By Nate Hochman
Wednesday,
February 15, 2023
There’s
a bumper-sticker slogan, invoked in defense of whatever left-wing cause célèbre
happens to be in the news that given week: “When you’re
accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.” It’s an appropriate summation of
the progressive allegation that the New York Times is too right-wing.
This fever dream hails from an alternate universe lightyears away from the
reality-based community.
The
latest iteration of this is today’s open
letter from
“nearly 200 New York Times contributors, a cadre of
celebrities, and the top LGBTQ media organization,” which “publicly condemned the
newspaper…for what some described as following the lead of far-right hate
groups’ in its coverage of trans issues,” the Daily Beast reports. The letter takes issue with the “Times coverage
debating the propriety of medical care for trans children,” which “has in
recent years treated gender diversity with an eerily familiar mix of
pseudoscience and euphemistic, charged language, while publishing reporting on
trans children that omits relevant information about its sources.”
Most
unforgivably, the letter notes some of that coverage has been cited by
conservative lawmakers and legislators in their efforts to combat gender ideology:
The natural destination of poor editorial judgment is the court of law.
Last year, Arkansas’ attorney general filed an amicus brief in defense of
Alabama’s Vulnerable Child Compassion and Protection Act, which would make it a
felony, punishable by up to 10 years’ imprisonment, for any medical provider to
administer certain gender-affirming medical care to a minor (including puberty blockers) that
diverges from their sex assigned at birth. The brief cited three different New York Times articles to justify its
support of the law: Bazelon’s “The Battle Over Gender Therapy,” Azeen
Ghorayshi’s “Doctors Debate Whether Trans Teens Need Therapy Before Hormones,”
and Ross Douthat’s “How to Make Sense of the New L.G.B.T.Q. Culture War.” As
recently as February 8th, 2023, attorney David Begley’s invited
testimony to the Nebraska state legislature in support of a similar bill approvingly
cited the Times’ reporting and relied on its reputation as the
“paper of record” to justify criminalizing gender-affirming care.
As noted
above, this is not a new talking point. Last month, left-wing blogger and
former Media Matters editor Parker Molloy — a signatory on today’s letter —
published a blog post titled: “The New York Times Declares War on
LGBTQ People With Hire of Anti-Trans Columnist.” That anti-trans columnist was . . . David
French. If you’re not familiar with his work, French is about the most moderate
conservative voice imaginable — so much so that he’s consistently invited
criticism from other conservatives, particularly those of a social bent, for
his overly charitable treatment of the cultural Left. (And for his opposition
to bans on drag queen
story hour and critical race
theory, and his
defenses of aspects of CRT and the concept of
systemic racism.)
But
that’s not enough for Molloy, who argues that the Times’ hiring of
French was simply more evidence of the paper’s pervasive anti-trans skew:
My point in this piece is that NYT’s columnist roster is absolutely
loaded with anti-trans voices with absolutely zero balance. For all the focus
the paper keeps putting on “the trans debate,” it doesn’t seem particularly
interested in actually involving trans people in said “debate” outside of the
stray “Look! Here’s a trans person writing a ‘guest essay’ for us!” token piece
they like to throw out there a couple of times a year. Meanwhile, their
columnists will fire out half-informed pieces criticizing trans people and
unnamed “trans activists” on the regular.
The
articles that both Molloy and today’s open letter cite are a handful of
relatively balanced reported pieces on the debate over gender ideology,
particularly as it pertains to children, that — Quelle horreur! —
attempt to give a fair hearing to both sides. They’re also angry about the fact
that the Times opinion page has been willing to give a hearing
to critics, as well as boosters, of the transgender movement.
But the
national paper of record’s openness to occasionally allowing dissidents in its
pages is not the same thing as an overall anti-trans bias — a claim for which
no empirical evidence is offered other than the fact that the paper allows said
dissidents to voice their views in its pages from time to time, in either
Molloy’s blog post or the open letter she signed.
Here are
a few other Times op-ed headlines: America Is
Being Consumed by a Moral Panic Over Trans People; I Chose to
Compete as My True, Trans Self. I Win Less, but I Live More; Is God
Transgender?; These 12
Transgender Americans Would Love You To Mind Your Own Business. Here are some from the non-opinion
sections: Transgender
Americans Feel Under Siege as Political Vitriol Rises; Fears of
Violence Rise on New Front in Gender Debate: Drag Shows; A Trans Icon
of the 20th Century Revived by Trans Stars of the 21st Century; G.O.P. State
Lawmakers Push a Growing Wave of Anti-Transgender Bills. (“Over the past three years, Republican
state lawmakers have put forward a barrage of bills to regulate the lives of
transgender youths,” the final piece notes. “The potential consequences for
transgender people, for whom harassment and threats have become common and
suicide rates are high, are profound.”)
If
that’s not enough, the actual Times editorial board hews to a
decisively pro-trans line. A December editorial, “How Americans
Can Stand Against Extremism,” argued: “The silence from a great majority of Republicans on the
demonization of, and lies about, trans people has indeed meant complicity —
complicity in what experts call stochastic terrorism, in which vicious rhetoric
increases the likelihood of random violence against the people who are the
subject of the abusive language and threats.”
These
are hardly the musings of a right-wing publication. But the allegations of the
paper’s rightward skew are activist in nature. The open letter’s objections are
telling — the Times published “reporting on trans children
that omits relevant information about its sources.” (Not that the reporting
is wrong, but that it didn’t do enough to inform readers that
some of the sources it reported on were the bad guys.) Some of the reports were
used “to justify criminalizing gender-affirming care” — again, not
that they were factually incorrect, but that they gave aid and comfort to the
enemy.
What
this uproar is about, in essence, is that these activist writers see papers
like the Times as theirs — conservatives
aren’t supposed to get a hearing, and any effort to give them one is thus an
unacceptable concession to the Right.
In other
words: When you’re accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.
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