Time Magazine chose Pope Francis as its 2013 “Person of the Year,” igniting criticism from those who believed Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor whose leaks sparked scrutiny into the breadth of U.S. surveillance programs, should have been chosen.
Former Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald, who has continued to break stories based on Snowden’s leaks, told TPM that “If it were a serious magazine with minimally brave editors, then of course Snowden would have been chosen, but I never expected him to be precisely because that’s not what Time is.”
Greenwald wasn’t alone in his criticism, with media figures from National Journal columnist Ron Fournier to Breitbart News editor John Nolte suggesting Snowden might have been a better choice.
Kinda nice for Time that they had a newsmaking Pope. Puts a plausible veneer on refusing the obvious pick: Snowden. http://t.co/d3OoiTylIl
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) December 11, 2013
No Ed Snowden? Yeah, Pope’s been interesting, but is he really most fascinating person of year? Once again, fear. pic.twitter.com/mcHY3bDKtu









