And I always was led to believe that freedom of speech doesn't mean say whatever you darn old please, but to refer to it as freedom of expression instead. As long as there's an "in my opinion" in front of a phrase, then you're in the clear. But, I think most of us would even say this about each other, as soon as someone throws an "in my opinion" into a conversation we all just tune out and say, "that idiots opinion isn't worth squat. thank you for wasting 20 seconds of my life." I think we can all comfortably do the same thing with this piece here.
9/26/2007 1:52:10 AM
U NEED 2 STFUIMO
9/26/2007 1:54:00 AM
I googled the "columnist" and he's the same guy who went out of his way to embarrass army recruiters back in 2005 in Golden, CO when he was 17. Basically the guy went into a recruiters office and said that he was a dropout who did drugs and the recruiters told him how to get around that. It made national news at the time and lead the army to review recruiting practices.In light of that, the guy seems like you're average 19 year old college smart ass who jerks off to Rage Against the Machine.[Edited on September 26, 2007 at 2:07 PM. Reason : .]
9/26/2007 2:03:12 PM
^bahaha
9/26/2007 2:46:10 PM
9/26/2007 2:47:35 PM
Statement From CSU Editor J. David McSwanehttp://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/14194938/detail.html
9/26/2007 3:19:38 PM
BECAUSE A COLLEGE RAG HAS THE RIGHT TO EXPRESS STATEMENTS OF PROFOUND RETARDATION CONNECTED TO UNRELATED INCIDENTS, AND THEN CLAIM THE PHILOSOPHICAL HERITAGE OF THOMAS JEFFERSON!!!!1DOWN WITH THE TYRANNY OF GOVERNMENT-SANCTIONED TABLOID JOURNALISM!!!1VIVA CSU COLLEGIAN!!!!1goddammit. you fuckers are gonna turn me into a conservative yet.
9/26/2007 7:18:42 PM
Kumbaya, my Lord, kumbaya. . . .
9/26/2007 11:26:32 PM
^^both sides are crazy, one is just crazier
9/26/2007 11:31:13 PM
^^^ hahahaha
9/26/2007 11:42:27 PM
a very good friend of mine who writes for several newspapers in greensboro wrote this as an article (listed in his blog) and i thought it was very well written:http://lukemcintyre.blogspot.com/ Fallout from the F-bomb - Colorado styleFORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -- The editor of the Colorado State University newspaper says he has no plans to resign amid criticism about an obscenity used in an editorial about President Bush.The four-word editorial, published Friday in the Rocky Mountain Collegian, said in large type, "Taser this. (Expletive) Bush."J. David McSwane, the Collegian's editor-in-chief and a CSU junior, said the newspaper's governing board may fire him but he won't voluntarily step down."I think that'd be an insult to the staff who supported the editorial," McSwane told the Fort Collins Coloradoan in Monday's editions.The newspaper's business manager has said the operation lost $30,000 in advertising in the hours after the editorial was published, and that the pay of student staffers would be cut 10 percent to compensate.McSwane said the newspaper's student editors decided to use the obscenity because they believe CSU students are apathetic about their freedom of speech and other rights."We thought the best way to illustrate that point was to use our freedoms," he said. Full article hereThose who read The Carolinian may remember my opinion on cursing.In a college paper there are times you can defend "adult language." We are, after all, printing our paper for adults. But that decision has to be defensible just like every decision has to be, from whether you run an article to hiring or firing a writer to changing the color of your skybox.Oddly enough, my column on cursing also included the phrase "Fuck Bush."And, like all words, curse words carry meanings and can be used for a purpose. During the course of any political discussion with friends, I will never say "I disapprove of President Bush's stances and I dislike him very much as a person." I will say, probably a number of times, "Fuck Bush." Those two words won't be the crux of my argument, of course, but it's a perfect description of how I feel about our president.Of course, it wasn't a full 50 percent of what I had to say, and I went on to tie that usage in with the 60s Supreme Court case Cohen v. California that defended a man who had the phrase "Fuck the Draft" posted on the back of his