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Edited on Sun Jan-11-04 03:55 PM by mouse7
This portion is a repost of dsc's letter to the WP. I'm using it simply to spare myself retyping the same info...
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borrowed from dsc's post...
"The following is quoted from the official transcript of Meet the Press, 11 January, 2004:
MR. BRODER: I saw the same kind of contrast when I was out there earlier this week. Gephardt gave a pep talk to about 175 union business agents and staff people who’d come in from around the country. I’d say it was about 98 percent male and the median size of these guys, about 6’3”, 250 pounds. Then I went over to...
MR. RUSSERT: My kind of guy.
MR. BRODER: Then I went over to the Dean headquarters, they’re young, they’re female, they’re gay, and they’re small. And I thought to myself, I hope those Gephardt guys don’t run into the Dean people. You know it would be a bad scene.
I am astonished at the depth to which your paper's star columnist has chosen to take our discourse. First, it is so utterly stereotypical. I am trying to imagine, without success, any columnist thinking he could do this sort of thing to supporters of Al Sharpton or Carol Moseley Braun. It is literally unthinkable. I realize that close-minded people like Mr. Broder will be astonished to hear this but gay people come in all shapes and sizes. We are, or at least some of us are, Mr. Russert's kind of guy. Astonishing, but true. We are, drum roll please, real live humans just like any other.
But Mr. Broder's statement has even more problems. As astonishing as it may seem, there are some laborers who actually think gays are decent people. And I have even heard that most of them respect women and wouldn't beat them up for sport. Of course, your close minded columnist wouldn't know that, or at least shows no evidence of actually knowing that. So Mr. Broder managed to smear laborers with nasty stereotypes too.
But, like the commercials, there is still more offensive things in Mr. Broder's bizarre statement. Some of us, for reasons which apparently escape Mr. Broder, find violence against women and gays to be something other than a laughing matter (the transcript doesn't mention laughter but it was there). It is hard to find a gay who doesn't know someone who was, or wasn't himself, attacked for being gay. For those of us who have been there it is no laughing matter. Mr. Broder should know better.
I know that gays and lesbians are among the last minorities for which conduct like Mr. Broder's is still acceptable, so I won't even bother asking you to discipline him for these hurtful and bizarre statements. But, you can, and should, be issuing apologies to Dean's supporters, Gephardt's supporters, gays and lesbians, and women in general. People in that same discussion wondered why the people on the Dean blog would be so down on the press. Your paper, in the person of Mr. Broder, gave a text book example. Your readers deserve better. Your country deserves better. Do better."
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The question I have... Is there a slander/libel suit here against these "journalists?" This is one of the most offensive discussions I've ever witnessed on broadcast television. Isn't there an accuracy standard they are forced to be held to, and if they have breeched that, is there a lawsuit?
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