MAN ABOUT TOWN: A Web of Intrigue
August 30, 2010 by George Southern · 8 Comments
By GEORGE SOUTHERN
Falls Church Times Columnist
August 30, 2010
Before the days of the Internet, getting “published” wasn’t that easy. Sure, you could pay a vanity press to privately print your work, but that didn’t mean anyone would read it. Today, though, any Tom, Dick, or Harriet can write a blog accessible around the world.
This seems like a useful innovation, but how does one separate fact from fiction? Truth from garbage? That’s one thing not even Google has figured out.
In little Falls Church, news sources are limited. For two years now we’ve had the Falls Church Times, but as a volunteer organization, this online newspaper doesn’t pretend to be able to cover all the local news of import. So we’re still often left with the News-Press, which recently set a record of 1,000 continuous weeks of publication.
Unfortunately, the News-Press, having over the years become accustomed to holding the only key to local publication, recently committed an egregious triple sin: First, it reported as “news” a couple of sentences posted anonymously on an obscure political blog. Then came an editorial bemoaning the “news.” Finally, the editor’s henchman laid out an action plan in reaction to the “news.”
If your reaction is “so what,” allow me to connect the dots. The News-Press editor remains in shock after the election of a mayor he opposed. First he petulantly reported that Mayor Baroukh had declined a request to congratulate the newspaper on its thousandth edition. Then, when it came time for the annual “State of the City” interview with the mayor, he handed the job off to an assistant.
It’s clear that the News-Press editor, along with his henchman, the ex-mayor’s husband, want very, very badly to see the end of Mayor Baroukh. Since Baroukh is a federal employee, and under the Hatch Act is not eligible to run in a partisan election, the ploy is to institute partisan elections for City Council.



