BY DAN
KENNEDY
Notes and observations on
the press, politics, culture, technology, and more. To sign up for
e-mail delivery, click
here. To send
an e-mail to Dan Kennedy, click
here.
For bio, published work, and links to other blogs, visit
www.dankennedy.net.
For information on Dan Kennedy's book, Little People: Learning to
See the World Through My Daughter's Eyes (Rodale, October 2003),
click
here.
Wednesday, May 12, 2004
THE TERRIBLE DEATH OF NICHOLAS
BERG. Okay, I've seen the video. Good Lord, what a horrible,
undeserved death
Nicholas Berg suffered at the hands of terrorists in Iraq. A website
I'd been directed to couldn't make the connection, but it took me no
more than a few minutes to locate and download a copy with LimeWire.
Such is the modern media environment. I have nothing profound to say
about this horrific act. A few random observations:
- Berg's family
is probably right that their son was singled out for execution
because he's Jewish. An odd wrinkle, though, is that his killers
apparently said nothing about Berg's being a Jew on the
five-minute-plus videotape. By contrast, when Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was beheaded by terrorists, their propaganda video dwelled at length on Pearl's
Jewish background.
- When CBS News aired the
non-gruesome parts of the Pearl video two years ago, it was widely
criticized. When the Phoenix posted
a link to the entire video,
and published two small images, including Pearl's severed head, in
its print edition, it set off a nationwide controversy. By contrast,
the pre-execution portions of the Berg video have already been widely
aired. At least one rather mainstream website, based in Arizona, has
already posted the entire video. And pro-war radio talk-show hosts
this morning are demanding that the major networks air the video,
under the guise of reminding Americans of why we're fighting. Why the
difference? I've always believed the media showed unusual deference
to Pearl's family - far more than they would under most circumstances
- because Pearl was a fellow journalist. More important, sadly, is
that we've all become increasingly desensitized after nearly three
years of constant war.
- Unlike the Pearl video, which was
a pretty unambiguous portrayal of Islamist terrorism, the meaning of
the Berg video depends entirely on one's preconceived notions about
the war in Iraq. Supporters of the war will argue that it shows why
we must keep on fighting. Opponents will counter that it's further
proof we shouldn't be in Iraq in the first place. As for those who
say - as the terrorists themselves claimed - that it was in direct
response to the abuses and torture at Abu Ghraib, I'm with CNN's
Aaron Brown, who said
last night, "The fact is these guys never need a reason to kill
Americans, hostages or otherwise. If it is in their interest, and it
is sick to think that killing an American in Iraq is in anyone's
interest, but if it is they would have done it anyway. Danny Pearl
was murdered and what exactly was the reason for that?"
posted at 11:04 AM |
0 comments
|
link
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
MEDIA LOG ARCHIVES
Dan Kennedy is senior writer and media critic for the Boston Phoenix.