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Friday, August 1, 2008

 

Otto Fuerbringer died the other day. The odds are high that you've never heard of him, and that alone is a good reason for invoking him here - even if it means taking a break from the latest Obama-McCain tit-for-tats. Fuerbringer was a crucially important figure at a pivotal moment in our '60s political history, a flesh-and-blood refutation of the falsehood that America is supposedly dominated by a "liberal media." More specifically, Fuerbringer, by his actions, refuted the enduring right-wing canard about how the "liberal media" supposedly "lost" the war in Vietnam.

On the contrary, Fuerbringer - as the most powerful editor at America's most powerful magazine, in an era when that magazine guided the national discourse and helped shape its politics - was actually pivotal in enabling the expansion of that war...despite the warnings from his own Vietnam correspondents that we were headed for disaster.

Fuerbringer, nicknamed "the Iron Chancellor," brooked little dissent while running the day to day operations at Time magazine. It's hard to imagine today, but back then Time magazine, with its millions of heartland readers, was a crucial player. And, as chronicled by a number of authors (most notably, ex-Vietnam correspondent David Halberstam in "The Powers That Be"), Otto Fuerbringer was a political conservative who trusted the word of the Pentagon. Back in the early '60s, the Pentagon told him that Vietnam could be won at a relatively small cost in American blood and treasure. The problem was that Fuerbringer's best reporter on the ground, Charlie Mohr, felt quite the opposite - and repeatedly wrote highly pessimistic dispatches (known in Time lingo as "files"), based on what his non-official sources were telling him and what he was witnessing with his own eyes.

The result was that very little of what Mohr wrote ever got into print - and, generally, the material from his files that did get into print was heavily rewritten by the editors...to reflect the government's official optimism. When Mohr complained one too many times, Fuerbringer retaliated by ordering up a critical story about the American press corps in Saigon. When the Time reporter assigned to the story produced a draft that Fuerbringer deemed too tepid, the editor demanded several rewrites. In the end, Halberstam recounts in his book, the final version "was virtually dictated by Fuerbringer. It took the straight Pentagon line, with a touch of the White House, and was a violent, all-out attack upon the reporters in Vietnam."

Meanwhile, during this same week in 1963, Mohr sent in a long, pessimistic file - his bleakest yet - about the war's potential impact on America. A young writer at the magazine's New York headquarters was assigned the task of shaping the file for publication - an unenviable task, of course, since he wanted to respect what Mohr had written, without somehow ticking off Fuerbringer. The writer was John Gregory Dunne, later to become a prominent journalist and novelist. In an interview three decades later, Dunne recounted what happened next:

"Charlie Mohr was one of the first to say that this war isn't going to fly. He was by no means a liberal; he just saw it on the basis of his reporting. One week we did a wrapup on the war, and Charlie sent in a file, the first sentence of which was, 'The war in Vietnam is being lost.' It was a Friday night, and I said to myself, 'Uh oh, this is never going into the magazine. I had dinner with Joan (his fiancee), and I said, 'I think I'm going to call in sick.' She said, 'No, you've got to go back and do it.' So I went back and did the story based on the file, trying to put in the qualifiers that would get past Otto Fuerbringer, and went home around three in the morning. The next morning, the edited copy was on my desk, and on the top it said, 'Nice. F.'" (That was Fuerbringer's customary way of approving a story.)

But, as Dunne recalled, there was a big problem with the edited copy: "It was the complete opposite of what Charlie's file was and what I had written. Redone from top to bottom."

Mohr quit the magazine, and Dunne told his superiors that he no longer wished to work on Vietnam stories. Fuerbringer then decreed that Dunne should pay the price for speaking out; thereafter, he was assigned to write stories about places like Lichtenstein. So he quit the magazine, too.

