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Politics : Those Damned Democrat's -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (1335)7/29/2003 12:44:24 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1604
 
Left, right team up against media giants
jewishworldreview.com | (KRT) WASHINGTON - Rep. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., a political strategist in the Clinton administration, likes to think of himself as a keen observer of political trends.
But he was caught off guard when letters and phone calls began flooding his office, all in protest of the Federal Communications Commission's decision to loosen broadcast ownership regulations.

"I was shocked," said Emanuel, who opposes the FCC action. "I didn't see it coming as a grass-roots issue."

It was just a few weeks ago that the controversial plan to relax media ownership rules appeared to be a done deal. Despite intense criticism surrounding the commission's June 2 vote, the House Republican leadership vowed to oppose attempts to overturn the matter. And a senior administration official threatened that President Bush would veto legislation reversing the FCC's action.

But since the agency's decision, a strange coalition has emerged to push Congress to reverse the FCC's plans. For example, the National Organization for Women, a liberal, feminist advocacy group, has joined forces with the National Rifle Association, a conservative pro-gun group, as well as the Christian Coalition, which espouses socially conservative views.

Ordinary people began to swamp lawmakers on Capitol Hill with letters and e-mail. Citizens stopped their congressmen on the streets at home to complain. Lawmakers began to take note of the political potency of the issue.

"I have had average citizens say, `What about this too much ownership of the media?' " said Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz. "I never expected it to be on the radar screen."

Several senators had warned the FCC in writing to slow down and hold more hearings before taking the vote.

"The Congress was trying to get word to the FCC (that) we don't agree with where you are headed," said Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., a staunch opponent of the new rules allowing a company to own television stations that reach as much as 45 percent of the national market, up from the current 35 percent. "Now they are shocked that we are making an effort to keep it from taking effect."

The FCC's plan to increase corporate ownership of media properties appears to be in deep peril on Capitol Hill. Last week, the House added a line to an appropriations bill that would prohibit the FCC from spending money to put its new ownership rules into effect. House Republican leaders decided against trying to strip out the provision, realizing that they would fail, a senior leadership aide said.

Now, senators are considering legislation that would go even further than the House. Last month, the Senate Commerce Committee approved a bill that would retain the 35 percent limit, as well as resurrect the cross-ownership ban that prohibits media companies from owning a newspaper and broadcast outlets in the same market. Tribune Co., the company that publishes the Chicago Tribune, has sought the lifting of the cross-ownership ban.

The concern shared by such disparate lawmakers as Emanuel and Lott is that media giants will gobble up all the radio, television and newspaper properties, eliminating divergent views and ending local control.

"People in small communities are saying, `Wait a minute. We don't want all our media controlled by East Coast or West Coast firms,' " said Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., who was first alerted to the problem by concert venue owners in Madison who felt threatened by Clear Channel Communications Inc. of San Antonio.

Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., who was first elected to the Senate in 1966, said he remembers his long-ago campaigns when he would swing by the radio station and give an interview.

"Now the door is locked," he said, complaining that the programming is frequently controlled from outside the state.

In the case of Emanuel, he has received 479 letters, phone calls, faxes and e-mails about the matter. The only issue of more pressing concern to his constituents seems to be the preservation of Social Security, about which he has had 558 contacts.

In a smattering of letters made available to the Tribune, constituents urged Emanuel to overturn the FCC's decision.

"I am concerned about local news, community programming and preserving diverse voices on the airwaves," one writer said. "The FCC decision serves business interests but not the public interest."

Meanwhile, groups such as the National Organization for Women and the Christian Coalition posted notices on their Web sites urging members to speak out against the FCC action.

"Did you know that five giant corporations control most of the news and entertainment you see on TV?" asked the NOW Web site. "Did you know that just four companies control 90 percent of U.S. radio? That most of this country's newspapers are owned by only 14 companies?

"What if things got worse? What if one of these mega-corporations could own multiple TV stations, radio stations and newspapers in your city?"

Jim Backlin, the Christian Coalition's director of legislative affairs, said many of his organization's 2 million members became energized and called their members of Congress once the impending ownership rule changes were explained to them in the coalition's Weekly Washington Review.

"Channel 25 in Hagerstown, Md., which has more common-sense standards than New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, should not have out-of-touch media giants forcing their vacuous television programs on communities which do not wish to have their children see them," the review said in one dispatch.

Robert McChesney, a University of Illinois journalism professor and co-founder of Free Press, an organization devoted to media diversity, said his organization coordinated a last-minute phone campaign during the week before the House vote.

