Man Who Assaulted TPUSA Reporter 'Second-Guessing' Living in the United States
Congolese Refugees Protest Outside the White House Accusing US of Not Doing Enough...
Houston City Councilwoman Celebrates Lesbian Visibility Week, Which Is a Thing
Three-Armed Iranian SEALS Swimming With Rifles Makes Us Question That Iran Is Winning...
Decision Desk HQ Projects the VA Gerrymandering Referendum Will Pass
Left Mad, Ratios Insane, Business Booming: Jimmy’s Famous Seafood Plays Hardball on X
Set Your DVRs: John Kerry to Make 'Special Appearance' on Colbert After Last-Minute...
Axios: DeSantis and Trump Discuss Top Roles — Supreme Court Named as Governor’s...
WATCH Special Election Results for Dems' DISGRACEFUL Push to Gerrymander Virginia LIVE on...
Rep. Jayapal Loves Cuba's 'Remarkable' Healthcare ... Cubans Risk Death on Rafts to...
Ms. Rachel, Stop Lying and Stay in Your Lane: Toddlers Don’t Need Your...
Tucker Carlson Will Be 'Tormented for a Long Time' for Playing a Part...
Talking Skit: Jake Tapper Puts in Scripted Appearance on Colbert to Promote WHCD...
Tim Walz: Democrats Would Win the ‘Battle of Ideas’ Against Republicans If Their...
Obama Bro Says Jewish Insider ‘Intentionally Misinterpreted’ Chris Murphy’s Sarcastic Twee...

What could go wrong? NYT rationale for determining offensive images 'doesn't seem like a healthy precedent'

As Twitchy reported Monday, the New York Times, which declined to reproduce Charlie Hebdo cartoons on its pages, was called out for their double standard on “art” after publishing a portrait of Pope Benedict XVI made out of 17,000 condoms.

Advertisement

The Times’ explained the decision:

The standards editor of the New York Times, Philip B. Corbett, responded to accusations of double standards this way [emphasis ours]:

I don’t think these situations — the Milwaukee artwork and the various Muhammad caricatures — are really equivalent. For one thing, many people might disagree, but museum officials clearly consider this Johnson piece to be a significant artwork. Also, there’s no indication that the primary intent of the portrait is to offend or blaspheme (the artist and the museum both say that it is not intended to offend people but to raise a social question about the fight against AIDS). And finally, the very different reactions bear this out. Hundreds of thousands of people protested worldwide, for instance, after the Danish cartoons were published some years ago. While some people might genuinely dislike this Milwaukee work, there doesn’t seem to be any comparable level of outrage.

Well, at least they admitted it.

Advertisement

No, it doesn’t.


https://twitter.com/instapundit/status/616248939889717249
https://twitter.com/SlapperBitch/status/616250177704300544
https://twitter.com/WBH_Politics/status/616248148055339008

Advertisement


https://twitter.com/Yair_Rosenberg/status/616247841502142464

This FIFY headline is more appropriate:

Nailed it!

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement