The AP made the correct call in running a photo of a mortally wounded Marine, writes David Harsanyi in the Denver Post. “If I could recall a wanton penchant of the press to run photos of dead Marines, my reaction might have been very different,” he writes. But he can't, and charges that image “exploit the tragic death of a true American hero”— in the words of Sarah Palin, for one—ring hollow. “The pictures unquestionably added humanity and context to (Joshua) Bernard's death.”
“It is unfathomable to imagine the anguish the Bernard family must feel” after the photos were released against their wishes, Harsanyi writes. But “the awful reality remains. As cruel as it sounds, those concerns should not guide the journalist's decision-making process.” In fact, “at the risk of dropping a massive cliche on readers,” Harsanyi writes, “the troops exist to defend things like the First Amendment, as ugly as they may find the results.” (More Joshua Bernard stories.)