004 paper by M.Y. Zhou, without mentioning it in her bibliography. And she included two verbatim sentences from the 1999 book “Functionally Graded Materials: Design, Processing and Applications” without quotation marks or an in-line citation, though the work is mentioned in her bibliography.

The 2007 “Get Real” paper pulled language describing tensors — an algebraic concept that includes scalars and vectors — from an earlier-published work, the “CRC Concise Encyclopedia of Mathematics.” In a 2010 paper, “Per Formative: Towards a Post Materialist Paradigm in Architecture,” that was not peer-reviewed, BI also found another instance of plagiarism, with Oxman using chunks of language from publisher Da Capo Press’ description of “The Modern Language of Architecture” by Bruno Zevi.

So yes, her plagiarism is now more extensive and more serious in nature than before. But again, it carries no consequences for her since she’s not in academia.  If these cases are substantiated, Oxman should apologize and correct both her thesis again as well as the published paper.

There’s no apology yet, just a couple of tweets from Oxman and Ackman. I have to admit that she has a sense of humor.

But Ackman, who is apparently very angry at BI, is now vowing to examine possible plagiarism in academics not just at MIT, but everywhere in America. Oy!

The upshot: Yes, Neri Oxman plagiarized in her thesis and some published papers. It’s more serious than before, but again, she will suffer no consequences, though her reputation has been a bit sullied.  It’s still not the equivalent of what Gay did, as it’s lesser in extent, mostly in a Ph.D. thesis, and, most important, Gay held an important and symbolic academic position.

I’m not excusing Oxman, for she transgressed. But there’s little more to be done than to extract her apology and corrections of her copying. But as for Ackman, the guy seriously needs to chill!

Bill Ackman’s wife Neri Oxman accused of plagiarism, admits guilt

January 6, 2024 • 11:30 am

Bill Ackman, you’ll recall, is the billionaire who helped bring down Harvard President Claudine Gay. First he chastised her for her performance before the House committee, calling out the antisemitism that occurred at Harvard on Gay’s watch. Then he announced that he would no longer donate to Harvard until they cleaned up their act. Finally, when Gay’s plagiarism in her scholarly papers came to light, he bored down on that, and kept doing it until she resigned as President.  There’s little doubt Ackman’s his stream of tweets about Gay promoted her resignation by calling everyone’s attention to Gay’s missteps and embarrassing the board of Harvard Overseers, which is Gay’s boss.

As I’ve said repeatedly, I think Gay shouldn’t have resigned until the evidence of plagiarism surfaced. Her remarks about antisemitism to the Representatives were wooden and unempathic, but a First-Amendment construal of Harvard’s speech code would indeed have deemed cries for genocide of the Jews as “conditional”. Sometimes it’s legal, and sometimes not. The problem was that Harvard doesn’t have a First-Amendment-based speech code, and it applied its own code unevenly, giving rise to hypocrisy.  However, I would have given her a chance, for if she’d implemented something like Steve Pinker’s “fivefold way”, Harvard would have greatly improved.

In the end, her plagiarism, which also called attention to a rather thin academic resumé, brought her down, and made me agree that she should resign.

Now, however, Ackman is somewhat hoist with his own petard, for his wife, Neri Oxman, a designer and a professor at MIT until 2021, stands accused of plagiarism herself.  It doesn’t seem quite as bad as Gay’s missteps, for Oxman, in her dissertation, did cite the sources of her information. What she failed to do, however, was put quotation marks around phrases and paragraphs she lifted from cited sources, and that’s a violation of MIT’s own plagiarism code.

Business Insider (BI), in the first two articles below, found examples of her plagiarism, and you can see that BI can barely contain its joy of catching an Ackman-adjacent person in the act of plagiarism. It’s almost tabloid journalism.

Click on either to read. The third article is a summary from CNN.  In the end, Oxman admitted guilt and said she’d correct the quotations, but Ackman is pushing back against the charges, vowing reprisal against both MIT and BI while not denying what Oxman did. But since Oxman is no longer at MIT, she has no academic job to lose.

Click below or find this article archived here:

Again, click below or go to the article archived here:

And from CNN, not paywalled.

