Paul stands stood tall

updated 6/23 at the end of the post.

MSNBC published a recent investigative report detailing media members who contributed funds to political campaigns. The story lists the journalist, their respective media outlet, who they contributed to and to what party, and their reaction.

My fellow Journal Star-contributing cartoonist, Paul Fell, was one of the people included in the story. It’s understandably not a popular position to take in the media, but he was apparently willing to take the risk to stand up for it.

(D) The Lincoln, Neb., Journal Star, Paul Fell, editorial cartoonist, $450 in 2006 to Maxine Moul, Democratic candidate for the House.

“For your information, I did contribute the amounts listed to the Maxine Moul for Congress campaign in 2006,” Fell said in an e-mail. “I am a freelance cartoonist, who contracts with the Lincoln Journal Star to draw three editorial cartoons a week.

“They don’t pay me enough money to be able to dictate how I conduct myself in political campaigns. I generally do not donate to political candidates, but Maxine Moul is a longtime friend and former newspaper publisher where I got my start as a cartoonist back in 1976.

“Frankly, I don’t give a rat’s ass what the Lincoln Journal Star or their parent organization, Lee Enterprises, policies are on allowing newsroom staff to give to candidates and parties. I do not believe they did disclose my donations. That’s their problem, not mine.”

Kyle Michaelis, who runs the New Nebraska Network blog, had some thoughts on this story and its Democrat-to-Republican ratio that I felt were definitely worth sharing.

We live in a world where the U.S. Supreme Court equates campaign contributions with the freedom of speech. Considering that journalists’ entire livelihoods are dependent on the liberal principles of free speech and a free press, it’s absurd that they are expected to give up their rights to partake in this delusion of disinterested neutrality perpetuated by the media.

Only TRUTH has the power to reveal bias for what it is. If anything, a journalist who hides her political leanings is only deceiving herself and lying to the public further. That may serve her career interests but only in an industry that has lost its soul and its purpose to formalism and false pretensions.

Journalists should get out of the games of image control and manipulating public perception. The story here is not that a few journalists are giving money to political campaigns, it’s that so many others will judge and cast aspersions because they’re more concerned about “how this looks” than they are about the actual world around them.

So there’s the issue of “Do I exercise my freedom?” versus “Do I empower public perceptions?” Personally, I don’t think I’ve ever had the money to contribute to a campaign, so it hasn’t really been an issue to me. But scouring the news for cartoon ideas, I do realize there are plenty of people who examine those contribution forms and make a story out of them. It’s hard enough as it is to get people to listen to your ideas; if they can latch onto something that will harm your credibility in their eyes, it’s best in my opinion to not give them that opportunity.

UPDATE!!! In today’s Journal Star, editor in chief Kathleen Rutledge explains Paul Fell will no longer draw cartoons for the paper because of this.

We pay him to express his own opinion on matters of public interest through cartoons that appear on the editorial pages. He is not an employee but a freelancer who is covered by our ethics code. He did not see fit to tell us he had made a political contribution, either at the time he made it or when he was contacted by MSNBC.

The biggest difference, though, is the cavalier attitude about journalistic ethics Fell exhibited. He said he doesn’t give “a rat’s ass” about the policies of this paper. Read his complete comments to Dedman elsewhere on this page.

Fell’s comments make it clear he does not care about guarding this newspaper’s trust with readers. We don’t think he should treat our credibility with such disdain.

There’s a little bit of a backlash in the comments section. I understand where they’re coming from, and at first I kind of admired Fell’s response. Not in the way that he dismisses the Journal Star’s rules, but in the sense that it felt like he was saying “This shouldn’t be an issue, so go find some real news to report!” But the unfortunate reality is that this is an issue and the Journal Star sadly has to concern itself with issues like this – not because they’re mean or anti-expression, but because of the way in which organized groups like to wage war against facts.

People who want to keep their heads in the sand and ignore reality when it doesn’t suit them will look for anything to discredit you. And for their money to go from their pocket to the Journal Star to an employee (or freelancer in this case) and directly to a political campaign they disagree with is just too much.

Sure, it’s a restriction of free speech. But really, it’s not like this is the only case in which free speech is limited. When you take on certain jobs, you accept that there are certain expectations and agreements on behavior. I have to accept that, due to the way I’ve chosen to make my living, my contribution to the political process will be by trying to start discussions through cartoons.

And let this be a lesson – don’t tell a reporter from a national news organization that you don’t give a “rat’s ass” about your employer’s rules.

