Why bother sending it to them? If they wanted to do something about the mess they've made, they'd've done it by now. It gets more impact sharing it directly on the web - rather than letting the Times ombusdsmen throw it into the "circular" file.
I'm getting tired of telling the "media" how they're screwing up and we're now going "around" them - I'd rather just GO around them and be done with it. Eventually, they will wither away - or learn a few tricks from the web.
Dear Mssrs. Daniel Okrent and Arthur Bovino (public@nytimes.com):
Sorry to keep harping on this, but it's important. Quite simply: we now know that we were lied into the war in Iraq by George W. Bush - and that one of his chief enablers was Judith Miller. Your newspaper, which may still be the newspaper of record in the US, splashed lies across its headlines for months and in no small way helped land the country in this 550-million-dollar-a-week mess with no end in sight, and perhaps more than anyone else in the media, Ms. Miller enabled this deception.
Petty plagiarist and liar Jayson Blair is gone - but what he did was arguably far less egregious than what Judith Miller has been exposed as doing: telling grandiose lies to get our nation into a war. As long as she is still on the payroll, you look like collaborators.
To quote from the Supreme Court decision which allowed the Times to publish the Pentagon papers:
"Paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people and sending them off to distant lands to die of foreign fevers and foreign shot and shell."
The rules of the game are changing rapidly, and I would think that your shareholders' value and the worth of your "brand" can only continue to erode if you gain a reputation for being a mouthpiece of a corrupt government.
This is the kind of writing any web-savvy person can read about your paper now:
http://stevegilliard.blogspot.com/2004/12/blair-and-miller.htmlThis stuff is out there, and tens of thousands of people are reading it every day. In a way, it constitutes a "scoop" - juicy information available only from your competition. Juicy information about how the Times can't be trusted.
In the long run, it of course matters little to me personally whether the Times gets its act together or not - I'm not a shareholder, and as I have repeatedly told you: after being an assiduous, inveterate reader of your paper for about 20 years, I no longer buy the Times, nor do I ever even bother to visit the website. As we know, the Internet treats censorship as damage, and routes around it. Thousands of former readers have already routed around you and no longer get their news from the Times.
Maybe you can't do anything about it - maybe corporations and free information are simply incompatible, and it took the internet for us to finally notice that.