NPR’s Katherine Maher Is Not Taking Questions About Her Tweets
Who is Katherine Maher, and what does she really believe? The embattled NPR CEO had the opportunity on Wednesday to set the record straight regarding her views on intellectual diversity, “white silence,” and whether Hillary Clinton (of all people) committed nonbinary erasure when she used the phrase boys and girls.
Unfortunately, during a recent appearance at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace to discuss the journalism industry’s war on disinformation, she repeatedly declined to give straight answers—instead offering up little more than platitudes about workplace best practices. I attended the event and submitted questions that the organizers effectively ignored.
That’s a shame, because Maher’s views certainly require clarity—especially now that longtime editor Uri Berliner has resigned from NPR and called out the publicly funded radio channel’s CEO. In his parting statement, Berliner slammed Maher, saying that her “divisive views confirm the very problems” that he wrote about in his much-discussed article for Bari Weiss’ Free Press.
Berliner’s tell-all mostly took aim at specific examples of NPR being led astray by its deference to progressive shibboleths: the Hunter Biden laptop, COVID-19, etc. He implored his new boss—Maher’s tenure as CEO had only begun about four weeks ago—to correct NPR’s lack of viewpoint diversity. That’s probably a tall order, since Maher had once tweeted that ideological diversity is “often a dog whistle for anti-feminist, anti-POC stories.”
That Silicon Valley v Russia thread was pretty funny — until it got onto ideological diversity. In case it’s not evident, in these parts that’s often a dog whistle for anti-feminist, anti-POC stories about meritocracy. Maybe’s not what the author meant. But idk, maybe it is?
— Katherine Maher (@krmaher) July 6, 2018
Indeed, Maher’s past tweets would be hard to distinguish from satire if one randomly stumbled across them. Her earnest, uncompromising wokeness—land acknowledgments, condemnations of Western holidays, and so on—sounds like they were written by parody accounts such as The Babylon Bee or Titania McGrath. In her 2022 TED Talk, she faulted Wikipedia, where she worked at the time, for being a Eurocentric written reference that fails to take into account the oral histories of other peoples. More seriously, she seems to view the First Amendment as an inconvenient barrier for tackling “bad information” and “influence peddlers” online.
But interestingly, she did not reiterate any of these views during her appearance at the Carnegie Endow
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