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To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/3/2003 1:21:00 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Couric Cues Up Clinton’s Talking Points,
Assumes Worst in Iraq

Assuming the worst and matching your guest’s agenda. When Senator Hillary Clinton appeared Monday morning on NBC’s Today after returning from a trip to Afghanistan and Iraq, Katie Couric’s first question didn’t consider the possibility that maybe things in Iraq look better on the ground than they do from afar on TV, as many other visitors have observed. Instead, her first question to Clinton: “What are your impressions of the situation in Iraq? How bad is it, in your view?"

And instead of pressing Clinton about the feasibility of her mantra about “internationalizing” the situation by bringing in the UN, a policy which would hasten the U.S. retreat from Iraq, Couric worried about how the Bush policy may lead to a premature withdrawal: "Well let me ask you about that exist strategy because it's been controversial. The notion of having caucuses and indirect election rather than direct elections has been criticized by the head Shiite cleric and many obviously Iraqis or Shiites. Do you think an exit strategy is being crafted at, at, sort of, the risk of not establishing a true democracy in Iraq?"

Couric set up the December 1 segment with Clinton, and Rhode Island Senator Jack Reed who accompanied her on her trip, both of whom appeared via satellite from Capitol Hill:

“On Close Up this morning Iraq. Democratic senators Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Jack Reed of Rhode Island have just returned from a trip to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Senator Clinton and Senator Reed, good morning to both of you. Senator Clinton let me start with you if I could. As we've been reporting on Sunday there was a massive firefight between U.S. and Iraqi forces resulting in the reported deaths of 46 Iraqi fighters still wearing the uniform of Saddam's Fedayeen militia. What are your impressions of the situation in Iraq? How bad is it, in your view?"

Couric’s second question: "Well Senator Reed, since Senator Clinton brought that up, what, how are the soldiers, how are U.S. forces holding up given the fact that November was the bloodiest month since so-called, major combat operations ended with more than 70 U.S. soldiers killed. What was your sense of morale?"

Couric, MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed, next cued up Clinton: "So Senator Clinton, what's the solution then?"

After Clinton talked about bringing in the UN to “internationalize” the situation, Couric simply wondered: "Do you think the Bush administration would be recep-, excuse me, receptive to that?"

Couric moved on to Bush’s surprise trip: "Let me ask you though about the President's visit to Iraq over the weekend to Baghdad, his surprise visit on Thanksgiving Day. Not surprisingly it's been getting mixed reviews depending on one's political views. Some have, have praised the President and said this was a huge morale boost for the troops who badly needed it and others have said it's basically the President was staging a positive photo-op to boost his popularity. Where do you come down on the President's visit, Senator Clinton?"

After Clinton’s “good but” answer, Couric stuck to pitching up another softball: "Well let me ask you about that exist strategy because it's been controversial. The notion of having caucuses and indirect election rather than direct elections has been criticized by the head Shiite cleric and many obviously Iraqis or Shiites. Do you think an exit strategy is being crafted at, at, sort of, the risk of not establishing a true democracy in Iraq?"

Couric’s last question once more simply cued up some Clinton talking points: “We're about out of time, Senator Clinton. What are your major, and Senator Reed. But, but I know you wanted to talk specifically about Afghanistan. So quickly, if you could. What are your major concerns about what is going on in Afghanistan right now?"


mrc.org



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/6/2003 7:23:28 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (12) | Respond to of 35834
 
<font size=4>The Last Refuge of the Democrats <font size=3>
by Fred Barnes, for the Editors
12/15/2003, Volume 009, Issue 14
<font size=4>
DEMOCRATS ROUTINELY COMPLAIN that President Bush and his political team call them unpatriotic for criticizing Bush on the war in Iraq. Democratic senator John Kerry, a struggling presidential candidate, last week went one step further. Addressing the Council on Foreign Relations, Kerry claimed to know ahead of time how the Bush crowd would react to his speech. "I know what the Bush apologists will say to this--that it is unpatriotic to question, to criticize, and to call for change," Kerry said. "I believe it is the essence of patriotism to hold this nation to a higher standard." Yet there was no such charge from Bush or his allies--no doubt, to Kerry's consternation.

The claim that Democrats are targets of a political low blow by being labeled unpatriotic has become a Democratic refrain. It's been used by Senate minority leader Tom Daschle, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, Sen. Bob Graham of Florida, and presidential candidates Dick Gephardt, Wesley Clark, and Howard Dean. Kennedy was upbraided by Republicans in September for claiming Bush had concocted the Iraq war for political gain. His response: "There's no question that this White House sees political advantage in the war. And you can see it in the way they attack the patriotism of those who question them."
<font size=5>
But nobody called Kennedy or any other Democrat
unpatriotic. Bush didn't. Senate Republicans didn't. House
majority leader Tom DeLay denounced Kennedy, but didn't
accuse him of a lack of patriotism. In this and every
other case in which Democrats claim to have been smeared
as unpatriotic, the facts don't bear them out. Bush has
never used the words "Democrat" and "unpatriotic" in the
same sentence or in nearby sentences. In fact, he's never
uttered the word "unpatriotic" in public in any context.
<font size=4>
Democrats said he insinuated they were unpatriotic during the congressional debate on a department of homeland security in 2002. But what Bush actually said in a speech was merely that "the Senate" was "more interested in special interests . . . and not interested in the security of the American people." And there was evidence to support the charge. Democrats controlled the Senate at the time, and they voted against Bush's version of the new department 11 times, precisely because it weakened the prerogatives of a Democratic special interest, labor unions.
<font size=5>
There is, however, one political figure who's been accused
time and again of being unpatriotic: President Bush. The
accusers? Democrats. Graham said Bush's Iraq policy
is "anti-patriotic at the core, because it's asking only
one group of Americans, those soldiers in Iraq and their
families, to pay the price of the occupation." Kerry was
harsher. In a candidate debate last September, he said
Bush "lives out a creed of greed for he and his friends.
I'm tired of seeing chief executives be permitted to take
their millions or billions to Bermuda and leave the
average American here at home stuck with the tax bill. You
know what I call that? Unpatriotic." Democratic
presidential candidate Al Sharpton complained of
Bush, "Real patriots don't put troops in harm's way on a
flawed policy." And Dean has questioned the patriotism of
Bush's attorney general, John Ashcroft.
<font size=4>
But Democrats have convinced themselves they are victims. To shut off dissent from Bush's Iraq policy, they insist, the administration tars dissenters as unpatriotic. When the White House said Durbin had disclosed classified information in a Senate speech, he responded by claiming that anyone who questioned Bush's case for war would be unfairly attacked. "This White House is going to turn to you and attack you," he said. "They are going to question your patriotism." Democrats were incensed by a recent Republican TV ad that says "people are attacking the president for attacking the terrorists." That, said Clark, showed Bush is "trying to strip us of our patriotism."

Democrats are selectively sensitive about TV ads. They remained completely passive when the NAACP aired a commercial in 2000 that accused Bush of killing James Byrd "all over again"--Byrd had been murdered by racist thugs--for refusing to sign a new hate crimes bill.
<font size=5>
And today they blame Bush for failing to deliver on his
promise to "change the tone" in Washington. Yes, the tone
needs changing. But it won't change if Democrats keep
complaining, in order to discredit Bush, that their
patriotism is being questioned--and then also claiming
that the president is unpatriotic. They are wrong on both
counts.
<font size=3>
weeklystandard.com.



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/9/2003 11:03:06 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Bush critics live in their own worlds
December 7, 2003

BY MARK STEYN SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST

For two years now, it's been apparent that increasing numbers of us are living in entirely self-created realities. For example, when I switched on the TV the other day, I saw President Bush being warmly received at Thanksgiving Dinner in Baghdad. By contrast, Wayne Madsen, co-author of America's Nightmare: The Presidency of George Bush II, saw a phony stunt that took place not at dinner time but at 6 a.m.

''Our military men and women,'' he insisted, ''were downing turkey, stuffing, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, and non-alcoholic beer at a time when most people would be eating eggs, bacon, grits, home fries, and toast.'' Warming to his theme, Madsen continued, ''The abysmal and sycophantic Washington and New York press corps seems to have completely missed the Thanksgiving 'breakfast dinner.' Chalk that up to the fact that most people in the media never saw a military chow line or experienced reveille in their lives. So it would certainly go over their heads that troops would be ordered out of bed to eat turkey and stuffing before the crack of dawn.''

Madsen's column, ''Wag The Turkey,'' arose, it quickly transpired, from reading too much into an a.m./p.m. typo in a Washington Post story and an apparent inability to follow complex technicalities like time zones. But, when Brian O'Connell wrote to Madsen pointing out where he'd gone wrong, the ''investigative journalist'' stuck to his guns: ''It's all a secret of, course, so no one will ever know,'' he concluded, darkly. For those in advanced stages of anti-Bush derangement, it will remain an article of faith for decades that the president made the troops get out of bed at 6 in the morning so he could shovel pumpkin pie down them.

Now consider Amr Mohammed al-Faisal's take on the same ''little skit'' (his words) for Saudi Arabia's Arab News: ''Instead of a dainty starlet trotting in to entertain the troops,'' he wrote, ''lo and behold, it was George Bush . . . Now, dear readers, you mustn't laugh at the Americans; remember they are our friends and allies.'' Al-Faisal then proceeds to explain that the Saudis need to find the Americans ''a face-saving exit out of Iraq.'' But ''before we lift a finger to help,'' the Americans must meet certain conditions, among them:

''The halt to the vicious campaign of hatred and lies propagated in the U.S. against Saudi Arabia. Administration officials starting with President Bush himself must spare no occasion to praise Saudi Arabia and inform the American people how lucky they are to have us as allies.

''The release of all Saudis detained in the U.S. or in Guantanamo Bay into Saudi custody.''

Really. While you're at it, why not demand every freed Saudi gets a couple of ''dainty starlets'' of his choice for the plane ride home? The appeasers in the House of Saud, to paraphrase Churchill, fed the crocodile in hopes that it would eat him last. But the croc got hungry and couldn't wait: Right now the bombs are going off in Riyadh, not New York, and Bush has indicated, in his Whitehall speech and elsewhere, that the Saudi regime in its present character has outlived his usefulness. But, if you were one of the various deluded factions in the House of Saud, the fact that the streets outside the palace are not full of folks doubled up howling with laughter at al-Faisal's column might well bolster your view that the lid can be kept on the al-Qaida pot and that spreading around a few more millions in Washington might breathe another couple years' life into the old the-Saudis-are-our-friends routine so many retired American diplomats like to do on Nightline and CNN.

But once in a while, even those in the most hermetically sealed alternative universes enjoy a day trip to reality. On Sept. 11, Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, happened to be in New York, a couple of blocks from the World Trade Center. Made no difference.
The archbishop is worldwide head of the Anglican Communion and, when he's not wrestling with gay bishops in New Hampshire and gay marriage in British Columbia, he occasionally has a spare moment to deal with non-gay issues. To Williams, the Americans' liberation of Afghanistan was ''morally tainted,'' an ''embarrassment,'' and an example of the moral equivalence between the USAF and the suicide bomber, both of whom ''can only see from a distance: the sort of distance from which you can't see a face, meet the eyes of someone, hear who they are, imagine who and what they love. All violence works with that sort of distance.''

Last month, the archbishop happened to be in Istanbul and was a guest at the home of the British consul, Roger Short. Within a few hours of his departure, Short was dead, vaporized in the wreckage of an almighty bombing. Williams sounded momentarily shaken, expressing ''shock and grief'' at the death of his host, and condemning ''these vicious and senseless attacks. These acts of violence achieve nothing.''

In fact, ''these acts of violence'' achieve quite a bit. Why, only a month earlier similar acts of violence had led the archbishop to make a speech at the Royal Institute for International Affairs at which he'd argued that terrorism can ''have serious moral goals.'' ''It is possible to use unspeakably wicked means to pursue -- an aim that is intelligible or desirable,'' he said. By ignoring this, America ''loses the power of self-criticism and becomes trapped in a self-referential morality.''

Perhaps Williams would like to explain what precisely is the ''serious moral goal'' of the men who killed his host.

One reason George W. Bush comes on a bit strong about ''evildoers'' and so forth is that the archbishop of Canterbury and any number of the Western world's great and good have rendered less primal language meaningless in this sphere: When Williams condemns terrorism as ''vicious and senseless,'' that's just the mood music of the evening news. When he says ''these acts of violence achieve nothing,'' what he means is that his ''shock'' stops at the end of the sound bite; whether or not the terrorists ''achieve nothing,'' he intends to do so.

Will the archbishop's recent run-ins with reality shake him from his equivalist pap? Islamic terrorism is a beast that has to be killed, not patted and fed. The Palestinians use children as human shields and as human bombs. Would it be too much to expect the archbishop, instead of bleating about ''serious moral goals,'' to dust off, say, Matthew 18:6 and offer up something about how it would be better if these fellows shoving their kids into the suicide-bomber belts hung the old millstone round their necks and drowned in the sea? Or will we have to wait for such Bushesque ''self-referential morality'' till His Grace is brushing the plaster from his cassock after his next close shave?

suntimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/11/2003 2:49:55 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
MoveOn.org's Daily Mislead lives up to its name.
CAMPAIGN 2004

Who's Lying Now?

BY BEN FRITZ
Wednesday, December 10, 2003 12:01 a.m. EST
<font size=4>
In a June 6 speech about Medicare, President Bush said, "We must protect seniors from high medical costs that can rob them of their savings." And with the recently passed Medicare bill, which adds a prescription drug benefit to the government's health insurance program for seniors, the president claims to have done just that.

Yet according to a prominent liberal Web site, the Medicare bill is de facto proof of dishonesty by President Bush because it includes a provision supported by Democrats that forbids the government from using its purchasing power to negotiate lower drug prices. Does the objection prove that Mr. Bush was lying? Of course not. On the contrary, it's nothing more than the sort of ideological disagreement that is inherent to democracy.

Unfortunately, the Medicare example is just one of many false accusations of presidential dishonesty leveled by "The Daily Mislead," which accused Mr. Bush of deception due to the Medicare provision on three separate occasions (here, here and here). The Mislead is a new project of the increasingly influential liberal organization MoveOn.org, which claims to reach more than two million activists and recently received a donation of up to $5 million from philanthropist George Soros, who is working to prevent President Bush's re-election.

The Daily Mislead claims that it provides "an accurate daily chronicle for journalists of misrepresentations, distortions and downright misleading statements by President Bush and the Bush Administration," but in most cases since its first issue on Sept. 15, it has done nothing of the kind. Instead, despite numerous examples of actual deception by the Bush administration, the Mislead has generally presented a series of partisan accusations of dishonesty based on nothing more than political disagreement. Like too many participants in the media bias debate, MoveOn is churning out a series of analyses designed to support a preconceived agenda--whether the facts fit the case or not.

In short, with The Daily Mislead, MoveOn has become the leader of a new school of liberal criticism that seeks to brand every policy disagreement with President Bush as a broken promise or lie. <font size=5>

These loose accusations trivialize charges of dishonesty,
reducing them to little more than another partisan spin
tactic.
<font size=4>
The most frequent way in which The Daily Mislead unfairly accuses the Bush administration of dishonesty is to present evidence of a vague promise made by the president and attack him for betraying this promise by not supporting some favored liberal policy (such as spending more money on the issue).

For instance, on Nov. 20, the Mislead made this accusation: "President Bush unveiled his energy plan in May 2001, vowing to 'make this country the world's leader in energy efficiency and conservation in the 21st century.' But the energy bill under final consideration by the Senate and supported by the President devotes less than ten percent of the $25.7 billion in tax breaks to energy efficiency."

But why is 10% not enough? How much would be enough? MoveOn never says, because it's too busy engaging in partisan attacks posing as objective analysis of dishonesty. It later points out, "The bill allocates only $1.5 billion over ten years in new energy efficiency spending, $300 million less than for 'clean coal' technology, considered by environmentalists to be an oxymoron." But why are environmentalists right about "clean coal," and why isn't $1.5 billion enough? It further states: "Around $14.5 billion of the tax breaks, about 62%, go to fossil fuels and nuclear power subsidies." Nuclear power, of course, produces no air pollution and is supported by some as an environmentally friendly power source.
<font size=5>
MoveOn may disagree, as it does with the Bush administration's spending on energy efficiency, but it provides no evidence as to why this disagreement is evidence of dishonesty.
<font size=4>
Similarly, on Oct. 21, the Mislead attacked Mr. Bush for not requesting as much for veterans' health as the American Legion, a veterans group, would like and for not engaging in emergency spending approved by Congress that included extra funds for veterans' health. The Mislead's evidence that this position was dishonest? An extremely vague statement by the president in which he said, "Veterans are a priority for this administration . . . and that priority is reflected in my budget."

The examples of "dishonesty" that consist of little more than vague statements and partisan disagreement go on.<font size=3> On Oct. 17, the Mislead said the Bush administration's campaign to promote the success of the Iraq war was dishonest because troop morale is low. On Oct. 7, it attacked the president's statement that education would be his "top priority" after he proposed only a small increase in funding for federal educational programs. And on Oct. 30, it accused the president of being deceptive when he promised to make the national park system the "crown jewel of America's recreation system" because of a dispute over funding for park maintenance and the fact that some parks have long waits for student groups to visit.
<font size=4>
In other cases, The Daily Mislead has made accusations of dishonesty that might be serious, but the only evidence MoveOn marshals for its cause is highly subjective.
<font size=3>
The Oct. 14 Mislead opens with the following statement: "Despite President Bush's rhetorical claim that 'the best safeguard against abuse is full disclosure,' Republican Senator Arlen Specter compares the lack of candor from the Administration about the Patriot Act to 'a big black hole.' " <font size=4>Why should we believe Mr. Specter's accusation? MoveOn doesn't tell us.<font size=3> It also notes that "fellow Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says 'it's like pulling teeth to get answers' from Attorney General John Ashcroft about whether the Justice Department may be using the Act to justify wrongful handling of Americans detained simply on suspicion of terrorist connections." The Mislead then notes that Mr. Ashcroft has testified before Congress three times since early 2002, while Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld did so 12 times, but fails to grapple with potential reasons for the difference, such as the war in Iraq.

