I was willing to give Newsweek the benefit of the doubt over their botched story last week. Although they should have confirmed the story with multiple sources, I wasn't willing to blame them for the deaths due to riots last week, and by most accounts Michael Isikoff is a pretty straightforward journalist that doesn't show extreme bias in his articles.
However, this is
over the line:
According to the Japanese blogger
Riding Sun, the headline (writing in white) reads "The Day America Died". And as you can see, the American flag has been stuck in a trash can. This cover appeared in the Japanese edition of Newsweek on February 2.
Now I'm not one to get salty at someone because they disrespect the American flag, because when it comes down to it, it's a piece of cloth. Patriotism and love of country and region comes from the heart, something that people can't burn or abuse.
But the International and American covers of Newsweek were different than the Japanese one. I won't post those because the photos are on his server (or, well, Blogger's) server and I'm sure enough bandwidth has been used from people hotlinking them to last a lifetime.
But
here's the International version. It's a photo of Bush with the headline "America Leads, But Is Anyone Following?" Both the International and Japanese versions have the
lead story by Andrew Moravcsik; the International version was titled, "Dream On, America" and it was titled in the Japanese version, "America, the dream country, is rotting away."
But the
American version was totally different. Not only did they not have the anti-American sentiments of the other versions, but they didn't publish Moravcsik's article either. The cover featured Oscar winners Jamie Foxx, Hilary Swank, and Leonardo Di Caprio. And note: Moravcsik is a professor at
Princeton University. Why would Newsweek choose to publish an American writer in their International and Japanese versions, yet not in the American one?
Newsweek didn't because they KNEW they would catch heat in this country for that edition, especially if they would have placed the Japanese cover with the flag in the garbage can. So they only left that and the article in the International and Japanese versions. It's one thing to actually pull a stunt like this, but it's totally another to do it where you will get less heat from the ones you know will criticize you the most.
Newsweek's stunt was cowardly, and if it wasn't for a blogger who noticed it, they would have gotten away with it.