SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Bush Administration's Media Manipulation--MediaGate? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Threshold who wrote (258)2/21/2005 11:05:52 PM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 9838
 
Letter from David Brock to White House Correspondents' Association, McClellan

February 17, 2005

White House Correspondents' Association
Ron Hutcheson, President
1920 N Street NW
Suite 300
Washington, DC 20036

Scott McClellan
Press Secretary
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Messrs. Hutcheson and McClellan:

Last month, I wrote Mr. McClellan, asking that he consider revoking the White House press credentials of Jeff Gannon, formerly of Talon News. Though the Gannon story has taken several turns since then, and attention has regrettably focused on less relevant information about Mr. Gannon, my objection to his presence in White House press briefings was simple: Mr. Gannon is not a reporter.

I say this not because Mr. Gannon is an avowed conservative; the press room is full of liberals, conservatives, and everything in between. And my complaint with Mr. Gannon has nothing to do with the fact that he wrote for a website rather than a newspaper, as some have suggested.

My contention that Mr. Gannon should not be considered a reporter is based on the following: he had no journalistic experience that we know of prior to showing up at the White House and declaring himself a reporter; the "news" outlet he worked for is nothing more than a front for a political activism website, GOPUSA.com; his former employers and colleagues are longtime Republican Party activists who lack journalism experience; he and his former employers were denied a Capitol Hill press credential because they could not establish that they were an independent news organization unconnected with a political organization; and his "news reports" often consisted of little other than verbatim reprints of White House talking points passed off as original reporting. Moreover, as Salon.com reported today, it seems Mr. Gannon attended press briefings as early as February 2003 -- more than a month before Talon/GOPUSA first published. Mr. Gannon is no more a reporter than Howard Dean is, but I presume Dr. Dean would not be admitted to presidential press conferences and given the opportunity to ask the president a question.

I understand that Mr. McClellan recently met with WHCA President Ron Hutcheson, and that neither is eager to take on the role of deciding who is and is not a journalist. I can appreciate this hesitancy -- though in Mr. Gannon's case, the decision does not seem a difficult one, and though refusing to make a decision is, in effect, a decision in the affirmative. Nevertheless, I can well understand why, in cases that are less clear-cut than that of Mr. Gannon, the White House and the WHCA are reluctant to take responsibility for making these decisions.

There is a simple, partial solution that is worth considering: limiting the number of times per year a person may use a "daily pass" to attend a press briefing. Mr. Gannon apparently used these "daily passes" to attend press briefings nearly every day for two years, presumably because he was unable to obtain a "hard pass." If use of a "daily pass" was limited to twelve times per year per person, out-of-town reporters would still be able to attend briefings while in Washington; news organizations that don't have full-time White House correspondents would still be able to send a representative on occasion; and new or "alternative" media outlets that are unable to obtain a "hard pass" would still be able to attend occasional briefings. But the "daily pass" could no longer be used as an "end-around" to the "hard pass" procedures, and somebody like Mr. Gannon would not be able to attend every briefing for two years while, to use The New York Times' Richard Stevenson's apt description, "hijacking" the press room.

I understand the difficult position all of you are in and the complications of deciding who is and who is not a journalist, particularly given the rapidly changing shape of the profession. I think such a limit on the frequency with which a person may use a "daily pass" could be a helpful first step in addressing the problems highlighted by Mr. Gannon while still maintaining an "open" briefing room.

I would be happy to discuss this idea, or the Gannon situation in general, with any of you.

Sincerely,

David Brock
President and CEO
Media Matters for America

mediamatters.org



To: Threshold who wrote (258)2/21/2005 11:15:09 PM
From: PartyTime  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9838
 
FOX's oil-for-food special smeared Annan, left out facts

A promotion for a FOX News special report titled Breaking Point: U.N. Blood Money: Kofi Annan Under Fire promised that the hour-long special would deliver "shocking new information" on corruption in the United Nations oil-for-food program. Instead, viewers were treated to a host of glaring omissions, dubious sources, falsehoods and distortions, smears, and innuendo.

As the title suggests, the report focused on U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. FOX chose to target Annan despite the fact that no specific allegations -- beyond the generic charges of "mismanagement" and "lax oversight" -- have surfaced to connect Annan to corruption in oil-for-food, let alone actual evidence.

