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R. Emmett Tyrrell
R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr.
15 Feb 2012
It's Time for Newt to Go!

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2 Feb 2012
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Buckley Is Wrong

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WASHINGTON — Recently my friend Bill Buckley wrote a rude column about our mutual friend, Conrad Black, on the occasion of Conrad's conviction on three counts of mail fraud and one of obstruction of justice, a mere speed bump after the mountains of charges originally filed against him. Conrad is appealing. Friends should stand by him either in polite silence or by joining me in public encouragement. The case has been variously characterized as an example of "corporate kleptocracy" by those who insist Conrad is a scoundrel or prosecutorial zealotry by those who think that in building a great newspaper chain, he saved some of the finest newspapers in the English-speaking world and introduced a sophisticated conservative point of view into the dull drone of our liberal-polluted "Kultursmog." Michael Barone, one of the wisest political observers in the country and a lawyer, has asseverated that "the case should never have been prosecuted." That is about the way I see it, and Bill's column was ill-timed.

"I don't need you when I'm right. I need you when I'm wrong," the late Louisiana politician Earl Long allegedly said to a legislator when seeking his vote for a dubious tax measure. My rule of friendship is a variation of old Earl's maxim. "I don't need you in good times. I need you in bad times." And it is in bad times that many, particularly in the political class, take a powder. "The phone never rings," is how a former high official from the Reagan administration described his life immediately after being falsely accused of some vague malfeasance now long lost down memory's well. My friend from the Reagan years was innocent, but he was also a vigorous combatant. He cleared his name, but the abandonment he suffered has been on my mind through Conrad's long years of scandalous news stories and expensive prosecutions.

Friends stand by their friends in their times of trial. My friendship with Conrad goes back two decades, though it has not been an easy friendship.

He is said to be a tough business bargainer, and I can tell you he is. In an extended negotiation with me, he was tough and wily. Never was he unethical, but in the end, I did not like the deal and I rejected it. Afterward we were perturbed with each other for a while, but my anger fizzled out. He is the rare media mogul who is pro-American, pro-Western and pro-Israel. He is immensely civilized, reads and writes intelligent books and has a sardonic wit. His indomitable character and cheerful resilience have been demonstrated throughout the proceedings against him. Eventually he forgave me for my independent streak, and we renewed our friendship. He may be indomitable and resilient, but he is not narrowly stubborn.

To return to the Buckley column, Conrad has been a major figure in the recrudescence of conservatism throughout the Western world that Bill and a handful of others began some 50 years ago. That is all the more reason that Bill should have stuck by Conrad. We should stick by our own — certainly when they are innocent or even when their cases are in doubt. There will be plenty of others to attack them, some from political animus, some from ignorance, some from self-righteous egotism. Standing by a friend under fire is the obligation of friendship. Standing by a friend who shares your values is a defense of those values.

I have considered Conrad's four convictions, and I agree with his appeal. He has not done anything wrong intentionally. He is the victim of prosecutorial excess. If he had done something wrong, it would be for the most part a disagreement over bookkeeping, not the kind of thing that should yank a man of his immense gifts from society and deposit him for years in prison.

Conrad was our friend in good times, and it is his friends' obligation to be his friend during the cruel winds of bad times. If a friend of Conrad's disagrees with this, he should be gentleman enough to remain silent.

R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. is founder and editor-in-chief of The American Spectator, a contributing editor to The New York Sun and an adjunct scholar at the Hudson Institute. His newest book is "The Clinton Crack-Up: The Boy President's Life After the White House." To find out more about R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr. and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Your jobs a columnist is not to stand by your friend, but to report, as best you can, the truth. Anything less makes you a kind of lobbyist.
There is a word in Sanskrit: dharma. It means duty, but on a very elevated level. It is not just what a person does, it also is when he does it and why.
Just as a doctor trying to save the life of an enemy soldier is doing his dharma, the soldier who shot him on the battlefield did his. The soldier who hid during the battle because he worried about leaving his child fatherless, did not act dharmically because his dharma as a soldier is first to his troops. If a military court were to make an inquiry about his behavior, the witnesses must all speak truthfully, even if it means testifying against a friend. It is their duty. It is their dharma. Even if it is gut wrenching.
If you were Mr. Black's lawyer, it would be you dharma to get him acquitted of charges regardless of the status of your personal relationship. It is the judge's dharma to remain impartial. It is the duty of the prosecutor to prosecute.
You , however, are a columnist. You duty is to give your readers the best and most honest reporting possible. If you honestly believe that Mr. Black is innocent, that is an excellent reason for writing a column in his support. (You might want to include some specific reasons. Right now you have not presented a persuasive argument). However, your friendship or enmity with him should have nothing to do with your reporting. In PRIVATE, this is another matter. You may support him and his family as much as you wish. You may call him, write him or buy him a drink. However your dharma as a columnist trumps your dharma as a friend. Your duty to your profession and its standards demands a different set of rules. You owe your reading public, the people who pay you and your profession nothing less. It is your duty to write as if you were under oath. If you are not able to do so you must either be silent or find another profession.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Mark W
Thu Dec 20, 2007 5:53 PM
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