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Parliament of Whores ... and Tattletales

More tales of journalists behaving badly: Boston Herald columnist Charles Chieppo has been given a $10,000 contract by Taxachussetts Governor Mitt Romney "to promote the governor's environmental policies," according to the Boston Globe.

His job calls for writing op-ed pieces and internal documents "to support the efforts of senior management to promote education, awareness, and acceptance of major policy initiatives" on the environment.

Chieppo will work two days a week until at least June 30. He also plans to continue writing op-ed columns for the Herald, where he is paid for each article.

Meanwhile, if we can believe Lloyd Grove, the Gray Lady is turning into the Gray Sex-Snitch:

The perils of Iraq have nothing on the nasty fracas erupting between former New York Times Baghdad Bureau Chief Susan Sachs and her ex-colleagues, Times Baghdad correspondents Dexter Filkins and John Burns.

The Gray Lady's management has just fired Sachs, a widely respected and experienced journalist who has tangled bitterly with Burns and Filkins, over allegations that she sent anonymous letters and an E-mail to their wives alleging bad behavior with women in the war zone.

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Comments to "Parliament of Whores ... and Tattletales":

phocion | April 8, 2005, 1:30pm | #

Awesome, another Globe vs. Herald catfight.

Warren | April 8, 2005, 1:34pm | #

heh, most amusing :)

Mike | April 8, 2005, 1:59pm | #

nothing worse in life than c blocker.
I mean that in all 'jest' of course.

SM | April 8, 2005, 4:27pm | #

"alleging bad behavior with women in the war zone."

Bad behaviour means they stole leads from the womyn, right ? Right ?

bigbigslacker | April 8, 2005, 5:44pm | #

They fired a whistleblower. Oh, the irony!

Deus ex Machina | April 8, 2005, 7:41pm | #

But considering that she works for the NYT, how do we know she didn't make the whole incident up or that she was even in Iraq in the first place?

R C Dean | April 11, 2005, 9:39am | #

Not only would I fire someone who sent anonymous email to a colleague's spouse accusing their colleague of infidelity, I have in fact done so.

I didn't care if the accusation was true or not. Within five minutes after confirming who had sent the email (the idiot had done it from a company computer), they were were fired. This was not a difficult decision. I don't need anyone in my organization who will try to destroy someone else's family life in order to win some petty internal political struggle.

rob | April 11, 2005, 12:08pm | #

In other words, she should have minded her own business and the business of her employer and not the personal business of her colleagues.

I wonder, at what point does a corporation or the government finally decide that it's pointless and wasteful to spend time, money and resources on witch-hunting people for what they do outside the workplace?

Not to mention the costs of hiring and firing personnel and the time lost while a new hire gets to a point that they are actually as useful to an organization as the person fired...