Glaring omissions

FOX News anchor David Asman, who hosted the special, repeated numerous times during the show that "Saddam stole billions from the oil-for-food program" and that oil-for-food "was supposed to pay for food and medicine for the Iraqi people, but Saddam Hussein stole billions." He narrated how "questions mounted ... about corruption at the U.N., about the billions Saddam stole," and he ended one segment of the show by reminding viewers, "you've heard how Saddam skimmed billions from the oil-for-food program." FOX News correspondent Eric Shawn emphasized that "nder oil-for-food, the Iraqi people suffered while Saddam Hussein stole billions," and FOX News correspondent Jonathan Hunt noted that "Saddam stole billions right under the nose of the United Nations." Most of these statements accompanied explanations of how Saddam supposedly used this illicit revenue to purchase weapons, finance weapons research and programs, and prop up his regime, threatening the safety of the United States and the world.

But no one found time in the hour-long program even to mention that the Duelfer report -- the final report by the Central Intelligence Agency's Iraqi Survey Group (ISG) on the search for banned weapons in Iraq, which Hunt discussed at length in another context -- estimated that of the nearly $11 billion in illicit income that Saddam obtained from August 1990 to March 2003, only $1.7 billion, or 16 percent, came through oil-for-food. Most of the rest came from so-called "bilateral protocols" -- illegal oil-smuggling agreements with Syria, Turkey, Egypt, and others. Near the beginning of U.N. Blood Money, Asman declared: "This hour, you'll also hear how oil-for-food had in effect financed Saddam's most sinister biochemical weapons plants." Saddam actually had no biochemical weapons plants (see below), but even if such a plant had existed, it would have been "effectively financed" far more generously through this smuggling than through oil-for-food.

Second, even as FOX News reporters and their sources heaped suspicion and innuendo on Annan and other U.N. officials (see "Innuendo" below), no one mentioned the substantial role of the U.N. Security Council, including the United States, in overseeing oil-for-food. As Media Matters for America has detailed, all members of the so-called "661 committee" -- the committee established by U.N. Security Council Resolution 661 to monitor Iraq's compliance with the newly established sanctions regime -- had the power to veto any sale of Iraqi oil and/or purchase of goods financed with oil-for-food revenues that it deemed suspicious. The committee was free to scrutinize detailed distribution plans" in which Iraq specified each item it intended to purchase. The committee also had access to the periodic audits of the U.N.-managed escrow account where Iraq's oil revenues were held.

Finally, Asman, Shawn, and Hunt never found time in their hour-long report to explain the central rationale for the creation of the oil-for-food program in Iraq -- namely, the humanitarian catastrophe that occurred under the U.N. sanctions regime prior to oil-for-food. Shawn reported simply: "After Saddam invaded Kuwait in 1990, the U.N. slapped sanctions on Iraq. Those sanctions later became oil-for-food." But he did not mention that an estimated 500,000 children died as a result of sanctions between 1991 and 1998, according to the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF). The Oil-for-Food Program, authorized in late 1995 and begun in 1996, was a response to this disaster, as the U.N. Security Council noted in Resolution 986. In 1998, even after oil-for-food had somewhat alleviated the suffering, U.N. humanitarian coordinator Denis Halliday quit his job in protest over the suffering caused by sanctions.

Dubious sources: Richard Spertzel on Iraq's "even more sinister plan"

For its specific criticism of the oil-for-food program, U.N. Blood Money relied heavily on the recollections of Richard O. Spertzel, a highly dubious source with little firsthand knowledge of the oil-for-food program. Spertzel is the former head of the biological weapons section of the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq (UNSCOM), the task force established in 1991 to monitor Iraq's weapons program following the first Gulf War. But his interview with Hunt for U.N. Blood Money suggests that Spertzel's knowledge of the oil-for-food program is limited to having seen oil-for-food officials around during his work in Iraq with UNSCOM. The only evidence he provided was his general impression that U.N. inspectors were lazy and his assertion that "t was such common knowledge it had to be known":

SPERTZEL: We used to joke about the oil-for-food people in Baghdad. The oil-for-food people spent most of their time in the cafeteria, as opposed to being out in field making sure that the material was going to the locations that it was supposed to.

HUNT: So the whole U.N. oil-for-food team was something of a joke?

SPERTZEL: It certainly was among the UNSCOM inspectors.

HUNT: So everybody knew this, within the U.N.?

SPERTZEL: It was such common knowledge it had to be known.

