[Mb-civic] MUST READ: The fall of Bob Woodward - James Carroll -
Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Nov 21 05:15:17 PST 2005
The fall of Bob Woodward
By James Carroll | November 21, 2005
AT WHAT point does naiveté become something to be ashamed of? The
revelation last week that Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward abetted
the Bush administration's program of lies and character assassination
left you feeling as if you, too, have been a coconspirator in the
sleaze. Not that you were under any illusion about the turn Woodward's
career took when he became a justifying megaphone for ''Washington
insiders." Nor is it a surprise to find the dean of investigative
journalism acting like every other self-protecting member of the
establishment, since journalism itself has become a pillar of the
governing power structure. But Woodward represented something more than
all of this, and his quite American fall from grace (''The bigger they
come") presents a challenge to your conscience.
''Watergate" is the most familiar word in the political lexicon. It
means two things at once, referring first to the American low point,
when the White House became a den of law breakers. You remember that the
crimes of the Nixon cabal were meant to shore up the walls of deceit
behind which the war in Vietnam was being fought. Lies and unjustified
violence defined the nation's soul. But Watergate also became code for
the most dramatic reiteration of national redemption, when diligent
truth-seekers brought to light the methods and purposes of Nixon's band.
The myth of American goodness depends on the conviction that, when the
truth is finally apparent, the nation will act upon it. Watergate was
the morality tale that made it so, and Bob Woodward, with his partner
Carl Bernstein, was the moral hero. It is not too much to say that
Woodward rescued your ability to believe in your country again.
The free press is an absolute value not only because the unfettered flow
of information is essential to the republican system, nor only because
the fourth estate serves as a check on the power of the other three, but
because public expression is necessary for the communal self-awareness
that keeps the body politic alive. You routinely turn to the newspaper
each morning not only to learn what happened, but to stroke the
otherwise intangible bond you share with the neighbors and strangers in
whose company you will spend the day. Reading the morning paper is like
tagging up, a literal ''touching wood," a dispelling of the darkness of
night, all done in the knowledge that everyone else is doing the same
thing, which gives you not only a place to start the day from, but a
reassurance that you are not alone in your concern for the common good.
The news media do for democracy what liturgy does for religion; what
poetry does for experience; what gesture does for feeling. With words
out of silence, the press tells you who you are.
And why shouldn't you be disturbed by Woodward's fall? As Watergate was
about the war in Vietnam, so the Valerie Plame affair is about the war
in Iraq. Woodward turns out to have been just another embedded reporter,
doing the war-work of the Bush administration while pretending to be
independent of it. But, speaking generally, the press has not been
independent since the traumas of the autumn of 2001. Newsrooms were
themselves targeted by the anthrax killer, and the fear that paralyzed
the nation was felt as much by reporters as by anyone.
So also that season's grief. Like frightened and heart-sick scribes
looking to Marines to protect them on the battlefield, and therefore
unable to write critically about their protectors, the news media, with
rare exceptions, simply embraced and passed along Bush's purposes and
justifications, not matter how palpably dishonest. Judith Miller was the
public captain of this enterprise, but Woodward was her secret
co-captain. This time, he was his own Deep Throat.
Your naiveté consisted in the belief that, after Vietnam, your nation
would never again embark on a criminal and unnecessary war. After a
popular movement, inspired by tribunes of the free press, stopped the
Vietnam War, you believed that the government would be responsive to the
will of the people, forgetting that the people can surrender that will.
The finger-pointing in Washington now -- who voted for what, when and
why -- is truly pointless. The merest glance back at the prewar debates
shows that the justifications for war were all made of tissue. If the
press treated them as substantial, that is because the nation itself,
which still includes you, needed the tissue to cover its shame. The
tissue of lies is yours.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/11/21/the_fall_of_bob_woodward/
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