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WaPo's Applebaum defends her defense of child rapist

September 30, 2009 3:47 pm ET by Jamison Foser

Yesterday, Anne Applebaum was one of two -- two! -- Washington Post columnists who argued for leniency for child rapist Roman Polanski.  Applebaum's argued that Polanski shouldn't be imprisoned because he has suffered enough -- he's had to pay lawyers' fees, and was unable to pick up an Oscar he won for fear he'd be taken for jail.  No, really -- that was Applebaum's argument:

He did commit a crime, but he has paid for the crime in many, many ways: In notoriety, in lawyers' fees, in professional stigma. He could not return to Los Angeles to receive his recent Oscar.

That's just dumb.  People who commit crimes do not pay their debts to society when they write checks to their lawyers.  And saying that someone has paid for the crime of child rape by being unable to receive an Oscar may be the single most clueless thing ever written by a Washington Post columnist.

Anyway, Applebaum's defense of Polanski drew some well-deserved ridicule, here and elsewhere.  

Well, today, Applebaum responded.  And, as Paul Campos points out at Lawyers, Guns and Money, she responds by saying, basically, that the Polanski case isn't "straightforward and simple" because Polanski's victim -- a 13-year-old child -- had asked her mother for permission to be photographed in a jacuzzi.

Applebaum doesn't bother to explain why a 13-year-old child asking her mother for permission to be photographed in a jacuzzi in any way gets a grown man off the hook for subsequently drugging and raping the child.  She just assumes we'll understand.  But, in any case, Campos points out that Applebaum got it wrong; the victim didn't ask her mother if she could be photographed in a jacuzzi.  So Applebaum's defense of Polanski is not only strange and bizarre, it is factually inaccurate as well.

Applebaum also defends herself from criticism that she should have disclosed the fact that her husband, a Polish government official, is currently lobbying for Polanski's freedom.  Applebaum writes that at the time she wrote the original blog post, she "had no idea that the Polish government would or could lobby for Polanski's release, as I am in Budapest and my husband is in Africa."

I actually find that reasonably compelling.  Unfortunately, that isn't Applebaum's only defense of her lack of disclosure.  Applebaum:

For the record, I will note that I mentioned my husband's job in a column as recently as last week, and that when he first entered the Polish government three years ago I wrote a column about that too. I have to assume that the bloggers who have leapt upon this as some kind of secret revelation are simply unfamiliar with my writing. 

This is nonsense.  If a conflict exists, it isn't sufficient to disclose it once.  It must be disclosed every time it is relevant.  Applebaum seems to assume that Washington Post readers make a mental catalogue of every Post reporter and columnist, their relationships, and their conflicts of interest.  That anyone who ever reads anything she writes will take it upon themselves to keep a running tally of her conflicts, so she need disclose them only once.  That, obviously, is not going to happen.  And it displays a stunning arrogance -- she thinks everyone who reads her column cares enough about her to know where her husband works.  

Finally, she's misstating the nature of what she mocks as the "secret revelation." The criticism wasn't that her husband is an employee of the Polish government.  Nobody cares about that.  It's that her husband is a Polish government official who is currently lobbying for the very thing Applebaum is arguing in favor of.  Surely she understands the difference?

Applebaum concludes:

The implication, in any case, that I am a spokesman for my husband -- while not quite as offensive as the implication that my daughter should be raped -- is offensive nevertheless.

That's a pretty poor attempt to play the victim.  Does Anne Applebaum expect us to believe that she doesn't think it would be newsworthy if, say, a United States Senator casts a vote that would benefit her spouse's business, without disclosing the interest?

There's a clear difference between saying someone is incapable of thinking independently and is merely a puppet of their spouse, and saying someone should disclose conflicts of interest that arise from their spouse's work.  The former would, indeed, be offensive.  The latter is what people were actually saying.

UPDATE: Applebaum also includes this priceless line:

Of course, there were some very legitimate disagreements, including two excellent ones from my colleagues Gene Robinson and Richard Cohen, and I take some of their points.

Note that the only legitimate disagreements Applebaum can bring herself to refer to came from her Washington Post colleagues.  Note also that she doesn't actually tell us what those disagreements were.  Or which of their "points" she "takes." It's a secret.  And, finally, note that neither Robinson nor Cohen actually mention her in any way, and that Cohen agrees with her that Polanski should not be jailed.

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    • Author by pointofview (September 30, 2009 4:32 pm ET)
      1 4
      Whoopi Goldberg defends Roman Polanski: 'It wasn't rape-rape'

      http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/culture/lucyjones/100003657/whoopi-goldberg-defends-roman-polanski-it-wasnt-rape-rape/

      There is class for ya!!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by overmars jr. (September 30, 2009 5:14 pm ET)
        1 1
        Ummm yeeeeah, so Whoopi Goldberg said something ridiculous.

        And... ?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by wzwriter (September 30, 2009 6:28 pm ET)
        1  
        When stupid posts are made, POV will post them.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by bilbo_dies (September 30, 2009 7:39 pm ET)
        1  
        So is she trying to equate this to date rape?
        "They had both been drinking, she said "NO", he thought she meant "Yes"."


        To me, rape is rape. The only difference being maybe the time you have to spend in jail paying for your crime. (difference between date rape and breaking into someones house, tying them up, raping them, and then leaving them for dead)


        If I follow Applebaum's defence I think I would rob a bank. Flee to Europe, live on the French Riviera, and then plea that I had already "done my time".
        Report Abuse
      • Author by Tbone Slickens (October 01, 2009 8:46 am ET)
           
        NO! Not rape-rape. You know, just the seduction of an underage girl (7th grade) with champagne and Quaalude's. Not the rape-rape where a forty-four year old man pushed himself on her and rape-raped her then when she told him she wasn't on the pill, ever the gentleman child rapist he buggered her bottom.