Spertzel also worked for the ISG, the CIA-led task force that searched for banned weapons in Iraq following the U.S.-led invasion. But in his interview with Hunt, Spertzel made claims that are unsupported by the Duelfer report. Hunt reported that Spertzel "stunned us" with the revelation that Iraq had "secret labs to make deadly weapons of assassination and terror, a nerve gas sarin, and a biological poison Ricin in spray form" and that "Spertzel believes an even more sinister plan was being cooked up by Saddam to put the poisons on department store shelves across the United States and Europe." These descriptions were interspersed with clips of Hunt's interview with Spertzel, in which he depicted this vivid and horrifying scenario:

SPERTZEL: Released into a closed area the limitation would be how many people are there.

HUNT: So, literally you could walk into Madison Square Garden, squeeze that aerosol?

SPERTZEL: Absolutely. If that were released in a closed area such as Madison Square Garden or some of your smaller shopping malls, it would have a devastating effect.

HUNT: Killing hundreds, thousands?

SPERTZEL: Killing hundreds of thousands.

[...]

SPERTZEL: Some of the photographs that were obtained from this same laboratory had multiple shapes of perfume spray bottles, I presume where he could mimic different brand names. Can you imagine somebody going into a department store and spraying a little bit of a perfume to see whether they like the scent, only instead of perfume they're getting a face full of sarin?

HUNT: Again, that would kill?

SPERTZEL: And that would kill within -- within a few minutes, and if this were to appear at a couple different locations, imagine the economic impact in the U.S. People would be afraid to buy anything.

[...]

HUNT: And that was something that he was working on?

SPERTZEL: That was being actively pursued as late as March 2003.

But the Duelfer report's Chapter 5 cites only a single Iraqi intelligence source on Iraq's alleged plot to smuggle poison onto European or American department store shelves, and this source claimed that they could not implement the plan because they lacked the chemical agents:

A former IIS [Iraqi Intelligence Service] officer claimed that the M16 directorate [IIS Directorate of Criminology] had a plan to produce and weaponize nitrogen mustard in rifle grenades, and a plan to bottle Sarin and sulfur mustard in perfume sprayers and medicine bottles which they would ship to the United States and Europe. The source claimed that they could not implement the plan because chemicals to produce the CW [chemical weapons] agents were unavailable.

Similarly, the report's "Key Findings" on Iraq's chemical weapons capability undermine Spertzel's suggestion that the laboratories posed a realistic threat to the United States:

ISG uncovered information that the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) maintained throughout 1991 to 2003 a set of undeclared covert laboratories to research and test various chemicals and poisons, primarily for intelligence operations. The network of laboratories could have provided an ideal, compartmented platform from which to continue CW agent R&D [research and development] or small-scale production efforts, but we have no indications this was planned. (See Annex A.) ISG has no evidence that IIS Directorate of Criminology (M16) scientists were producing CW or BW [biological weapons] agents in these laboratories.

Following Spertzel's description of the secret laboratories, he assented to Hunt's suggestion -- in a highly leading question -- that this capability was "tied together" with corruption in oil-for-food, but no one explained how. Here's the exchange:

HUNT: I assume the U.N. and the secretariat should have done more to stop Saddam acquiring weapons and to oversee the oil-for-food program far more efficiently because the two are tied together.

SPERTZEL: The two are tied together. I think they let the world down, no question about that.

Falsehoods and distortions: Iraq's military infrastructure under oil-for-food

Hunt misleadingly reported that "somehow under oil-for-food, Saddam was able to build underground bunkers, like this one, so hardened that even dozens of missile strikes on the palace above it didn't seem to damage it at all." But there's no evidence that Saddam used oil-for-food money to build bunkers; in any case, oil-for-food was never intended to prevent Saddam from building bunkers, only to alleviate the Iraqi people's suffering while maintaining the sanctions regime.

Hunt continued with an outright falsehood:

More worrisome, the Iraq Survey Group found that supposed humanitarian imports under oil-for-food gave Saddam the ability to restart his biological and chemical warfare programs at a moment's notice.

This is false. The Duelfer report does not say that Iraq successfully obtained material for its weapons program under the guise of "humanitarian" imports. The report says only that the "Iraq's acceptance of the Oil-for-Food (OFF) program was the foundation of Iraq's economic recovery and sparked a flow of illicitly diverted funds that could be applied to projects for Iraq's chemical industry." The report does not say that Iraq successfully obtained weapons material under the guise of "humanitarian" imports.

Smears: Kofi Annan and the Rwandan genocide

Shawn began a discussion criticizing Annan's role in efforts to confront the 1994 Rwandan genocide by declaring that oil-for-food "isn't the only time Annan played a central role in a United Nations debacle." even though it's far from clear that Annan "played a central role" in oil-for-food. The Rwanda discussion included clips of an interview with retired Canadian General Romeo Dallaire, who commanded the U.N. peacekeeping mission to Rwanda beginning in December 1993. Shawn's report misleadingly suggested that Annan was callously indifferent to the genocide and forbade Dallaire to act:

SHAWN: The U.N. force was commanded by Canadian General Romeo Dallaire. Dallaire learned from an informant that Hutu militia had targeted all Tutsis for "extermination." Dallaire requested permission from Annan's office to try and stop the atrocity.

DALLAIRE [clip]: And so I was quite surprised to get a message back fairly promptly telling me that I was well outside of my mandate.

SHAWN: And so the U.N. peacekeepers did nothing. Annan never passed Dallaire's information on to the Security Council. Once the killing began it went unchecked until mid-July. By then the Hutus had slaughtered an estimated 800,000 Tutsis.

In fact, Annan's role as Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations was simply to implement U.N. Security Council Resolution 872, which explicitly laid out the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda's (UNAMIR) mandate. The resolution authorized the mission to enforce the Arusha Peace Agreement of August 1993 between the Hutu government and Tutsi rebels, who had been fighting since 1990. The mandate did not permit the force to intervene to take preemptive action against the threat of new violence. Annan has expressed regret for the United Nations' failure to act more aggressively against the genocide, but ultimately, only the Security Council could have authorized U.N. military action. Indeed, the Security Council passed Resolution 909 on April 5, 1994, two days before the genocide began, but it merely extended the time period for UNAMIR's previously established mission.

As for Annan's alleged failure to "pass Dallaire's information on to the Security Council," Annan in fact instructed Dallaire to inform two Security Council members of the impending threat of violence in Rwanda. The United Nations' independent inquiry into its actions regarding the Rwandan genocide explained (select "English") that on January 11, 1994, Dallaire requested permission to act preemptively based on information from an informant about possible violence against both the U.N. mission itself and against Tutsis. Annan's reply to Dallaire, in which he informed Dallaire that his plan to intervene was beyond the mandate of the U.N. mission, also instructed Dallaire to meet with Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and inform him of the situation. Finally, Annan's cable instructed Dallaire: "Before the meeting with the President, the Ambassadors of France, Belgium, and the United States were to be informed and asked to make similar demarches." The subsequent reply to Annan confirmed Dallaire "met with the heads of mission of France, Belgium, and the United States" to tell them of the impending threat [pp. 10-12]. These events occurred on January 11-13, 1994, but the genocide did not begin until April 7.

Shawn introduced the segment on Rwanda by explaining that Annan "was the under-secretary-general in charge of U.N. peacekeeping ... when the Security Council dispatched 2,500 mostly Belgian troops to Rwanda to keep the peace between the warring Hutus and Tutsis." In fact, the 2,500-member U.N. peacekeeping mission to Rwanda, or UNAMIR, included only about 400 Belgians along with 940 Bangladeshi and 840 Ghanaian troops.

Innuendo

Though no allegations of corruption have surfaced against Annan, a picture of Annan flashed on the screen in the first minute of U.N. Blood Money as the announcer explained that "Saddam stole billions from the oil-for-food program, and now, word he got help inside the U.N." The picture appeared just as the announcer uttered the words "he got help inside."

The program also included a series of suggestions that Annan deserves blame for corruption in oil-for-food despite the absence of evidence against him:

For example, Asman explained: "The biggest question of all: Where does the buck stop in this scandal? The answer for a growing number of people is that it stops with U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan."

