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The Media

March 1999

The throne of self-importance

by James Bowman

One of the great emblematic moments in what must inevitably be called postmodern journalism came last month when, having published an anonymously sourced report that Kenneth Starr was considering indicting President Clinton, The New York Times then proceeded to editorialize against the Independent Counsel—for leaking! “But … But … ,” we stammer, “he leaked (if he leaked) to you. You published the leak. If you thought this was, in the words of the editorial, an ‘apparent effort from the office of Kenneth Starr … to spark a debate over criminal prosecution of the President at a time when the Senate deserves a calm decision-making atmosphere and an open field for negotiation’ and that, further, such an effort was deplorable, why did you, The New York Times, the world’s schoolmistress in political ethics, make yourself complicit in it? If it was wrong or injudicious for the thing to be done, ho ...

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James Bowman is the author of Honor: A History (Encounter Books) and Media Madness: The Corruption of Our Political Culture, also published by Encounter (2008)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 17 March 1999, on page 57
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