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Old 12-22-2004, 03:48 AM
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Default Re: Time Magazine's Person of the Year for 2004...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Darren
Quote:
Originally Posted by ApostateAbe
Didn't Osama make Person of the Year in 2002 or something?
I think he was in the running for it, seriously.
He was in the running in 2001, but Time wimped out and played politics instead.

Quote:
It is an inescapable fact of life that the bad, the evil, and the notorious often have a great deal influence on world affairs, and Time's annual "Man of the Year" selection is simply an acknowledgement of the person they perceive to have been that year's most influential individual, whatever the nature of that influence. Some of Time's previous "Man of the Year" selections such as Adolph Hitler, Joseph Stalin, and Ayatullah Khomeini (or even Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson) were not intended to heap laudatory praise upon those persons, but to simply recognize their profound effect upon world history.

So, by the standards Time has employed for more than seventy years, Osama bin Laden is an obvious choice as someone to be considered for designation as 2001's "Man of the Year." Certainly some may believe that there are better choices (i.e., that there are other people who have had more of an influence on world events in the past year than Osama bin Laden) or that as nothing more than a terrorist (i.e., someone lacking any official political standing) Osama bin Laden shouldn't be afforded any publicity at all — good or bad — by an American national news magazine, and those are legitimate issues one might choose to raise with Time. But complaints along the lines of "How dare you even consider honoring a murderer like Osama bin Laden!" are likely to fall on deaf ears, because honor is not what Time's "Man of the Year" is about.

Update: Time avoided the controversy by naming New York mayor Rudy Giuliani as their Person of the Year for 2001, disdaining Osama bin Laden as a "garden variety terrorist":

Though we spent hours debating the pros and cons of naming Osama bin Laden, it ultimately became easy to dismiss him," said managing editor Jim Kelly. "He is not a larger-than-life figure with broad historical sweep . . . he is smaller than life, a garden-variety terrorist whose evil plan succeeded beyond his highest hopes."

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