The accusation (from BI):

The billionaire hedge fund manager and major Harvard donor Bill Ackman seized on revelations that Harvard’s president, Claudine Gay, had plagiarized some passages in her academic work to underscore his calls for her removal following what he perceived as her mishandling of large protests against Israel’s bombardment of Gaza on Harvard’s campus.

An analysis by Business Insider found a similar pattern of plagiarism by Ackman’s wife, Neri Oxman, who became a tenured professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2017.

Oxman plagiarized multiple paragraphs of her 2010 doctoral dissertation, Business Insider found, including at least one passage directly lifted from other writers without citation.

. . .An architect and artist who experiments with new ways to synthesize materials found in nature, Oxman has been the subject of profiles in major outlets such as The New York Times and Elle. She has collaborated with Björk, exhibited at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and had paparazzi stake her out after Brad Pitt visited her lab at MIT in 2018.

There are two kinds of accusations. First, that Oxman “self plagiarized”, using her own writing in her dissertation word-for-word in her published papers. That’s okay, and isn’t really plagiarism because a dissertation isn’t published, and in most cases is intended to be turned into papers. Thus, BI’s statement below isn’t incriminating:

She also recycled phrasing she used in her dissertation in subsequent papers. The opening paragraph of her dissertation, for instance, appears almost word-for-word in an article she published in 2013. While re-using material isn’t a formal violation of MIT’s academic-integrity code, a guide to “ethical writing” recommended by the university to its scholars and students warns against it.

Self-plagiarizing isn’t a good habit if you use the same phrases or paragraphs in one paper after another, but “plagiarizing” from a dissertation into a paper is not at all a violation. I suspect MIT’s dictum here refers to using your own words repeatedly in published work. And that’s not what Oxman did.

The evidence:

Then there are the other cases, in which Oxman did cite her original sources but also used big chunks of wording from them—without quotation marks. That’s a no-no, but it’s not as big a no-no as what Gay did, which was lift chunks of prose and then not include her using proper citations.

Here are a couple of examples of how Oxman used wording from previously-published papers in her thesis. Notice that she does cite the sources in parentheses, though:

and one more:

The MIT academic integrity code (below; click to enlarge) says that even though sources are cited, this is a no-no. But remember, this is plagiarism in a dissertation, not in a published paper. I’ve circled the bit that Oxman violated:

Oxman apologized for these errors in a tweet, though she couldn’t verify one of the accusations because the source was online. She’s going to get MIT to correct the citations. BI notes:

Neri Oxman, the wife of billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, admitted to failing to properly credit sources in portions of her doctoral dissertation after Business Insider published an article finding that Oxman engaged in a pattern of plagiarism similar to that of former Harvard president Claudine Gay.

BI identified four instances in Oxman’s dissertation in which she lifted paragraphs from other scholars’ work without including them in quotation marks. In those instances, Oxman wrote in a post on X, using quotation marks would have been “the proper approach for crediting the work. I regret and apologize for these errors.”

. . .Oxman wrote on X that after she has reviewed the original sources, she plans to “request that MIT make any necessary corrections.”

“As I have dedicated my career to advancing science and innovation, I have always recognized the profound importance of the contributions of my peers and those who came before me. I hope that my work is helpful to the generations to come,” she wrote.

Oxman now leads an eponymous company, Oxman, focused on “innovation in product, architectural, and urban design,” she wrote on X. “OXMAN has been in stealth mode. I look forward to sharing more about OXMAN later this year.”

I don’t know how MIT will correct these errors, because I don’t think most Ph.D. theses are online (mine certainly isn’t). If it is they can fix it, but perhaps they’ll just append the corrections in her thesis that reposes in MIT’s library.

If you read the Business Insider articles, they come off as hit jobs, as if somehow they’re joyfully getting back at what Ackman for what he did to Claudine Gay by showing that Ackman’s wife did the same thing. But Oxman didn’t do the same thing: she is guilty of not using quotation marks around quotations taken from an attributed source in a dissertation. Gay, on the other hand, is guilty of not using quotation marks around unattributed quotations, and doing this in published papers, not in a dissertation.  Further, Oxman is no longer a professor at MIT, and was never dean or president of any university, so it’s not such a big deal. Yes, she should have cited sources correctly, but in the end the damage is minor. Her missteps are far more excusable than Gay’s. But they are missteps, and academics need to know what constitutes plagiarism.

