Welcome to this weekโs Reno News & Review.
Itโs been building for a while. Every week, more people have suggested war-related stories. Somehow, they just all came together at once. Here we are, an issue hip-deep in the likely upcoming war against Iraq. While there are a lot of opinions expressed in this paper, there is one seemingly unrepresentedโpro-war.
Youโll have to take my word that if Iโd realized it sooner, Iโd have put a pro-war viewpoint in the paper, at least in Guest comment. I see no reason to fear dissenting opinions. Itโs the people who try to stifle dissenting opinions who scare me. Still, itโs not like the pro-war view is under represented. Almost every other mainstream mass media outlet seems in favor of this war. When I see the media whores on the network โnewsโ touting new weapons like theyโre promoting add-ons for my PDA, interviewing generals like theyโre captains of industry and then tsk-tsking the petroleum companies for profiteering, I want to puke. You donโt suppose these mass media outlets are in favor of the war because they are owned by the companies that make the bombs, do you?
Thatโs my roundabout way at getting at the core topic of this editorโs note: free speech. Iโve noticed a lot of stories about people being punished for exercising their First Amendment rights to free speech as of late. The dean who got fired at UNR comes to mind. So does an e-mail that was sent out by the Washoe County School District, which we discuss on page 9. I couldnโt count on all my fingers and toes the number of times Iโve heard, since Sept. 11, an opinion prefaced by, โWell, I shouldnโt be saying this, but โฆโ
Man, say it. If you donโt say it, no matter what it is, eventually you will lose the right to say it.
Along other unrelated, maybe, lines, Brian Bahouth, news director at KUNR, informs me that the stationโs special High Desert Forum with UNR Provost John Frederick will be at 4 p.m. on March 25, rather than March 19, as originally scheduled.