Similarly, Claudia Rosett, whom Asman identified simply as "Claudia Rosett with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies," asked: "The big question is how much did Kofi Annan know? ... How deeply involved was he in the aspects that were clearly corrupt? Why did he not tell us much, much sooner things that were wrong with it?" But she, too, produced no specific evidence against Annan. Rosett is a former Wall Street Journal editorial board member and a regular columnist for the Journal's website, OpinionJournal.com. The Foundation for Defense of Democracies is a conservative think tank that has been attacking the United Nations since long before corruption in oil-for-food came to light. Foundation President Clifford D. May wrote in March 2003 that "U.N. fecklessness has been responsible for the deaths of millions of innocent victims."

mediamatters.org



To: Threshold who wrote (258)2/22/2005 12:38:17 AM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 9838
 
Gannongate: Scathing Article Attacks Niagara Falls' Newspapers
by catnip
[Subscribe]

Mon Feb 21st, 2005 at 19:14:04 PST

The Niagara Falls Reporter, a free weekly newspaper, has had a huge role in Gannongate by publishing a letter to Congresswoman Louise Slaughter pressing her to call for a congressional investigation, which as most of you know, she did. She also filed a FOIA request with Homeland Security for more information about Gannon/Guckert. Check out this site for video of Slaughter's appeareance on CNN's Anderson Cooper's '360' show.

read on...

Diaries :: catnip's diary ::

Last week, the Niagara Falls Reporter's Mike Hudson wrote an excellent article about Gannongate, which I shared with you here. This week, he's come out with a hard-hitting article about Gannongate that his local competition is not going to like much.

The Niagara Falls Reporter is the only local newspaper that's picked up the Gannon/Guckert story in a major way. The others are eerily silent on the matter, so Mike Hudson takes them to task:

GANNONGATE SCANDAL ELUDES LOCAL DAILIES
By Mike Hudson
I've learned not to expect too much from my colleagues at the Niagara Gazette and Buffalo News. For the most part, they're a lot younger than I am, and apparently learned the practice of journalism in a very different fashion.

On Feb. 9, when Rep. Louise Slaughter wrote an open letter to President George Bush demanding an investigation into how a person using an alias, with a background in gay pornography and no journalistic credentials whatsoever, managed to obtain White House press passes nearly every day for two years, it made headlines around the country.

The New York Times, Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, "Salon" online magazine, CNN, the Associated Press, MSNBC and a raft of other major media outlets have all reported on the burgeoning scandal. It seems that a man calling himself "Jeff Gannon" -- and acting as an agent for a wholly owned subsidiary of a Texas-based Republican group known as GOPUSA -- had received White House clearance to pretty much come and go as he pleased and, by his own admission, had access to highly classified national defense documents.

The White House press corps is the most rarefied of American journalistic beats. Maureen Dowd, who writes for The New York Times and won a Pulitzer Prize for her scathing indictments of Bill Clinton, had her press pass revoked when George W. Bush took office.

Days after writing her letter to the president, Rep. Slaughter, along with Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, called on the Secret Service to launch its own investigation, and referred the matter to Patrick Fitzgerald, the special Justice Department prosecutor investigating the leaking of undercover CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity to the media. House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland also encouraged the special counsel to look into the matter. And Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey called upon White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan to release all documents related to Gannon.

Still, despite the fact that our congresswoman blew the lid off of what promises to be the first major scandal of Bush's second term, the local dailies have remained silent. Why is it that Slaughter's brave challenge is big news everywhere but in her own district?

I've got a sinking suspicion I know the answer. You see, in the first sentence of the first paragraph of her letter to the president, Slaughter states, "I feel compelled to ask you to address a matter brought to my attention by the Niagara Falls Reporter, a local newspaper in my district."

Ooooo...that's gotta sting. But wait, there's more:

How did we find out about it? There are any number of excellent sites on the Internet that had been way out front with the story. Daily Kos, Media Matters for America, BuzzFlash, AMERICAblog and Eschaton, to name but a few. In much the same way that Matt Drudge's Web site drove the Monica Lewinsky feeding frenzy, today's bloggers have been on the current scandal like white on rice.

These intrepid cyber-sleuths not only revealed that Jeff Gannon's real name was James Dale Guckert, they exposed his ties to pornography and uncovered the stranger-than-fiction fact that he had been offering his services as an "escort" with a going rate of $200 an hour. In a recent interview with "Editor and Publisher," Guckert didn't deny any of the allegations.

Bloggers: 1 MSM: 0

Further online reporting showed that Talon News, the organization he claimed to work for, consisted of a single obscure Web site, and unveiled the GOPUSA connection. Just for good measure, they discovered that many of the articles Guckert had "written" were nothing more than White House press releases with the Jeff Gannon byline attached and that, in at least one case, he may have plagiarized a piece that had appeared earlier on CNN.

We followed the story online, did a little checking of our own, and wrote the congresswoman voicing our concerns.