These are subjective accusations against the president, not serious analyses of dishonesty. The Oct. 1 Mislead makes a similarly absurd claim, stating, "On Tuesday members of the Iraqi Governing Council contradicted Secretary of State Colin Powell's optimistic timetable for self-government, saying it could take up to 18 months to ratify a constitution, thus extending the U.S. occupation into 2005. This is far longer than senior administration members suggested just last week but is exactly what President Bush's father warned might happen." That the Bush administration disagrees with the Iraqi Governing Council about the timetable for the occupation and that this claim contradicts a statement by George H.W. Bush in a 1998 book are not in themselves evidence of dishonesty, though, just disagreement.
<font size=4>
Another favorite tactic of the Mislead has been to blast the administration for promises it was unable to fulfill or policy plans that changed due to altered circumstances. In essence, these supposed examples of dishonesty actually consist of outcomes the Bush administration cannot realistically control.
<font size=3>
The very first Mislead, from Sept. 15, included such an attack, nothing that Mr. Bush said his "first goal is an economy that [will] employ every man and woman who seeks a job." MoveOn then attacked the president because the economy had lost approximately 2.5 million jobs since he came into office. The fact that the economy has not created jobs, however, is not evidence that Mr. Bush didn't attempt to spur job creation through his economic policies.

Similarly, the Misleads from Sept. 29 and Oct. 3 attack the administration for not reaching the job creation goals it offered in support of its tax cut plans. And in perhaps the biggest stretch of all, the Oct. 24 Mislead implied that a Bush pledge to crack down on corporate leaders who violate the public trust was broken by an internal memo at military contractor Haliburton, which is obviously not proof of deception by the administration.
<font size=4>
Worst of all, the Mislead occasionally engages in deception of its own, citing inaccurate or misleading evidence or publishing articles that do not even include accusations of dishonesty by the Bush administration.
<font size=3>
The Nov. 25 Mislead analyzed the situation in Iraq and accused Mr. Bush of dishonesty because he "yesterday said that we 'put the Taliban out of business forever'--taking credit for supposedly ridding the world of the terrorist regime." It goes on to describe "the President's declarations that the challenges in Afghanistan are over." But the Nov. 24 speech quoted in the Mislead is all about the continuing missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. In it, Mr. Bush makes clear that Taliban are still a threat and that challenges remain in Afghanistan, saying, "We are fighting the terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan and in other parts of the world so we do not have to fight them on the streets of our own cities." Mr. Bush is clearly acknowledging the continued turmoil in Afghanistan, which consists in part of fighting remnants of the Taliban regime.

On Sept. 19, the Mislead cited a quote by Vice President Dick Cheney on NBC's "Meet the Press" in March when he said, "We believe [Saddam Hussein] has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons." It notes that six months later Mr. Cheney said, "I misspoke." But despite the Mislead's title, "Bush Administration Spends Week Retracting Assertions About Saddam's Threat to the U.S.," the evidence actually suggests that Mr. Cheney did simply misspeak. In the same interview, the vice president referred to Iraq's attempts to reconstitute its "nuclear program," and said Iraq had "pursued" nuclear weapons and that "we know he's out trying once again to produce nuclear weapons." In context, Mr. Cheney clearly was referring to Iraq's attempts to obtain nuclear weapons, not alleging it possessed them at the time.
<font size=4>
At times, the Mislead's arguments verge on irrelevant, because there's simply no logic to support a claim of Bush administration dishonesty.<font size=3> The Nov. 6 Mislead, for instance, is about the fact that the Army Corps of Engineers was considering canceling a no-bid contract extension with Halliburton. It contains no evidence at all that anyone in the Bush administration was involved in the overcharges that led to the potential cancellation. And on Nov. 14, the Mislead attacked Bush administration changes in overtime rules that some analysts said would lead to millions of workers losing their right to overtime pay. The evidence that this is dishonest is a quote in which the president promoted his tax cut plan because it returns money to the American people. The idea that Mr. Bush's support for tax cuts means that he should support any plan that would lead to workers being paid more is absurd on its face.
<font size=4>
Although it occasionally contains legitimate instances of Bush administration dishonesty, The Daily Mislead is primarily a vehicle for MoveOn's partisan attacks on the president. There's nothing inherently wrong with partisanship, but framing these attacks as objective analysis of dishonesty is highly deceptive.

The Daily Mislead is just one more example of how partisans eager to exploit the public's frustration with actual dishonesty by their leaders systematically conflate disagreement with deception. Until we recognize the difference, it will be hard to sort out truth from fiction.
<font size=3>
opinionjournal.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/11/2003 4:21:18 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CBS Insists Dean No McGovern, “Had a
Moderate Record” in Vermont

<font size=5>
Do you remember any CBS News stories in 1999 which
countered liberal attacks on George W. Bush as a hardline
conservative by emphasizing his moderate record as
Governor of Texas? But on Tuesday night, CBS came to
Howard Dean’s defense against charges he’s any kind of a
liberal.<font size=3>

Instead of looking at the left-wing policies Dean is now advocating, such as a massive tax hike, Byron Pitts insisted: “This five-term former Governor had a moderate record during his ten years in the Vermont state house. He was a fiscal conservative, well known for being frugal from budget cuts to his own bargain-basement wardrobe. Dean supports a balanced budget amendment, and he was given top marks from the National Rifle Association.”

Nonetheless, Pitts fretted, “the Republican party loves comparing Dean to that legendary liberal and anti-war candidate George McGovern, who lost in a landslide to Richard Nixon in 1972.” Pitts then showcased Jonathan Rauch of the National Journal, who argued: “Howard Dean on domestic policy is, if anything, to the right of where Bill Clinton was at this point 12 years ago.”
<font size=4>
"Fiscal conservatives"? The Cato Institute awarded Governor Dean a "D" for fiscal matters in its report card last year.<font size=3> They noted: "He supports state-funded universal health care, generous state subsidies for child care, a higher minimum wage, liberal family leave legislation, and taxpayer-financed campaigns...After 12 years of Dean*s so-called 'fiscal conservatism,’ Vermont remains one of the highest taxing and spending states."

For the Cato report in PDF format, with Dean assessed on page 60: www.cato.org

And on the gun control front, just because he accepted political reality in Vermont does not mean he’d oppose imposition of more restrictions on gun rights once he achieves national office.

Pitts began his December 9 CBS Evening News story on Dean’s political views, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:

“He’s the physician-turned-politician who claims he’s a liberal-”

Howard Dean at a campaign rally: “Here’s how the liberal Birchen stock Governor from Vermont gets elected.”

Pitts: “-and has built much of his support on an anti-war platform. But not only has he never owned a pair of Birchen stocks, this five-term former Governor had a moderate record during his ten years in the Vermont state house.”

CBS put up a graphic of a manilla folder opened to show Dean’s record, with a photo of him beside it. The text below an underlined “Gubernatorial Record”:

“Fiscal conservative
“Frugal
“Supports balanced budget amendment
“Top marks from NRA”

Pitts elaborated: “He was a fiscal conservative, well known for being frugal from budget cuts to his own bargain basement wardrobe. Dean supports a balanced budget amendment, and he was given top marks from the National Rifle Association. Still, the Republican Party loves comparing Dean to that legendary liberal and anti-war candidate George McGovern, who lost in a landslide to Richard Nixon in 1972.”

Jonathan Rauch, National Journal: “Potentially, he is a Clinton in McGovern clothing. But Howard Dean on domestic policy is, if anything, to the right of where Bill Clinton was at this point 12 years ago, and Clinton obviously did very well.”

Pitts: “Dean portrays himself as a Washington outsider, once comparing members of Congress to cockroaches. But there he was, the self-proclaimed outsider joyously holding hands with last election’s ultimate insider. And as for that 'appeal-to-your-base-then-move-to-the-middle’ strategy that worked well for Bill Clinton 12 years ago and Ronald Reagan two decades ago, can it work for Howard Dean?”

Craig Crawford, CBS News political analyst: “One thing you’ve got to say about Howard Dean, he came from nowhere. He has beaten some of the biggest Democrats in Congress. And so you can’t count this man out.”

Pitts concluded: “Friends and adversaries both describe Howard Dean’s political bedside manner as that of a doctor. He can be decisive and dismissive. He’s made it this far doing it his way, but as in campaigns past when the race tightens, the middle of the road is usually the safer road to the White House. Byron Pitts, CBS News, New York.”

mediaresearch.org



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/11/2003 5:12:21 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
ROGER SIMON:
<font size=4>
I don't want to think that Noah Oppenheim is correct in writing that many in the media quite seriously don't want us to win, but tonight of all nights it seems more likely that could be so. As I type these words at ten p. m. PDT... maybe I missed something... maybe I didn't click far enough... but I see no reports of the large pro-democracy/anti-terror march of Iraqis in Baghdad today in tomorrow's New York Times or Washington Post or in the Los Angeles Times(at least on their websites). Or on the CNN site. Or on MSNBC.... Do you think for one moment that if thousands had been marching for Saddam... for the fascists... excuse me "insurgents"... it wouldn't have been front page news? I don't. What's going on?

