the state of politics.
I'm not usually a link-farmer, but this is pretty interesting/enlightening/depressing.
First: this year's presidential endorsement editorial from The Lone Star Iconoclast, Bush's hometown newspaper. They endorsed Bush in 2000 but they're not this year. (And I'd say their justification is better phrased than most of what I've heard Kerry say.)
And then: the followup editorial on the aftermath. Excerpt:
We have been told by several avid Bush supporters that the days when newspapers publish editorials without personal repercussions are over. As publishers, we have printed editorials for decades, and have endorsed candidates, both Republican and Democrat. When Bush was endorsed four years ago, the Gore supporters did not respond with threats, nor did Democrats when we endorsed Reagan twice. Republicans did not threaten us personally or our business when we endorsed Carter and Clinton for their first terms. In the past, when individuals disagreed with an editorial, they would write a letter to the editor politely expressing a different point of view in contrast to the views of the publishers, which we have usually published. Occasionally someone would cancel a subscription or an ad, but this was rare.
The goal of the editorial page has been to provide an arena for the expression of a variety of thoughtful opinions, some by the publishers, some by columnists, and some by our readers.
The new mode of operation, I am told, is that when a newspaper prints an editorial of which some sectors might disagree, the focus is now upon how to run the newspaper out of business. Out the window are the contributions the newspaper has made to the community in the past and the newspaper's extensive investment in the community.
The point isn't even whether or not the paper's got their facts straight or who they're endorsing, the point is the attack-style response. This is what it's come to. Thanks Bill O'Reilly, thanks Rush Limbaugh, thanks Fox News, thanks attack politics. You've successfully destroyed intelligent discourse.