The May 11 issue of the New York Times carried an extraordinary mea
culpa -- the detailed admission of wrongdoing by former Times reporter
Jayson Blair. According to the article, "Mr. Blair repeatedly violated
the cardinal tenet of journalism, which is simply truth."
When six U.S. soldiers were taken hostage in Iraq, Blair was filing
articles based on his interviews with Gregory Lynch, father of Private
Jessica Lynch. According to Blair's article, Mr. Lynch "choked up as
he stood on his porch here overlooking the tobacco fields and cattle
pastures." Problem is, Mr. Lynch's porch does not overlook any tobacco
fields or cattle pastures. In fact, none of the Lynch family remembers
even talking to Blair.
Commenting on the egregious violation of journalistic standards, former
Times reporter Alex Jones commented, "There has never been a systematic
effort to lie and cheat as a reporter at The New York Times comparable
to what Jayson Blair seems to have done."
I have news for you, Mr. Jones. Because if truth defines the litmus
test for good journalism, the New York Times has failed. Exhibit A is
the Times' coverage of gender health stories.
The fact is, American men die 5.5 years sooner than their female counterparts.
The truth is, men lag on almost every indicator of health status. The
reality is, the government spends three
times more money on breast cancer research than for prostate cancer.
Yet this side of the truth is seldom heard in the pages of the New
York Times.
Indeed, the New York Times has evidenced a clear-cut bias against men's
health. A search of all articles published in the Times during the period
1996-2002 reveals the following:
Men's Health: 468 articles
Women's Health: 787 articles
Prostate Cancer: 1,572 articles
Breast Cancer: 2,714 articles
Worse, the New York Times has featured stories that have uncritically
touted the feminist claim that women are mistreated by the medical care
establishment.
For example, it has long been known that women stand at far greater
risk than men of developing complications during risky
cardiac procedures. For this reason, physicians are cautious in
refering women for these invasive tests.
Despite this fact, the Times ran a front page story on July 25, 1991
that claimed, "Studies Say Women Fail to Receive Equal Treatment for
Heart Disease." But when later studies began to cast doubt on the feminist
discrimination claim, the Times buried that article on page C6 ("Studies
Split on Sex Gap in Treating Heart Patients." April 14, 1992).
Another example -- the NYT published its first Women's Health section
in 1997, but did not run a special section on Men's Health until two
years later.
The articles in the 1999 Men's Health Section were replete with sexist
put-downs. One article opened with this patronizing headline: "As Patients,
Men are Impatient, or Uneasy, or Both. They Need to Get a Grip, Like
Women." Another headline used a derogatory tone to explain men's shorter
lifespan: "Why Men Don't Last: Self-Destruction as a Way of Life."
One can only wonder how the NYT editors could approve articles that
were downright insulting to men.
Following the May 11 revelations, the brass at the Times has tried
to portray the Blair scandal as an isolated, one-time incident. Publisher
Sulzberger, ever-sensitive to the feelings of others, opined, "Let's
not begin to demonize our executives -- either the desk editors or the
executive editor."
Mr. Sulzberger, the problems at your newspaper run much deeper than
Jayson Blair.
Carey Roberts