(Emphasis in original.) I just searched "Iraq" on the NYT website. Not only did I find absolutely no reference to the anti-terror protests in Iraq, the search results brought home to me just how relentlessly negative the spin is on the stories that they do report.
<font size=5>
This is an absolute embarrassment to the American media --
even Reuters and Al Jazeera are doing a better job! -- but
I don't know if they'll even notice.
<font size=4>
But we're noticing. And while the story hasn't quite been blacked out, it's close. Readers report that CNN did run clips of the marches, as did Fox (see above). But the biggest story in the NYT on Iraq is that two GIs were killed during a robbery. Roger's basic point holds: Had these demonstrators been marching on the other side, this would have been a big story instead of the closest thing to a non-story.
<font size=5>
So why isn't it a big story when it's good news? Because
they want us to lose? Or at least, because they are, as
Noah Oppenheim suggests, consciously or unconsciously
seeking "vindication" of their anti-war views?
<font size=4>
When you compare what they do report with what they don't, it seems to me that they're either glorying in the bad news and ignoring the good for the reasons Oppenheim suggests, or just lousy at their jobs. Or, I suppose, both. Your call.
<font size=5>
UPDATE: One of Roger's commenters points out that the
Times did cover the march -- as a single paragraph buried
in the story about the 2 GIs:
<font size=4>
In contrast, a heavily policed march in central Baghdad on Wednesday, organized peacefully by the country's major political parties, drew thousands of Iraqis to protest attacks by guerrilla fighters, which have injured and killed Iraqi civilians as well as occupiers.
<font size=5>
This kind of ass-covering ("See! We covered it!") is
almost worse than not covering it at all. Pathetic.
<font size=3>
instapundit.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/11/2003 8:55:57 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Liberal media bias, part I
Ryan Zempel
December 11, 2003

Few people have done more to highlight the issue of liberal media bias than Bernard Goldberg, author of the bestselling "Bias." Goldberg has now authored the recently released "Arrogance: Rescuing America from the Media Elite" in which he offers solutions to the problem of media bias.

I interviewed Goldberg recently and will be publishing the interview in three parts during the next several days.

Part I

Townhall: Do you think the increasing availability of alternative news sources -- such as cable, talk radio, internet -- has had any positive impact in terms of eliminating network news' bias?
<font size=4>
Goldberg: Well, first, before I get directly to that, I think the Wall Street Journal was right when it said in an editorial that in the age of the internet, cable TV, and talk radio, denial is not a winning strategy.

And that's what the big networks continue to do in terms of the question of bias in the news. If you bring it up, they simply deny it, and then they accuse you of having the bias. But in the age of talk radio, the internet, and cable, that's not a smart strategy, that's a losing strategy.

Having said that, I don't know that the big media elite people at the networks look at Fox and say, "Geez, we better be fairer, because there's Fox." I don't think they look at conservative websites on the internet and say "we better be fairer because of that" and they don't look at talk radio and say that. I think they're dismissive of all of these things.

Some of them are worthy of being dismissive of. There's some talk radio that's horrible. There are some conservative websites and many liberal websites that are nasty and vicious and shouldn't be taken seriously.

But basically, I think the media elites maintain their arrogance and don't say, "Since there's cable out there, and since there are responsible places on the internet out there, and since there are a few responsible conservative talk outlets on radio out there, we better be fair, we better be less biased than we have been."
<font size=5>
Because they don't acknowledge they've been biased in the
first place. So I don't think it has the kind of effect
that it ought to have.
<font size=4>
I do think this, though. I do think there are slivers of sunshine. The editor of the LA Times earlier this year wrote a scathing memo to his staff about a page one story that he found to be incredibly biased regarding abortion. I don't know that he did that because of the three entities you mentioned -- talk radio, cable, and the internet -- I think he did that because the subject is really out there now.
<font size=3>
And in some small way, I hope I contributed to that with my first book "Bias." Frankly, I don't think he would have written that memo if "Bias" hadn't come out and it hadn't touched so many American people.

Because of that, the subject is on cable and the internet a lot more than it used to be, so indirectly, yes. Indirectly, I think the real conversation started a couple years ago.

Since it's so prevalent in our culture now, they have to pay more attention, but my point is, there are only slivers of sunshine. Overwhelmingly, they remain arrogant and they don't pay any attention to any of the criticism.

Townhall: In "Arrogance" you talk about ombudsmen and how they simply do not recognize bias when they see it. Do you think there's any way to change that?

Goldberg: Well, I didn't do a survey of all the ombudsmen in America. And one at NPR recently, who took Terry Gross to task, I thought did a great job. She interviewed Bill O'Reilly and was incredibly unfair to him, and NPR's own ombudsman came to that conclusion in a public way.
<font size=4>
So, I'm not making a blanket indictment of ombudsmen, but what I am saying is that very often they're part of the problem. If they come to the table with preconceived notions just like reporters do, then it's going to be hard for them to see why, in this case, conservatives might be upset with the way a story was handled.

Again, not a blanket indictment of ombudsmen, but I think too many are part of the problem.

I don't think the situation is going to easily be fixed in-house. I think these media elites live in such a comfortable, elite bubble in places like New York and Washington and there are so many like-minded people inside that bubble, that it's very, very difficult for them to see what we're talking about here.

It's very difficult for them to see what the problem is. They don't have any frame of reference inside that bubble.
<font size=5>
So, they think everything to the right of center is
conservative and everything left of center is middle of
the road. And they don't have a lot of people disagreeing
with them inside that bubble -- it's an ideological echo
chamber.
<font size=4>
So, I'm not terribly optimistic that this is fixable strictly by them. I think they can, but I don't think they will, because they haven't acknowledged the problem yet.

Go to a guy like Bob Schieffer and ask him about liberal bias and the first thing he says is, "you know, you might be hearing in a biased way." Well, technically, he's right, the person might be, but that's dismissive of every person who thinks there's a liberal bias. You can give him a hundred examples and he won't pay any attention to it. For the most part, neither will Rather and Jennings and to some extent, neither will Brokaw.
<font size=3>
So, I think they need outside help. And, in the case of "Arrogance," I offer it in the 12 step program. If 12 steps are good enough for alcoholics, they ought to be good enough for journalists.

I'm rooting for them to fix it. I want to make this clear, I'm rooting for them to fix the problem. Because I think it's important in a country like ours that we have a trusted mainstream press.

I don't want people getting their news from talk radio. I don't want them going to the more extreme websites and thinking this stuff is mainstream and reasonable.
<font size=4>
But if the media elites don't take the wake-up call, I think, as I say in the first chapter of the book, I think they're going to become the journalistic equivalent of the leisure suit -- harmless enough, but hopelessly out of date.
<font size=3>
I don't see very many signs -- I do see the slivers of sunshine that I mentioned -- but I don't see very many signs that they are waking up.

Townhall: One of your suggestions in your 12 steps is that they move out of New York. Do you think that's really realistic?

Goldberg: No. I wrote half of that step and came within an inch of throwing it in the garbage can for that very reason. But then I said, "Now wait a second, that's not the point."

And then I wrote the second half of the step which is: hold on, these places are real places. They have real people living in these places.

And they have real families and their kids go to real schools and these people have real jobs. And I'm saying, would it be a human rights violation if one of the networks picked up and moved to Oklahoma City? Would that really be torture? What would be so terrible about that?
<font size=4>
And what would be so good about it is that they would finally be out of their bubble. And five seconds after they touched down in Oklahoma City -- or Tupelo, or Laughlin, Nevada, or Mitchell, South Dakota, or Indianapolis -- five seconds after they got off the airplane, they'd run into somebody who disagreed with them about something, and that would be a very healthy thing.

Do I literally think they're going to do it? No. They would rather jump off the roof of their co-op on Park Avenue than do it. I mean, that's how much they would hate leaving New York City.

Why would it be not okay for somebody who lives in Manhattan to live in Oklahoma City? What would be wrong with that? It's because they don't have respect for people who live in Oklahoma City. They don't have respect for their values, for their lifestyle.
<font size=3>
"Oklahoma City?" they'd say, "I'd rather be dead than live there."

Well, I think that's a snobbishness that's not healthy. But do I literally think they're going to go there? Of course not.

Ryan Zempel is Townhall.com's News & Politics Editor and has reviewed both of Goldberg's books -- Arrogance and Bias.

©2003 Ryan Zempel



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/12/2003 12:09:58 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Bush “Punishes” Allies, CBS Cites Halliburton
“War-Profiteering”

Every network on Wednesday highlighted the angry reaction of nations excluded from receiving U.S.-paid contracts for the reconstruction of Iraq, but CBS went the furthest in treating the decision to limit the contracts to the 63 nations in the anti-Hussein coalition as some kind of scandalous punishment when it could also be seen as a reward to those who helped or as an incentive to others to join up.

