Under the guise of entering the "electronic telecommunications age" upon the
suggestion of friends, it appears the Omaha World-Herald is finally kicking
former editor and publisher Harold W. Andersen to the curb after years of
filling its opinion page with increasingly insufferable inanity.
Andersen is, of course, an institution in the Nebraska press, but his
ultimate legacy is one of unprincipled partisanship, protecting and projecting
the World-Herald's singular position of power in Nebraska politics.
Andersen has always been keenly aware of the World-Herald's influence, and he
has never been shy to use that influence to advance the paper's corporate,
conservative agenda - in its reporting as well as on its opinion page.
Since retiring as publisher in 1989 (after being implicated in a series of
bizarre allegations involving influence-peddling and even child sex abuse),
Andersen has been been officially confined to duties as a twice-weekly
columnist. But the spirit of his reign has survived pretty well intact.
One hopes the symbolism of Andersen's departure, the need for change in the
face of declining readership, and a new generation of reporters and columnists
untainted by past regimes might allow for a true change of course at the
World-Herald, embracing an ethic of responsible reporting that actually
challenges Nebraska's powers that be rather than positioning itself for
pre-eminence amongst them.
But, let's face it - this is the World-Herald, folks. I wouldn't
count on it.
By the way, Andersen promises that he will continue to make new columns
available at www.HaroldAndersen.com after his last World-Herald
column on September 30th. Thank God for that. I can't imagine what the people
of Nebraska would do without Andersen telling us what to think.
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