Free Press members also contacted other groups in the diverse coalition opposed to relaxing media ownership rules: Move On, Consumers Union, Consumer Federation of America, Common Cause, National Rifle Association, and Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting.

"A number of groups have large e-mail lists," McChesney said. "And we asked them to send out an alert."

The alert asked people to call their representative in Congress and tell him or her to support an amendment in the House that would have not only reinstated the 35 percent cap but the ban on cross-ownership. Move On, for example, estimated that its list alone generated 14,000 to 28,000 phone calls, McChesney said.

Michael Copps, one of two Democratic members on the five-member FCC, said he saw evidence that the issue had taken off when commission Chairman Michael Powell refused to hold additional hearings to listen to the public's views on media ownership.

Copps and his fellow Democrat on the commission, Jonathan Adelstein, held unofficial hearings instead.

"You would have 500, 600 people show up," Copps said. "It just kind of hit you over the head that, wow, this was a grass-roots issue.

"People, when they are reminded that they own the airwaves, take a very proprietary interest in them and how they are used, as well they should."

So many people e-mailed the FCC that the agency's computers bogged down, Copps said. Critics who opposed the FCC decision estimate that opponents of the new rules sent out almost 2 million mailings to both the commission and Congress.

"A button clicked for a lot of Americans this spring," McChesney said. "And it had dramatic effect. To the point where I think the unthinkable is now at hand. There's a very good chance that we will overturn the entirety of the FCC decision in September."



To: calgal who wrote (1335)7/29/2003 12:44:42 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1604
 
Newsworthy progress in Iraq

As the dust settles after war, it can take several months before an accurate picture emerges of the scene on the ground. In the interim period, it can be frustrating for Americans not to have a precise reading of the situation their troops are in, and we in the press also can be frustrated with a lack of tangible information. Too frequently, however, this frustration with the unknown is portrayed as frustration with a decidedly unsatisfactory level of progress, which is an entirely different complaint. Luckily, on the first score, we have respected journalists returning from Iraq with first-person accounts that steady progress is being made over there.
In The Washington Post on Sunday, foreign-affairs columnist Jim Hoagland reported that, "Iraq is much calmer than I expected from daily dispatches and television accounts that rarely treat sustained progress as news. The joint American-British occupation authority is making real progress in handing over responsibility to local authorities." Writing from Mosul, Mr. Hoagland criticized the Bush administration for not being clearer about its goals for reconstruction, and expressed doubt that the job can be done in the amount of time American public opinion will allow. But he also admitted that the effort to "win hearts and minds" is positive and that U.S. generals really are trying to "make Iraq into a country that works." These views are important coming from a distinguished media voice.
Similar progress reports are coming from other mainstream sources. Christopher Hitchens, a decidedly non-credulous international journalist, told Fox News, "It's quite extraordinary to see the way American soldiers are welcomed. To see the work that they're doing — and not just rolling up these filthy networks of Ba'athists and jihadists — but building schools, opening soccer stadiums, helping connect to the Internet, there is a really intelligent political program as well as a very tough military one." Because the daily lives of Iraqis are improving and political stability is increasing, Wall Street Journal editor Paul Gigot reports from Najaf that, "The majority aren't worried we'll stay too long; they're petrified we'll leave too soon."
Since the end of the war to oust Saddam's regime, much has been made of the isolated ambushes on U.S. troops, and the media has hyped the non-story that Americans are already tiring of the mounting body count. A frequent line — especially on TV news shows — is that this resistance is in marked contrast to the peaceful time American GIs had reconstructing Germany after a longer and nastier Second World War. This is not in fact the case, as pockets of Nazis did employ a hit-and-run guerrilla campaign to try to dissuade allied occupation and reconstruction. From the fall of Berlin in May 1945 and into 1947, Nazi resistance fighters — known as werewolves — blew up roads and bridges, assassinated German officials cooperating with the Allies, sniped at GIs, sacked museums and undertook countless other acts of vigilantism and sabotage. Eventually this mayhem passed and Germany became a peace-loving capitalist democracy. The goal in Iraq is a difficult one, but progress is being made — and is now finally being reported on.


URL:http://www.washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20030728-084132-1405r.htm



To: calgal who wrote (1335)7/30/2003 11:59:12 PM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1604
 
Still pertains to overall war situation, and that involves Democrats and Republicans:

Rice Says She Feels 'Personal Responsibility' for Iraq Flap




Wednesday, July 30, 2003
WASHINGTON — National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice (search) said Wednesday that she feels responsible for the questionable statement in President Bush's State of the Union address about Iraqi plans to buy uranium in Africa.