Subsequently, we received a lot of help and support from Rep. Slaughter's staff, particularly Suzanne Macri and Jane Schroeder at the Pine Avenue office and Karl Frisch in Washington. Although we didn't know it when we wrote the letter, Slaughter had already been looking into the Bush administration's possibly illegal and certainly unethical payments to syndicated columnists and television talking heads like Armstrong Williams, Maggie Gallagher and Mike McManus.

It is a sad disgrace that, unless you're tuned into the national media or what is now known as the blogosphere, or unless you read the Reporter, you can't find anything out about what our local representative in Congress has been up to over the past week.

The Buffalo News was busy lamenting the fact that the steroid-sucking, store-bought governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, is ineligible to run for president because of a quaint provision in the Constitution of the United States that says you have to be born in this country to serve in that office. Coincidentally, Warren Buffet, one of the Terminator's chief campaign advisers, also owns the News.

Over at the Gazette, they waxed poetic about what a wonderful occasion Valentine's Day is. How sweet. How sickeningly sweet. They wasted space on a frivolous column a young airhead writes called "I'll Try Anything Once" and exhausted valuable front-page space on a column by Vince Anello which, I think, is called "I Am a Liar and a Thief."

No, I was just kidding. It's actually called "Ask the Mayor."

Ouch! I wonder if Hudson is related to Armando...

The Gazette is owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., a corporation based deep in the heart of the blood-Red State of Alabama. Last week, the company made industry news when it fired a columnist for his liberal views at another paper it owns -- the Pella (Iowa) Chronicle -- a move that caused the paper's longtime managing editor to resign in protest.

It's a strange business, this journalism racket. On one hand, you've got a fake news organization employing a fake reporter who turns out to be a gay prostitute gaining access to the highest level of American government and being made privy to classified documents. On the other hand, you've got a bunch of dedicated amateurs who know how to use computers and the Internet exposing him, something the Secret Service and the FBI apparently were unable to do.

So much for "Homeland Security."

Then you've got a small weekly newspaper and Congresswoman Louise Slaughter, both having the temerity to ask, "What the hell's going on here?"

And finally, you've got a couple of gutless and bloated dailies that are too lazy, too stupid or too partisan themselves to report on a sensational national news story that broke right in their own backyard. Despite the fact that both papers fill their pages with reams of canned Associated Press copy every day to cut down on editorial costs, the AP stories dealing with Slaughter's valiant efforts have apparently fallen through the cracks.

Stab. Stab. Are they bleeding yet?

So here's some news for these alleged news hounds -- this story isn't going to go away any time in the foreseeable future. Sooner or later, they're going to have to report on it.

Last Friday, Slaughter was able to confirm reports that the phony newsman had been attending White House press briefings as early as Feb. 28, 2003, a full month before Talon News even existed. Since Guckert said in a recent interview that he hadn't had any experience in journalism prior to joining Talon, Slaughter called on Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge to find out how such a thing could have happened.

She and Conyers have also filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the Homeland Security Department demanding all records relating to Guckert and the process by which he obtained his top-level clearance.

As a member of Congress, Slaughter said, even she could not simply walk up to the White House and gain admittance. And she's losing patience with administration officials who continue to maintain the treatment Guckert received was nothing out of the ordinary.

"It's been a week since I wrote President Bush seeking answers in this matter. I have not yet received a reply," she said last week. "With each new revelation it becomes more and more clear that the relationship between the White House and Jeff Gannon was anything but typical. It is time for this administration to stop stonewalling and come clean with the American people."

Do you think those other newspapers will cover this story now? Maybe The Gazette will threaten to sue the Niagara Falls Reporter again from their very red headquarters in North Carolina.

The truth hurts doesn't it, you spineless "journalists", you?

Kudos once again to my new favourite small town publication for taking on the establishment.

Sidenote: I had hoped Mike Hudson's article this week would have focused more on the bloggers in pyjamas phenomenon but, I must say, this scathing article is bound to ruffle many corporate feathers and I'm 100% behind that effort. You know something's very, very wrong when news corporations refuse to even cover such an important story.

Keep up the great work, kossacks! You're my heroes.

(Once again, permission was granted for me to publish this article from Mike Hudson, Editor-in-Chief, of the Niagara Falls Reporter. Considering that, and the fact that he has 4 cats, he's a pretty good guy).

dailykos.com
[PARTYTIME NOTE: I have five cats--lol!]