Question: "Please explain to me how boycotting local advertisers will hurt the
Post? Since you have mentioned their names it won't matter where they
advertise to those who decide to boycott them, so why would these companies
withdraw their ads from the Post?" (Adapted from actual, longer question.)
Answer: Thanks for asking! Those are very good questions. I can understand
some people are concerned or confused about this, so I welcome the chance to
discuss the Washington Post Boycott and Secondary Boycott of Advertisers.
Here's the quick answer: Until the editorial staff, publishers, reporters,
and columnists of the Washington Post wake up and start doing their jobs, we
don't want any of our dollars going to the Post. Period. The Post STILL refuses
to print Rep. John Conyers' corrections of the Dana Milbank attack piece they
rushed into print. Post writers and others have ignored, attacked, and even
retaliated against Post readers. In at least one case, a Post "reporter" sought
to punish Post readers who questioned her.
Real journalist, Gene Lyons wrote: "[O]ur old friend Susan Schmidt, dubbed
'Stenographer Sue' by the scrappy activists at mediawhoresonline.com for what
they deem her practice of taking dictation from Kenneth Starr [after] a barrage
of informed criticism of her comically one-sided articles ... tried to get even.
Schmidt traced her correspondents' e-mail addresses, found out where they
worked, and forwarded messages to their bosses in a seeming attempt to get them
in trouble for malingering on the job. It backfired. Her antagonists not only
didn't get fired, they exposed Schmidt's pettiness for the world to see.... [I]f
Schmidt had put half the ingenuity into her reporting she did trying to silence
her critics, maybe they wouldn't frighten her so."
This is a call to end media masochism. Why should we pay people to hurt us?
We have tried to work with the Post, but we can't get through to them. We tried
reasoning with the Post and they tried to punish us. Nothing else has had any
appreciable impact. We've endured this long enough to know the Post will not
respect serious grievances. On the contrary, they don't even recognize our right
to disagree with them! As Lyons explained:
"The capital's crybaby culture has rarely been more perfectly captured than
in a recent article by Washington Post ombudsman Michael Getler. Post reporters
have been getting rude e-mails, if you can believe such a terrible thing.
Several, poor babies, got their feelings hurt. 'Some of the stuff coming into
electronic mailboxes here in recent weeks is simply vulgar,' Getler huffed. ...
Since he quotes none of it, Getler's complaint is hard to evaluate. Here at the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, we're made of sterner stuff. The merely vulgar gets
featured on the 'Voices' page, my favorite part of the paper. Name-calling,
race-baiting, religious diatribes, anti-Semitism, sexual taunts, you name it.
Only the major dirty words are forbidden."
See: Gene Lyon's Article Schmidt Strikes Out, April 24, 2002 http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/2002/04/24_Lyons.html
Sadly this is all too typical of the thin-skinned, one-sided, petty Post.
They have an ombudsman, Michael Getler, who is supposed to stand up for Post
readers and others who feel wronged by the Post, but he prefers to stand up for
the Post against the aggrieved. It's like hiring a lawyer and having her testify
against you. Would you keep paying that lawyer? Why should you?
Back to the boycott. Businesses invest advertising dollars in ways they think
helps them make more money. Boycotting Post advertisers will convince many that
paying the Post to alienate people costs a lot of dollars and makes no sense.
Many will pull their ads from the Post, that's how this boycott is hurting the
Washington Post.
Businesses are not entitled to our money. They seek our patronage through
advertising. If their advertising supports things that hurt us, why should we
help them hurt us? We have no duty to fend for businesses. If we support
businesses that support the Post, we are rewarding bad behavior that hurts
America, imperils our children, and more. If we do not want this to continue, we
have to stop supporting it with our consumer dollars. It's that simple.
Obviously we have to mention the businesses' names in order to boycott them.
Also, we urge anyone who reads the Post now to do so at a library and note the
advertisers in order to help us boycott every business that runs ads in the
Post. So yes, it does matter very much to us if businesses advertise in the
Post. That's the whole point. We're not giving our money to Post advertisers
anymore. We are telling them why. They can act accordingly. If businesses stop
giving our money to the Post, we will stop boycotting them. Until then, we can,
should and will support businesses that won't use our money to support those who
attack our essential concerns and values.
The Washington Post has ill-served its readers. I provided examples of the
Post's media malpractice including:
* Dishonest, unfair, and inaccurate attacks against Al Gore and Bill Clinton
by Post reporters and columnists.
* Refusal of the Post's reporters and columnists to challenge Bush
Administration lies and failures especially regarding the Iraq War.
* Refusal of the Post's reporters and columnists to report on the Downing
Street Minutes, hearings, rally and related issues accurately or fairly and
their dishonest attacks against those who question Administration lies and
failures.
See: http://www.mikehersh.com/Wake_Up_Call_for_the_Washington_Post.shtml
If anyone can actually show any of this is inaccurate I would welcome the
corrections. I understand how newspapers work well enough. For example, I know
that a boycott will not kill the Washington Post. I also know the Post will keep
misleading and even attacking people who expect and demand they report the truth
- unless we do something. We tried asking nicely, and were dismissed or
attacked. Rep. John Conyers' letter addressing the Post's gross
misrepresentations remains ignored by the Washington Post.
Apparently the Post doesn't think its subscribers have any rights or other
options. The Post Ombudsman acts like his job is to protect offending writers,
not offended subscribers. The Post shows contempt for you? I say return the
favor. Join the boycott. Nothing else gets the Post's attention. But this isn't
about me. I reject efforts to make this about me. I don't expect you to take my
word for it.
Read what Rep. Conyers, David Swanson, Bob Somersby, John Nichols and others
wrote. Consider the merits: the facts and the information provided. Then
determine for yourself what you think. If you don't agree a boycott makes sense,
or if you need more information, please write to me or check my sources. I am
open to other points of view and I'm willing to discuss the facts.
If you agree, then join the burgeoning boycott effort. Cancel your
subscription and stop buying the Post. Make sure you inform Post advertisers
that you're boycotting them. Inform the Post of your actions so they get the
wake-up call. After all, nothing else seems to get through to them. Also let me
know if you want to help organize a picket-line to inform the public of this
boycott.
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