Why Kamala Harris Won't Be Asked About the Suicide of a Newspaperman She Persecuted
When it comes to conflicts with people engaged in unpopular or disfavored speech, too many journalists side with the feds.

The sitting vice president, shortly before moving to Washington, D.C., successfully scapegoated through heavily publicized if legally unsuccessful pimping prosecutions a career newspaperman who last week shot himself to death at age 74 rather than sit through yet another prostitution-facilitation trial that he insisted to his dying days was an attack on free speech.
Yet the chances of Kamala Harris being asked this week—or any week—about the late James Larkin, or her starring role in the demonization of his and Michael Lacey's online classified advertising company Backpage as "the world's top online brothel," are vanishingly small. That's because people have a natural revulsion toward anything associated—however falsely—with child prostitution or sex trafficking, true. But it also stems from something far less excusable: When it comes to conflicts between the feds and those from the professionally unpopular corners of the free speech industry, journalists have been increasingly taking the side of The Man.
You could see this dynamic in stark relief last month in the elite-media response to U.S. District Court Judge Terry Doughty's Independence Day injunction against the federal government from pressuring social media companies to censor individuals for allegedly spreading "misinformation." As catalogued at Reason by Robby Soave, J.D. Tuccille, Jacob Sullum, and Robert Corn-Revere, and as I experienced during a bizarre panel discussion on CNN, the default journalistic reaction was anxiety that the ruling (in the words of the New York Times news department) "could curtail efforts to combat false and misleading narratives about the coronavirus pandemic and other issues." Sure, there may be First Amendment implications, but, well, have you seen that dangerous whackaloon Alex Berenson?
Far too often, journalists reserve their free speech defenses for people they actually like. And man, did they not like Jim Larkin and Mike Lacey.
This antipathy for Larkin/Lacey and the New Times alt-weekly chain the duo launched in Phoenix was obvious long before politicians began moving on from Craigslist to Backpage in their morally panicked crusade against technology companies that allegedly promote "sex trafficking." (I use quotation marks here not to intimate that sex trafficking does not exist, but rather that, as Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown has documented better than any living reporter, the term is overwhelmingly deployed by politicians and law enforcement to describe and punish conduct that has nothing whatsoever to do with forcing unwitting adults, let alone minors, into the sex business.)
The New Times honchos—especially Lacey, who was always the more public and pugilistic face of the franchise—were resented because they threw sharp elbows at both the graybeard alternative weeklies to their left and at the big-city dailies that were originally to their right but then tacked over time to the kind of bloodless lefty respectability space inhabited by NPR. The New Times papers hurled buckets of snark onto anyone perceived as Establishment, which pissed off boomer lefty journalists almost as much as elected Republican officials such as Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio and Arizona Sen. John McCain.
The New Times "view of who was the establishment and who [was] the outsider," sniffed LA Weekly windbag Harold Meyerson in 2003, "was classically neocon." (The game of pin-the-inaccurate-political-insult on the New Times never did fall out of fashion.)
Having mocked, then beaten, then eventually subsumed a Village Voice Media chain revered for its foundational role in postwar alternative journalism, Lacey and Larkin and co. found themselves relatively friendless during various scrapes with the legal system. When the independent hippie alt-weekly San Francisco Bay Guardian won a lawsuit in 2008 against the New Times–owned SF Weekly for "predatory pricing" of advertising (yes, one free paper sued another free paper over charging lower ad rates), and when that $21 million settlement (after having been tripled by the presiding judge) was upheld in 2010, I noted that "the journalistic thumbsucker community outside of the Bay Area has been almost completely silent about this potentially momentous precedent."
You can almost hear the journalistic eyerolls at Backpage's frequently successful series of legal defenses that the third-party speech and commerce that the now-defunct company facilitated were protected under Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act of 1996, i.e., "the Internet's First Amendment."
"As Trial for Backpage's Founders Begins," snarked a September 2021 Gizmodo headline, "Their Free Speech Defense Is Flailing." (The case was declared a mistrial less than a week later due to prosecutorial misbehavior.) The Washington Post in 2022 published a laudatory review of prosecutor Maggy Krell's book Taking Down Backpage: Fighting the World's Largest Sex Trafficker, with Section 230 treated as a deviously exploited loophole. "Krell and her fellow crusaders," concluded E.J. Graff, then–managing editor of the Post's Monkey Cage blog, "are rightly proud of the strides they've made in cracking down on this scourge."
