Absolute truth must be spun absolutely
The American elite is almost beyond redemption. . . . Moral relativism has set in so deeply that the gilded classes have become incapable of discerning right from wrong. Everything can be explained away, especially by journalists. Life is one great moral mush--sophistry washed down with Chardonnay. The ordinary citizens, thank goodness, still adhere to absolutes. . . . It is they who have saved the republic from creeping degradation while their "betters" were derelict.

-- Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

That strikes me as a mostly true statement, and certainly many Americans would agree with it. But when someone delivers such a lecture on moral absolutism, I'd prefer that at least in practice he make a stab at upholding the "absolute" standards he claims to champion.

With the above in mind, I want to return briefly to yesterday's post in which I speculated about possible inaccuracies involving a "cat in the washing machine" in a story by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard.

I wrote an update to the post, but readers who come here looking for new posts might miss it. Because I think it's important I want to to re-stress yesterday's point: what reporters say should not be taken at face value.

While I focused on the cruelty to cats angle (which struck me as possibly untrue character assassination), I now see something worse in Mr. Evans-Pritchard's blatantly untrue claim -- asserted quite boldly, to emphasize his central point -- that the Pim Fortuyn killing had been "the country's first political assassination since 1584." A commenter named Kozinski refuted that claim with this reminder of a brutal 17th century political double murder:

Pim Fortuyn was the Netherland's first political assassination since 1584? Tell that to the De Witt brothers, who ruled Holland in the 17th century. John and Corneilius were literally torn apart by a frenzied mob in 1672 when their policy of appeasment towards France resulted in an uprovoked invasian by Louis XIV.

22 year old William of Orange (later Englands's William III) then took control, opened the dykes, and drove the French out. It helps to be reminded that the Dutch used to be made of sterner stuff.

(NOTE: This historical fact is hardly obscure; it's considered noteworthy enough to appear in the American Heritage Dictionary.)

On top of that, there was an even worse omission in the Evans-Pritchard piece. As I showed below, he ignored the 1979 assassination of Sir Richard Sykes, Britain's Ambassador to Holland.

1979: British ambassador assassinated in Holland
British ambassador in Holland Sir Richard Sykes has been shot dead outside his Dutch home.

Two gunmen opened fire on Sir Richard and his Dutch footman as they left his residence at The Hague to make the short five minute car journey to the embassy.

It wasn't clear at the time whether the IRA or a Palestinian faction was responsible, but the assassination was widely reported, and now a British reporter old enough to remember it essentially says it never happened.

What I'd like to know is why?

  • Why say that Theo Van Gogh mangled cats if he didn't?

  • Why lie about a country's older history as well as its more recent history?
  • Maybe I shouldn't be too hard on this reporter. After all, he's been around long enough to see that hardworking reporters who do the proper research get nowhere (they might even end up being punished!), while the sleazebags (those who write fictitious stories) end up being rewarded. There's probably a slippery slope there. It's a dog-eat-dog world. Maybe cat-eat-cat . . .

    (Must have something to do with the "spin" cycle.)

    ADDITIONAL NOTE: Some of my more politically conservative readers might admonish me for this apparent "attack" on a conservative reporter, and may wonder whether I'm becoming a cog of the liberal attack machine. The fact is, the overwhelming majority of my "attacks" (if pointing out inaccuracies is an attack) have been directed against liberal reporters -- most often those writing for the Philadelphia Inquirer. I think at minimum, I should apply the same standard to those who would replace the liberal media. I've seen enough agenda-driven reporting to dislike it wherever I see it. The extent to which I agree with the agenda is irrelevant. (Actually, the argument can be made that dishonest reporting, by harming the conservative agenda, does more damage to it than dishonest liberal reporting.)

    While I know this is irrational, on a more personal note, I feel a bit betrayed, because years ago I bought one of this reporter's books, and probably fell into the "wanting to believe" mindset I'm now cautioning people against.

    But please, folks, this is just some friendly advice from my hardened and cynical heart -- not to be misread as a moral lecture!

    posted by Eric on 12.12.04 at 12:27 PM





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    Comments

    Whenever I think of relativity vs. absolutes, I always think of Wanda vs. Dawn.

    Your statement that those of us who preach absolutes must live up the absolutes we preach pierces my conscience. I have been a slimy hypocrite. I have been preaching my absolutes of Polytheistic Godliness, Selfishness, Sexiness, so I must strive harder to live up to my ideals. I must do _much_ more masturbating. MUCH more!

    Eric, everytime I comment, it's a "ditto" to you unless I state otherwise, you funny guy, you.

    The Left has gotten into the habit and addiction of "nuancing" everything such that nuance is its reason for life, given, of course, that it is nuance which establishes that, "What I think is right and you must do what I think."

    Thus, ditto, we cannot do the same thing, resorting to claims which are not true, but true because we are right [if that makes any non-nuanced sense].

    Joseph Paul Goebbles got himself into big trouble by being taken over by nuance, convincing himself that the masses must be shown that "the right thing is the right thing", when it later turned out that the right thing was the wrong thing. [Goebbles at Nuremburg, 1934]

    Rather also fell.

    But now I'm perseverating and must put a stop to it immediately, or will soon have to push my "first alert" button.

    J. Peden   ·  December 12, 2004 05:33 PM

    Thanks to you both except I don't know how I'll ever live up to the dittos. But too much perseveration leads to hairy palms.

    Eric Scheie   ·  December 12, 2004 07:14 PM

    Masturbation leads to Lesbianism. It must never be legalized.



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