None of this had any impact on Fuerbringer, of course. Two years later, he toured Vietnam and the Pentagon briefers showed him one of the new military bases. The editor was impressed. He told his listeners, "I know how to end the war tomorrow, quickly. Bring five Vietcong generals here to see this, and they'll surrender." In fact, Fuerbringer said this to the guy who had replaced Charlie Mohr in Saigon - but that reporter's skeptical files didn't sit well with Fuerbringer either, and, within a year, he was yanked from the Saigon bureau.

So the next time you hear complaints about the "liberal media," remember Otto Fuerbringer and the tale of how, at a crucial juncture in our history, the most powerful magazine editor in America adhered to his beliefs by refusing to let the facts get in the way. Sort of like the people who invoke the term "liberal media."

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Speaking of history, we can't end this week without noting the latest report by the Inspector General at the U.S. Justice Department - and wondering anew how it was possible that an attorney general (Bush crony Alberto Gonzales) could have nary a clue that a young party hack in his own office (Monica Goodling) was screening non-partisan job applicants for ideological purity...in violation of federal law.

I recall how Goodling described herself 14 months ago, as "a fairly quiet girl who tries to do the right thing and tries to treat people kindly along the way." Well, according to the IG report, released the other day, this is what Goodling considered to be kind treatment:

Ousting an assistant U.S. attorney, and blocking the official from further assignments, based on Goodling's belief that this woman was gay; rejecting a qualified applicant for a non-partisan counter-terrorism job because the applicant's wife happened to be a Democrat; spurning applicants who didn't share her views about (in her words) "gods, guns + gays"; screening out any applicant who didn't meet the required conservative litmus tests that defined someone as (in her words) "a good American."

It's illegal under federal law to screen civil service applicants for ideological purity and thus compromise the independence of the Justice Department. It's well known by now, of course, that the Bush regime's practices have been unprecedented, and it's no surprise that nobody higher up the food chain (Gonzales, and, needless to say, Bush) has stepped forward to take responsibility.

Perhaps the historians can sort out who knew what, and when they stopped knowing it. After all, Bush himself has often said that the verdict on his tenure will be rendered by the historians. Starting with that IG report, he's giving them plenty to work with.

 

