Publication information |
Source: Union Boot and Shoe Worker Source type: journal Document type: editorial Document title: “Another Boycott” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: November 1901 Volume number: 2 Issue number: 11 Pagination: 5-6 |
Citation |
“Another Boycott.” Union Boot and Shoe Worker Nov. 1901 v2n11: pp. 5-6. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (public response: criticism); New York Journal; yellow journalism; the press (criticism); Boot and Shoe Recorder; The Sun [New York, NY]; cartoons. |
Named persons |
William McKinley; J. E. Tilt. |
Document |
Another Boycott
The enemies of the New York Journal are attempting
to make that paper a scape goat [sic] for the murder of President McKinley.
Many of these enemies are rival and competing papers. The cry is taken up by
the large body of eternal copiers among the editors on the news and trade press.
There is a “hue and cry” against the “Journal;”
in labor parlance a “boycott” has been established, though these very active
and most vindictive “boycotters” would disown the term. They would not call
a spade “a spade” on their lives. Not even in regard to the offence which the
New York Journal is charged with.
“Down with yellow journalism” cry the boycotters[.]
What is yellow journalism? The average dictionary doesn’t know. All the editors
who are doing the “hue and cry,” act as if they knew, but do they? They would
furnish about as many definitions as there are editors. Not that the editors
are such original fellows, but no one has yet become an authority on the subject
for them to copy.
The term, yellow journalism, is supposed to have
been first applied to the New York Herald on account of the color of part of
its pictorial department and afterwards to the New York [5][6]
World on account of its pictures of the “Yellow Kid.” If all there is to yellow
journalism is the possession of a comic pictorial section a great many journals,
which are in the ranks of the boycotters, are included in the definition. But
the term has evidently got by usage to mean something else. What? The loud trumpeting
of one’s own virtues? Such a charge would be laughable coming from the ranks
of the boycotters. The only reason they may not surpass the “Journal” in this
same line is from lack of ability. Surely ability is not blamable. If motives
are equal and lack of modesty in self-congratulation blamable, surely a very
large portion of the news and trade press must be condemned as yellow journalism.
If tooting one’s own horn rather loudly is yellow journalism, has not the Boot
and Shoe Recorder, the self-styled “World’s Greatest Trade Journal,” been a
little yellow at times? We are not throwing a stone at the Recorder on account
of it but merely pointing out that perhaps the Recorder is wrong in throwing
a stone at the Journal, considering its own policy and also pointing out that
if we are wrong in our conception of the Recorder’s position, and it is the
most modest of journals, that even then, in justice it must scatter broadsides
right and left into the ranks of the press for its brazen self-laudation.
Self-laudation cannot be the distinguishing feature
of what the boycotters term by “yellow journalism,” as they also practice it
and would not be likely to condemn themselves. What is it then?
The New York Journal does not differ materially
from the majority of newspapers, except in two respects: It has said no stronger
things against the late administration than the New York Nation or the New York
Evening Post and many other very respectable journals. Its news columns are
not much to our liking, but neither are the news columns of three-quaaters [sic]
of the newspapers printed. The Journal does just what the press does generally—publishes
matter which will cause the paper to be demanded by the public. In this respect
it is no better and no worse than other papers. In short, in only the two following
respects does it differ materially from the general run of newspapers.
It differs from the others firstly, in that it
favors the cause of labor. If this is the distinguishing feature of yellow journalism,
we must give that variety our hearty approval. We hope and confidently expect
there will be more of it. The news columns of the Journal often do the cause
of labor more harm than good, but they are meant to be friendly reports. The
extensive advertising of certain labor exploiting schemes, like the J. E. Tilt,
Endicott experiment, as plans of philanthropists to uplift the workingman is,
in all probability, merely an error on the Journal’s part.
But the editorials in the Journal are splendid,
as a rule. They are a great credit to the newspaper press, which has neither
head nor heart enough to be proud of its best work. The cause of humanity is
being advanced by these editorials; it is being retarded by the New York Sun,
a paper which treated Mr. McKinley far more harshly than the Journal.
Liberty, prosperity and the peaceful solutions
of social problems will follow such editorial work as the Journal is doing.
Class hatred is the fruit of the Sun’s policy. The trouble with the boycotters
is, they are color blind; it is the Sun that is yellow.
The other respect in which the Journal differs
from the general run of journals is in the degree of success it has achieved.
Many of its rivals could forgive its so-called
“yellowness,” but they cannot forgive it its success. The Boot and Shoe Recorder
is also a successful paper, and may have enemies itself on that account.
The Recorder kindly warns us against approving
the New York Journal. We are grateful for the warning but shall not heed it.
We know our friends and propose to stand by them.
If the objection to the Journal is due to the
sort of political cartoons it publishes, the boycotters are in favor of one
law for themselves and another for their opponents. It appears that they are
opposed to free speech and a free press for others. No fault was found
with the caluminous [sic] cartoons of Harper’s weekly [sic] nor with the cartoon
lies about walking delegates in the so-called funny papers, but when the funny
men gives [sic] the other side a slap, a terrible crime is committed, and the
cry of yellow journalism is heard.
Any competent judge of human nature will concede
that if any kind of cartoons could rouse a bitter and revengeful feeling in
the breasts of the working people it is the sort in which they are portrayed
as idiots, and the officers of their organizations as blatherskites and rogues.
It was always a fact that some people cannot stand
their own medicine; that there are people who like a fight but want their opponent
handcuffed or gagged, and the use of all kinds of weapons for themselves.
We do not think the boycotters are consistent;
in fact, it looks very much as if their principal motive is jealousy.
We are opposed to this boycott.