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NYT: We Stopped Calling Waterboarding 'Torture' Because The Bush Administration Didn't Approve

Waterboarding

First Posted: 07/01/10 05:38 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:55 PM ET

Yesterday, we made note of a new study from the Kennedy School of Government that found that America's major newspapers, after decades of reliably and accurately referring to waterboarding as torture, suddenly stopped doing so around 2002, when America started waterboarding people like the dickens! Adam Serwer offered this comment on the matter:

As soon as Republicans started quibbling over the definition of torture, traditional media outlets felt compelled to treat the issue as a "controversial" matter, and in order to appear as though they weren't taking a side, media outlets treated the issue as unsettled, rather than confronting a blatant falsehood. To borrow John Holbo's formulation, the media, confronted with the group think of two sides of an argument, decided to eliminate the "think" part of the equation so they could be "fair" to both groups.

Well, today Yahoo's Michael Calderone has comment from a New York Times spokesman, who -- while maintaining that the Times's official position is that the study is "misleading" -- nevertheless comes right out and confirms that they are in fact precisely the unrescueable cowards that Adam Serwer says they are:

However, the Times acknowledged that political circumstances did play a role in the paper's usage calls. "As the debate over interrogation of terror suspects grew post-9/11, defenders of the practice (including senior officials of the Bush administration) insisted that it did not constitute torture," a Times spokesman said in a statement. "When using a word amounts to taking sides in a political dispute, our general practice is to supply the readers with the information to decide for themselves. Thus we describe the practice vividly, and we point out that it is denounced by international covenants and in American tradition as a form of torture."


The Times spokesman added that outside of the news pages, editorials and columnists "regard waterboarding as torture and believe that it fits all of the moral and legal definitions of torture." He continued: "So that's what we call it, which is appropriate for the opinion pages."

Isn't that great? Waterboarding is totally torture so long as we are "outside of the news pages," where journalists at the Times are free to believe that waterboarding "fits all of the moral and legal definitions of torture." And, obviously, they want to make it clear that they feel that they deserve credit for having these important feelings about morality, despite the fact that they are too terrified to evince these principles in the "news pages" of a "newspaper" that's best known for publishing "pages of news."

[What's especially dumb about all of this, is that waterboarding wouldn't be newsworthy at all if it weren't torture. If waterboarding was nothing more than say, a light splashing of water to the face, there would be no stories written about it at all. But for decades the New York Times wrote stories about waterboarding specifically because it was torture, referring to it as "torture."]

Of course, none of this explains the other side to the study, which found that, "In The New York Times, 85.8% of articles (28 of 33) that dealt with a country other than the United States using waterboarding called it torture or implied it was torture while only 7.69% (16 of 208) did so when the United States was responsible." It's pretty clear that at the New York Times, as a matter of policy, when someone other than the United States straps a person to a board and performs a harrowing simulation of drowning on them to extract information or mete out punishment, things get a whole lot clearer, morally and legally -- and then suddenly, the very same "news pages" become a lot braver.

At any rate, the big takeaway here is that as long as you are able to frame immorality as an interesting point of view in a political dispute, the New York Times is ready to suspend decades of crystal-clear judgment, subserviently.

RELATED:
Study: Newspapers stopped describing waterboarding as 'torture' during Bush years [Yahoo's Newsroom]

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Yesterday, we made note of a new study from the Kennedy School of Government that found that America's major newspapers, after decades of reliably and accurately referring to waterboarding as torture,...
Yesterday, we made note of a new study from the Kennedy School of Government that found that America's major newspapers, after decades of reliably and accurately referring to waterboarding as torture,...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Kevin Atlanta 09:55 PM on 07/01/2010
The NY Times editorial board has repeatedly demonstrated over the course of the past decade that they are spineless suited only to pandering to the Corporate Fascist directed spin of the day from ACORN and the Brieghtbart/O'Keefe- Faux Spews echo chamber to their own ignorance and idiocy rubber stamping the Bush/Cheney Wrecking Crew's Propaganda and Lies because not one of them gets off their lazy butts to  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jackinthegreen
immoderated
08:48 PM on 07/20/2010
BRAVO, JASON LINKINS. HEAR! HEAR!
08:52 PM on 07/06/2010
Why does the Bush Admin get to redefine words? Dictionary.com says torture is: "the act of inflicting excruciating pain, as punishment or revenge, as a means of getting a confession or information." If waterboarding fits the standard definition, then it gets to be called torture.
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Irazu
I have nothing to declare
03:04 PM on 07/06/2010
"a Times spokesman said in a statement. "When using a word amounts to taking sides in a political dispute..."

