by Dreams End » Tue Dec 06, 2005 4:22 pm
Interesting you all picked up on this, as I live in Nashville. <br><br>First, about Wikipedia. Seems like an awfully easy "solution" if one is needed would to simply have a "not yet reviewed" tag automatically placed on new user edits. The information stays until someone has a look that it meets the standards (now what the STANDARDS are is another question...).<br><br>If I go to the site and see some unexpected piece of news about somebody and I see that "not yet reviewed" tag, it tells me that it's a new edit and no one else in the foodchain has yet had a look. I know they have had long involved discussions on certain topics as to how best to edit them that can go on for days and days. Sometimes I find these when I'm googling for something. I always did wonder how they resolve issues. If proldic and rdr were both trying to edit an article on the Soviet Union, it would be quite a challenge to mediate. <br><br>Now, as to Seigenthaler. I've met him...and I know some of his family. I grew up watching John Jr. as a local TV reporter. There are a lot of Seigenthalers in Nashville. I knew his brother's kids when I was growing up. Their father, Tom Seigenthaler was the man who started the PR firm (not John, as the Wikipedia article suggested and not MPF...another one firm here in Nashville.) Tom lived in Belle Beade, the richest, "aristocratic" section of Nashville. And yet, he was the only one in that area to vote for Jesse Jackson in 1984. Go figure.<br><br>The rest of his family, especially the "Strobels", another part of the family line, are all nice, liberal activist types for the most part. One of them has a community service award named after her and another is a Catholic priest who is a well known activist. So, not that liberals can't be part of such shenanigans, but it's a perspective most of the family shares.<br><br>John has a local show here about books. He also started the First Amendment center that does, basically puff pieces, on "important" thinkers and cultural icons (I think Art Garfunkel was on there once.) Interviewing Woodward does not seem like a red flag to me, as so many others also interview the man. Woodward's robotic presentation just keeps 'em coming, I guess. So, we know that Woodward has been pushed out into this public role, but you can't say who is part of the pushing and who interviews him because they believe the hype. Naturally, someone so associated with the "first amendment" would be interested in this famous reporter and "breaker" of the Watergate story.<br><br>John was also a Justice Department aid under Kennedy, and as such got the Alabama governor to allow the 'freedom rides' to begin and there's also a story about him rescuing an African-American during some anti-black violence spawned during the freedom rides. I don't remember the whole story. <br><br>And, I think assuming that the "bridge jumper" was MKUltra might be reaching a bit. <br><br>So, pretty good politics and a really nice family. And the article did have some serious errors. <br><br>However, I do see him as part of the liberal establishment...or the liberal "flavor" of the establishment. Involved in the Kennedy Justice Department and then with RFK's re-election campaign, I've never seen any allegation that he was involved in either plot. That would be some serious deep cover as he was a reporter in Nashville for years and years. Not exactly a hotbed posting for CIA assassination collaborators. (Do we count against him the fact that his family descends from Germans?)<br><br>I don't much care for USA Today, the national paper he co-started. <br><br>The paper comes out of Virginia and is owned by Gannett who owns a TON of other newspapers in the US and also in England and also some TV stations. So, media consolidation alone is an issue here. They also pushed the whole "polling" aspect to new "highs" (lows.) And they seriously have dumbed down the news. <br><br>That said, I don't know of any evidence that USA Today is any more of a "Mockingbird" type outfit than any of the other large, corporate media. I spent some time Googling and haven't found much to make me think that Seigenthaler is other than what he purports to be. A liberal. I have criticisms of liberals, but that is not what this is about.<br><br>The other question underlying all this, is whether that Wikipedia story was planted so that this media "attack" could come about. I don't know. In the article I saw in our local paper (if it's not in the one linked here) he said a colleague or friend alerted him to the posting. But yes, his "hey, what's this whole Wikipedia thing" does ring a bit false as someone in his business would have hit Wikipedia entries hundreds of times in the course of daily research. <br><br>However, this "conspiracy", should it be one, could also be primarily an attack on the paid media against the free media. There's a place where intelligence interests and corporate interests certainly come together.<br><br>I'd be open to any evidence that Seigenthaler is a more conscious "operative" than I know about. At certain levels of society, those lines get pretty blurred anyway.<br><br><br><br><br> <p></p><i></i>