Business Insider keeps mentioning Ackman in their two pieces, which of course is what gives this story its legs, but BI also adds superfluous material to make both Ackman and Oxman look bad, like this:

In 2019, emails uncovered by the Boston Globe showed Ackman pressured MIT to keep Oxman’s name out of a brewing scandal over an original sculpture she gave to Jeffrey Epstein in thanks for a $125,000 donation to her lab.

So what? This is irrelevant to the story, and is pretty much of a smear.

As for Ackman, he’s not denying that his wife did what BI accused her of, but is standing by her nonetheless (see the linked tweet below):

Her husband, Ackman, lauded her transparency in his own post on X following the publication of Business Insider’s article.

“​​Part of what makes her human is that she makes mistakes, owns them, and apologizes when appropriate,” he wrote.

However, this empathic stand is weakened by Ackman’s threat to examine the writings of Business Insider staff for plagiarism:

. . . and he’s going after plagiarism at MIT, too!

The guy is combative, that’s for sure! It’s not seemly for him to strike out at everybody, trying to find plagiarizing skeletons in their closets. Gay is gone; Oxman admitted fault and will correct her writing. It’s time to move on!

Here are Oxman and Ackman from NBC News; the caption is from NBC:

h/t: Greg Mayer

Another NYT writer resigns in lieu of being fired

December 19, 2023 • 10:45 am

Another writer for the New York Times, one who had accrued numerous accolades, resigned after having signed her second petition staking out a political position. As the NYT itself reported below, its Magazine writer Jazmine Hughes decided to resign from the paper after discussions with management. (She would have been fired had she not left.)

Click to read:

An excerpt from the article:

Jazmine Hughes, an award-winning New York Times Magazine staff writer, resigned from the publication on Friday after she violated the newsroom’s policies by signing a letter that voiced support for Palestinians and protested Israel’s siege in Gaza.

Jake Silverstein, the editor of The New York Times Magazine, announced Ms. Hughes’s resignation in an email to staff members on Friday evening.

“While I respect that she has strong convictions, this was a clear violation of The Times’s policy on public protest,” Mr. Silverstein wrote. “This policy, which I fully support, is an important part of our commitment to independence.”

Mr. Silverstein said Ms. Hughes had previously violated the policy by signing another public letter this year. That letter, which was also signed by other contributors to The Times, protested the newspaper’s reporting on transgender issues.

. . . The petition Ms. Hughes signed about the Israel-Hamas war was published online last week by a group called Writers Against the War on Gaza. The group, which describes itself as “an ad hoc coalition committed to solidarity and the horizon of liberation for the Palestinian people,” denounced what it described as Israel’s “eliminationist assault” on Palestinians as well as the deaths of journalists reporting on the war. It was signed by hundreds of people, including other well-known journalists and authors.

Hughes, who had won a National Magazine Award, was warned after she signed her first petition that doing it again would bring about her termination.  Although the NYT Guild (a union) did try to fight the call to resign, they failed.  If you want to read about all the minutiae involved in this resignation, click below to go to an archived Vanity Fair article describing it:

The creation of journalism policies against signing petitions or making political social-media posts is, of course, intended to preserve the appearance of a reporter’s objectivity, and has intensified during the racial and political turmoil of the past few years.  I’m in favor of such restrictions, as it helps keep the news unbiased—or at least helps keep readers from thinking that the news is biased by a reporter’s politics:

The October 7 Hamas attack on Israel and monthlong war in Gaza has led to heated clashes across college campuses and social media. It has also renewed debates inside media companies over staffers expressing personal views in a public setting, a point of tension that has flared before around issues of racial justice and abortion. Some news organizations, including Vanity Fair parent Condé Nast, have recently sent emails reminding staff of their social media policies. Publishing giant Hearst Magazines went a step further last week with a new social media policy that “warns staffers that even ‘liking’ controversial content could result in their termination, and encourages telling on colleagues who post content that could violate the rules,” according to The Washington Post.