        No. It wasn't rape-rape...just a drug fueled seduction of a minor who you sodomized, or just another night in Hollywood.

        The best part Point is you got four "downers" by exposing one of the head cheerleaders on the left! Can't wait to see the defense of that!
        Report Abuse
    • Author by historygeek001 (September 30, 2009 5:12 pm ET)
      1 1
      Anybody who defends either child rape is disgusting. Applebaum states that Polanski should be left alone because he has had to pay money and couldn't pick up his award in person; the implication is that people should be allowed to buy their way out of trouble. Polanski drugged and raped a 13 year old child. That is indefensible.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by fabucat58 (September 30, 2009 5:56 pm ET)
        1  
        No one's defending child rape. The issue is whether prosecution of Polanski will do more social harm than good. I myself am incredibly conflicted about the entire thing.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by foghornleghorn (September 30, 2009 7:44 pm ET)
          2  
          This is all political. The L.A. county prosecutor was embarrassed by the 2008 movie about this case.

          The D.A. is just flexing his muscle because he's trying to save face for his department. After all, why do it now? Polanski's been going to Switzerland for YEARS. He has a house there.

          Not that they shouldn't have arrested him, but if any case has some extenuating circumstances, its this one. Especially the point that a plea deal was worked out but the judge threw it out because he was a publicity hound and wanted an OJ like trial (even though this pre-dates OJ).
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Brabantio (October 01, 2009 1:42 am ET)
               
            Is that an extenuating circumstance? My impression was that a judge isn't obligated to accept a plea deal, so I'm not sure what legal ramifications that action is supposed to have. I haven't read very much about this though, so there may be details I'm not bearing in mind.
            Report Abuse
    • Author by randy99 (September 30, 2009 5:14 pm ET)
         
      fer chrissakes! the dude couldn't pick up his Oscar in person.
      just like being nailed to a cross.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by overmars jr. (September 30, 2009 5:15 pm ET)
      1  
      #1 - WaPo = joke.

      #2 - Applebaum = a major reason why #1 is so very true
      Report Abuse
    • Author by fabucat58 (September 30, 2009 5:53 pm ET)
         
      Interestingly, Breitbart's Big Hollywood claims that "ALL liberals think that Polanski should go free." This issue, like the immigration question, is one that cuts across party lines. A perusal of Huffington Post and Democratic Underground reveals that most of its members think that Polanski should be thrown in jail forever.

      After the guy on the Breitbart site discussed how awful liberals were for their support of Polanski, I noted the following. First, I stated that for years, Polanski had spent some months each year in Switzerland and that the US had not taken steps to have him arrested. Fascinatingly enough, it was not until Obama became President and until Eric Holder became AG (both fathers of young girls) that the US persuaded the Swiss to arrest Polanski. Second, I noted that the French and the Polish governments which are protesting the Polanski arrest are controlled by CONSERVATIVE parties. I'm sure my post on the Breitbart site made me about as popular as a skunk at a perfumery.

      Finally, as I've noted before, there's a delicate question of ethnic solidarity. I cannot tell you, for example, how many well-meaning African Americans defended Michael Jackson. (I know that he was found innocent--but his bedtime practices were bizarre). I think that Ms. Applebaum and Mr. Cohen have stood up for Polanski because he was a Jew (albeit a very secular one) who escaped the Holocaust. I'm sure that Cohen and Applebaum think that they are being objective, but this case is interesting because I think that it's impossible to be objective about it.

      Seriously, I don't know how I come down on this entire affair myself.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by HarryP (October 01, 2009 1:38 pm ET)
           
        Interestingly, Breitbart's Big Hollywood claims that "ALL liberals think that Polanski should go free."

        Could you give me a link? I tried finding it and couldn't. Thanks.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by fabucat58 (September 30, 2009 5:59 pm ET)
         
      This whole Polanski mess with its child rape reminds me of the Scahill interview on the Maddow Show last week. Scahill, as you recall, said that Blackwater employees actually RAN a child sex ring in the 90s when they were working in Bosnia.

      With that in mind, I came up with this bumpersticker: "BLACKWATER HAS RAPED MORE KIDS THAN POLANSKI OR ACORN!"
      Report Abuse
    • Author by JanetfromMD (September 30, 2009 8:17 pm ET)
         
      WaPo seems to have removed any trace of Applebaum's column from their website. I looked for it when I saw it mentioned in a message for Robinson's column.
      I thought it was ironic today that we saw Hillary Clinton, I believe at the UN, presiding over a meeting regarding the sexual abuse of girls around the world.
      Polanski certainly would fall into the category of a child sex abuser.
      I think those Hollywood people who support Polanski have lost their moral compass.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by the7sticks3363 (October 01, 2009 2:34 am ET)
      1  
      YOU TRAITORS! I thought you people cared about protecting the work we do in Hollywood and freedom of speech, but I guess all of you are just concerned about your sorry little butts and use us as a piggy bank for your Democrat causes. I'll still vote for either Democrats or Republicans, but I am never going to give you a blank check ever again if this is the way you people think. We made you, therefore we can destroy you. And stop badmouthing my town! Hollywood is the greatest city in the world!
      Report Abuse

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