"In normal times, local
law enforcement can uphold public order. But in rare moments, like ours today,
more is needed, even if many politicians prefer to wring their hands while the
country burns."
Running this puts black people in danger. And other Americans standing up for our humanity and democracy, too. @nytimes pic.twitter.com/MQAA2WJ6YG
— Mara Gay (@MaraGay) June 4, 2020
Also weighing in was Sewell Chan, the editorial page editor of the Los Angeles Times and former boy wonder at the NYT, who finished out there as, wait for it, op-ed editor. He wasn't happy with Cotton mussing up his once-beloved page.
THREAD: As a former @nytimes Op-Ed editor I am reluctant to weigh in on my alma mater. But the decision to publish @SenTomCotton calling for troop deployments to quell unrest falls short of sound journalistic practice. pic.twitter.com/SgXSndkq8l
— Sewell Chan (@sewellchan) June 3, 2020
It is
not unusual for right-leaning opinion articles in The Times to attract
criticism. This time, the outcry from readers, Times staff members and alumni
of the paper was strong enough to draw an online defense of the essay’s
publication from James Bennet, the editorial page editor.
“Times Opinion owes it to
our readers to show them counter-arguments, particularly those made by people
in a position to set policy,” Mr. Bennet wrote in a thread on Twitter. “We
understand that many readers find Senator Cotton’s argument painful, even
dangerous. We believe that is one reason it requires public scrutiny and
debate.”
The opinion section is run separately from the news side. Mr.
Bennet reports to the publisher, A.G. Sulzberger, as does the paper’s executive
editor, Dean Baquet, who is in charge of news coverage. The distinction between
opinion pieces and news articles is sometimes lost on readers, who may see an
Op-Ed — promoted on the same home page — as just another Times article.