The Anti-Male New York Times
June 10, 2003
by
Wendy McElroy
Anyone familiar with the New York Times' bias against men
was not surprised by the Jayson Blair (search) scandal,
in which the reporter blatantly falsified stories for years. The
Times is notorious for pitching gender feminism
(search) in
slanted, one-sided reports. The systemic dishonesty exhibited by the
Blair scandal was not an isolated incident. When it comes to coverage
of men, it seems to be policy at the Gray Lady.
Perhaps nothing else could be expected from the leadership of publisher Arthur
Sulzberger, Jr. (search).
Edwin Diamond's book Behind
the Times quotes Sulzberger as stating, "We can no longer offer
our readers a predominantly white, straight, male vision of events."
Former Times reporter Nan Robertson explains that Sulzberger
calls himself a feminist and she points to his deep admiration
of author Marilyn French, renowned for male-bashing. In her book
The
War Against Women, French states, "Men's need to dominate women
may be based in their own sense of marginality or emptiness; we do not
know its root, and men are making no effort to discover it."
For years, the Times — America's "newspaper of record"
— has been a vehicle for political correctness in both subtle
and blatant ways. Examining its policies provides an interesting window into
the anti-male and liberal bias rampant in most current media.
Those policies dictate:
1) Who is hired.
In an article entitled
"The Degradation of the New York Times," Joseph Epstein —
former editor of the American Scholar — writes, "the
true politics of the new New York Times are to be found at
work on the issues of feminism, racism, homosexuality — usually
funneled through the totem of 'diversity,' which, reinforced by political
correctness, I prefer to think of as totalitarian pluralism." Epstein
adds, "The way Sulzberger has backed up his conviction is not only through
the writing he publishes but also through hiring and promotion practices
inside the paper."
No wonder Blair was forgiven over and over again for gross inaccuracies
and flat fabrication. Times Executive Editor Howell Raines' explanation was,
"as a white man from Alabama" he gave Blair too many chances. Would
another reporter, if he was also a white man from Alabama, been given
no chance at all?
2) Which stories receive coverage.
William McGowan's iconoclastic book Coloring
the News chronicles the media
distortions caused by political correctness. McGowan is especially
critical of the Times, which in its crusade for "diversity"
and sensitivity to minorities, has sacrificed both accuracy and balanced
coverage. For example, he points out, "The New York Times runs
a long, admiring article identifying Patrick Chavis, a black doctor
in Los Angeles, as evidence that affirmative action in medical schools
is working the way it was meant to, by bringing good doctors into minority
neighborhoods. Later, after many botched operations and a patient's
death, Chavis loses his license. The Times never reports it."
3) How studies and statistics are reported.
In his article "Unfit
to Print: Case Study in Deceit at the New York Times," men's
rights activist Carey Roberts described the misrepresentation
of a report from the General Accounting Office (GAO) on the
status of women's health research at the National Institutes of Health
(NIH).
The "Results in Brief" section of the study (pp. 6-7) offers its conclusions,
"In the past decade, NIH has made significant progress in implementing
a strengthened policy on including women in clinical research... More
than 50 percent of the participants in clinical research studies that
NIH funded in fiscal year 1997 were women, according to NIH. Even when
studies with female-only or male-only protocols are removed from the
data, the proportion of women enrolled exceeded 50 percent."
The GAO report shows that the NIH actually neglected men's health in
1997. For example, men constituted only 37% of participants in extramural
research studies (Figure 1); 740 female-only studies were funded, but
only 244 male-only ones (Table 2). Nevertheless, the Times
story — written by a medical reporter who should know how to read
NIH studies — bore the headline "Research Neglects Women..." The
slighting of men was not mentioned.
Such exposés in the powerful Times have real-world impact.
As Roberts points out, "Responding to the public outcry over the fabricated
'neglect' of women's health, the Women's Health Office Act, S. 2675,
was introduced in the 106th Congress. The bill was read on June 6, 2000,
just five weeks after the Times article appeared."
4) Which books are reviewed.
In his book Women
Can't Hear What Men Don't Say, author Warren
Farrell carefully documents the extreme bias with which the
inordinately influential Times Book Review section chooses
titles to spotlight. Farrell writes, "man-haters like Marilyn French
and Andrea Dworkin" have "every book they write reviewed while books
written by men who articulate the issues of adult men with compassion
and criticize the feminist perspective have none of those books reviewed."
Farrell comments on the impact of the NYT bias. "When The New
York Times Book Review ignores a book it sends a message: 'You
are not one of the players.' Other media take the cue. When it systematically
ignores books on a topic with one point of view and gives double reviews
to books with the opposite perspective, the violation is not just one
of journalistic ethics, but of the responsibility of power."
The Times is no longer a player on any team that values truth,
accuracy, or men. The Old Gray Lady is like the Old Gray Mare...she
ain't what she used to be. Putting her to pasture would be a kindness.
Wendy McElroy
Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com.
She is the author and editor of many books and articles, including her
new anthology Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband
in Canada. Other articles by Wendy McElroy
can be found in the MensNewsDaily.com archive.