Dan Rather managed to work “Halliburton” and “war-profiteering” into his introduction of his lead story: “President Bush has decided to punish some major countries by excluding them from the rebuilding of Iraq. American companies with contracts in Iraq, especially those like Halliburton with close ties to the administration, are being paid handsomely. Some critics are saying Halliburton is unfairly war-profiteering. But countries that wouldn’t join the President’s coalition of the willing to oust Saddam Hussein are now saying, 'unfair,’ about being denied a share of the big money reconstruction pie.”

CNBC’s Brian Williams saw retribution, teasing his December 10 newscast: "Tonight on 'The News,' getting even: After claiming, 'You're either with us or against us,' the Bush White House now goes after those who weren't on board during the war in Iraq."

Williams, MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth observed, opened his The News with Brian Williams, by noting how critics worried that Bush’s “with us or against us” rhetoric had too much “swagger,” but now, he warned, “it is much more real.”
Williams announced: "Good evening. Few people alive in this country during those scary days after September 11th will forget the President's speech to Congress, which became known later as the 'Bush Doctrine.' To other nations, he said, 'You're either with us or against us.' Critics later worried it was swagger -- too blunt, not realistic. Tonight, it is much more real. The bill has come due for the nations that failed to step up and help the U.S. fight terrorism. It's not that those nations will have to pay for it as much as it is about how much they will perhaps lose because of it. And so we begin here tonight at the Pentagon with NBC's Carl Rochelle."

Following Dan Rather’s opening of the December 10 CBS Evening News, as quoted above, David Martin reported:

“If you haven’t sent troops to occupy Iraq, you can forget about winning any of the prime contracts to rebuild Iraq. And that means you -- Germany, France, Russia and even Canada -- four of the most conspicuous countries to refuse to send troops to Iraq. That, in so many words, is what Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz says in a memo naming the countries eligible to bid on $18.5 billion worth of reconstruction contracts, a memo which left Canada’s incoming prime minister railing against the unfairness of it all.”

Paul Martin, incoming Canadian Prime Minister: “I find it really very difficult to fathom. First of all, Canada has put in close to $300 million in terms of the reconstruction of Iraq. We have troops in Afghanistan and are carrying a very, very heavy load in that country.”

Martin: “Germany and France, which also sent troops to Afghanistan, and Russia which granted the U.S. overflight rights for the war against the Taliban, were equally indignant and could get even by refusing to forgive any of the $7 billion debt Iraq owes them. The White House suggested the surest way to get a piece of the action is to send troops to Iraq.”

Scott McClellan, White House Press Secretary: “If countries decide they want to participate in the efforts and join the efforts of the coalition forces in Iraq, then circumstances can change.”

David Martin: “Ever since 9/11, one of the Bush administration’s slogans has been, 'If you’re not with us, you’re against us.’ This order translates that into dollars and cents. One reconstruction contract is to import hundreds of millions of dollars worth of fuel into Iraq, which despite its vast oil reserves, is still short of gasoline for cars and propane for cooking. That contract is currently held by Halliburton, once headed by Vice President Cheney. Today, Congressman Henry Waxman demanded an investigation into why Halliburton charges up to three dollars a gallon to import gasoline from Kuwait into Iraq where it sells for as little as five cents at the pump. Specifically, why Halliburton tacks on a ten percent markup in a business where a profit of a penny a gallon is normal. Halliburton claims it’s only a two percent markup and blames the high cost of transportation since it is dangerous to truck fuel into the middle of a war. One thing is clear: Whether you’re a country or a company, it pays to be a friend of the Bush administration. David Martin, CBS News, the Pentagon.”

A baffling sentence: “Today, Congressman Henry Waxman demanded an investigation into why Halliburton charges up to three dollars a gallon to import gasoline from Kuwait into Iraq where it sells for as little as five cents at the pump.”

How exactly is Halliburton “war-profiteering” if they are paying $3.00 for a product unit they sell for 1/60th that price? Sounds like they are providing gift to the Iraqis.

I’d assume this was a jumbled explanation for a complaint from a Congressman, whom Martin failed to identify as a liberal Democrat, about how Halliburton is over-charging the U.S. government for bringing gas into Iraq, but then why not just charge more for it in Iraq?

Martin and CBS also failed to point out how non-U.S.-paid contracts are still available to Canada, France and Russia. ABC’s Kate Snow asserted that “the new reconstruction policy drew anger around the world,” but she pointed out on World News Tonight how “the contracts in question represent only the U.S. portion of all the money committed for Iraq's reconstruction.”

mediaresearch.org



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/16/2003 3:14:19 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
From: LindyBill

You expect to read this from Ray Duray, but not from a Congressman.

From: LindyBill
____________________

washingtonpost.com
<font size=4>Lawmaker Criticizes Capture Of Hussein
<font size=3>
Associated Press
Tuesday, December 16, 2003; Page A17
<font size=4>
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.), who earned headlines across the globe last year for criticizing President Bush while in Baghdad, is enmeshed in a new controversy over remarks he made about the capture of Saddam Hussein.

In an interview yesterday with a Seattle radio station, McDermott said the U.S. military could have found the former Iraqi dictator "a long time ago if they wanted."

Asked if he thought the weekend capture was timed to help Bush, McDermott chuckled and said, "Yeah. Oh, yeah." He added, "There's too much by happenstance for it to be just a coincidental thing."

When the interviewer asked again if he meant to imply the Bush administration timed the capture for political reasons, McDermott said: "I don't know that it was definitely planned on this weekend, but I know they've been in contact with people all along who knew basically where he was. It was just a matter of time till they'd find him."
<font size=3>
State Republicans immediately condemned McDermott's remarks, saying the Seattle Democrat again was engaging in "crazy talk" about the Iraq war.

"Calling on him to apologize is useless, but I call on other Democrats to let the public know if they agree with McDermott -- and Howard Dean, who recently said he thought it was possible that President Bush had advance knowledge about 9/11," said state Republican Chairman Chris Vance. "The voters deserve to know if the entire Democratic Party believes in these sorts of bitter, paranoid conspiracy theories."

Democrats joined the criticism of McDermott.

"With all due respect to my colleague, that is a fantasy," Rep. Norman D. Dicks (D-Wash.) said of McDermott's comments. "That just is not right. . . . It's one thing to criticize this administration for having done this war. I mean, that's a fair question. But to criticize them on the capture of Saddam, when it's such a big thing to our troops, is just ridiculous."

McDermott, in a telephone interview, called the timing of Hussein's capture suspicious but said he was not alleging it had been intentionally delayed.

"Everything was going wrong, and they got a real Christmas gift, if you will, in that the troops did a magnificent job and found" Hussein, he said.

washingtonpost.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)12/16/2003 9:02:15 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Liberal Media Bias
What are the causes?

By Draginol
Posted Wednesday, November 12, 2003 on Right Wing Techie
Discussion: Politics

Liberal bias in the media is pretty established at this point. Established in the sense that any reasonable person who has put any significant effort into looking into the issue will have come to that conclusion. The main deniers of such bias come, naturally, from liberals. Debating whether there is liberal media bias, for me, is like debating evolution vs. creationism. I'm not going to waste my time debating whether evolution is a fact or not and I'm not going to debate whether liberal media bias is a fact or not. I'll leave that to others who have more time on their hands. ;)

For one thing, the problem with proving liberal media bias is the reliance on statistics on what is covered. There is no quick way to do it. Just as Creationists can pop up a dozen websites "proving" he bible's accuracy, liberals can pop up websites that argue there is no liberal bias or more amusingly, websites that show a conservative in the media. I happen to believe that most liberals can be convinced of a liberal bias. But to do that, some basic ground rules have to be provided:

1) It's liberal media bias. Not Democratic Party bias. The media is just as likely to fry a Democrat as a Republican. Though I suspect that they relish frying the Republican and the threshold of what gets reported may be a bit different.

2) Liberal bias has to do with social values. Not political ones. Those values specifically revolve around social justice, racism, affirmative action, abortion rights, gun control, the military, gay rights.

3) And the clincher: <font size=4>Liberal bias is unintentional. It is not a conspiracy. It is largely unconscious. It is the result of liberals believing that they are not liberal (or not very). That their views are mainstream. In fact, not only are their views mainstream but they honestly believe that conservative views are fringe. Held by only a tiny percentage of right wing extremists whose views don't warrant coverage because so few people hold those views in their mind.
<font size=3>
Here's a clue though for liberals: Most conservatives don't believe the government should be involved in social justice, solving "racism", promoting affirmative action, providing federal rules on abortion (let alone by a court), providing gun control or making special laws for different lifestyles. And about half the population feels this way. Not a tiny "fringe". HALF.

It is item #3 that Bernard Goldberg's new book, "Arrogance - Rescuing America from the Media Elite" deals with. Rather than argue that liberal bias is the result of liberals trying to force their agenda down our throats, it is the result of liberals thinking that their agenda is already shared by the majority of people. With one exception: The New York Times which has spent a great deal of effort these past 3 years forcing its politically correct agenda down our throats.

