Sunday, December 30, 2007

"News" they can use

A commenter called james c, over at Vanishing American, writes: "Since getting access to US media via the internet, i noticed there is a journalism style which i can only describe as 'sob-story hand-wringing'. It must be taught in journalism schools. No one could write like that naturally. VA, do you know what i mean?"

I'm sure VA knows what he means, as do I. It's become like one of those form letters you get from corporations when you write to them about a problem -- the words are already there in a computer macro, with just a few words filled in to "personalize" it. The "sob-story hand-wringing" immigration story seems to have been written by some Central Politburo of Political Correctness and distributed to the media to adapt as they see fit. Only, some of us see it as unfit as the product of a supposedly free press.

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It's easy to find examples, but the Phoenix-area East Valley Tribune seems to be vying with The New York Times for the Olympic Gold Medal in one-sided, slanted reporting. If this is in fact what they teach in journalism school nowadays, you could hardly offer the class a better model than this.
Bad. Bad. Bad. That’s how Mesa business owner Ramon Quintana describes the crisis facing Hispanic-oriented companies as people in the Latino community lose their jobs and flee the area for friendlier frontiers. The problem comes from a mix of fear of recent immigration arrests and the pending crackdown on employers who hire illegal residents. Hispanic-oriented businesses are paying the price.
Crisis. Flee the area for friendlier frontiers. Fear. Crackdown. ¡Ay caramba!¡Fascismo! The United States is beginning to rediscover that it has borders, and they do not include all Mexico.
At the height of the Christmas shopping season, some businesses reported less than half the revenue they had last Christmas. Those who remain are struggling to pay the rent, both on their homes and businesses. “Everybody is complaining,” Quintana said. And the situation is only going to get worse, he said.
Worse for whom, amigo? For you and your clientele, contemptuous of American law, indulging in the kind of border jumping that would get you jailed if you tried it in Mexico? But maybe a lot better for those of us who are citizens of this country, who will no longer watch ever larger portions of our cities become Tijuana because of criminals like you.
The windows at U-Care Thrift Store are still plastered with “Happy Holidays” and “Peace on Earth Good Will to All,” a merry message compared with the story on the other side of the glass. Neighbors say the owner fled about a month ago, leaving rows of clothing racks and a store full of merchandise behind. ... U-Care Thrift Store is the third shop on the corner of Main Street and Stapley Drive to close. Quik Cash payday loans and a former party store are already empty.

Those probably won’t be the last to close on that corner, Quintana said. Other vendors tell him they worry about making the rent.
SeƱor Quintana? You and "other vendors" thought you'd game the system here, come to El Norte for the freebies that American taxpayers are required by their political overlords to grant you.

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But that's changing. You sponged off our country for years. Well, the game's about up, amigo. You lose, and you deserve to lose.


Oh, and you, East Valley Tribune: Bad. Bad. Bad.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks Rick--good column. I read the comments following the article in the offending paper. Couple of self-righteous bleeding hearts, couple of seriously confused folks...and an army of people commenting along the lines of "adios, parasites," "'bout damn time," "Don't let the door hit you on the way out," etc., etc. Very encouraging.

Thanks for a consistently good blog. Thanks in particular for leading me to the Kardec texts.

Happy New Year!
-J

Rick Darby said...

Thank you. Yes, I read the reader comments on the East Valley Tribune story. I even included my own response with a link to this blogpost, and got half a dozen people who clicked over.

As you say, the great majority weren't sold by the tear-stained, oh-dear tone of the piece. I've seen the same phenomenon in other papers, including even The Washington Post. What is the matter with these editors? Can't they see their propaganda is going over like squishy peas?

No, I suppose they can't see it; they have been part of the Liberal Establishment's mutual admiration society for so long, all they can do (if they read the comments at all) is shake their heads and moan about how many "racists" and "right-wing extremists" there are.

Anonymous said...

Very funny Rick. The article you quoted was a perfect example of the genre. A little sob-story vignette opened the piece - Bad. Bad. Bad. - and then expanded to the wider political nonsense.

'Urban' minority education is another rich source for these stories. The Washington post has some classics.

The UK - among its many other problems - seems to be determined to repeat US problems, as there are now stories about 'urban minority' schools - whereas just 5 years ago this was unheard of. In Bradford, white and muslim schools are being 'integrated'. I wonder what the outcome will be ... Wait until our minority percentage reaches 15 percent.

I'm sure this unique prose style will travel across the atlantic as well.