This is not to say that there haven't been good (and appropriately skeptical) examinations of the Backpage side of the story, though it's interesting to note that they often come from people who used to work for the New Times chain. And there has been a smattering of free-speecher support and outrage over the years, including last week from TechDirt's Mike Masnick.
But the overarching journalism-industry response to the past seven years of Backpage founders being hounded by ambitious politicians and prosecutors and thrown into courtroom cages; their family members being pulled out of the shower; their bank accounts seized; their ankle bracelets affixed; and now one of the defendants offing himself has been studious indifference and silence. You will see 100 times more ink spilled this year on chimerical right-wing book bans than you will on the vice president's scapegoat blowing his brains out.
Journalists tend to be pretty good about looking backward through the decades and recognizing that, Oh shit, we kind of went overboard during that whole Satanic Panic thing. While better late than never, such correctives should lend urgency to the quest of finding injustices that are depriving people's liberty right the hell now.
Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht is still serving two life sentences in federal prison. President Joe Biden is sitting on a backlog of approximately 19,000 clemency petitions, most for nonviolent crimes and/or violations of laws that no longer exist. And Mike Lacey still faces trial, scheduled for later this month. It's too late for Jim Larkin's kids to get their dad back, but it's never too late for people in the free speech business to recognize that one of their own is getting railroaded. I just wouldn't bet on it.
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As catalogued at Reason by Robby Soave, J.D. Tuccille, Jacob Sullum, and Robert Corn-Revere, and as I experienced during a bizarre panel discussion on CNN, the default journalistic reaction was anxiety that the ruling (in the words of The New York Times news department) "could curtail efforts to combat false and misleading narratives about the coronavirus pandemic and other issues." Sure, there may be First Amendment implications, but, well, have you seen that dangerous whackaloon Alex Berenson?
Is this the most self unaware paragraph in Reasons history? They defended misinformation citizenship for 3 years under the guise of private companies. Robbie literally had an article that trashed Berenson.
It's all fun and games when you line up with coworkers and colleagues for a group head shot... until the first bullet goes through one of your colleague's head. Then, when the panic sets in, you realize no one actually said the word "photo".
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The subtext is that misinformation cannot exist except in conflict with The Narrative. Once you understand this all other conflicts are resolved.
The fact that this scumbag killed himself out of remorse and guilt for his actions rather prove Vice-President Harris's righteousness, doesn't it? Just like Jeffrey Epstein's suicide, Vince Foster's suicide, and Donald Trump's suicide.
Remember, persecuting a human to death is a noble venture for the righteous.
So is the Clinton method.
Being friended by a Clinton is less cruel.
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Seth Rich, Michael Hastings, Gary Webb, Dorothy Kilgallen, Jack Ruby, Paul Wellstone,.....
Please let's stop with the rumors; Jeffrey Epstein is not dead. He is currently alive and well living in the Middle East with his pre-pubertal girlfriend under the name Hadid Nahkil Musseff.
I met the man several times. He was indeed a prick.
Ms. Harris is probably a bit sad. You can't score points on TV attacking a dead man.
Maybe eventually, but I'll bet she had a good evil cackle when she first heard the news.
This is definitely the only bad prosecution of the Biden administration. All the others are pure and good.
The which administration?
The federal Backpage case began with an indictment handed down in March 2018, after Kamala’s California state case had fallen apart.
https://www.justice.gov/media/945546/dl?inline
The Biden administration did continue the persecution, following the collapse of the first federal trial, but it takes a rather special kind of thinking to pin Larkin’s suicide on Joe Biden.
Woooooosh!
You can’t score points on TV attacking a dead man.
Teddy Roosevelt wants his statute returned then.
Sooo. Whutabout those vote counts in Ohio? Do I hear gnashing?
"Suicide is when somebody kills themselves. It is bad when people die. *kackle*" - Kamy Harris
Canada agrees.
She is going to use this as yanking material for years.
You will see 100 times more ink spilled this year on chimerical right-wing book bans than you will on the vice president's scapegoat blowing his brains out.
If those pesky republicans would stop pouncing in the kulture war.......
What do the deplorables know about culture anyway?
There must be some way to blame this suicide on Trump.
For democrats all she has to do is screech “Trump!”. Nothing else is required.
You mean, like for initiating the 2018 federal prosecution of the Backpage founders?
Oh, right, "rogue FBI", deep state, etc...
