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Health & Fitness

NBC and Insincere Apologizing "To Those Who Were Offended"

Apologies that aren't apologies -- when made only "to those who were offended;" example of NBC regarding their truncating the Pledge of Allegiance

Lisa de Moraes of The Washington Post reports that "NBC has apologized for cutting the 'under God, indivisible' part of the Pledge of Allegiance in a clip during Sunday’s coverage of the U.S. Open." The editing out of that part of the Pledge, said announcer Dan Hicks during the broadcast, "was not done to upset anyone, and we'd like to apologize to those of you who were offended by it."

Please, pseudo-contrite ones, forever spare us from apologies made disingenuously to "those who were offended."

How can I put this more clearly: a qualified apology implies that you do not authentically regret that which you did, but only that you are sorry that someone took umbrage.

Moreover, there is no explanation of the mechanism that led to the elimination of the religious reference -- was it intentional? Was it unintentional? Was it a coincidence that the controversial section of the Pledge was omitted? Was the "indivisible" left out to give cover to the strategic elimination of "under God?"

We don't know, but NBC in its cute way avoids what the following simple, unambiguous statement of apology could virtually eliminate, doubt that they are sorry for what they did. They could simply say: "We are embarrassed and sincerely regret leaving out 'under God, indivisible' from the Pledge of Allegiance in our U.S. Open coverage. It will not happen again."

Cute locutions are incompatible with sincere statements lamenting a mistake.

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FIRST PUBLISHED IN RED MARYLAND, JUNE 20, 2011

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Monday, June 20, 2011

--Richard E. Vatz




Prof. Vatz teaches political rhetoric at Towson University

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