Now, as we learned the other day in a discussion about James Bennet, another NYT staffer who was fired (this time unjustly), there is no leeway for straight news reporters to express political opinions in public, a little more leeway for op-ed writers, and magazine writers are somewhere in the middle:

At one point, according to two sources familiar with the conversation, Hughes asked Silverstein about severance, citing the union contract provision that says there is a severance package if it is a mutual resignation. Silverstein said this did not apply to her, according to a source familiar. Hughes learned she would not receive any severance, and only walked away with her paid time off and health care extended through the end of the month. Hughes emailed a letter of resignation a few minutes after 5 p.m. on Friday. Within the hour, she received a call from a Times media reporter, who was writing an article about her resignation.
Hughes wasn’t an opinion writer, in which case, according to the Times’s own editorial standards, she would have “more leeway than others in speaking publicly because their business is expressing opinions,” though opinion writers are still expected “to consider carefully the forums in which they appear and to protect the standards and impartiality of the newspaper as a whole.” But she was a magazine writer who, as opposed to a straight news reporter, could be expected to inject a point-of-view or first-person perspective into her work. Hughes, who is Black and gay, has tackled race and identity in her work; she won an award from the Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists for a Times magazine story revisiting her experience coming out. [Hughes is black and gay.]
While there is no such stated provision for Times magazine writers, Times staffers I spoke to noted that writing in the magazine has by nature been more open to commentary than the news pages. “But it’s still part of the Times paper and ultimately still answers to Joe Kahn,” as one puts it. The executive editor and his deputies have made it clear to staff that it is not acceptable to publicly align with an advocacy group or criticize colleagues’ work. “Under this current masthead,” another Times staffer notes, “there has never been less tolerance for this.” Especially at this moment, when the Times has been under a microscope for anything related to the Israel-Hamas war. “The context here is huge,” a third staffer says, “and that letter took a direct swipe at the Editorial Board.”

The “direct swipe at the Editorial Board” is probably not just her signing the petition, which makes no bones about supporting Palestine, but also that the petition both mentioned the NYT as complicit in biased reporting and encouraged other writers to sign on:

At the same time, we must reckon with the role words and images play in the war on Gaza and the ferocious support they have engendered: Israel’s defense minister announced the siege as a fight against “human animals”; even as we learned that Israel had rained bombs down on densely populated urban neighborhoods and deployed white phosphorus in Gaza City, the New York Times editorial board wrote that “what Israel is fighting to defend is a society that values human life and the rule of law”. . .

. . . We call on all our colleagues working in cultural institutions to endorse that boycott. And we invite writers, editors, journalists, scholars, artists, musicians, actors, and anyone in creative and academic work to sign this statement. Join us in building a new cultural front for a free Palestine.

Had Hughes not signed a petition that accused her employer of whitewashing Israel, she probably wouldn’t have been fired. But she knew exactly what she was doing and what would happen to her.

In my view, anti-petition-signing and social-media policies are valuable for venues that purport to do objective reporting, for without them any remaining trust in journalism would be lost. As for the NYT, these policies should apply to both news reporters and magazine writers, and not necessarily to op-ed writers, whose job is, after all, giving their opinions.

h/t: Enrico

NYT publisher responds to James Bennet’s accusations

December 18, 2023 • 9:15 am

Yesterday I discussed a very long article in The Economist (17,000 words!) by New York Times op-ed editor James Bennet, who was fired from the paper (“euphemistically: “asked to resign”) after publishing an op-ed piece by Republican Senator Tom Cotton.  Cotton’s piece called for bringing in the military should post-George-Floyd demonstrations turn violent, and Times staffers (and the general public) said that such a wicked op-ed made them feel “unsafe.”

Bennet went into detail about how he was first supported by NYT publisher A. G. Sulzberger and executive editor Dean Baquet, but when the ranks of Offended Staff grew too numerous and too loud, Bennet had to go.  The hypocrisy of the spineless Sulzberger is stunning, but Bennet also describes why the NYT has become so biased and woke, and how its editorial stance—”progressive”—has crept into both the news and the Sunday Magazine.  It was a scathing indictment.

