This may be the toughest day...
This may be the toughest day in the year to write a column. What
do I say on the day after Christmas?
Many of those who bestir themselves to read this are probably
exhausted from overeating, overbuying and over-socializing; or, at
the other end of the spectrum, relieved that the special loneliness
of the holidays is almost over. Few are yet ready to go back either
to the usual business conducted on this page or the frenetic pace of
the last month.
So, at least for me, it’s time to kick back and look at bits and
pieces of college bowl games in which I have little or no interest
and try to figure out if the spate of new movies is worth sitting
through commercials to see. Or, better still, just kick back and
ruminate.
Like ruminating, for example, on the importance in this society of
expressing and weighing dissenting views. The New York Times got into
an absurd fix a few weeks ago by trying to put down internal dissent.
As with most issues of substance, it came up over a matter of very
little substance at all.
This mastodon of American journalism decided, at a time when the
world was in considerable turmoil, that the issue of whether or not
to admit women to a guys-only Atlanta golf club merited major
editorial treatment. Two Times’ columnists disagreed, said so, and
had their columns killed. The resulting criticism was deeply
embarrassing -- and should have been -- to the editors of the Times.
I bring this up as worth ruminating about here for two reasons.
First, because the continuing liveliness of the letters on the
Pilot’s Forum page feeds on dissent. And, second, because the
publisher and editors of the Pilot don’t require its columnists to
agree with their editorial positions.
Back when I was starting out in journalism in Fort Wayne, Ind., we
had two newspapers. Neither left any doubt on their editorial pages
about their political loyalties, but there was one basic difference
between them. The Democratic newspaper -- the Journal-Gazette -- ran
a broad variety of political opinion on its Op-Ed page. The
Republican News-Sentinel ran only columnists who agreed with their
conservative point-of-view. The News-Sentinel editor was a good
friend, and I stretched out many drinks, which I could ill afford
then, at a local bar debating this matter with him.
I argued that it is the basic responsibility of a newspaper to
give its readers a variety of views on public issues so they can make
rational choices. He argued that it would be stupid for him to give
space in his newspaper to opinions he regarded as wrong.
Neither of us changed those views much in the years that followed.
But I ended up in an area where the two major newspapers -- the Times
and the Register -- offered almost exactly the same contrast in
styles.
The Pilot leans in my direction because, although there is no
Op-Ed page, there is the outspoken Forum page. When I travel
cross-country by car, the first things I read in the newspapers I
pick up en route are the letters to the editor, which tell me a great
deal about the pulse of the community I’m visiting.
I can say honestly that I’ve never seen letters that measure up in
passion, clarity or outrage better than those that appear regularly
in the Pilot. If the views of the editors of this newspaper and the
views of The Bell Curve are predictable, the letters challenging both
aren’t.
Recent examples would certainly include the torrent of complaints
about the Pilot’s continuing frequent news and feature coverage of
Wendy Leece after she lost her school board seat. Or the letter
writer who accused the Bell Curve of being blinded by my “liberal
elitist and socialistic ideology, like most journalists and college
professors” because I suggested we should take a harder look at the
reasons for invading Iraq. Or the outraged protectors of the ficus
trees and the incontinent ducks. Or the letter writer who finally
came to the defense of the embattled Dave Ellis by pointing out that
he consistently knocked off Democrats, which certainly gave Ellis
license to use any tactics -- including lies and deceit -- that were
effective in eliminating these noxious critters.
I have had complaints from local citizens who wondered why their
letters weren’t run, and I have no answers except lack of space, poor
timing or personal attacks and such excessive rhetoric that it
doesn’t merit print. But the overwhelming tide of letters to the
editor of the Pilot are thoughtful, focused, clear and well written.
They may be full of baloney, but that, of course, is in the eye of
the beholder.
I have learned in the several years I’ve been doing this gig that
it is almost impossible to predict what subject matter that will draw
mail. I have dealt with what I considered provocative subjects that
landed with a dull thud, and I have drawn animated response with
seemingly pedestrian entries. The longest letter I’ve ever received
came from a column in which I defended TV viewing. And by far my
biggest response followed a request for suggestions for a new name
for the column.
A number of letters come directly to me rather than through the
Pilot, and I do not do well about answering them. My intentions are
fine, but my performance is lousy. I have a considerable pile of
letters, dating back further than I care to look, that I fully expect
to answer and quite probably won’t -- for which I apologize profusely
and have no reasonable excuse beyond lethargy to offer.
It has occurred to me as I wrap this up that there is another
group of Dec. 26ers that I didn’t mention -- those people who will be
returning gifts or poised in the trenches for the post-Christmas
sales.
They probably won’t have time to read this, anyway. But if they
do, I urge them to stay home and ruminate.
You might start with whatever letters to the editor are offered
today. If they don’t light a fire, try tomorrow or the next day. And
then, maybe raise a toast on New Year’s Eve to the importance of
honest dissent -- in your community, your country and the world.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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