Liberals in the media tend to think that people who think that assault rifles should be legal are just a bunch of NRA crazies. In fact, a large percentage of Americans, myself included (and I don't even own a gun), believe that. My writings on my blog here would probably be considered to be "far right" by the liberal media even though my opinions and values are not just shared by a large percentage of Americans but that I am actually to the left of a sizeable percentage because I'm pro-choice, pro gay civil unions, and favor a progressive tax code.

Liberals tend to simply see their views as being more civilized, more sophisticated, more thought out. Conservatives, by contrast, are a bunch of barbarous red necks with Confederate flags on their pickups waiting to lynch some poor African American -- at best. At worst, conservatives are a fringe of fascist rich people who got there by stepping on the hopes and dreams of everyone else.

What humane person can possibly be against affirmative action? Only racists are against that think liberals unconsciously. Being against gay marriage is just simple bigotry by religious zealots. Pro-Lifers are a bunch of hypocritical nuts. People who favor the war on Iraq are just stooges of right wing propaganda (particularly Fox News no doubt). Liberals are "progressives" (think the media would use "progressive" or "visionary" for conservatives? I somehow doubt it). Conservatives are described as "far right", "right wing extremsists", "fascist", "right wing nut", and worse depending on whether it's on camera or off camera.
<font size=4>
And what happens is that liberals tend to think that only a tiny fringe element of society believes what conservatives believe. So why give coverage to something only a few people believe? After all, everyone they know has the same opinions they do. They may not even know a single person who doesn't have the same opinions on these issues. So they conclude (wrongly) that those who hold conservative values are actually on the fringes of society. Either greedy rich bastards or uneducated red necks in the sticks who probably can't ready anyway so why bother writing about their point of view anyway?

Michael Moore actually has put this view quite succinctly. He truly believes that most Americans have the liberal views he does. That Republicans are supported by a confederacy of fringe groups that band together. But each fringe group is made up of only a tiny number of largely ignorant hate-filled zealots who are statistically irrelevant.

As a result, when deciding what to cover on TV or in the news, it comes down to focusing on things that they believe the majority of their readers or viewers think worth hearing about. And since they think their viewers hold the same beliefs they do, they pick the things they're interested in covering and exclude the things they think are unworthy.

And that is what I think is the basis of the liberal media bias in America.
<font size=3>
draginol.joeuser.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)2/18/2004 12:52:51 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
SAUCE FOR THE (GAY) GANDER? [Rod Dreher]

What I don't get is this: why was it wrong for Judge Roy Moore of Alabama to unilaterally declare federal law wrong, and defy it by installing a Ten Commandments monument in a courthouse rotunda ... but it's okay for San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom to unilaterally declare state law wrong in prohibiting same-sex marriage, and defy it by issuing marriage licenses to gay couples? I mean, I know why the media was outraged by the former episode of grandstanding and not the latter, but as a legal matter, what's the difference?

"The Corner" Blog



To: Sully- who wrote (249)2/18/2004 1:53:32 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hustling up Bush charges
Tuesday, February 17th, 2004
<font size=4>
Activist rocker Moby raised Republican hackles last week when he advised President Bush's enemies to engage in political mischief.

Moby told my fellow gossips Rush & Molloy: "For example, you can go on all the pro-life chat rooms and say you're an outraged right-wing voter and that you know that George Bush drove an ex-girlfriend to an abortion clinic and paid for her to get an abortion."

Now the incorrigible Larry Flynt says he plans to market a Bush abortion story as genuine - in a book to be published this summer by Kensington Press.

"This story has got to come out," the wheelchair-bound Hustler magazine honcho told the Daily News' Corky Siemaszko. "There's a lot of hypocrisy in the White House about this whole abortion issue."

Flynt claimed that Bush arranged for the procedure in the early '70s.

"I've talked to the woman's friends," Flynt said. "I've tracked down the doctor who did the abortion, I tracked down the Bush people who arranged for the abortion," Flynt said. "I got the story nailed."

Flynt wouldn't disclose whether he plans to name the woman.

Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie - who in a speech last week accused "Kerry campaign supporters," not just Moby, of hatching the Internet chat room scheme - was unavailable for comment on Flynt's charges.

But RNC spokesman Yier Shi told me: "The Democrats will do anything in this election, judging by their campaign tactics, to smear without any evidence or background. This is just another one of those cases."
<font size=3>
Writer can't put story to bed

Liberal pundit Joe Conason worked himself into quite a lather Friday over the rampant rumors concerning Democratic presidential front-runner John Kerry.

"Is American politics suddenly returning to the bad old days, when Washington journalism became frenzied with sheet sniffing and keyhole peeping?" the Bill Clinton loyalist demanded indignantly on Salon.com.

Unfortunately for Conason, Internet commentator Mickey Kaus promptly discovered that, in 1992, Conason had engaged in just such "sheet sniffing and keyhole peeping" - a long, rumor-filled piece about Clinton's campaign opponent, the first President Bush, in Spy magazine.

"He Cheats on His Wife," blared the headline over the article, in which Conason enumerated various unsubstantiated personal scandals involving George H.W. Bush, including extramarital affairs and (as the Spy headline announced) "unpleasant details of Bush's all-around bachelor-party piggishness!"

But unlike cybergossip Matt Drudge - who, Conason charged in Salon, had "hyped to the maximum" the "vague and unsourced" Kerry rumors - Conason sometimes dropped the word "alleged" and published dirt as fact.

In a tone of supreme authority, he wrote about "Bush's adultery" and "the President's extramarital dalliances."

Yesterday, Conason explained: "That's the Spy style - it's a very assertive style. They just don't use a lot of 'alleged' ... But I stand by every word."

Conason also explained why, in his scorching of Drudge, he failed to mention his Spy piece: "I wasn't even thinking about it. It was 12 years ago."

In an E-mail, Conason argued that the subject of his Spy story was less Bush's supposed affairs than the media's reluctance to investigate them - in contrast to "nonstop press coverage of Clinton's alleged, rumored and gossiped infidelities ... Was the the President protected by a political double standard?"

Conason blamed Spy editors Kurt Andersen and Susan Morrison for the assertive headline.

"If you read the story, you'll see that the text isn't nearly as conclusive as

the cover line. I argued with Kurt and Susan that saying "He cheats on his wife' on the cover went too far, because I didn't agree that we had proved it. That decision was theirs."

Kaus retorted: "He blames his editors. But should he now be lecturing people on 'journalistic standards'? ... The lesson of 1992 wasn't that sex shouldn't be dredged up. It's that voters need to know everything. Democrats ignored Clinton's 'alleged, rumored and gossiped infidelities' and wound up electing a President who wasted most of his second term on a sex scandal."

The Briefing

Worry lines, be gone! It's premature to celebrate just yet, but defendant Martha Stewart is certainly entitled to a "Super Collagen" treatment after last week's favorable rulings in her securities fraud and obstruction of justice trial.

On Sunday, the domestic diva was spotted on the East Side plunking down $145 at the deluxe Mario Badescu spa for a facial featuring the special treatment that "gives the skin a radiant, healthy glow," according to spa literature. "Great before a special event."

An acquittal perhaps?

If that happens, Lowdown suggests that Stewart comp a spa day to Federal Judge Miriam Cedarbaum - who on Friday denied prosecutors the right to call certain expert witnesses and introduce certain phone records.

Hire this actress or turn the page! Pity Chloe Sevigny, the indie-movie siren and Union Square mouse-lover.

She keeps losing roles to more mainstream actresses, even though she's been trying to go Hollywood.

"She recently left the William Morris Agency [for Endeavor] because they didn't cast the net wide enough (she fired them, not vice versa as was reported)," says Premiere magazine.

But Sevigny is still waiting for lightning to strike.

She recently had a good meeting with director Sam Raimi ("Spider-Man," "The Evil Dead" films) for a horror movie, "but then he offered the part to Sarah Michelle Gellar!" she laments.

"It's, like, 'What movie are you making if you have to choose between me and her?'"

There was another disappointment with "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" director Doug Liman.

"Liman basically said, 'Well, if we were going to go indie, we would hire Sarah Polley instead.'

"There's just a group of girls at the top who get offered everything, whereas I don't."

nydailynews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)2/18/2004 8:07:31 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
In case you wondered how really "Left" it is among the
Duke Academics, check out this letter to the Editor of
their paper. - From: LindyBill

Letters to the Editor: Political parties display similarities

February 17, 2004

While my take on the word freedom may be slightly different than those of the Duke Conservative Union (slavishly following the commands of Sauron--oops! I mean David Horowitz--does put a slightly different slant on the term) <font size=4>I do appreciate their efforts to call to our attention the lack of diversity in party affiliation among some Duke faculty.