Sulzberger had recently published a long take on his ideal of journalism in The Columbia Journalism Review (I haven’t read it, but found it here), yet apparently his ideals are quite at variance with the reality of the paper he heads.  Here, for example, is Sulzberger’s last paragraph in that essay:

It is Americans themselves who will need to insist that there is a future for independent journalism. Amid all the distraction, confusion, and chaos of the digital world, it’s more important than ever that citizens develop relationships with news organizations that inform and challenge them, commit to finding a daily place in their lives for independent journalism, and use it to expand, not merely reinforce, their worldview. If the press holds fast to journalistic independence, I am confident that over time more people—of all backgrounds and perspectives—will come to see the value of journalists serving as fair-minded guides through a complex world at a consequential moment.

“Fair-minded guides” and “expanding rather than reinforcing a worldview” is the opposite of the tendentious reporting that Bennet described, and you can vouch for the paper’s bias simply by reading it.

Now, however, apparently stung by Bennet’s piece, the Mighty Sulzberger has replied to the criticism in the pages of his very own paper. Click below to see his short NYT response:

Here’s his response in its entirety:

James Bennet and I have always agreed on the importance of independent journalism, the challenges it faces in today’s more polarized world, and the mission of The Times to pursue independence even when the path of less resistance might be to give into partisan passions.

But I could not disagree more strongly with the false narrative he has constructed about The Times.

Our commitment to independence is evident in our report every day. Whether in the wars in Europe and in the Middle East, the turmoil on college campuses, or the political mood of the country on the eve of another election year, our 2,000 journalists are breaking stories, holding the powerful to account, and seeking to shed light rather than heat on the most divisive issues of our time, regardless of whom our coverage might upset.

Our readers now also have the benefit of an Opinion report that has grown in size and ambition since 2020 and has only expanded upon its commitment to exploring a wide range of viewpoints. Today we have a far more diverse mix of opinions, including more conservative and heterodox voices, than ever before.

James was a valued partner, but where I parted ways with him is on how to deliver on these values. Principles alone are not enough. Execution matters. Leadership matters.

This is hogwash.  The opinion section is still largely (at least 75%) pretty Left, there are only a couple of conservative columnists, and remember what I quoted yesterday from Bennet:

The Times’s failure to honour its own stated principles of openness to a range of views was particularly hard on the handful of conservative writers, some of whom would complain about being flyspecked and abused by colleagues. One day when I relayed a conservative’s concern about double standards to Sulzberger, he lost his patience. He told me to inform the complaining conservative that that’s just how it was: there was a double standard and he should get used to it. A publication that promises its readers to stand apart from politics should not have different standards for different writers based on their politics. But I delivered the message. There are many things I regret about my tenure as editorial-page editor. That is the only act of which I am ashamed.

And here’s Bennet’s description of how he parted ways with the paper:

Like me, Baquet seemed taken aback by the criticism that Times readers shouldn’t hear what Cotton had to say. Cotton had a lot of influence with the White House, Baquet noted, and he could well be making his argument directly to the president, Donald Trump. Readers should know about it. Cotton was also a possible future contender for the White House himself, Baquet added. And, besides, Cotton was far from alone: lots of Americans agreed with him—most of them, according to some polls. “Are we truly so precious?” Baquet asked again, with a note of wonder and frustration.

The answer, it turned out, was yes. Less than three days later, on Saturday morning, Sulzberger called me at home and, with an icy anger that still puzzles and saddens me, demanded my resignation. I got mad, too, and said he’d have to fire me. I thought better of that later. I called him back and agreed to resign, flattering myself that I was being noble.

