No.
3 In a Series About Pinch Sulzberger’s Apologies to Graduating
College Seniors for His Failed Life
Pinch Sulzberger Apologizes for His Failed Life but Makes Things Worse,
Pinch Realizes He Has Done Wrong to America and His Children but He
Will Probably Never Accept that His Newspapers Are Still Damaging
Our Society
More Lies from Pinch Sulzberger and His Personal Friend, Sen.
Chuck Schumer, as They Seek to Destroy President Bush
Calling for Tony Snow: “Where Are You, Tony?”
After
reminding the new college graduates of the butterfly-theory (a fanciful
exaggeration of Judeo-Christian beliefs that all actions, no matter
how tiny, have a tremendous effect upon the world), Pinch told his captive
audience earlier this week the following:
“When I graduated from college in 1974, my fellow students
and I had just ended the war in Vietnam.“
Even Pinch quickly admitted, “Okay, that’s not quite true.”
But it's worse than that, Pinch. It’s not even close to "true".
What Others Say About Pinch
Let’s look at what others say about Pinch’s life.
The well-known Bernard Goldberg labeled him as the “most dangerous”
person in America (after Michael Moore who was in a separate category)
in Goldberg’s newest book, “100 People who are Screwing up America.”
The following page is a portion of Bernie’s newest book, which
tells how he feels about Pinch.
“The New York Times is a
far cry from what it once was --- and will surely remain so as long
as Pinch Sulzberger is in place. Because
while editors will come and go, he is the constant --- the Times version
of a permanent government --- and he remains unapologetically dedicated
to using the paper’s influence to impose his notion of the way America
ought to be --- on all the rest of us.”
Bernie then tells
what he calls a “famous story” about Pinch.
“It seems that back
in the 60s, when young Pinch was such a committed student activist
against the war in Vietnam that he was twice arrested in antiwar protests,
his exasperated father, then-Times publisher, Arthur Sulzberger Sr.,
asked him a simple question: ‘If a young American soldier comes upon
a young Vietnamese soldier, which one do you want to see get shot?’
“Pinch didn’t even
hesitate. It was, he said, ‘the dumbest question I ever heard in my
life,’ adding ‘I would want to see the American get shot.
It’s the other guy’s country.’
“As the man in charge
of the nation’s most powerful and influential newspaper --- the one
from which almost all the major news outlets, including the networks,
slavishly take their cues --- he has probably done more than anyone
to destroy the confidence of millions of ordinary Americans in the
fairness and basic integrity of the so-called mainstream media.”
A Disastrous Family Battle
We’re witnessing today a disastrous
fight within the Sulzberger family.
Pinch is battling all his ancestors, including his father. Pinch says they were all homophobes. He is not inaccurate in that statement. Pinch’s grandmother (the mother of Pinch’s father,
Punch Sulzberger, who could not read the paper because of his dyslexia
but was Chairman for 34 years) was so extreme in her dislike of homosexuals
that she prevented the Times from providing any dialogue or leadership
when psychiatrists, artists, etc. began to change their views.
Meanwhile,
Pinch is apparently not overtly homosexual (with a wife and children),
but he revels in discussing homosexuality with many friends who dress
in women’s clothes. This has
been explained fully by us many times and can be found in our free Archives or in Atty. Pawlick’s
book, “Libel
by New York Times.”
Whatever your feelings
about homosexuality, our nation has been drawn into a battle within
the Sulzberger family between Pinch, its Chairman since 1997, and
the rest of the clan. When one owns the multi-billion dollar conglomerate
known as The New York Times Company and the Chairman is seeking to
“get even” with his father and others, it has poisonous consequences
for our nation. This is documented
in the many histories of the New York Times, particularly "The
Trust."
Founder of MassNews First Challenged Pinch in 1999
When the founder of MassNews, Atty. J. Edward Pawlick first challenged
the Times/Boston Globe conglomerate back in 1999 and then intensified
his challenges in 2001 after the Times/Globe libeled Pawlick’s wife
16 times, Pawlick had never heard of Pinch Sulzberger nor had most
Americans. He didn’t know that
this newspaper was owned and controlled by a few members of one family.
But now on the portion of
Fox News channel still controlled by Brit Hume, there is a constant
drumbeat to expose the New York Times. You don’t hear much about Pinch
yet. But you will as this story continues to unfold.
Even fewer had heard of
Publisher/Attorney Pawlick in 1999. But the lawyers in his home state
of Massachusetts have always revered his newspaper, Lawyers Weekly,
which Pawlick founded in 1972.
What a contrast with the inherited
wealth of the Sulzbergers. Despite
this contrast, Pawlick had the courage after 25 years of being a Publisher/Attorney
to challenge the largest, most-famous paper in the world --- because
it had a total monopoly in his home-state of Massachusetts. By that
time, Lawyers Weekly had grown to 120 employees (40 lawyers, 20 writers,
40 in sales and 20 others) working in seven states as the acknowledged
leader for newspapers for lawyers across the nation.
Pinch Was
Nasty to the Young Black Man in His Care, Jayson Blair
Everyone knows what
happened to the 22-year-old black man, Jayson Blair, who Pinch carefully
took under his care with “butterfly wings.” When the young man had
trouble adjusting to such a heady atmosphere (after all, no white
22-year-old had ever been thrust by the Times into such pressure)
and his presence became a threat to Pinch, he was quickly thrown to
the wolves. The New York Times had to grovel for the first time in
history. A memo from Pinch and his top two editors said, “We
accept our responsibility,” but the two editors resigned a few weeks
later and Pinch is still there.
We Will Spend Holiday Weekend Planning How to Explain This
“Confession” to the Nation
We will be spending most
of our holiday vacation by planning how to explain this epoch-making
story to the nation. It should be a book, but you don’t have
time to read a book and we don’t have the time to write it.
Please do us a favor, though, and keep advising us how the
story resonates with you. |