Mind and Destiny

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Name: Jim O'Leary
Location: Delhi, N.Y., United States

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Sunday, February 24, 2008

A Vicious Joke

David Corn is a regular contributor to Salon. On June 25, 1998, he wrote an article for Salon entitled: “How Sen. John McCain’s tasteless two-liner about Chelsea Clinton and Janet Reno was censored out of the nation’s leading newspapers.” Excerpts of that article follow:

“During the last few months, many established media outlets have decided to report innuendo and rumor about the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal... But this new standard in the practice of journalism seemingly does not extend to other political figures, at least not media darlings like Sen. John McCain. Earlier this month, at a Republican Senate fund-raiser, McCain told a downright nasty joke making fun of Janet Reno, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Chelsea Clinton.

“The fact that McCain had made the tasteless joke was reported in major newspapers, as was the vain attempt by his press secretary to initially deny what McCain had done. But in several major newspapers, the joke itself was kept a secret. When McCain subsequently apologized to President Clinton, the Washington Post, in its personality section, noted the apology but said the joke ‘was too vicious to print.’

“The Los Angeles Times, in its Life & Style section, provided an oblique rendering of the joke that did not fully convey its ugliness. When Maureen Dowd penned a column in the New York Times about the joke, she wrote that McCain ‘is so revered by the press that his disgusting jape was largely nudged under the rug.’ But Dowd chose not to relay the joke, either.

“The joke did appear in McCain’s hometown paper, the Arizona Republic, and the Associated Press did report the joke in full, so everyone in the press had access to McCain’s words. But by censoring themselves, the Post, the Times and others helped McCain deflect flak and preserved his status as a Republican presidential contender.

Salon feels its readers deserve the unadulterated truth. Though no tape of McCain’s quip has yet emerged, this is what he reportedly said: “Why is Chelsea Clinton so ugly? Because her father is Janet Reno.”

“McCain’s two-liner conveys some interesting insights into what he considers humorous (lesbianism, a young woman’s physical appearance), particularly since it was delivered to a Republican crowd. Remember, this is the party that champions pro-family values.

“But the joke revealed more than a mean streak in a man who would be president. It also exposed how the Washington Post, New York Times and Los Angeles Times play favorites when reporting the foibles of our leading politicians.”

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