Boston Globe: Op-ed about Defiling Food didn't meet standards - iMediaEthics

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(Credit: Boston Globe, screenshot)

The Boston Globe published an op-ed that originally read in part, “One of the biggest regrets of my life is not pissing in Bill Kristol’s salmon.”

Now it says: “One of the biggest regrets in my life was serving Bill Kristol salmon and not telling the neoconservative pundit and chief Iraq War cheerleader what I really thought about him.”

The Globe‘s opinion piece by Luke O’Neil, headlined, “Keep Kirstjen Nielsen unemployed and eating Grubhub over her kitchen sink,” now carries an editor’s note that reads:

Editor’s note:A version of this column as originally published did not meet Globe standards and has been changed. The Globe regrets the previous tone of the piece.”

iMediaEthics has written to the Globe and tweeted O’Neil.

The first paragraph of the opinion piece originally read:

ONE OF THE biggest regrets of my life is not pissing in Bill Kristol’s salmon. I was waiting on the disgraced neoconservative pundit and chief Iraq War cheerleader about 10 years ago at a restaurant in Cambridge and to my eternal dismay, some combination of professionalism and pusillanimity prevented me from appropriately seasoning his entree. A ramekin of blood on the side might have been the better option, come to think of it. He always did seem really thirsty for the stuff.

Now it reads:

One of the biggest regrets in my life was serving Bill Kristol salmon and not telling the neoconservative pundit and chief Iraq War cheerleader what I really thought about him. That was 10 years ago, at a restaurant in Cambridge, and I was reminded of that episode this week when Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen, the purportedly reluctant triggerman for Donald Trump’s inhumane policies of ethnic cleansing, announced she would be stepping down from her post at the president’s request.

The Globe also deleted this paragraph, according to an Internet archive comparison:


As for the waiters out there, I’m not saying you should tamper with anyone’s food, as that could get you into trouble. You might lose your serving job. But you’d be serving America. And you won’t have any regrets years later.

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Boston Globe: Op-ed about Defiling Food didn’t meet standards

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