When it comes to the awful abuse of children, it sure seems like the
Boston Globe doesn't get too worked up unless the words Cardinal,
bishop, or priest is in someone's job title.
Over seven years ago, beginning on January 6, 2002, the Boston Globe
initiated a relentless, no-stone-unturned investigation into terrible abuse in
the Catholic Church. By the time the calendar year 2002 ended, the Globe
had published a mind-blowing 989 articles. (That's not a typo.
Yes, the paper ran an average of over two-and-a-half articles a day on
the scandal in a single year.
See for yourself.) And the Globe still takes joy in hammering the
Church, even if it means reporting clergy abuse
in Ireland.
Yet this past week, the Globe's response to the apprehension of Roman
Polanski has been a proverbial shrug. No stinging editorials about the
despicable abuse by Polanski. No blistering op-eds about the callous
Hollywood celebrities who actually ran to the defense of the sick
Polanski. The Globe has not even devoted any of their own columnists to
the story. Rather the paper has simply run a few news pieces
from
other
newspapers.
A
number
of
columnists have aired the same thought that I also had when the
news of Polanski's arrest surfaced last week: If Roman Polanski were
Father Roman Polanski, he would have been in jail ages ago, and no
one would be arguing about it. (The closest that someone at the Globe
actually comes to formulating this thought is in
Michael Paulson's blog at boston.com.)
Non-Globe readers may be surprised that the Boston paper
fawns and
swoons for celebrities just as much as the Los Angeles Times and the
New York Times do. Is the Globe downplaying the rape of a minor because
of the abuser's vocation? It sure seems so.
Double standard? Yup.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
TheMediaReport.com:
Los Angeles Times: Clergy Abuse and School Abuse
TheMediaReport.com:
Falsehoods and Outrageous Statements by Abuse Attorney John Manly