jacket. The difference there being that the back of a jacket is only so big. With a newspaper you'd have to come up with a reason not to include seven or eight hundred words explaining your opinion. The problem with the Colorado editorial is that there isn't one.Running a four-word editorial like that seems to be the equivalent of having an opportunity to speak with a person in great detail about your political beliefs, and instead screaming "FUCK [political group here]!" over and over. Doesn't make a lot of sense. In fact, it's a pretty stupid decision on their part, and they deserve the flak they're catching for it.Seeing the difference between a situations where something is defensible and when it isn't is what you call editorial judgement. And, like McSwane, before writing that column I asked the rest of the editorial board what they thought about it. A couple were a little surprised that I even asked. Yes, is the obvious answer. Yes, that column is defensible.But the same word isn't always the same word, and just yesterday I cut the word "bullshit" out of someone's column because I couldn't think of a single reason for it to be there. Being an editor sometimes means being a dick and not giving someone their way. It also means thinking long and hard about a decision and then making the right one, even if you really don't want to. On a college paper you have to realize that can include anything up to and including firing a friend. Or, more importantly, realizing when you have messed up so badly that you can't defend keeping your own job.You shouldn't think: can I get away with this one decision?You think: can I defend myself to the inevitable litany of questions and accusations to come? There's no defense like making consistantly ethical, based on the rules decisions. No chance of a "what about that time you did this?"In the end, it's not about you. It's about defending the newspaper that was around before you and, assuming you don't screw up too badly, will continue on in the future.posted by Luke McIntyre at 9/25/2007 07:01:00 AM
9/27/2007 4:08:30 AM
Here's the deal.McSwane has been jonesing for more national media attention since his last episode (which at least had societal value).... This was the best way he could think of to bring the spotlight back to him.and it will work. upon graduation, he will land a media position that would not normally have been attainable to him.I'm thinking, his first gig post-college will be something like Assistant Communications Director for MoveOn.Org[Edited on September 27, 2007 at 12:21 PM. Reason : ]
9/27/2007 12:20:59 PM
i don't see a problem with the headline. Actually it's kind of funny. Man, people just don't have a sense of humor anymore ...Really this comes down to the gratuitous use of a "bad word." Because it's offensive. Because the paper, when laden with profanity, cannot adequately market itself to the Main Street, middle-American, small-business owners who advertise within its pages. No longer can the local head shops, pizza take-out places, apartment complexes, and sundry book buy-back services advertise there. No sir. Too offensive.These people take themselves too seriously. College newspapers aren't serious forums. They don't hire professional journalists. The advertisers are usually mom'n'pops looking for cheap distribution. And the college newspapers that _do_ take themselves seriously, are usually boring and pretentious (see: the Daily Tar Heel).So, my advice to the administration is -- take a deep breath, laugh it off, and stop pretending that the college rag matters.
9/27/2007 9:41:33 PM
^totally agree. Censorship in America has gotten rediculous. He tried to make a point. Maybe some took something from it, maybe some didnt, and obviously some were offended. When offending someone was deemed a crime I must have been a few beers deep at a tailgate cause i sure don't remember. Get a sense of humor or deal with it...either way, just move on.
9/28/2007 11:00:31 AM
What censorship? He made his speech, and now the advertisers at the paper are making theirs. If he gets fired over this, it will be because his actions caused harm to the paper, not because of his political views. The same would have happened if he had published a "Fuck anarchy" message and advertisers started pulling funds.
