"Kennedy docs show death threats as late as 1985"
That is the AP headline this morning over a story on newly released documents dealing with the life of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of the House of Hyannisport.
Now please read carefully from the second AP paragraph, to which the headline refers:
"The documents showed that on May 23, 1985, the U.S. Capitol Police passed onto the FBI a copy of a letter sent to the Secret Service, ostensibly by a Warren, Mich., resident. The sender, whose name was redacted, declared: 'Brass tacks, I'm gonna kill Kennedy and (President Ronald) Reagan, and I really mean it'."
The crazy Michigan woman didn't kill anyone, but this morning an AP writer and at least one AP editor murdered a fair segment of the media's remaining credibility.
Call it a stupid mistake by two so-called professionals who know full well that many, many readers never go further than the headline and that fewer still go beyond the first paragraph. The quoted paragraph follows a lede also mentioning the threat to Teddy but not the president.
Call it a stupid mistake by two so-called professionals who know full well that many, many readers never go further than the headline and that fewer still go beyond the first paragraph. The quoted paragraph follows a lede also mentioning the threat to Teddy but not the president.
Or perhaps they were aware of the readership studies but somehow secured employment with the world's largest (and once great) wire service with news judgment which holds that a threat to assassinate a senator is highly significant while an identical threat against a sitting president is worth just a throwaway line.
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There's also some fresh documentation that we are quite correct in despising the youngest Kennedy for his cowardice and calculated lies and actions while Mary Jo sucked in that last horrid lungful of sea water. But it is buried deep in the usually unread sentences which, like as not, would be on the dead-tree jump page if not cut altogether.
For instance, the FBI helped Ted buy time to get his story arranged for the fawning reporters who aspired, above all, to be favored Kennedy courtiers.
For instance, the FBI helped Ted buy time to get his story arranged for the fawning reporters who aspired, above all, to be favored Kennedy courtiers.