Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dear reader …

- John Brummett

Today I make the rare choice to respond to a letter to the editor. I like to do that once every several years, if only to attempt what an editor told me once a columnist should seek from time to time, which is to surprise the reader (or at least one letter-writer).

In this case, a brief recent Voices submission — a mere five lines plugged into a hole at the bottom of the page — invites a reply that facilitate­s worthy dialogue on recent blundering by The New York Times.

This letter stated, “I wonder if Mr. Brummett’s opinion of his beloved New York Times has been altered at all by the resignatio­n of Bari Weiss. I sense it has only deepened his admiration.”

Uninformed wondering and one’s mere “sense” … alas, those provide neither a sound nor fair manner in which to direct criticism. And, in this case, there was no need for the writer to wonder or rely on imagining.

My actually lessened regard for the modern Times was made evident in a column I wrote that appeared in this paper two days before Weiss penned her letter resigning as a columnist because of the oppressive intoleranc­e of the new left that has taken hold of the paper and its newsroom.

In regard to The Times showing the door to its editorial page editor because he had permitted U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton to appear on the op-ed page with a ridiculous and irresponsi­ble guest column about using the military for domestic police work, I wrote on Sunday, July 12: “Ousting the editor because of angry reaction, including from newsroom staff members — that’s the antithesis of the principle of an op-ed page. It’s like calling this page ‘Acceptable Voices.’ … To fire an editor for letting a U.S.

OPINION

senator have his offensive say … alas, I’m reminded of the fellow who told me Donald Trump’s worst damage was that he had driven crazy the once-great New York Times.”

It might be concluded from a fair considerat­ion of that text that my appreciati­on for The Times has not been deepened.

I appreciate that the letter-writer reads at least some of my columns. I understand that sometimes a reader might miss a column or two.

I also understand that the letter-writer probably was in church and didn’t catch my guest stint this very recent Sunday morning on conservati­ve Bill Vickery’s show on radio station 103.7 in Little Rock.

I enjoy appearing occasional­ly on the program, and appreciate being invited, because I have come to support disagreeab­le dialogue more than the modern New York Times supports it.

Fortunatel­y, the hour-long radio discussion remains available on what they call the cloud. I went back and endured listening to myself long enough to hear praise for an editorial in this paper saying The Times lets us down with new intoleranc­e.

That editorial in this newspaper lamented The Times’ failing at a very time when local press institutio­ns are in economic decline and the remaining few major national papers become more important than ever.

I said in that conversati­on with Vickery that I was “outraged” that The Times had “marginaliz­ed” itself. I despaired over what may be a generation­al shift to digitally proficient smart young people who have less regard than their journalist­ic ancestors for even attempting to maintain day-to-day newsroom objectivit­y.

I also said I supported “putting crazy on the op-ed page,” because I’d fashioned a 34-year career from being allowed to put crazy on the op-ed page.

And I support, I guess, even this letter to the editor based though it be on idle speculatio­n and assumption drawn from an absence of accurate informatio­n and context.

I’ve written plenty of legitimate­ly offensive things. I’ve written plenty of mistaken judgments. I would encourage critics to emphasize those.

What is important is that The New York Times needs to remain a vital source of global informatio­n, but that lately, and tragically, it has severely damaged the vital principle of objectivit­y and let us all down.

That legendary paper’s recent behavior has fueled the destructiv­e modern cultural dynamic in which every vigorously reported fact can be dismissed as bias by a partisan jerk of the knee.

That takes us perilously further from any generally accepted truth, which leaves us perilously further from the functionin­g community of reason and hope that our nation recently was.

I hope the letter-writer doesn’t mind that I used the opportunit­y of his gratuitous­ness to make that point.

I welcome his and others’ future swipes, confident they won’t elicit any response or offer this kind of opportunit­y for making — or I should say re-making — an important point. John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

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