From The Catholic League with my emphases and comments:
BOSTON GLOBE & NYT LACK "ZERO TOLERANCE" RULE
Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments as follows:
Yesterday, a Boston Globe editorial unfavorably compared the Vatican to the American bishops, saying that "Until the church adopts a zero-tolerance policy, justice cannot be served…."
On July 9 and July 17, the New York Times, which owns the Globe, ran editorials voicing the same criticism. The Times editorial of July 17 correctly notes that such a policy means "requiring secular authorities to be alerted from the beginning." Interestingly, neither newspaper has such a policy of its own.
Section IV of the New York Times Business Ethics Policy (which also governs the Globe), says, "Any employee who becomes aware of any conduct that he or she believes to be prohibited by this Policy or a violation of the law," is expected to "promptly report the facts" to "any supervisor or the legal department." (My italics.) It says nothing about contacting the authorities. [Say it ain’t so!] Moreover, their policy says that if an employee has been found guilty, "appropriate and corrective action up to and including termination" will take place. Even then it says nothing about contacting the authorities! [ShaZAM!]
Yesterday, we contacted three persons on four different occasions who work in the Boston Globe’s Human Resources Department about this issue. No one responded.
This settles the issue.
The New York Times and the Boston Globe find it unwise to adopt the same policy regarding employee misconduct—including instances where the law is broken—that it condemns the Catholic Church for not adopting worldwide.
So if a priest is alleged to have groped a parishioner, the cops must be called. But even after an internal probe reveals that an employee at the Times or Globe is guilty of the same offense, the cops should not be summoned. The hypocrisy is vile.
Contact the editorial page editors, Andrew Rosenthal at the Times and Peter Canellos at the Globe: andyr@nytimes.com and canellos@globe.com
ZZZZINGGG, that will leave a mark, hopefully were it counts.
So whats good for the goose ISN’T? good for the gander?
My guess is that if the NYPD were called out every time an NYT employee violated the law in the course of doing their job, NYPD would have to open a new precinct to deal with the workload…not to mention a sizeable jail…with a “Starbucks” of course!
“….He wrote the Globe and the New York Times, and he left them in a stew,
For he scorned to bow to a paper chain, did bold Bill Donahue.”
;)
Ouch, NYT, need some help with that beam in your eye?!
The New York Slimes has a lot more than a beam in its eye.
Good for Bill Donohue, our dear Catholic pitbull. The New York Times won’t be embarrassed, because like the old Soviet Politburo, they are special people and have privileges the canaille shouldn’t have.
Another ZAPPER from Bill Donohue! ‘Way to go, our Irish pitbull!
The Elites are at it again. They are Above reporting a crime committed by one of their own. Didn’t you know that? Tsk tsk.