While there are important differences, we must keep in mind that the Democrats and Republicans show negligible divergence on major domestic and foreign policy issues. Clinton's government, after all, bombed Iraq repeatedly while George W. Bush just did it all at once. Neither has released data on the numbers of Iraqis killed; social services, welfare, support for education and the environment were gutted under both regimes and no high ranking member of either has been held responsible for personal benefits derived from ties to the military cybernetic complex, etc....

Given this, I also want to know, where is the diversity?<font size=3> Where are the Greens, Labour, the Christian Democrats, the Socialists, the Communists, the Workers Party, the Black Panthers, Puerto Rican independistas, etc...? Where is the truly wide range of partisan organizing that, across the globe, offers diversity in imagining options for the future?

Diane Nelson
Associate Professor, Department of Cultural Anthropology

chronicle.duke.edu.



To: Sully- who wrote (249)3/3/2004 2:57:35 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
The Times's Conservative Problem

What does a conservative beat mean for The New York Times?

by Terry Eastland
03/03/2004 12:00:00 AM

FOR MORE THAN A MONTH, one of our national papers of record, the New York Times, has been examining "conservative forces in religion, politics, law, business and the media." No, that isn't made up. The quoted material comes from Times national editor Jim Roberts, announcing last month that David D. Kirkpatrick, the former media correspondent, would patrol the new beat.
<font size=4>
As with any press release, it deserves a question or two, beginning with why the Times thinks it can cover all of those conservative forces with only one reporter. The task would seem to require a legion of correspondents, but somehow, with just one, the Times will manage.
<font size=3>
The "job," Roberts said, "will take [Kirkpatrick] across the country and make him a frequent presence in Washington." It will thrust him into "the political campaigns," and yet "we expect that much of what he does will transcend the race itself and delve into the issues and personalities that drive--and sometimes divide--conservatives."
<font size=4>
In fact, division turns out to be the dominant narrative of the journalism so far. Consider the headlines of the first three stories: "Bush's push for marriage falls short for conservatives," "Conservative groups differ on Bush words on marriage," and "A concerned bloc of Republicans wonders whether Bush is conservative enough."

Moreover, those and other "conservative" stories have proved more than a little strained. The words "conservative" and "conservatives" are used to excess--24 times in one story--as though to assure readers that the Times is on the conservative beat. And people
otherwise not known to be important conservatives turn out to be major, on-the-record sources, no doubt delighted that the Times has reached them. Was the point of actually announcing a "conservative beat" to interest conservatives in becoming sources?
<font size=3>
Earlier this month, Sridhar Pappu, the enterprising media reporter for the New York Observer, interviewed Times executive editor Bill Keller about his paper's unusual undertaking. "I winced a little when I read that job announcement," he said, "because it was a little like the New York Times discovers this strange, alien species called conservatives, and that's not what this is about."

Keller offered two explanations of "what this is about." The first is that the paper wants to get beyond "the shorthand you use for any interest group" and instead try "to figure out why people believe what they do, how big their constituency is, where it comes from."
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Keller surely knows that his own newsroom often is perceived as liberal and that a more intense effort to report on conservatives might rid his staff of any misconception that conservatives are all, well, strange or alien. In any case, good journalism should attempt to get beyond convenient but distorting labels. And give the Times credit: Kirkpatrick's latest piece--headlined "Southern Baptists bring New York their gospel"--does a decent job of telling readers why Southern Baptists, who certainly qualify as a "conservative force" in religion, have organized evangelistic efforts in New York ZIP codes full of Times readers.

As for Keller's other explanation of "what this is about," he told the Observer that the Bush administration "is not the most accessible in the history of the Beltway" and that its "reasoning and . . . strategies are often clouded in secrecy and spin." Here, Keller may have said more than he wished. Or maybe not. Was he merely saying that to understand what the administration is doing you need to consult conservatives on the outside? Or did he mean to telegraph that the Times is preparing to use its news pages to challenge a presidency that its top editor regards as uniquely inaccessible and given to spin?

It bears noting that the Times hasn't assigned anyone to
cover "liberal forces in religion, law, politics, religion
and the media." Given our equally divided electorate, you
would think that a liberal beat might be warranted and
that the Times might favor its readers with pieces on,
say, the liberal groups working to block Bush judicial
nominees or the liberal groups strategizing to litigate
same-sex marriage into states outside of Massachusetts.
<font size=3>
But, no, Keller told the Observer, liberals aren't equally situated, for they are completely out of power, holding neither elective branch. Conservatives have all of the power, so they alone qualify for special journalistic treatment.

By Election Day, we will know what that treatment has meant for conservatives featured in the pages of one of the nation's most influential papers--and, not least, for George W. Bush.

Terry Eastland is publisher of The Weekly Standard. This column originally appeared in the Dallas Morning News.


weeklystandard.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)3/3/2004 3:53:08 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
I watched the program, 'A Fight To The Death', on the
Discovery/Times Channel (that's the NYT) last night. It's
a BBC/NYT 2 hour whitewash of the BBC/Andrew Gilligan
scandal & the Hutton Report. The NYT spent most of the 2
hours attacking Tony Blair & the British government &
President Bush. When not in attack mode, they distorted &
whitewashed the BBC's lack of integrity, Gilligan's lies &
the near complete failure of the BBC to investigate
Gilligan's odious lack of journalistic integrity, although
they chose to blindly stand behind him to the bitter end.

The fact that the NYT & the BBC created this lousy piece
of revisionist history when the Hutton Report's exhaustive
investigation factually lambasted the BBC, seems to be
completely lost on both organizations.

If anyone thinks that liberal media bias doesn't exist, I
suggest you watch this so called documentary. It should be
considered right up there with anything conjured up by
Michael Moore.
___________________________________________________________

'Panorama' special to air in America
19:09 GMT, Saturday 28th February 2004 -- by James Welsh

Panorama: A Fight To The Death, a special episode of the BBC One current affairs programme that aired a week before Lord Hutton published the findings of his inquiry, will air in America next week.

Described by Melvyn Bragg as a "landmark" programme for BBC current affairs, the programme examined the conflict between the Government and the BBC during the David Kelly affair. Dr. David Kelly, a civil servant, was unmasked as the "senior source involved in the drawing up of the dossier" that Andrew Gilligan cited when claiming in his report on BBC Radio 4 that the Government had "sexed up" its dossier regarding Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.

The programme will form part of an evening of programming on the Discovery Times channel, a digital cable joint-venture between Discovery and the New York Times. Power And The Press, airing from 8-10pm ET on Tuesday night, will examine the entire conflict and Hutton Inquiry, with the Panorama special forming the central part of the broadcast.

Vivian Schiller, senior vice president and general manager, Discovery Times Channel, said:

"Although somewhat of a departure from our normal documentary fare, we felt it was extremely important to present this special as an artifact of history to the American public as events continue to unfold surrounding intelligence investigations in both the U.S. and the U.K. This program is also a milestone event in the history of the BBC – an investigation of its own reporting that preceded the resignations of both the chairman and the Director General of one of the most powerful media companies in the world."

digitalspy.co.uk



To: Sully- who wrote (249)3/23/2004 8:49:31 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
MORAL BLIND SPOTS:
InstaPundit

One of my regular email critics sent this, which I think is the first non-critical email I've received from him. It's pretty revealing:
<font size=4>
I realize you generally assume that the vast majority of reporters are praying to their pagan gods for our failure in Iraq and the war against terrorism (I am not one of them), and are now crafting their stories to reflect and facilitate such a thing. While I think you are dead wrong on this, I have to admit I was taken aback by a conversation I had recently with a colleague.

I work as a freelancer for a major national publication, and was talking to my editor as we were closing a piece last week. It was Thursday, and the reports were coming out of Pakistan that we might have Ayman al-Zawahiri surrounded.
<font size=5>
I passed this news on to the editor, who was
crestfallen: "Oh, no. I don't want anything good to happen
for Bush before the election," was the reaction (P.S.,
this editor does not edit foreign or political stories).

It was a sickening moment. This is a man responsible for
thousands of American deaths. So while I have no desire to
see Bush re-elected, and I disagree with our attack on
Iraq, to hope for our failure in capturing one of the
deadliest people in the world is a moral blindspot.

Yes, it is. And -- based both on reports like this one,
and on the obvious slant of some stories -- I don't think
that editor is alone, though I doubt an actual majority of
his colleagues feel that way. But some clearly do, letting
their Bush-hatred trump their patriotism.
<font size=4>
This is no surprise, I suppose: there were plenty of Romans who played politics with the barbarian attacks, and sometimes even secretly allied with the barbarians, in the hopes of gaining political advantage at home. This isn't on that level. But it's nothing admirable. And it's naive to think that such attitudes don't influence coverage where they're present.



To: Sully- who wrote (249)3/28/2004 2:46:49 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Ranting Profs - IT'S ALL IN THE HEADLINE
By Cori Dauber

The LA Times yesterday published a serious article on the serious topic of low troop morale in the Army, morale low enough to even present instances of suicide. This is important news that should be reported. But <font size=4>it is the sensationalistic way that it is reported that bothers me. The headline reads, "High Suicide Rate Among Troops Found.<font size=3> But since the article also reports that

Since the war in Iraq began a year ago, 24 soldiers have committed suicide. The suicide rate for Army soldiers in the Iraq campaign in 2003 was 17.3 per 100,000, compared with an overall Army rate of 12.8 for 2003 and 11.9 from 1995 through 2002.

