Julian Sanchez | February 20, 2005
When I strolled in on Saturday, early in the afternoon, the blogger corner was all abuzz about John Fund, who'd apparently just plopped himself down in front of a blogger's (briefly unattended) laptop and proceeded to check email for 20 minutes. When the owner returned, Fund reportedly informed him he'd "just be a minute" and kept right on pluggin'. Robert Cox has started a Fund fund drive to buy the reporter a Blackberry.
Some bloggers seem to think this is a tale of big media arrogance toward mere bloggers. I suspect it's just Fund's absent minded professor schtick. Folks who've known him a while report that he didn't find anything unusual about coming into the (collective) office on weekends to do laundry in the restroom sink. So I'd say chalk this one up, I think, neither to the ever-popular David & Goliath narrative of bloggers vs. MSM nor even, really, to rudeness so much as, well, let's call it an idiosyncratic sense of how people normally behave. I assume (well, hope) that it just didn't occur to him to ask whether it was a laptop set up for anyone to use—it's not clear that anyone actually told him.
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So we're givin' Fund the ol' innocent until proven guilty?
Nobody's suggestin' that he have his press credentials taken
away.
...We just wanna do what every angry mob does--storm the castle and
look at the furniture.
the guy sat in a chair and used a computer that was unattended
in a large open room with many people. maybe if he was found in the
stalls with it on his lap there would be reason for uproar.
crosswalk needs to cross the street more often.
Dude, WTF?
http://www.theagitator.com/archives/019005.php#019005
What an asshole.
Now the first time, maybe, you could chalk it up to being
oblivious, but once bitten and twice oblivious? I'm not buyin'
it.
John,
Good to see you at CPAC. Recall that you were using my laptop
while I
grabbed lunch.
I hit the BACK button to get back to where I was when you sat
down and found your Outlook Inbox was displayed. You also left my
computer logged into the WSJ mail server; anyone could have come by
and sent e-mails from your account and possibly used your remote
connection to access the Dow Jones servers.
You might want to be more careful when you jump on someone's
PC.
--
Robert Cox
Managing Editor
http://www.TheNationalDebate.com
http://www.OlbermannWatch.com
Member
Media Bloggers Association
http://www.mediabloggers.org
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/weblogs/kmc/?adate=2/19/2005#1313761
I got this link via the link joe supplied above. Apparently, this
is an e-mail that the alleged second victim of Fund's alleged
laptop conversion fired off to Fund. If Fund really is so
oblivious, I'm not sure he'll understand what the e-mail
means.
...and I think Cox was much more considerate than I would have
been. If I were in his position, I think I might have fired off an
e-mail to Gigot telling him about what I thought of the editorial
direction of the Journal as well as what I thought about his taste
in clothing and women. Of course, I would explain at the end of the
message that I wasn't really Fund.
...probably.
I mean not only is the guy hovering over Fund like the Sun at noon, but wouldn't you notice people taking pictures of you from like three different angles?
I have been a profesor for over 15 years, and the "absent-minded
professor" shtick infuriates me. It's just a lame excuse for
boorish behavior, and one that professors somehow seem to be able
to get away with. That somebody with a PhD can somehow be more
prone to frequent spacing out than everyone else is second in
absurdity only to the notion that somehow being a professor makes
it OK.
If it had been my computer I would have called security after 30
seconds.
When I used to intern for Americans for Tax Reform, John Fund would come in every once in awhile to talk to Grover and to do some writing. He used to usurp people's computers all the time. I never found it offensive, but I sure as hell wasn't going to ask him to move.
I'd have deleted all of the mail and sold all of the
stocks.
It's the price of doing stupid.
But then that's just me.
This is mostly between the owner of the laptop and John Fund, as
far as I'm concerned. It appears the laptop owner was a good deal
more understanding of Fund's boorish behavior than I would have
been.
It has lowered my opinion of Fund. And that's just one more hit in
a continuing series of disappointments in the Wall Street Journal,
which I once held in extraordinarily high regard, but now consider
just another hack MSM publication.
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