I’ve been following the story about the disgustingly depraved behavior of the student-heckler at Ann Coulter’s speech at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas this past Tuesday. After a couple of days of hearing and reading about this, I decided that I should check out what the local newspaper has to say about the incident.
I haven’t subscribed to the Austin-American Statesman for years because of what I perceive as an extreme liberal bias–not only on the editorial page–but also in the hard news stories. I quite enjoy the at least once-a-year telephone call I get asking poll questions about the paper. I always politely and fully answer the questions–perhaps a bit too fully for the interviewer who is generally asking multiple choice questions. My views of the paper were confirmed today when I checked the online version.
The paper didn’t cover Ann’s speech or the incident until today–with only a short blurb in something called the Central Texas Digest (free registration required):
Heckler arrested at Coulter speech
A heckler was arrested Tuesday night during a lecture by conservative speaker and writer Ann Coulter at the LBJ Auditorium at the University of Texas, campus police said. Ajai Raj is charged with disorderly conduct, a class C misdemeanor, police said.
The lack of coverage did not sit well with some of the readership who e-mailed the editor with protests the editor discusses on his blog (free registration required):
Two e-mails have arrived this morning from readers irate that we didn’t cover the heckler who interrupted a lecture by TV personality Ann Coulter Wednesday night at the LBJ School over at UT. We did, as you’ll see by following the link and scrolling down to the third item.
One e-mailer, a regular, criticized the “Pravda on the Lower Colorado†for failing to publish anything on the heckler. He was wrong, as he often is.
The second was more nuanced. He wondered why we didn’t do more with the story:
“The article in yesterday’s Statesman re decreased newspaper circulation here and around the nation should be no surprise to anyone who uses the Internet as a tool to widen news awareness horizons. A case in point: today’s Statesman gives but one mildly-worded column inch to the arrest of a U.T. English major for disorderly conduct at Ann Coulter’s recent lecture. The Statesman elected to provide no details of the incident whatsoever. One has to go to the Internet to read what actually happened, and it’s in plain ‘view’ on a number of news websites, ie. Drudge, and blogs. The virulently obscene question this ‘Pride of the U.T. English Department’ asked Ms. Coulter is the best clue to the political ambience in our overwhelmingly liberal universities. Your editors didn’t have to use exact quotes, but they could have easily worded around it thereby giving the story much more effect, unless, that is, they didn’t want to embarrass U.T. even more. It’s a real cesspool down there.â€
He’s right. Internet use affects newspaper circulation for the worse. The implicit question is whether the dustup at UT deserves more space than we gave it. In other words, it’s a question of news judgment. We decided it was not, and I’m comfortable with that.
The fact that Sean Hannity made hay of the incident, as if Ann Coulter were some lonely voice forced to cower in the face of a “virulently obscene question,†is laughable. Ms. Coulter soldiered on, and the viral spread of her ordeal around the blogosphere this morning is proof that she emerged not just unbowed, but unbloodied, too.
The last paragraph by the editor misses the point clearly laid out by the e-mailer. The story is not Ann Coulter’s reaction to and survival of the actions by this heckler. The story is that ideological thuggery has been incubating on the campuses of this country’s universities and is now breaking out into vulgar behavior and assault–all in an attempt to intimidate and to squash participation in the market of ideas by conservatives and even liberals who refuse to conform. The editor’s response is pathetic. Had the heckler been a member of the KKK disrupting the speech of Al Sharpton, I am certain that the paper would have focused on the threat such an action poses to free speech, instead of lamely claiming there was no story because Al Sharpton was a grown man able to handle it.
On the other hand, the paper does cover the speech given by Justice Scalia at Texas A&M University–my alma mater. I can assure you that the vast majority of students at Texas A&M–whether Republican or Democrat (though I assert that Texas A&M is “red flyover country while UT is decidedly more blue)– would not stand by and allow a heckler to spew filth and make vulgar gestures at a guest on campus–and they wouldn’t wait for security to handle the situation either. Just try walking on the off-limits grass near some of the war memorials on campus if you want to know what I mean.
When I was a freshman at Texas A&M in 1974, William Kunstler spoke. If there was a student present at that speech who agreed with him–it wasn’t evident to me. Nonetheless, all of the students who asked question of Mr. Kunstler were extremely respectful and polite.
Getting back to the Austin American Statesman’s story of the speech by Justice Scalia, (free registration required) it is clear that Justice Scalia was treated with great courtesy and respect by the students at Texas A&M. Of course, the reporter has to unsheath a claw to take a swipe because of that fact:
“Societies only mature, they never rot,” Scalia quipped, to the delight of the laughing audience.
During a question-and-answer period, Scalia only received softball inquiries. One questioner identified himself as a member of the Young Conservatives of Texas and the next as a member of the Texas A&M Young Republicans.
That led Scalia to ask: “Am I totally preaching to the choir?”
To that, many in the crowd laughed, and applauded. (emphasis added)
So–a “dustup” at a speech of a well-known pundit and best-selling author taking place at a major university located in the paper’s home town is not news–but students acting respectfully and actually enjoying a speech by Justice Scalia a hundred miles away is news? I think that both stories are newsworthy–but one can be twisted to take a dig at the more conservative students of Texas A&M.
This is why I refuse to spend money on the local newspaper.