Boston Herald

Hypocrisy of leftist press a danger

- By LAURA HOLLIS Laura Hollis is a syndicated­columnist.

Just when I think I can switch to a topic other than the rank hypocrisy and fraud of our national press, they serve up another fresh helping. This past week saw at least three.

The first was the parade of paeans given to recently deceased Sen. John McCain. McCain was a veteran and longtime public servant known for his love of this country, so it’s logical that millions of Americans would appreciate his service and mourn his passing. But the press?

During his run for president in 2008, McCain — like every Republican who runs for national office — was demonized as senile, a racist and a warmongeri­ng threat to human civilizati­on. The second example was the umpteenth journalist­ic gaffe by CNN. Lanny Davis, attorney for former Donald Trump consiglier­e Michael Cohen, admitted that he was an anonymous source behind CNN’s July 27 story in which it was alleged that Trump knew about and approved a meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and several Russians who claimed to have “dirt” on Hillary Clinton. While other press outlets — to their credit — retracted the story after Davis’ admission, CNN has refused to do so.

The third and arguably most appalling example is the Aug. 27 New York Times article about the sexual abuse scandal that is once again ripping through the Catholic Church. On the heels of the Pennsylvan­ia grand jury report detailing credible sexual abuse allegation­s against 300 priests across the state, former Vatican ambassador to the U.S. Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano released an 11-page letter in which he asserts that he (and others) told Pope Francis about the sex abuse allegation­s against thenCardin­al Theodore McCarrick years earlier, and that Francis’ response was to reinstate McCarrick to priestly responsibi­lities from which he had previously been removed by Francis’ predecesso­r, Pope Benedict XVI.

This sexual abuse scandal is the Catholic Church’s #MeToo moment. When powerful men like Harvey Weinstein, Charlie Rose, Matt Lauer and former U.S. Sen. Al Franken were credibly accused of sexual misconduct in the secular sphere, the calls immediatel­y came for their firings or resignatio­ns. Unsurprisi­ngly, therefore, many Catholics are saying that if Vigano’s statements are accurate, Pope Francis must step down.

But the Times characteri­zes it otherwise, saying that “an ideologica­lly motivated” — conservati­ve — “opposition has weaponized the church’s sex abuse crisis to threaten not only Francis’ agenda but his entire papacy.”

The outrage and revulsion generated by the Pennsylvan­ia report and Vigano’s detailed accusation­s are genuine. For the Times to spin Catholics’ reactions as being motivated by mere political advantage is cynical in the extreme. In other words, when the left defends free speech or free exercise rights, it’s valiant and noble. When rightleani­ng individual­s do it, it’s time to scrap the First Amendment. When the left demands the heads (or at least the jobs) of those who have committed or tolerated sexual abuse, they are heroes vindicatin­g the voiceless and powerless. When conservati­ves do it, it’s for craven political advantage.

I’ve said it before, but it bears restating: Traditiona­l liberals espouse certain principles and the universal applicatio­n of them. But today’s Saul Alinsky progressiv­es find principles useful only to the extent that their applicatio­n accomplish­es specific, desired results. This is why left-leaning selfdescri­bed liberals like Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz, journalist Glenn Greenwald or former Evergreen State professors Heather Heying and Bret Weinstein can find themselves suddenly on the outs for defending what they thought were tried-and-true precepts of liberal thought.

It is also why the public doesn’t trust an increasing­ly progressiv­e press.

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