• Libra00@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    Well, I see the NYT has certainly evolved with the changing times. Where once it pretended to talk about issues faced by us all it has now apparently retreated to the much more financially-secure world of providing ethical cover for landlords who profit from human suffering. If this is a ‘war on immigration’ these guys are literally war profiteers. Definitely ‘speaking for the people’ there, NYT. No, in case you were wondering, the word ‘rich’ does not in fact belong inside those quotes.

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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      16 days ago

      Isn’t that what the Ethicist column always has been? Philosophy has even historically been a bourgeois subject. (I don’t think people usually put Marxism in philosophy classes.)

      Also, I don’t think the response is providing cover. It encourages the question-asker to use this rental income for lobbying against ICE.

      • Libra00@lemmy.ml
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        16 days ago

        First I couldn’t read the full article because I don’t subscribe to the NYT, but…

        I don’t think the response is providing cover. It encourages the question-asker to use this rental income for lobbying against ICE.

        It’s providing cover in exactly the same way that billionaires use philanthropy to launder their image: by asserting that giving a tiny portion of one’s ill-gotten gains to ‘good causes’ somehow ameliorates the ethical implications of acquiring it in the first place.

        It does not.

    • MnemonicBump@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      16 days ago

      The New York Times has a LOOOONG history of shitty opinions and tone-deaf to just downright bad takes. Here’s a fun greatest hits:

      🧨 1. Downplaying the Holocaust (1930s–40s)

      The NYT repeatedly buried reports of the Holocaust, often placing them on page 10 or later. They downplayed the genocide of Jews during WWII to avoid appearing “too Jewish” in an era of antisemitism. Public awareness suffered greatly as a result.

      Bad take: Treating the genocide of 6 million people like a footnote.


      🛢️ 2. Cheerleading the Iraq War (2002–03)

      Judith Miller and others ran uncritical coverage of “WMDs” in Iraq, helping sell a war that was based on lies. The editorial board later admitted it failed to challenge the Bush administration’s narrative.

      Bad take: “Let’s trust the government that wants a war.”


      👮‍♂️ 3. Central Park Five – Trial by Media, Fueled by Racism (1989–2002)

      When five Black and brown teens were arrested in the 1989 Central Park jogger case, The New York Times joined the rest of the media in framing them as guilty from the start—using dehumanizing language, ignoring holes in the prosecution’s case, and failing to question the racist hysteria. They weren’t alone, but they were the paper of record.

      To make things worse, Donald Trump took out full-page ads in four NYC papers, including the Times, calling for the reinstatement of the death penalty. The ads appeared in May 1989—before the teens even stood trial. The paper printed it without criticism or context, amplifying a call for state-sanctioned murder of children.

      The teens spent years in prison before DNA evidence and a confession from the actual perpetrator cleared them in 2002. The Times acknowledged the wrongful convictions after the fact, but never meaningfully reckoned with its role in legitimizing a racist rush to judgment.

      Bad take: Amplifying racist fear, ignoring the facts, and publishing a death penalty ad against kids who hadn’t been convicted.


      ☁️ 4. Tom Cotton’s “Send in the Troops” Op-Ed (2020)

      The NYT published a now-infamous op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton calling for military force against BLM protesters. It was so bad that staff revolted, and the opinion editor resigned. Turns out fascist takes don’t go over well in a newsroom.

      Bad take: “Let’s solve civil unrest with military occupation.”


      🧬 5. Ongoing Anti-Trans Bias (2020s)

      The NYT has been called out by GLAAD, hundreds of contributors, and its own readers for publishing anti-trans talking points as neutral reporting. Critics say they platform bigotry under the guise of debate while ignoring actual trans voices.

      Bad take: “Both sides” journalism on human rights.


      🥄 6. Tone-Deaf Sympathy for the 1%

      The Times loves publishing bizarre op-eds about the struggles of the ultra-rich. Like the infamous:

      Bad take: “Won’t someone think of the wealthy?”


      🗞️ BONUS: Soft-Pedaling Hitler (1930s)

      Like many US papers, the Times downplayed the early threat of Adolf Hitler, painting him as a quirky or “moderate” leader. Their early coverage normalized fascism at a dangerous time.

      Bad take: “He’s not so bad if you ignore the fascism.”