NYT Goes On a Mole Hunt

It is the latest internal crisis at the Times, where management has been at odds with factions of the newsroom over union negotiations and coverage of sensitive topics like the transgender community and social justice. 

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Reporting about the Gaza war has been a particular flashpoint, especially over an in-depth article that found Hamas weaponized sexual violence in the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel. Some staffers questioned the reporting behind it and alleged that the suffering of Gazans isn’t getting the same attention. Times leaders in March said they stand by the reporting.

The internal probe was meant to find out who leaked information related to a planned podcast episode about that article. But its intensity and scope suggests the Times’s leadership, after years of fights with its workforce over a variety of issues involving journalistic integrity, is sending a signal: Enough.

Ed Morrissey

This is a few days old, but is still interesting in light of what has transpired at NPR. This is a case of a media outlet getting tired of being told what to do by its employees and looking for ways to impose control over the workplace. NPR is just the opposite, with ideological demands imposed from the top down and expulsion of dissenters. 

But they aren't entirely unrelated, either; the biggest point in common is the ideological and intellectual rigidity of the Left. At NPR, those are the people in charge, and at the NYT, those are the people who think they're in charge. 

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