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Threats to Press Freedom Focus of BEA Panel
May 31, 2006
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Deborah Mathis

Myra MacPherson

Howell Raines

Doug Marlette
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A distinguished panel of journalists and authors discussed "Threats to
Press Freedom in the War on Terrorism," on Saturday, May 20, at BookExpo
America. The event, co-sponsored by the American Booksellers Foundation for
Free Expression (ABFFE), the American Library Association's Freedom to Read
Foundation, and the Association of American Publishers' Freedom to Read Committee,
focused on how threats to press freedom diminish the ability of the American
people to monitor the activities of the government.
Deborah Mathis, former White House and national correspondent for the Gannett
News Service and author of Yet a Stranger: Why Black Americans Still Don't
Feel at Home (Warner) and What God Can Do (Atria), moderated the
panel featuring Myra MacPherson, former Washington Post reporter and author of All Governments Lie: The Life and Times of Rebel Journalist
I.F. Stone (Scribner); Howell Raines, former executive editor of the New
York Times and author of The One That Got Away: A Memoir (Scribner);
and Doug Marlette, syndicated political cartoonist and author of Magic Time (FSG).
Noting that threats to a free press began soon after President Bush took office,
Mathis told the audience that prior to 9/11 Attorney General John Ashcroft
issued a memo stating that if the administration believed records sought under
a Freedom of Information Act request should be withheld, "the Department
of Justice will defend your request." She said that this represented a
marked turnaround from the Clinton administration's position, and she noted,
"Janet Reno said ... we should err on the side of disclosure."
Praising booksellers for helping to amend Section 215 of the Patriot Act, Mathis
added, "There were some improvements -- there's [now] a little bit of leeway
in challenging [a Section 215 order]."
Following Mathis, MacPherson discussed her work researching the life and times
of I.F. Stone and talked about how the rebel journalist -- who was constantly
"hounded by Hoover" in the mid-1930s -- might feel about the present
state of politics. "First of all, somebody asked me what would Izzy be
saying about Fox News, and he would be saying that they are collaborationists
[for the Bush administration agenda], as he once called the New York Times,"
she said.
If journalist Stone was anything, MacPherson noted, it was brave. Stone didn't
worry about speaking out against whatever administration was in charge if it
was doing something wrong. And she stressed how today it is more important than
ever that journalists -- and civilians alike -- be the same way. "It takes
real guts, and I applaud all of you who are fighting the Patriot Act,"
she said.
Of today's press corps, MacPherson said, "I don't see enough outrage"
toward the current administration.
Mathis asked Raines if any present-day journalist reminds him of I.F. Stone,
to which Raines replied, "I know of no one who is remotely resembling I.F.
Stone." He explained "reporters are more timid than in the past."
On the other hand, he continued, reporters cannot simply come out and claim
that someone in any administration lied simply because they think they did.
"Since reporters lack subpoena power, if they're going to claim someone
lied, it's something they need to prove. And that's a wall that's not easily
penetrated."
Raines added that it takes time to prove someone is lying, and he noted, "It
took over five years for stories [to come out of Viet Nam] that the war was
being lost."
Following Raines, Marlette told the audience that there are fewer and fewer
good political cartoonists. "Twenty years ago there were 250 [political]
cartoonists working. The number of cartoonists working now is 70," he said.
This trend is due in part to what Marlette termed the "corporate culture
of niceness," which makes the press fearful of being offensive or controversial.
Calling himself an "equal opportunity offender" Marlette said that
his cartoons have come under attack from both the left and the right. Often,
when liberals or conservatives claim they believe in free speech, what they
really mean is "they believe in free speech for themselves," he said.
"[Political cartoonists] don't apologize for our opinions."
Marlette then showed a series of slides featuring some of his more controversial
cartoons, including satirical takes on President Clinton, President Bush, and
Mohammed. He expressed his disappointment with the American press for being
afraid to run the controversial Mohammed cartoons following the violence that
erupted on their publication in Denmark. "The press in this country appeased
the terrorists [by refusing to run the Danish cartoon]," he said. "They
abdicated to a street mob."
The panel concluded with a short discussion about blogging and how this has
created, for some, a free speech dilemma since a blogger can write anything
about anyone, and true or not, it becomes widely disseminated. "I have
a real problem with bloggers," Mathis said. "Bloggers are like karaoke
singers.... They're unedited writers.... That stuff gets out on the Internet, and
it is very dangerous." --David Grogan
Topics: News - Bookselling, BookExpo, Free Expression,
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