Given that Bennet was forced to leave is hardly under question, and the fact he was asked to leave makes hash of Sulzie’s protestations.  A publisher should have spine enough to stand up to the staff’s and social media’s outcry. For if you read Cotton’s editorial, you’ll find that it’s neither odious nor harmful—it’s simply a conservative view that many in America shared. But it was HARMFUL

It’s also telling that Sulzberger’s response to Bennet does not contest any of Bennet’s facts, but simply glowingly affirms how wonderful and dedicated the NYT is. It’s an exercise in back-patting, not self defense. Pardon me if I believe Bennet rather than Sulzberger.

h/t: Rosemary

How the New York Times lost its objectivity and credibility

December 17, 2023 • 9:30 am

Anybody with cerebral neurons who reads the New York Times surely sees that it’s not only moved leftward, becoming “progressive” rather than liberal, but has also become less objective, allowing its editorial stand to seep into the news coverage, which is supposed to be objective.

This tendency became blindingly obvious when, on June 30, 2020, Republican Senator Tom Cotton published this op-ed in the paper (click to read):

In the wake of protests, both peaceful and violent, ignited by the death of George Floyd, Cotton called for the use of the military to help quash violent riots (note: not peaceful demonstrations):

The pace of looting and disorder may fluctuate from night to night, but it’s past time to support local law enforcement with federal authority. Some governors have mobilized the National Guard, yet others refuse, and in some cases the rioters still outnumber the police and Guard combined. In these circumstances, the Insurrection Act authorizes the president to employ the military “or any other means” in “cases of insurrection, or obstruction to the laws.”

It was not a rare opinion then, and was part of opinion editor James Bennet’s drive to publish editorials from all sides of the political spectrum to stimulate readers’ thought. That is, after all, what op-eds are for. In fact, in February of that same year, Bennet oversaw the publication of an op-ed by

But that’s not how it played out.  The Cotton editorial sparked a huge pushback among NYT staffers, who claimed that the piece in fact put them in danger, a claim I’ve never understood. There was also pushback on social media.  And although both the publisher of the paper, A. G. Sulzberger, and executive editor Dean Baquet had initially approved of the Cotton editorial. But as the public’s and staffers’ outcry grew their spines turned gelatinous.  Bennet (who had been at the NYT before, then left to be editor of the Atlantic, and then returned to the paper to head the op-ed section), refused to apologize, and so he was fired.  This showed the spinelessness of a paper whose mission was, in fact, to stimulate thought by publishing a variety of viewpoints. Besides losing Bennet, the paper also lost Bari Weiss, who was also demonized after tweeting about the division between the “old guard” of liberals and the young “progressive” staffers.

The paper added a long and cowardly apologia for Cotton’s op-ed that you can see atop the piece. It says, among other things,

After publication, this essay met strong criticism from many readers (and many Times colleagues), prompting editors to review the piece and the editing process. Based on that review, we have concluded that the essay fell short of our standards and should not have been published.

They blamed a “rushed and flawed” editing process, but that was not the case. The real reason is that staffers and social media, heavily weighted by the opinions of blacks (after all, they constituted many of the protestors after Floyd’s death), scared the editor and publisher.

After getting his pink slip, Bennet became a writer for The Economist, and now he’s ignited another conflagration by publishing a huge (17,000-word!) piece in his magazine. His mammoth but fascinating piece not only explains and defends his actions, but severely indicts the Times for polluting its news coverage with progressive opinion. His piece is one of several articles in the magazine examining the media, and there’s also a brief summary of it in the issue. You can read Bennet’s piece for free by clicking on the link below, and The Economist‘s short analysis on the screenshot below that.

You can also find Bennet’s piece archived here. It’s a must-read for anyone who’s interested in journalism but also reads the NYT. It will take you maybe two hours, but what else is there to do on a rainy Sunday morning? And the payoff is immense. Never again will you read the NYT the same way. The premier paper in America, the “good gray lady” who publishes “all the news that’s fit to print” is in fact soiled by bias and the injection of opinion into the printable news.

Below is The Economist‘s brief summary of the piece, but gird your loins and read the long version above.

Although Bennet is justifying his own actions, it’s hard to find anything he did wrong, and the way the paper treated him, along with his discussion of the paper’s bias and how it got that way (hiring young and experienced readers from places like HuffPo, for instance), is absolutely believable. Bennet did what he was hired to do.  But the paper remains biased, which is playing out right now in the Times‘s news coverage of the Hamas/Israel war. It’s hard to find an article in the news section that is not implicitly critical of Israel or suggesting that maybe the war should end with Israel withdrawing back into its boundaries and Hamas left un-destroyed. (You can, of course, find the source of this slant by reading the paper’s op-eds.)