9/28/2007 11:11:50 AM
guess what?his stunt to get personal attention to satisfy his vanity, has caused the CSU paper to lose significant advertising revenue -- thousands of dollars in recurring contracts -- and forced THE ENTIRE STAFF TO HAVE THEIR WAGES PERMANENTLY REDUCED BY 10% TO COMPENSATEwhat a fucking douchebag.I'd say that's serious business, and is not a matter of "lightening up" or "getting a sense of humor" about a "bad word"[Edited on September 28, 2007 at 7:58 PM. Reason : ]
9/28/2007 7:57:10 PM
^ Gee, I didn't know you could reduce minimum wage by 10%. Or that staff at a college paper worked there "permanently."Gimme a break; you make it sound like the guy is running a global multinational.Plus if you were at all capable of reading/understanding/comprehension/all-that-other-good-stuff, you'd note that my commentary above was directed at the mom'n'pop advertisers who were stupid enough to pull funding from the paper. Like the students are going to stop buying books from the local textbook dump because some idiot ran a "FUCK BUSH" headline one day.People just need to get a grip.
9/29/2007 12:54:37 PM
9/29/2007 1:00:04 PM
9/29/2007 1:34:10 PM
9/29/2007 1:34:47 PM
What if all advertisers stopped running ads because someone wrote an article detrimental to those advertisers' interests? And what if newspapers therefore refrained from printing important information that would have otherwise been printed?Corruption would inevitably ensue.
9/29/2007 3:24:20 PM
^, ^^^^Then the people need to write their own paper. If you are going to base your business' finances on other people, then you need to expect that if you make those people unhappy, your finances may disapear.Here's a thought: If the paper would not print something because it was detrimental to the interests of its advertisers, can you trust that the paper was ever printing the truth in the first place? Doesn't such a paper deserve to go under? And if they don't go under, don't such advertisers deserve to lose their advertising in such a well respected paper?
9/29/2007 4:10:41 PM
9/29/2007 5:14:58 PM
9/29/2007 5:23:24 PM
9/29/2007 5:57:29 PM
if the purpose of the news paper is educational then what better way to educate aspiring journalists than demonstrate what happens when you don't think and instead do things that piss off the people that pay you checks. If on the other hand it is supposed to be a place where anyone with two brain cells and a copy of notepad can spout whatever bullshit they feel with no consequences then they need to come up with a way of financing that doesn't depend on other people wanting to associate with you.
9/29/2007 6:12:52 PM
9/29/2007 7:01:12 PM
9/29/2007 7:04:10 PM
[an interesting point]
9/29/2007 8:23:50 PM
9/29/2007 9:00:26 PM
Instead of making a thoughtful piece that tied together the tasering of the student and the actions of the current administration, the kid decided to throw thoughtfulness aside, echo what has become a popular sentiment on college campuses, and hope that shock value would make his point for him. Ultimately he misjudged his audience and failed. I'm sure that after his last incident with army recruiters he feels that he's the next Michael Moore and as such any of his thoughts are valid political points.The fact that the school paper deemed a statement that was both incredibly mindless and potentially offensive as legitimate journalism hurt its credibility as well as its respect in the community. Advertisers have every right to jump ship when any media source turns in a direction that could embarrass them in the future - i.e. when a college paper begins to think that any poorly thought out, knee jerk reaction to a current event is political commentary that needs to be shared.
9/29/2007 9:49:47 PM
^
9/29/2007 10:52:13 PM
9/30/2007 1:37:54 AM
since when are Editorials put on the front page in 148-point font?
9/30/2007 1:47:04 AM
Smoker, I appreciate your commentary and hope that you understand that this response is not intended in any way to diminish your valid points. I agree with you on the majority of your post.My use of the term "journalism" may not have been as thought out as needed. However, "journalism" can be used to define any material written for publication in a newspaper or magazine or for broadcast. I certainly understand your point, but regardless of the author, any writing that is published in print media passes at least one person who deems it as appropriate and fitting of the topic at hand. Clearly the four words published as an opinion column are simply one person's opinion, but the simple fact is that someone thought that the incredibly mindless and potentially offensive few words were worth publishing. While not necessarily expressing the views of the paper, the staff still felt that a four word opinion piece based solely on shock value was worth printing.I understand your feelings towards Bush and can't blame you for any of them. However, the issue at hand is a loud mouth douche being tasered at a John Kerry speech, not the war in Iraq.
9/30/2007 3:56:57 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/05/cnnu.editor/index.html
10/5/2007 1:20:44 PM