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Date: | Fri, 8 Apr 2005 18:23:15 -0400 |
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I live in New York and read the New York Times daily. I'm also aware of
all the different ways to frame the debate on this issue, since I'm a
breastfeeding advocate. The Times chose what they usually choose,
especially in the Sunday magazine: to target the worries of an upper
class person, portray these worries as neurotic, and use somewhat
inflammatory language to make the issue "sexy". The banner headline was
an image of a worried, skinny woman nursing with vaguely reassuring
tones: this is the Times' image of their audience. The real take home
message is /not/ on the banner headline: on every measure formula fed
babies have much worse outcomes than babies fed "contaminated" milk.
You can find this buried in the print, which most people don't read.
And the other big issue which is not addressed anywhere is that no one
is testing formula for contaminants.
Every news outlet has a bias, and rhetoric which verges on propaganda is
found in even the most staid venues.
Kate Sharp
LC in NYC
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