And the pictures were fairly graphic, too. I'm not quite sure why we're seeing them because it used to be bad taste to show these sorts of things. Aaron Brown of CNN kindly told us why:
http://zena.secureforum.com/znet/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=21&ItemID=3397<edit>
AMY GOODMAN: Let me ask Aaron Brown; when Jeremy just asked you about civilian casualties you said 'oh you are talking about collateral damage', I thought that was an interesting response because I don't think, in this country, we would ever refer to someone as collateral damage. It's sort of inappropriate, and then you went on to say a school was bombed. Even that issue, and the question of reporting the facts. The facts of war are casualties. There are many, many pictures that are now coming out of Iraq of dead children, women and men. There are hundreds of them. In the foreign press, it is a very different picture that is being shown on the TV screens and in the newspapers- they're showing dead people. We don't see that very much in this country, what are your thoughts on that?
AARON BROWN: Amy I am not sure I understand the question.
AMY GOODMAN: I'm just asking about showing pictures of people being mutilated or killed that we see in the foreign media a great deal?
AARON BROWN: There are clearly differences in the kinds of pictures CNN would consider appropriate to put on television -- on any side -- than the ones Abu Dhabi television would put on. I have seen it, and the program has, at least on 2 occasions specifically, and on many occasions more broadly -- discussed whether or not we have over sanitized. This is not, to me, a political question, I understand, that in the context of this discussion, everything is political. It is a journalistic question, it is a question of taste. It would be a very difficult decision to make for me, I make them as well as I can. I saw things on the first Sunday of the war, that, if you put a gun to my head I wouldn't have put them on TV because it was just too- it was pornographic, in my view. But it certainly showed the violence of war.
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What's changed? Why is it OK now? Surely Aaron Brown didn't mean it was bad taste to show civilian casualties caused by US actions but OK to show civilian casualties caused by those opposed to the US. But what exactly did he mean? I'm confused.