Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/11/15

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Subject: [Leica] photos of war dead
From: "Emanuel Lowi" <mano@vif.com>
Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2003 17:20:06 -0500

It is rather common for governments to restrict press freedoms in time of war. The
theory behind this -- obviously -- is that the effort towards victory takes
precedence over the public's right to get all the gory details in the heat of the
moment. There's a hierarchy of needs or national interests at work, and it was ever
thus. In the present case, the US public is getting news of deaths in Iraq. It is
debatable whether they also NEED to see photos of the dead service-people being
buried, as those images are likely to eventually undermine the efforts of those still
on the battlefield. Those of you who are against this war, I suspect, are hoping for
exactly that effect. But you'll need to change your constitution (I think) to have
ultimate press freedoms taking precedence over the prosecution of this or other wars.
It took some years of the Vietnam war before the US media felt the massive home-grown
opposition to that conflict and started publishing pictures that eventually
undermined the war effort -- and that may have been a good thing. It would be
inappropriate for the press to make things work the other way 'round.

Emanuel Lowi
Montreal
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Replies: Reply from Eric Welch <eric@jphotog.com> (Re: [Leica] photos of war dead)
Reply from Marc James Small <msmall@infionline.net> ([Leica] Photos of War Dead)