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Pilgrim's avatar

> It is, in effect, the equivalent of Hester Prynne being forced to wear the letter “A,” designating herself as an adulteress.

Is it not worse? As I understand (I've not read Hawthorne's novel), she was --- technically, at least --- an adulteress, since she embarked on her affair without verifying for certain that her husband was dead. ...By contrast, there's no such guilt attached to those who are revealing the truth about the commission of a crime --- they're actually being socially stigmatised for doing what is right.

> its stated mandate to “comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable,”

I'd only ever heard this phrase in a religious context. Left-leaning preachers and Social Gospel types often use it to speak of Christianity.

I didn't realise that it was said originally of journalists, by a journalist --- one Finley Peter Dunne, writing under the pseudonym of an Irishman named "Mr. Dooley". And, amusingly, it was actually written to lampoon the hypocrisy and grandiosity of the fourth estate. Very fitting...

“Th newspaper does ivrything f’r us.

It runs th’ polis foorce an’ th’ banks,

commands th’ milishy,

controls th’ ligislachure,

baptizes th’ young,

marries th’ foolish,

comforts th’ afflicted,

afflicts th’ comfortable,

buries th’ dead

an’ roasts thim aftherward.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finley_Peter_Dunne#Often_quoted_aphorisms

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