eclectics said:
Heavens be, I would never claim to be as intellegent as you. And the proof to back up your statement is what? I would love to read it.
I wasn't commenting on my intelligence, nor yours for that matter, only on your apparent lack of knowledge (and curiosty) on this particular subject matter.
I would never venture a guess as to why the news orgs choose to print or not to print. They have the freedom to do either, but their main obligation is to print the relevant news.
They are reporting on the cartoons and the violence, because it's obviously "relevant" and newsworthy.
As for venturing a "quess" here are some of the major news outlets excuses...oops, I mean reasons, for not publishing the cartoons:
AP:
"'We don't distribute content that is known to be offensive, with rare exceptions. This is not one of those exceptions. We made the decision in December and have looked at the issue again this week and reaffirmed that decision not to distribute,' Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll said in response to queries about the cartoons."
NBC:
"NBC has been airing a brief picture that shows only part of the cartoon. 'We felt that in order to convey the essence of the story, it was not necessary to show the entire cartoon,' said spokesperson Allison Gollust."
CBS:
"At CBS News, the decision was made not to run the cartoons. 'We could explain it, so we didn't need to show it,' says Linda Mason, CBS News senior vice president, standards and special projects, who compares the decision to one not to show dead soldiers. 'Any rendering of Muhammad is an insult to Muslims, and desecration is even worse,' she says, adding that the decision was made out of a desire not to unnecessarily offend, not because of the demonstrations or 'out of fear of retribution.'"
ABC:
"ABC News ran an image of a cartoon on various broadcasts last week but stopped in follow-ups. 'We understand the sensitivity of this issue, particularly among our Muslim viewers,' ABC News spokeswoman Cathy Levine said. 'We feel we can report this story now without needing to continually show the offending image.'"
Read more.
CNN (take 1):
"CNN has chosen to not show the cartoons in respect for Islam."
CNN (take 2):
"CNN is not showing the negative caricatures of the likeness of Prophet Mohammed because the network believes its role is to cover the events surrounding the publication of the cartoons while not unnecessarily adding fuel to the controversy itself."
New York Times:
"New York Times editor Bill Keller said that he and his staff concluded after a 'long and vigorous debate' that publishing the cartoon would be 'perceived as a particularly deliberate insult' by Muslims. 'Like any decision to withhold elements of a story, this was neither easy nor entirely satisfying, but it feels like the right thing to do.'"
Washington Post:
"'They wouldn't meet our standards for what we publish in the paper,' said Leonard Downie, Jr., executive editor of The Washington Post, which ran a front-page story on the issue Friday, but has not published the cartoons. 'We have standards about language, religious sensitivity, racial sensitivity and general good taste.'"
Los Angeles Times:
"The Los Angeles Times sent this statement to E&P this afternoon: 'Our newsroom and op-ed page editors, independently of each other, determined that the caricatures could be deemed offensive to some readers and the there were effective ways to cover the controversy without running the images themselves.'" [This from the paper that ran an op-ed arguing that we shouldn't support the troops.]
USA Today:
"At USA TODAY, 'we concluded that we could cover the issue comprehensively without republishing the cartoon, something clearly offensive to many Muslims. It's not censorship, self or otherwise,' said deputy world editor Jim Michaels."
Boston Globe:
"This was a case of seeking a reason to exercise a freedom that had not been challenged. No government, political party, or corporate interest was trying to deny the paper its right to publish whatever it wanted. The original purpose of printing the cartoons some of which maliciously and stupidly identified Mohammed with terrorists, who could want nothing better than to be associated with the prophet was plainly to be provocative."