But I digress. Here are just a few telling quotes from Bennet’s piece:

The Times’s problem has metastasised from liberal bias to illiberal bias, from an inclination to favour one side of the national debate to an impulse to shut debate down altogether. All the empathy and humility in the world will not mean much against the pressures of intolerance and tribalism without an invaluable quality that Sulzberger did not emphasise: courage.

. . . . . One of the glories of embracing illiberalism is that, like Trump, you are always right about everything, and so you are justified in shouting disagreement down. In the face of this, leaders of many workplaces and boardrooms across America find that it is so much easier to compromise than to confront – to give a little ground today in the belief you can ultimately bring people around. This is how reasonable Republican leaders lost control of their party to Trump and how liberal-minded college presidents lost control of their campuses. And it is why the leadership of the New York Times is losing control of its principles.

and perhaps the most telling quote in the piece:

For now, to assert that the Times plays by the same rules it always has is to commit a hypocrisy that is transparent to conservatives, dangerous to liberals and bad for the country as a whole. It makes the Times too easy for conservatives to dismiss and too easy for progressives to believe. The reality is that the Times is becoming the publication through which America’s progressive elite talks to itself about an America that does not really exist.

This is how bad it got:

The bias had become so pervasive, even in the senior editing ranks of the newsroom, as to be unconscious. Trying to be helpful, one of the top newsroom editors urged me to start attaching trigger warnings to pieces by conservatives. It had not occurred to him how this would stigmatise certain colleagues, or what it would say to the world about the Times’s own bias. By their nature, information bubbles are powerfully self-reinforcing, and I think many Times staff have little idea how closed their world has become, or how far they are from fulfilling their compact with readers to show the world “without fear or favour”. And sometimes the bias was explicit: one newsroom editor told me that, because I was publishing more conservatives, he felt he needed to push his own department further to the left.

The Times’s failure to honour its own stated principles of openness to a range of views was particularly hard on the handful of conservative writers, some of whom would complain about being flyspecked and abused by colleagues. One day when I relayed a conservative’s concern about double standards to Sulzberger, he lost his patience. He told me to inform the complaining conservative that that’s just how it was: there was a double standard and he should get used to it. A publication that promises its readers to stand apart from politics should not have different standards for different writers based on their politics. But I delivered the message. There are many things I regret about my tenure as editorial-page editor. That is the only act of which I am ashamed.

Trigger warnings on conservative articles! And an admission from the publisher that, yes, the paper had a political double standard—and that was okay!

Here’s Bennet’s vision for an ideal paper:

. . . . there has been a sea change over the past ten years in how journalists think about pursuing justice. The reporters’ creed used to have its foundation in liberalism, in the classic philosophical sense. The exercise of a reporter’s curiosity and empathy, given scope by the constitutional protections of free speech, would equip readers with the best information to form their own judgments. The best ideas and arguments would win out. The journalist’s role was to be a sworn witness; the readers’ role was to be judge and jury. In its idealised form, journalism was lonely, prickly, unpopular work, because it was only through unrelenting scepticism and questioning that society could advance. If everyone the reporter knew thought X, the reporter’s role was to ask: why X?

, , . followed by his view of where the paper now stands politically:

Illiberal journalists have a different philosophy, and they have their reasons for it. They are more concerned with group rights than individual rights, which they regard as a bulwark for the privileges of white men. They have seen the principle of free speech used to protect right-wing outfits like Project Veritas and Breitbart News and are uneasy with it. They had their suspicions of their fellow citizens’ judgment confirmed by Trump’s election, and do not believe readers can be trusted with potentially dangerous ideas or facts. They are not out to achieve social justice as the knock-on effect of pursuing truth; they want to pursue it head-on. The term “objectivity” to them is code for ignoring the poor and weak and cosying up to power, as journalists often have done.