Posted by Dick Polman @ 10:52 AM  Permalink | 85 comments
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Comments
Posted by Gibba Mang 11:07 AM, 08/01/2008
Last time I checked, the major media outlets(TV, Newspaper, Magazines) were all owned by welathy corporations. Bottom line is dollars whcih all conservatives can embrace. The liberal media bias is a myth. I'm sure there are liberal reporters that slant a news story to support their beliefs. But it comes down to facts, which are neither liberal or conservative.
Posted by p-diddy 11:24 AM, 08/01/2008
We live in an era of "free"-market fundamentalism, and this extends to media. Who cares about real journalism? Just tell your audience what they want to hear. I am a capitalist, but this era of governmental secrecy, extremist deregulation and privatization is hurting our democracy.
Posted by jwad56 11:37 AM, 08/01/2008
Interesting. Change the subject of normal Obamamania - McCain bashing to deflect attention from the poll numbers? What happened?
Posted by JimR 11:39 AM, 08/01/2008
In the day to day of political reporting, it's difficult to argue against a liberal slant. But, with 60+% of the public NOT believing the 'liberal' media, what effect can it really have? Who is it that's listening?
Posted by AHiredGun 11:44 AM, 08/01/2008
The "liberal media" - all part of the big lie, along with the Republican Party cares about the little guy.
Posted by MiddleNameHussein 12:06 PM, 08/01/2008
Investor's Business Daily, July 23, 2008: Putting Money Where Mouths Are: Media Donations Favor Dems 100-1 (www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=301702713742569). Excerpt: An analysis of federal records shows that the amount of money journalists contributed so far this election cycle favors Democrats by a 15:1 ratio over Republicans, with $225,563 going to Democrats, only $16,298 to Republicans . Two-hundred thirty-five journalists donated to Democrats, just 20 gave to Republicans — a margin greater than 10-to-1. An even greater disparity, 20-to-1, exists between the number of journalists who donated to Barack Obama and John McCain.
Posted by puttinonthefoil 12:11 PM, 08/01/2008
It will take some time for history to judge this administration, and luckily, I will be around to see it. I don't think it will judged kindly, hence why years of email documentation go missing among other things, but that all remains to be seen. Still, regimes that 1) mislead their people into wars for resources 2) invoke fear and "patriotism" to keep the citizens in line (only to spy on them) 3) attempt to dismantle or overtake non partisan governmental organizations in order to consolidate power 4) have a leader who supposedly talks to God 5) galvanizes its supporters with hatred (please admit: yesterday's Gypsies and Jews are today's Gays) etc. etc.. I could go on, but generally these types of regimes are not judged kindly in hindsight. At some point I will have to explain to my children how they stayed in power in 2004, and I can only shrug my shoulders and say, "John Kerry was a stiff."
Posted by aviben 12:40 PM, 08/01/2008
Corporate and government influence over the mainstream media is an old story that persists to this day. The "liberal media" canard is perpetuated by the same forces that would have the public believe that the Democrats are left-leaning, when it fact there is often little difference between the parties on key issues. Neither Dems nor the GOP have addressed the usurping of the judicial system by a nationwide network of organized "vigilante injustice" that is supported by government-funded volunteer and "citizens corps" type organizations. It's bypassing the judicial system in Philly and the five surrounding counties and across the nation; but the mainstream media ignores reports of constitutional and human rights abuses. Read about it at nowpublic.com/scrivener, "vigilante injustice"
Posted by CB 12:42 PM, 08/01/2008
A lot has changed since Vietnam. John Wayne and Charlton Heston have been replaced as Hollywood Heroes and Public Icons by Lefty nuts like Barbara Streisand and her like. The media has turned from reporting the facts to actually believing they print impartial articles rather than the lefty loon propaganda they actually do. Mr. Poleman is part of the "in your face" evidence to this fact.
Comment removed.
Posted by jmc 12:56 PM, 08/01/2008
I'll keep looking for that story on John Edwards' little visit to an ex-campaign staffer and her child. I would think that a former Presidential candidate who is (was) on the short list to be Obama's VP possibly having a love child while his cancer striken wife sits at home would be big news to a unbiased media. I guess not. Remember people, it's not what the media reports, it's what they don't report.
Posted by tom - wilmington, de 01:10 PM, 08/01/2008
Okay, the liberal media bias was incorrect back in 1963. What has that got to do with the present. Read any article on anything positive, especially as written by the Associated Press, and it will invariably be followed by a "but, things are bad" line. The media cannot write anything positive, which is why so many stories about us being in a recession when we weren't, and why no stories about Iraq and the civil war ending, etc. Maybe the liberal media bias was wrong back in the 1960's when the Democrats ran the entire government, but is that true today?
Comment removed.
Posted by yobill626 01:14 PM, 08/01/2008
MNH: If the rest of the country as a whole are donating much more to Dems than GOP, your numbers hold less validity. Overall, the Dems are getting many more people to donate smaller amounts (called grassroots). Even Republicans are calling 2008 a Democratic year, so those numbers will be skewed to Obama. Compare the donations of Bush to Gore in 2000. I'll bet they reflect the outcome as well.
Posted by yobill626 01:22 PM, 08/01/2008
CB: Hollywood Heroes like Barbara Streisand...? That comment is pretty current --- if it were 1983! I agree she's a loon, but the line is lame...
About Dick Polman

Cited by the Columbia Journalism Review as one of the nation's top political reporters, and lauded by the ABC News political website as "one of the finest political journalists of his generation," Dick Polman is a national political columnist at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He is on the full-time faculty at the University of Pennsylvania, as "writer in residence." Dick has been a frequent guest on C-Span, MSNBC, CNN, NPR and the BBC. He covered the 1992, 1996, 2000, and 2004 presidential campaigns.

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All commentaries posted before April 18, 2008, can be accessed at www.dickpolman.blogspot.com.