barmar, on 2018-September-06, 08:55, said:
Were you similarly bothered by Deep Throat remaining anonymous for decades?
Also, this is not a case of a reporter with an unnamed source. This was an Op-Ed, not a news report -- the author is the anonymous source themselves. Different standards apply -- they're expressing their opinion. It's essentially just a Letter to the Editor, but given a bit more prominence.
Obviously if Trump found out who did this, he would fire him on the spot (even a less despicable boss would do so), and maybe the staffer should have been willing to accept this result as the consequence of bringing the truth to light. OTOH, perhaps we need people like this behind the scenes.
Let me take on the Deep Throat analogy.As with Winston't allusion to Rear, it illustrates a point. Maybe it doesn't support my point, but it illustrates it.
DT met secretly with Woodward and Bernstein, giving them information and guidance. Then W and B followed up on this, check the information, and published a signed account of what they believe happened. W and B made assertions based on research and took responsibility ofr what they said. that is very different from what happened with the anon piece.
Now let me take a couple of comments from others:
Winstonm, on 2018-September-06, 06:44, said:
I don't get the negative reaction to the decision made by the Times to publish. I strongly agree that the author is a slimeball who should be outed and ousted. Times is doing what papers do.
and
cherdano, on 2018-September-06, 06:58, said:
Ken: in my view the news in this op-ed isn't the specific claims made in this op-ed. The news is that *a member of Trump's cabinet* (the writer clearly implies that they were part of the 25th amendmendment discussions) wants to make this public statement. This alone is newsworthy enough, even if several of the specific stories told in there were wrong.
But if you want to know more about the Times' decision-making process, you can ask questions here:
https://www.nytimes....ords=auddevgate
I am not sure I agree that the author is a slimeball and I am uncertain if some of the specific stories are wrong. But let's go with that possibility for a moment. Then we have the NYT lending its editorial page to a slimeball who doesn't even get his facts straight. I am not sure "this is what papers do" Sounds more like something Trump would say. And we have a cabinet member who is a slimeball who can't get his facts straight? We are in deep stuff.
And now to
hrothgar, on 2018-September-06, 06:17, said:
I expect that you are right.
Regardless of what I think of Trump, he can not and should not tolerate a situation in which his own political appointees are deliberate sabotaging his administration.
He needs to know who wrote this.
I believe that he would be justified in taking action against the Times to force disclosure of the author.
with this said and done, the contents of this piece are terrifying
The type of tactics that the author claims to be employing only work if the executive is suffering from dementia or is, in some other way, mentally unfit for office. Hiding documents that are ready to be signed because the President will almost immediately forget that he issued an order about leaving NAFTA or instituting a policy of government sanctioned assassination or who knows what else is terrifying.
Indeed. This occurred to me as well. The way to deal with Trump is to take things off his desk, trusting he will forget that they were there, or forget they even existed? Where the hell are we?
Let's compare it with the Saturday Night Massacre. Richardson did not just go about as usual trusting that Nixon would forget that he had told him to fire Cox. Richardson resigned. This is a response I can admire. But writing some anonymous piece about heroic efforts to get around a president? This approach cannot work over the long run, it just can't, and blabbing about it doesn't help matters.
I suppose this could be seen as an argument for why the NYT should publish it, since, to the extent it can be regarded as truth, it shows that the whole operation, not just the oval office, is riddled with idiocy.
We cannot have a presidency where aides are hiding things hoping he will forget. This speaks very badly not only of the president but also of them ..