It wasn’t a suicide. He didn’t shoot himself. Trump shot him – that’s right – it was Trump, in the Library, with his big bad elephant gun. Trump shot him because he had retained the credit card receipts from when Trump paid for some gash with a company credit card, and D. A. Bragg was about to add this as an additional indictment for forgery of business records. And we’ll be able to bring Trump to justice for this (heinous? heiney?) murder. (It is reported that the bullet which blew his brains out entered through his heiney.) Eric Swalwell has the proof. Pencil-neck Schiff has seen it. Pence will be willing to testify about it, if called. And an Obama nominated federal judge has already proclaimed Trump guilty of this to save the country the expense of picking a jury. The FBI is still looking into where the nefarious Trump was on the evenings that Epstein killed himself and when Seth Rich was “robbed”, and have proclaimed Trump as a “person of interest” in both of those deaths.
In the meantime, NASA has revealed that after years of research, it has established that water is wet, except when it’s in an environment of systemic racism.
Berenson’s biggest crimes were saying that masks are ineffective, and that most non seniors don’t need to be vaccinated. You can see how he can became the symbol of crazy, dangerous Covid speech.
You can almost hear the journalistic eyerolls at Backpage's frequently successful series of legal defenses that the third-party speech and commerce that the now-defunct company facilitated were protected under Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act of 1996, i.e., "the Internet's First Amendment."
Almost!
"The sitting vice president, shortly before moving to Washington, D.C., successfully scapegoated through heavily publicized if legally unsuccessful pimping prosecutions a career newspaperman who last week shot himself to death at age 74 rather than sit through yet another prostitution-facilitation trial that he insisted to his dying days was an attack on free speech."
Is this actual human English or some cheap AI word salad?
Cheap Kamaltoe word salad.
Also, damaging with accountability a sitting vice president who shares a party with the journalists ostensibly covering her is not something we do anymore.
FTFY. They don't like the idea of free speech in general because it means that anyone, not just officially sanctioned purveyors of The Narrative like themselves, can speak their mind.
gotta agree with you there. Seems more and more that free speech in general is just a problem to most people.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Fuck off you marxist cunt. Every one of you were pro censorship government misinformation, lockdown and forced jab until well into 2022, not mid 2020 when the Pincess Cruise ships proved the whole thing an overblown fraud n the world. Or perhaps we should hold that red wedding style event you fantasize about for you instead of the conservatives you loathe.
Skynet is a "private" company.
Fuck off you marxist cunt. Every one of you were pro censorship government misinformation, lockdown and forced jab until well into 2022, not mid 2020 when the Pincess Cruise ships proved the whole thing an overblown fraud n the world. Or perhaps we should hold that red wedding style event you fantasize about for you and your guild instead of the conservatives you loathe.
??
Oh, it's just another mindless rant about the magazine you love to hate.
If you actually know the topic, the rant is not mindless at all. It is full of easter eggs and barbs squarely pointed at a self-righteous and hypocritical writing staff.
But it also stems from something far less excusable: When it comes to conflicts between the feds and those from the professionally unpopular corners of the free speech industry, journalists have been increasingly taking the side of The Man.
Check out Glenn Greenwald, over here.
Where?
"to the kind of bloodless lefty respectability space inhabited by NPR."
Or - - -
https://thefederalist.com/2023/08/05/is-npr-trying-to-start-a-race-war/
Funny article. And not haha funny. You read the line:
wants to know “how country music became this symbol of racism” and why country music stars remain popular despite artists who currently lead the charts “peddling racist rhetoric today.”
Et tu brute? Blame your opponents for what you're doing yourself. And they're so unbelievably unselfconscious about it. It's alinsky all the way down.
Journalists are economically rational actors without a conscience. Mainstream newspapers gain nothing from defending "alt" newspapers, and they hurt themselves by annoying Democrats.
And who are you trying to kid, Matt? You act the same way. The only reason you wrote this tepid piece is because it fits in with your particular brand and because it aligns with the economic interests of your newspapers, not because of any principled defense of free speech, something that has been lacking from these pages for decades.
Well, that's true NOW, that their favorite party is in office. Under the previous administration, journalists were hardly siding with "The Man".
Well, not The OrangeMan.
This supports Taibbi's point about journalists preferring narratives over news. It's reprehensible (and hypocritical, of course).
It’s kind of always been that way though.
I'm sure that's right to a degree - and sometimes you can almost see the calculation, for example when GWB was making the case for war against Iraq. the press largely swallowed the WH/No. 10 narrative so as not to appear to be creating their own - to the cost of the American and to a much lesser extent the British people; the point being that if they were news not narrative they wouldn't have made the calculation in the first place.