That rate was still below the national rate of 21.5 suicides per 100,000 for men ages 20-34, the age range of most soldiers in Iraq. (My emph.)
<font size=4>
So I could just as legitimately have written a headline
reading "Army Suicide Rate Lower Than National Average." I
suspect the parents of American soldiers opening their
morning paper might have preferred seeing that, don't you?

A more realistic headline, however, would have been, "Deployed Soldiers Have Higer Suicide Rate Than Those in Garrison." But that isn't quite as shocking, is it?

Stop trying to make the military look bad, and stop trying to make the war in Iraq look disastrous! We aren't stupid, and we know how to read a damn newspaper article. This is designed for people skimming the paper, who will just glance at a headline, and it isn't even outrageous anymore. It's saddening.



To: Sully- who wrote (249)4/3/2004 5:45:35 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Criticizing America
Tech Central Station

By Lee Harris Published 04/01/2004

Lee Harris is a TCS contributing editor. He recently wrote for TCS about Haiti and forgetfulness. His new book is Civilization and Its Enemies.

Among the people who have generously taken the time and trouble to comment on my book, a few of them appear to be extremely annoyed that I did not criticize America for all the things that it has done wrong -- or, at least, for those enormities that are always sure to make the Top Ten list of anyone who has spent even a few hours in a college or junior college American history course. Why didn't I devote a chapter to the atrocities committed in the Philippines after the Spanish-American war -- one of the sentimental favorites of the any red-blooded Chomsky-ite?

Well, let me offer this anecdote as a justification of my omission.

A week after my book came out, a friend dragged me to the nearest Border's bookstore. Now what is interesting about this Border's is that it is located in Snellville, Georgia, the town that's celebrated for its boast that "everybody is somebody in Snellville." It is heavily Southern Baptist, and in the last election probably voted for George Bush by an overwhelming majority. In short, it is as American as apple pie and Chevrolet.

So we went to this Border's, where my friend, after a good bit of searching, finally discovered the obligatory one copy of my book on the shelf reserved for political science -- facing spine up, of course. <font size=4>Meanwhile I was standing at the front of the store, right where the friendly Border's staff sets out those long tables stacked high with best sellers, among which were prominently displayed piles of Noam Chomsky's most recent recycling of his anti-American diatribe, while next to this was Chalmers Johnson's latest lament about the tawdry depravity of the new American Empire. Though these stacks were nothing compared to the rows of Michael Moore's books that greeted you the moment you stepped through the door. <font size=3>
<font size=4>
Now I am a firm believer in the usefulness of what Adam Smith called the division of labor.<font size=3> If you are going to make a simple pin, it is far better to divide the complex task of making this pin into a variety of even simpler tasks. This way each worker only needs to do one thing, and he quickly learns to do it very well, with the end result being an immense increase in the productivity of each of the individual workers. Whereas <font size=4>ten pin makers, each working on one pin, can produce 100 pins at the end of an hour, the division of labor multiplies this amount by many times -- and all because each worker sticks to doing what he knows best.

Seen in this light, can anyone doubt that Mr. Chomsky excels at telling what a menace America is to the world, or that Chalmers Johnson is a past master at lamenting America's loss of its pristine virtue? After all, simply look at how much practice these men have had sharpening their particular pins.<font size=3> How could a novice like me even hope to compete with them? Not to mention a worker like Michael Moore, always twisting his pin precisely the same way each time. Over and over again, these industrious and skilled workers perform exactly the same simple task -- no wonder they do it so well.

This explains too why they are so highly rewarded, both in terms of paychecks and in terms of praise; and it also explains why their wares are so prominently displayed for the public's attention in bookstores -- even in those parts of the world where they are more apt to be lynched than read.

But, this being so self-evidently the case, why on earth would anyone expect a humble drone such as me to try to compete with these masters of their craft? They have established a virtual Guild, and, like the Meistersingers of Wagner's opera, they are justifiably proud of their achievement.
<font size=4>
At same time, there is a down side to all of this<font size=3>, and this too was pointed out by the same Adam Smith who first praised the division of labor. According to Smith, <font size=4>the unvarying performance of the same simple task over and over tends inevitably to create a kind of mental monotony approaching dullness even in the most skillful worker -- indeed, precisely in the most skillful worker. <font size=3>

Alas, I fear I have a long way to go before I reach this stage of perfection. And that is why I cannot complain about the obscure corner of the store in which my book was concealed. It is the price I must pay for being a mere amateur, and for being so inept at my one task that I am never quite sure that I have done it right, even after I have done it. Would you buy the pins of such an incompetent pin-maker?
<font size=4>
Which allows me to address the question with which we began: Why didn't I spend time in my book criticizing America? Well, because there are people who are amply repaid for doing this very thing, and for doing it over and over and over, in exactly the same way each time. And who but a pinhead would try to compete with that?
<font size=3>
Copyright © 2004 Tech Central Station - www.techcentralstation.com



To: Sully- who wrote (249)6/22/2004 2:22:54 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 35834
 
Shocking News: Objective Study on Media Bias Shows Media is Leftist
<font size=4>
Often, when I discuss media bias, leftists tell me that my observations result from a "selection bias" -- in other words, I see liberal media bias because I am a conservative, just as a liberal would supposedly see conservative media bias.

My usual response is that leftist accusations of conservative media bias are scant and unconvincing. For example, nobody has ever answered my challenge to find examples of pro-conservative bias on abortion, gun control, race issues, religion, criminal justice, homosexual rights, or similar culture-war issues in the New York Times, Washington Post, or the Los Angeles Times. Eric Alterman couldn't come up with such examples in an entire book devoted to debunking the notion of the liberal media.

But my liberal friends are undaunted. They tell me that the only thing that would really prove media bias is a careful study that objectively analyzes the mainstream media for a liberal or conservative slant.

Well, guess what? I am just today learning about such a
study, by two professors from respected schools, which
finds a significant liberal bias in the mainstream media.

Here are the details:
<font size=3>
One of the researchers is Tim Groseclose of the Department of Political Science at UCLA as well as the Graduate School of Business at Stanford. The other researcher is Jeff Milyo of the Harris School of Public Policy at the University of Chicago. The study was published in September 2003, but is just now getting some publicity in a recent article in BusinessWeek magazine. The article describes the researchers' methodology this way:
<font size=4>
These researchers set up an objective measure of bias in U.S. television networks, newspapers, and magazines. The main finding is that the liberal inclination is pronounced. Although Fox News emerges as conservative, it is not nearly as far to the right as many outlets are to the left.
<font size=3>
Groseclose and Milyo began with the well-known ratings of the voting records of U.S. senators and representatives by Americans for Democratic Action (ADA), a self-described liberal lobbying group. . . . [T]he median member of the U.S. House had an ADA score of 39. <font size=4>Thus, 39 is a reasonable measure of a centrist position.
<font size=3>
THE NEXT STEP MEASURED the tendency of Senate and House members in their speeches to [favorably] cite 200 prominent think tanks. . . .

The last step measured the tendency of various media outlets to [favorably] cite the same 200 think tanks [in news stories]. . . . The researchers used this information to calculate a right- vs. left-wing indicator for each media outlet -- effectively, an ADA rating. The assumption is that media outlets that refer favorably to conservative think tanks are reasonably characterized as conservative, whereas those that refer positively to liberal think tanks are plausibly labeled as liberal. The final product (in a preliminary table provided by the authors) was a list of computed ADA ratings for the media outlets.
<font size=4>
On the conservative end, Fox News Special Report came out with a rating of 27; that is, 12 points more conservative than the 39 of the median member of the House. The only other right-of-center outlet was The Washington Times, at 34.

On the liberal end, Newsweek had an astonishing rating of 72 -- that's 33 points more liberal than the House median.

Other highly liberal outlets included The New York Times, Time magazine, the CBS Evening News, USA Today, and NBC Nightly News. These scores ranged from 62 to 64, about 25 points above the House median. For viewers seeking truly "fair and balanced" reporting, the best outlets were ABC Good Morning America and NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. The ADA scores for these programs were 39 and 41, respectively. Places moderately left of center were CNN's NewsNight with Aaron Brown (49), The Washington Post (53), NPR's Morning Edition (55) and ABC WorldNews Tonight (55).

. . . .

Bottom line: The Groseclose-Milyo study shows the media are skewed substantially to the left of the typical member of Congress. Thus, if the opinions of viewers and readers are similar to those of their representatives, the media slant is far to the left of that of most of their customers.

By the way, my favorite newspaper (the Los Angeles Times) received a score of 58.4 -- far to the left of the median of 39.

Leftists, who have blinded themselves to media bias for years, will no doubt find all sorts of ridiculous reasons to discount this study. But it is an interesting analysis -- even if its conclusion is utterly predictable.
<font size=3>
thatliberalmedia.com