New link: Blog of San Diego

Over in the San Diego blogs links, you may notice something new. I just discovered BlogofSanDiego.com thanks to an indirect reference in a Union-Tribune story citing “Pat Flannery, a San Diegan who writes about City Hall politics on a blog…”

This site is packed with info. Charts, graphs, photos, documents. This guy is extremely thorough. As the site boasts, it’s “Unfiltered News based on Source Documents,” and he’s got a lot of them.

Editorial cartoonist panel at Comic Con

In his latest blog, Daryl Cagle mentions several Comic Con events regarding editorial cartooning, including what looks to be a pretty decent panel line-up (I’m excited about Mr. Fish):

[Cagle will] be moderating a panel about editorial cartoons on Saturday, July 28th, from 11:30am-12:30pm in Room 4…So far, the panel includes: Steve Breen, the Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist for the San Diego Union-Tribune; Mr. Fish, the altie cartoonist for the LA Weekly and Village Voice; Patrick O’Connor, the editorial cartoonist for the Los Angeles Daily News; Monte Wolverton, the brilliant editorial cartoonist and Mad Magazine artist, Brian Fairrington, a great cartoonist and my co-editor on the Best Political Cartoons of the Year books; and Lalo Alcaraz, also an editorial cartoonist for the LA Weekly and creator of the political comic strip, La Cucaracha, which runs in the LA Times. Breen, O’Connor and Fairrington are past winners of the Locher Award as “Best College Editorial Cartoonist of the Year.”

Koter-buh-bye

Sadly, the commentary on Nebraska’s most widely-distributed cartoonist, The Omaha World-Herald’s Jeff Koterba, will be sans-cartoons in a matter of minutes. I received this unfortunate e-mail minutes ago.

You’re (sic) obsession with me would be almost comical, if not for your continued violation of copyright laws. While many bloggers maintain that the use of any copyrighted material falls into a gray area, there is no doubt that legally, you must ask permission prior to posting my work on your website.

At first I was simply flattered that you kept taking me to task. Now, however, it’s getting a little creepy.
I’m going to have to ask you to immediately remove my work from your site. Furthermore, any future use of my work will require my permission.

It’s too bad that it’s come to this. If I’m not mistaken, you once contacted me while you were at UNL, asking for advice. If it wasn’t you, I apologize. I am frequently approached by student cartoonists for feedback, regarding their work. I always do my best to be as helpful as I can. It is always my intention to encourage anyone who is starting out (You and I both know how difficult it can be to break into the field). It’s always helpful to have a mentor, a friend, anyone who cartoons full time, to take the time to look over work.

While I respect your right to attack me, I have to say that the next time I hear of a full-time cartooning job opening up somewhere, you wouldn’t exactly be the first person I’d call.

Jeff Koterba

The bad news is, the cartoons are coming down. The good news is, he’s not going to help me get a better job, which will leave me with more time to blog.

UPDATE!!! After a few e-mails back and forth, Koterba has implied that the visually-aided commentary may not be dead after all – I’ll just need to ask first.

…Also, regarding reprints and usage on blogs, I’m fairly liberal (no pun intended). I almost always grant permission. Again, if in the future you want to take me to task, on brushstrokes or politics, I’m not too thin-skinned to grant permission. Believe me, the stuff you’ve written about me doesn’t come close to some of the stuff that’s been said about me (including Ted Rall’s cartoon)…

So looks like he’s not that big of a villain after all. BUMMER!

Maybe one day…

…we’ll go back in time, back to when we still believed what the administration and the dwindling percentages still want us to believe.

Back before we learned about the new Iraqi oil law, which takes Iraq’s oil wealth out of the hands of the people and turns over the oil supply to a “Federal Oil and Gas Council,” which is made up literally of Big Oil leaders.

Back before we learned that Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11, and back before we groaned every time Bush or Cheney tried to keep making that claim six years later.

Back before we could exploit the deaths of soldiers to defend those who would personally profit, and paint those who would dare challenge the injustice as disrespectful and damaging.

Maybe one day, we’ll all be so beaten down by empty rhetoric and doublespeak that we’ll collectively return to a 2003 mental state when it was so much easier and more convenient to just believe what the profiteers wanted us to believe.

But in the meantime, here’s Jeff Koterba’s Memorial Day cartoon from The Omaha World Herald:

In this space used to be a cartoon, which included a drawing of a monument that says “Iraq-Afghanistan Memorial” which then includes the lines “This was not, as some erroneously believed, a war for oil. To those who fought to overthrow a maniacal dictator, and most importantly, to stop terrorists where they dwell, we thank you.” Then there’s a little caption that says “Maybe one day…”

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