Journalists always used to like to use individual cases to illustrate general points or principles. But most used to do the background research and analysis to make sure that the individual cases corresponded to general points.
These days, journalists presume a neo-Marxist narrative as fact and then find individual cases to illustrate it.
Please define "neo-Marxist narrative". Are journalists generally advocating for seizing the means of production, or do you just mean, "not going along with the kind of right-wing stuff I believe"?
Bingo.
But I think you may have attributed a bit too much rational thought to it.
I’m sorry you are so ignorant of 20th century political and philosophical thought.
In brief, Marxism intended to bring about social change through “seizing the means of production”; in contrast, neo-Marxism intends to bring about social change by “critiquing the underlying power structures and ideologies that perpetuate social inequalities and oppression” (critical theory). That is, the rejection of "seizing the means of production" and the embrace of social change through narrative and story telling is one of the key differences between pre-1930's Marxism and post-1930's ("neo") Marxism.
That is, the use of narrative and story telling is at the heart of critical theory. In 21st century American social science at universities, critical theory is a widespread approach, particularly within fields like sociology, cultural studies, gender studies, and political science. That is where left wing politicians and almost all journalists are trained in it.
Hope that helps cure you of some of your ignorance.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but isn’t a large reason for that because regular Marxism just didn’t work as well in the west where there was much more upward mobility of the proletariat, meaning the class warfare angle couldn’t get as strong a foothold.
Yup. That's why Horkheimer / Adorno et al invented it, in the 30s. It's been the main model for Marxist struggle for decades since. Enough so that most people just view it as culture war stuff that has nothing to do with means of production ideas assocuiated with Marx.
In the old view, Marxists actually respected people that "made things" - it was mainly an alternative view as to how profits should be shared. Neo-marxists believe the act of actually *making* something, is, in itself, a mark of fascism, and working (for anything other than "social change") just allows systemic oppression.
"Let the machines do it." was the answer to how the crops would feed us.
It's textbook critical theory, what journalists have been taught at university over the last few decades. It's not "hypocritical", which would imply that they know it's wrong and harmful, it is what "professional journalism" amounts to in 2023.
I don't think one needs to resort to claims of them being taught "critical theory" - and I'd like some evidence for this proposition. It's sufficient that what was expected of journalists changed over the years, as did what journalists were willing to go along with.
It’s not a claim, so much as a statement of fact: https://www.newschool.edu/nssr/creative-publishing-critical-journalism/
I have my own judgement of CT, but there is no doubt there are plenty of colleges that have a program in it or have incorporated it into the coursework for all kinds of degrees.
(I now have to check to see if it is being incorporated into the Architecture program at my alma mater.)
That's like saying "I'd like some evidence for the proposition that physics departments are teaching differential equations." Critical theory is at the core of most modern social science, in numerous forms.
Look for "critical theory" and associated terms like "systems of power", "queer theory", "power structures", "critical legal studies", "postcolonialism", "feminist theory", "underprivileged", etc. on the sites of social science departments of various universities.
Google is your friend!
However, a lot of the blame lies with those who, whether interested or disinterested, coin and popularize misleading labels like "neoconservative", which appears to mean "newly conservative". But then, the underlying label "conservative" itself appears to mean, "wanting to keep things the same".
I don't know whether the "classically" was meant to say, "as the term was used in its heyday", "as the term was originally used", or was just an intensifier, like "literally" these days (i.e. my whole lifetime, b. 1954).
AFAICT the label "neoconservative" was adopted by those who, at the time, became less enamored with redistribution to the poor, of rehab of criminals, and of the Rousseauean attitude toward the improvement both of the lesser classes at home and of the leaders of the Communist bloc — which meant they had become more sympathetic to the ideas of those identified as "conservatives" at the time. To put it crudely, they had become punishment-oriented: punish poverty by not giving poor people stuff, punish criminals, and punish Communist actual or potential aggression.
But somehow it seems to also have been taken as shorthand for treating Israel as the world's bulwark, as long as it's Jew-led.
I thought that the neocon term was identified with the Project for a New American Century, where some of the "Projectors" had indeed been left or at least liberal in their youth, and were now interventionist conservatives. And a disproportionate number of them were Jewish (feh).
All “conservative” means in neo-conservative or compassionate-conservative is “anti-abortion”. It’s trying to appeal to liberals who oppose abortion but don’t have a political tent. Then convince them to support Republicans.
