• sunzu
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    -15 months ago

    In return, Duranty won rare interviews with Stalin and wrote glowingly about Stalin and his plans. The Pulitzer board cited his “dispassionate interpretive reporting” in awarding him a prize in 1932 for a series of reports the previous year. The first was a front-page article that started with the line: “Russia today cannot be judged by Western standards or interpreted in Western terms.”

    In 2003, public pressure led the Times and the Pulitzer Prize Board to conduct parallel reviews of Duranty’s work and the prize. The board found no “clear and convincing evidence of deliberate deception.” It decided against withdrawing his award.

    Exhibit No. 1 for for NYT’s editorial quality.

    https://www.npr.org/2022/05/08/1097097620/new-york-times-pulitzer-ukraine-walter-duranty

    • @fukhuesonOP
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      -15 months ago

      The posted article is not an editorial, so I don’t understand the relevance.

      • sunzu
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        5 months ago

        Duranty example shows that editors at NYT will permit political/ideological bias to shape coverage even if it is to cover up a genocide.

        Now today’s example is hard to cover up, but NYT is not here on Palestinians team, never has been. Their coverage is there to make liberal American to accept the situation as is, nothing can be done, Israel is not doing a genocide but if they are, Gaza residents had it coming anyway.

        • @fukhuesonOP
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          5 months ago

          This is completely unfounded with regards to the reporting (not editorializing). You provide absolutely no evidence to support this biased opinion.

          This is verging on conspiratorial misinformation, and an attempt to baselessly discredit the posted article.

          • sunzu
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            45 months ago

            I provide a historical fact where NYT was instrumental of covering up a genocide in 1930s and I suggested that they are a bad faith actor here too, which is my opinion.

            conspiratorial misinformation

            You not liking another person’s opinion does not make their opinion a conspiracy btw

            I could be wrong, clearly another poster feels similar though.

            But the bottom line is that NYT already did this before, that is a fact. Time will tell what role they played here, it took 70 years for truth to come for the last “trick”

            • @fukhuesonOP
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              -55 months ago

              I’m not going to continue this with you. How absolutely absurd that you’re attempting to discredit this article due to something that happened nearly a century ago. Mbfc’s analysis of nyt now strikingly doesn’t include your aforementioned concern, perhaps your should update them with this insight and see if it moves their needle? :)

              • sunzu
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                25 months ago

                I am providing context on how NYT behaves. People can make their own decisions on NYTs credibility. Maybe it was just one off.