For instance, the word "fraud" cannot be used in the context of Halliburton; "Civilian Casualties" to be dropped in favour of "collateral damage"; "Freedom Fighters" preferred to "Insurgents" when on our side, the reverse when they are against us. "Compassionate Conservatism" in place of "Screw you, Jack, I got mine."

What, after all, is in a word?
06:34 PM on 07/06/2010
I agree "terrorism" is now "man made disasters"
12:03 PM on 07/06/2010
I would like to give it a try to see what all the fuss is about
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jeremyfive
11:31 AM on 07/06/2010
I guess that's why we didn't purse impeachment for Bush-Cheney either.
09:45 AM on 07/06/2010
Huff is just as bad as NYT.

Try posting anything that goes against the official story of 911.
06:35 PM on 07/06/2010
Some of you get your tinfoil hat theories on here, yours must have been really out there.
02:07 AM on 07/06/2010
The publisher sharing Bush's ideology had nothing to do with it?
Fostering his agenda printing bushie lies every day...
... gotta think morality and pressure were unconsidered and unnecessary respectively.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Poorsarah
04:08 PM on 07/05/2010
Oh what the hey...let the GOPers just call this illegal torture "enhanced interrogations"...that will smooth things over.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BBinMT
Is this a 5 minute argument or the full half hour?
02:36 PM on 07/05/2010
And this is seen by some as "patriotism".
02:21 PM on 07/05/2010
Nobody understands the power of the word torture better than the editors at the NYT.

They knew precisely what they were doing and this just further damages their credibility on all issues having to do with transfers of the largest amounts of our tax dollars, which include war, bailouts, health care "reform," etc.

I could care less if they do a good job reporting on the wedge issues used to divide and conquer Americans--- like abortion, or if they do a good job covering travel.

I want to see them be objective on the issues that involve trillions of dollars and national security.

I want to see them put the main threats to Americans and our future on the FRONT page and not bury them where nobody treads.

And I want to see them inform Americans about the issues BEFORE it is too late and all is said and done or already in motion beyond the stopping point.
11:15 AM on 07/05/2010
Somone please explain to me why the NYT is afraid to PO Republicans but they don't mind in the least making up nonsense against Democratic Administrations.

Remember WhiteWater?

The NYT knew BEFORE the 1992 election that there was nothing behind that story.

Yet they consistently went along with the rest of the Corporate Media fools in hounding the Clinton Administration over something they KNEW was false.

They didn't seem to have a problem taking sides in that political dispute. The side they knew was wrong.
06:36 PM on 07/06/2010
Why didn't the clintons just turn over the paperwork?
07:40 PM on 07/06/2010
They did.

And the FBI investigated it and cleared them.

BEFORE 1992.
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lackofoversight
A nickel isn't worth a dime today... Y. Berra
05:11 AM on 07/05/2010
The days of Woodward and Bernstein and a Washington Post that had the dedication to do their job and the courage to stand up to a corrupt government are long gone. Welcome to American corporate media in 2010.
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Bettysdad
The arc of human history is to the left.
03:54 AM on 07/05/2010
Where are all the wingnut trolls who should be defending the NYT since they believe waterboarding is NOT torture.

The position the wingnuts support.

So where are they?
06:37 PM on 07/06/2010
Maybe they don't respond to lunatics.
10:40 PM on 07/04/2010
" If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck".
03:43 PM on 07/04/2010
Keep remembering, those in the media deciding what information to give us are in the top 5% of our income structure.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
09:04 AM on 07/05/2010
Not sure about that. Most reporters make squat.
11:16 AM on 07/05/2010
It is the editor and the Corporate Suits that make the decisions on content.

Not the reporters.