And they do not just want to be part of the cool crowd. They need to be. To be more valued by their peers and their contacts – and hold sway over their bosses – they need a lot of followers in social media. That means they must be seen to applaud the right sentiments of the right people in social media. The journalist from central casting used to be a loner, contrarian or a misfit. Now journalism is becoming another job for joiners, or, to borrow Twitter’s own parlance, “followers”, a term that mocks the essence of a journalist’s role.

. . .  This contest over control of opinion journalism within the Times was not just a bureaucratic turf battle (though it was that, too). The newsroom’s embrace of opinion journalism has compromised the Times’s independence, misled its readers and fostered a culture of intolerance and conformity.

According to Bennet, the paper’s politics have also invaded, with the publisher’s and editor’s agreement, the “cultural section” and the Sunday Magazine, which are apparently allowed to inject opinion into what seems to be news—without any explicit labeling of the sites as “opinion.”

In the end, as you might have predicted, Cotton’s op-ed “harmed” nobody. The cries that the printed word can cause harm are nearly always bogus unless they involve libel or false advertising. “Causes harm” is the new phrase for “this offends me.” Bennet sums up the fracas in one final paragraph, arguing that the op-ed accomplished exactly what such pieces are designed to do:

After all, we ran the experiment; we published the piece. Was any Times journalist hurt? No. Nobody in the country was. In fact, though it is impossible to know the op-ed’s precise effect, polling showed that support for a military option dropped after the Times published the essay, as the Washington Post’s media critic, Erik Wemple, has written. If anything, in other words, publishing the piece stimulated debate that made it less likely Cotton’s position would prevail. The liberal, journalistic principle of open debate was vindicated in the very moment the Times was fleeing from it. Maybe if the Times would put more trust again in the intelligence and decency of Americans, more Americans would again trust the Times. Journalism, like democracy, works best when people refuse to surrender to fear.

Here’s Bari Weiss, whose own NYT job was collateral damage from l’affair Cotton, discussing with Megyn Kelly that fracas, Bennet’s article, and the ideological capture of the NYT.  I’m happy that Weiss has made a success with her Free Press site, which is increasingly attracting good writers and articles. This discussion is a good 11-minute chaser after the long piece, and adds Weiss’s own take from working at the paper.

Finally, today’s Sunday Times of London has its own short and generally sympathetic piece on the article. It also gives a few quotes from Bennet that supplement that article.

Click to read the archived article:

A short quote by Bennet in the piece above:

In spite of last week’s cri de coeur, Bennet is reluctant to return to the culture war barricades. “I’m anxious about re-engaging on these questions. I took a pretty severe beating at The New York Times, enough of a beating that I kept thinking, ‘God, I must have done something horribly wrong.’” But he insists: “I thought and still think what I did at the newspaper was right — and I need to have the courage of my own convictions.”

He is not — to many people’s disappointment — planning to write a book about his experience. But he would like to try to help a new generation of journalists recapture the spirit of empathy and open-minded inquiry that he thinks is all too rare these days in many newsrooms.

His first piece of advice is get off social media. “It has been terrible for journalism. It started well as a source of ideas — a digital conversation — but it pretty quickly became a weapon for enforcing orthodoxy. On social media you don’t want to endure the punishment of expressing dissent, or, God help you, a heterodox opinion. But originality — revealing or saying something new — is the whole point of the news business.”

His second recommendation is: “Do your reporting away from your computer. Get out in the real world, talk to people face to face. Only sit at your computer to write your story.”

I’m only half joking when I say that all serious newspeople should be banned from both reading and posting on social media. The lure of the clicks and likes is poison for journalism.

My own view?  I dislike the NYT but read it because it’s still the best source of national and international news around, and because some of its writers are provocatively heterodox (McWhorter, Pamela Paul, etc.). The Washington Post is hopeless, and as far as I can see it’s on the road to extinction.  Associated Press? Biased. Reuters? Biased. The Wall Street Journal has a news section less infected with its own politics (conservative) than does the NYT, but I do read some conservative op-eds to get a view of the other side. But too many of its articles are financially oriented.

 

h/t: Rosemary, Pyers