Joe Williams
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2007
- Messages
- 4,846
Had a discussion the other night with a veteran scribe, and we both came to the rather chilling conclusion that, some day sooner rather than later, we're going to see and hear of a newsroom or newspaper executive suite that gets riddled by gunfire from some disgruntled employee.
Don't get us wrong, we're as horrified by the thought as anyone. But can management continue to cut and slash and squash and crush without some blowback? I know there was the guy at the Miami Herald sometime last year who went bananas and created a hostage situation. The next (il)logical step would be for a displaced (bought out or laid off) newsperson to go postal. It doesn't even have to be someone who has gotten the ax. It could be someone living every day in fear that he or she will be next.
Sorry if raising the issue scares or troubles anyone here, but let's get real, this is a lot of workplace trauma to be dumping on a passionate, driven, sometimes crazed-in-normal-times bunch of employees with limited alternate job options. Odds are that someone somewhere is gonna snap, no? If it's happening on campuses, it's only a matter of time before it happens in newspaper headquarters. I can already imagine the helicopter video on CNN and colleague sound bites that "He was such a quiet copy editor..."
Don't get us wrong, we're as horrified by the thought as anyone. But can management continue to cut and slash and squash and crush without some blowback? I know there was the guy at the Miami Herald sometime last year who went bananas and created a hostage situation. The next (il)logical step would be for a displaced (bought out or laid off) newsperson to go postal. It doesn't even have to be someone who has gotten the ax. It could be someone living every day in fear that he or she will be next.
Sorry if raising the issue scares or troubles anyone here, but let's get real, this is a lot of workplace trauma to be dumping on a passionate, driven, sometimes crazed-in-normal-times bunch of employees with limited alternate job options. Odds are that someone somewhere is gonna snap, no? If it's happening on campuses, it's only a matter of time before it happens in newspaper headquarters. I can already imagine the helicopter video on CNN and colleague sound bites that "He was such a quiet copy editor..."