On a certain level, neoconservative is completely interchangeable with neoliberal.
That level is not very high.
Conservative is defined as Roberta in the 1856 proslavery Dem platform.
Free Speech?
A Portland jury just let two people get away with fingering Andy Ngo for a beating by Antifa thugs. Reason probably won't report anything about this.
https://www.bizpacreview.com/2023/08/09/shock-verdict-finds-antifa-goons-not-liable-in-andy-ngo-attack-attorney-declares-i-am-antifa-1385206/
This link is much better.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/andy-ngo-loses-civil-lawsuit-against-portland-activists/ar-AA1eYQvg
I'm surprised you recognize the difference between the two sources! Well done.
Anyway, although Ngo probably should have had a gun with him, suing people for identifying him in a public place was never going to be a winning case. And hard to believe any of the defendants had enough assets to satisfy a judgment, but you never know I guess...
Public place is irrelevant. If you holler "There he is, get him", you've committed a crime. If you knowingly identify someone for those who wish to harm him, you have committed a crime.
Aiding and abetting a crime has always been a crime in itself.
Ah, the nostalgia of Christs's Volksgenosse over the good old days when brownshirts and commies bashed each other with bricks in Hanover, Berlin, Nurenberg... Socialists and their scuffles are hallowed in the Halls of Coercion, Aggression and Collectivism. But nowhere else.
I have no direct experience of the recent "street wars", but from what I've seen on video, etc., both sides appear to think they're playing some sort of game. But maybe the same could have been said of the '60s...
In the late 1960's New York City averaged 2 to 3 bombings per week. It was far more violent then and far less successful in accomplishing progressive goals. The lesson of the 60's was that violence without government sanction won't work. People feel that they can fight back. 60 years later, having dominated the culture, progressives now control the retaliatory use of force leaving people helpless to defend themselves.
Rittenhouse was found not guilty by reason of self defense giving some people hope. To crush this hope, Daniel Penny was charged with second degree manslaughter. He will be convicted and will be killed in prison. His murderer will face no charges.
Knowing this was who Harris was, who did this guy vote for?
Because none of this chick's history was hidden, despite the media trying hard to push her as "moderate" when she got the nomination.
According to present mores, sex trafficking belongs in elementary schools.
That and women in Ohio have individual rights! Ain't it awful? At least Christian Nixon pardoned that Christian hero, Lieutenant Calley.
If not for the Libertarian party platform of 1976 we'd still be living under the Comstock Act.
There was a time that the press, commendably, truly served to comfort the afflicted and to afflict the comfortable. Now, however, in the age of wokeness that, unfortunately, is no longer the case. The press now serves as a propaganda outlet for the nation's elites and those they have put in power to control the potentially unruly populace.
What do you mean things have changed? The press still comforts the uncomfortable elites who worry about the hoi poloi learning the truth about them, and afflicts those who are comfortable in their blissfully ignorant lives.
The only real change is in who is uncomfortable and why.
The press's only job should be, in the words of Joe Friday, "Just the facts, sir, just the facts".
Poorly written article. Can't anyone that calls themselves a journalist write anymore?
Anyone who calls themselves a journalist.
Matt is prolly sobbing over the poor helpless souls those voters are keeping the Republicans from killing in forced childbirth. Give the guy a break.
Killing children in the womb seems to be what you care about the most. As far as Ohio goes (you are just chomping at the bit to talk about it) That's exactly what the SC intended when they struck down a U.S. Constitutional right to abortion, and let the states decide the issue. So, Ohio you can stop the "girl bullying" and commence the "fetus bullying". Que the response of a first-year creative writing student.
"Far too often, journalists reserve their free speech defenses for people they actually like. And man, did they not like Jim Larkin and Mike Lacey."
This is a painfully accurate paragraph. The corporate press is rife with people who use free speech to virtue signal when it suits them, and then ignore all that stuff when it's someone they despite.
For some people, their free speech is a tool to silence others. Whine to Facebook, and the offending post is gone.
Muh private company.
Because the" severity of COVID and the efficacy and safety of the vaccines" was the truth. Right Matt? Wrong.
It seems like you've provided a detailed passage discussing various aspects of journalism, free speech, legal cases, and the treatment of individuals like James Larkin and Mike Lacey in the context of their involvement with Backpage. The passage highlights the media's response to conflicts involving free speech and controversial figures. It also touches on the dichotomy between the attention given to certain issues, such as right-wing book bans, and the relative lack of attention to cases like those involving Backpage.
chandnacorporation.com