"I certainly feel personal responsibility for this entire episode," she said in an interview on PBS' "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer." "What I feel most responsible for is that this is detracting from the very strong case the president has been making."

Rice was the latest administration official, including CIA Director George Tenet (search) and the president himself, to take responsibility for the statement tying Iraq to Africa.

The Bush administration has been barraged by embarrassing questions asking why it included the claim in the State of the Union more than three months after a similar claim was removed from a Bush speech in Cincinnati.

Rice said Tenet called her deputy, Stephen Hadley (search), in the fall and told him not to put the claim about uranium in a presidential speech in Cincinnati.

She said she later learned Tenet had sent "a set of clearance comments on why he wanted this out of the speech."

"I can tell you, I either didn't see the memo, I don't remember seeing the memo," Rice said, adding that it covered many areas of the speech besides the uranium claim.

Several months later, when she saw the reference in the State of the Union speech, "I thought it was completely credible and that it was backed by the agency," she said.

Rice said steps are being taken, including more double-checking of such changes from one speech to the next, to avoid a similar lapse in the future.

"We're going to have a process where we don't have to rely on people's memories to link what was taken out of the speech in Cincinnati to what was put in the speech for the State of the Union," she said.

Rice said it's important not to let the controversy about the disputed statement cloud the strong case the administration had against Iraq.

Bush strongly defended his national security adviser Wednesday, saying she was an "honest, fabulous person" and the United States was lucky to have her in government.

URL:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,93360,00.html



To: calgal who wrote (1335)7/31/2003 1:39:49 PM
From: Tadsamillionaire  Respond to of 1604
 
Claim: An ex-congressman who had sex with a subordinate won clemency from a president who had sex with a subordinate, then was hired by a clergyman who had sex with a subordinate.
Status: True.

Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001]

Jessie Jackson has added former Chicago democratic congressman Mel Reynolds to the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition's payroll. Reynolds was among the 176 criminals excused in President Clinton's last-minute forgiveness spree. Reynolds received a commutation of his six-and-a-half-year federal sentence for 15 convictions of wire fraud, bank fraud & lies to the Federal Election Commission. He is more notorious; however, for concurrently serving five years for sleeping with an underage campaign volunteer.
This is a first in American politics: An ex-congressman who had sex with a subordinate won clemency from a president who had sex with a subordinate, then was hired by a clergyman who had sex with a subordinate.

His new job? Youth counselor.

Origins: We can't say with absolute certainty that this is "a first in American politics" (since the sexual peccadilloes of American politicians were not always as widely publicized as they are now), but:
1995-1997: President Bill Clinton's sexual escapades with Monica Lewinsky, then a 21-year-old unpaid White House intern working in the office of Leon Panetta, Clinton's Chief of Staff, hardly need recounting to anyone who hasn't spent the last five years on Mars.

January 2001: The National Enquirer reveals that Jesse Jackson had been carrying on an affair with Karin L. Stanford, a 39-year-old former aide on his Rainbow/PUSH Coalition staff, for over four years, and that Jackson had fathered the child Stanford bore in May 1999. (Jackson has been married for 38 years.)

January 2001: Just before leaving office, Clinton (at the urging of Jesse Jackson, among others) commutes the sentence of former Illinois congressman Mel Reynolds, who had spent 30 months in a state prison for having sex with a 16-year-old campaign volunteer and was serving a five-year sentence in federal prison for lying to obtain loans and illegally diverting campaign money for personal use.

January 2001: The Chicago Sun-Times reports that former congressman Mel Reynolds will work as the community development director of Salem Baptist Church in south-side Chicago and as a consultant for Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, trying to decrease the number of young African-Americans going to prison.
Last updated: 17 August 2001

snopes.com

Dodge, Susan. "Reynolds Finds Work with S. Side Church."
Chicago Sun-Times. 29 January 2001 (p. 5).

Page, Susan. "Who Gets a Pardon? It Depends on Who Asks."
USA Today. 20 March 2001 (p. A7).

Page, Susan and Mimi Hall. "Pardon Drama Casts Wide Net."
USA Today. 23 Feburary 2001 (p. A7).

Sneed, Michael. "Reynolds Might Be Really Enjoying the Ride."
Chicago Sun-Times . 25 February 2001 (p. 12).

Associated Press. "Celeb Pardon Push."
[New York] Newsday. 9 March 2001 (p. A5).