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Tuesday, July 04, 2006
Bruce Bartlett :: Townhall.com Columnist
The shame of the Times
by Bruce Bartlett
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The New York Times is very upset that it has been singled out for revealing a government program that tracks terrorists through financial transactions. The Times notes that the same story was simultaneously broken by the Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times, but so far they have not come in for the same criticism.

One reason for this disparate treatment is that the New York Times has no reservoir of goodwill to fall back on. Because of its past actions, people are disinclined to give it the benefit of the doubt when its judgment and patriotism are questioned.

A few weeks ago, I wrote about Herbert L. Matthews, a Times reporter who virtually put Fidel Castro in power by excusing and covering up his crimes, and making him seem like the second coming of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln combined. But even more serious charges have long been leveled at another Times reporter: Walter Duranty, who covered the Soviet Union for the paper for many critical years in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

The charge against Duranty is that he knew about Josef Stalin's policy of deliberately starving the people of Ukraine to punish them for defiance, and intentionally kept this news out of the Times. It is likely that the glare of publicity on this monstrous crime in a paper as important as the Times probably would have caused Stalin to back off, potentially saving millions of lives. Adding insult to injury, in the view of many critics, is that Duranty received a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting in 1932, which the Times still proudly lists among those the paper has won.

Duranty first arrived in Moscow in 1921, and saw communism as a great experiment. He was no communist himself, but he admired the Soviets' toughness and willingness to do what was necessary to bring a poor, backward country into the top tier of nations. Consequently, he consistently looked the other way, excused or rationalized the forced labor camps, purges and other acts of brutality as part of the price that had to be paid to achieve greatness. As Duranty famously put it, "You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs."

The famine of 1932-33 was the culmination of a long struggle between the Soviet state, non-Russian nationalities like the Ukrainians and historically independent-minded farmers who had been forced onto collective farms. It also resulted from Stalin's need for foreign exchange to buy Western machinery to aid industrialization.

To get grain, quotas on the collective farms were steadily raised to more than 50 percent of the harvest. This left farmers with too little for their own needs and not enough for the next year's planting. They began hiding grain, making it harder for Moscow to get the grain it needed for export.

In late 1932, Stalin decreed that all grain should be confiscated and anyone interfering with this action should be considered an enemy of the state. More than 5,000 people received the death penalty as a result. Throughout the countryside in Ukraine and other grain-growing areas, starvation set in. Stalin sent troops to prevent farmers from leaving the land, where increasingly there was nothing to eat. In response to pleas for food aid, Stalin called the famine "one of the minor inconveniences of our system." Continued...

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About The Author

Bruce Bartlett is a former senior fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis of Dallas, Texas. Bartlett is a prolific author, having published over 900 articles in national publications, and prominent magazines and published four books, including Reaganomics: Supply-Side Economics in Action.

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©Creators Syndicate
Death of the Condor...
In the 1975 movie, 3 Days of the Condor, Robert Redford played Joe Turner, a CIA agent code-named "Condor," whose job was to just "reads books." When everyone he worked with in his "section" is killed by a "rouge element" operating "inside" the CIA, Condor goes on the lamb--knowing that he's next in line to be killed. Turner/Condor soon uncovers an insidious CIA plot/coverup and in the final scene he confronts his CIA handler "Higgins," in front of the New York Times building.

Turner tells Higgins that, in order to protect himself, he's given the "story" to the NYTimes. Higgins groans and tells Turner that he doesn't know the damage he's done. However, in the final table-turning line, Higgins asks Turner this all-important question: "How do you know they'll publish it?" The question stops Condor dead in his tracks. The implication, of course, is that the CIA holds some kind of sway over the NYTimes and that Turner's "story" might be suppressed, for security reasons, by a compliant and, gasp!, patriotic NYTimes.

Given what we now know about the New York Times, its history, and its willingness to publish anything Pinch & Co. deem fit to print, regardless of the damage it does to our national security--and so long as it damages the Bush administration--it's safe to say that Hollywood's fictious "Higgins" was blowing smoke up Condor's you-know-what when he let him think that his "story" wouldn't be published.

Obviously, given the fact that in 1975 a Republican was in the Oval Office, there was no way the NYTimes wouldn't have published Turner's "story." But Hollywood wanted us to believe that the NYTimes might do the right thing, and not print a story damaging to the CIA.

Even back in 1975 we were being suckered by Hollywood into thinking that the NYTimes was something other than what it is--a despicable, arrogant, left-wing rag.

BTW, 3 Days of the Condor, the movie, had no resemblance to the original book, Six Days of the Condor, by James Grady. Like turning Islamic terrorists into Nazis, Hollywood "crafted" the "Condor" storyline to suit it's political agenda.


Sinister Thinking on the Left
Mr. Duranty's comments that "you can't make an omelet without breaking eggs" and "what are a few million dead Russians in a situation like this? Quite unimportant" reflect the sinister morality of the Left, which goes something like this: since the goal is an earthly utopia wherein all pain, suffering and unhappiness will be banished for all time for all of humanity, any human suffering created in the short term on segments of the human race, while lamentable, is justified in view of this larger goal and happier future. A frightening mentality that cannot be made public often enough!
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