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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: altair19 who wrote (104217)4/10/2007 3:13:38 PM
From: coug  Respond to of 361678
 
Yes altair,

After listening to her and her team, I was even more disgusted with Imus.. What a fine person to coach those fine young women. Their parents have to be so proud of them.

And Imus doesn't even know them..

c



To: altair19 who wrote (104217)4/11/2007 2:19:32 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361678
 
Advertisers Pull Out of Imus Show
___________________________________________________________

'I Don't Deserve to Be Fired,' Says the Shock Jock, Under Attack for Slur

By Paul Farhi and Frank Ahrens
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, April 11, 2007; A01

As skittish advertisers began to pull out and calls for his resignation reverberated, embattled shock jock Don Imus yesterday continued a campaign of contrition over racially and sexually insensitive remarks he made, even while insisting that he shouldn't lose his national television show and syndicated radio program.

Imus, who last week called the Rutgers University women's basketball players "nappy-headed hos," said on his morning show yesterday that he will seek a meeting with the team. His on-air slur has mushroomed into widespread condemnation, fueled round-the-clock news coverage and resulted in a two-week suspension of his show, carried on MSNBC and CBS Radio.

"I don't deserve to be fired," Imus, 67, said yesterday during his show. "So I should be punished, and I'm being punished, and not insignificantly, by the way. I'm not whining, because I don't feel as bad as those kids feel."

Imus's comments came a few hours before an emotional news conference by the Rutgers team. Her players seated next to her, their faces fixed with grim expressions, Rutgers Coach C. Vivian Stringer told the assembled reporters, "We have all been physically and emotionally spent and hurt" by Imus's remarks, which she called "deplorable, despicable and abominable and unconscionable." The team's players said they would meet with Imus.

Three advertisers -- office supply chain Staples Inc., Bigelow Tea and Procter & Gamble -- said late yesterday that they would stop placing ads on the show out of dismay over Imus's comments. Any further defections could significantly erode economic support for a program heard in about 70 radio markets, including Washington. CBS Radio, which syndicates Imus, has not announced how it will fill the time slot when Imus's suspension begins on Monday. MSNBC said it would program expanded news coverage during the time.

Imus has gone past the edges of propriety many times during his long career, but nothing has approached the storm that now swirls about him.

As early as 1982, former Imus employer WNBC in New York promoted him and co-worker Howard Stern as radio bad boys. The pair blazed a trail for a generation of shock jocks, including Doug "Greaseman" Tracht, who was fired from Washington's WARW in 1999 for uttering a racist remark on-air, and Opie and Anthony, a New York duo fired in 2002 for a stunt involving a Virginia couple allegedly having sex in a Manhattan church.

Over the past decade, however, Imus has crafted a radio show that has become part of the political and media establishment while maintaining an inflammatory edge.

The list of Imus's guests over the years is a who's who of the media and political elite, including former senator Bill Bradley, Tom Brokaw, James Carville, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, Rudy Giuliani, conservative commentator Laura Ingraham, Sens. John Kerry, Joe Lieberman and John McCain, Dan Rather, NBC News anchor Brian Williams, New Yorker writer Ken Auletta and Washington Post reporters Howard Kurtz and Dana Priest. He also has become a must-stop for many authors promoting their books.

Yesterday, a number of those guests distanced themselves from Imus.

"The comments of Don Imus were divisive, hurtful and offensive to Americans of all backgrounds," said presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, who recently promoted his book on Imus's show. "With a public platform comes a trust. As far as I'm concerned, he violated that trust."

The controversy follows years of incendiary statements by Imus and members of his on-air team, many of which attracted little attention from the news media or civil rights activists .

In March, Imus's executive producer and longtime sidekick Bernard McGuirk said that Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton was "trying to sound black in front of a black audience" during a recent speech on civil rights in Selma, Ala. McGuirk added that Clinton "will have cornrows and gold teeth before this fight with Obama is over."

In a November broadcast, Imus referred to the "Jewish management" of CBS Radio as "money-grubbing bastards," according to the Forward, a Jewish daily newspaper.

Imus has endured barbs from critics in the past. But this time, Imus may have picked the wrong victims at the wrong time.

The Rutgers slur was directed against blameless and generally unknown young women who had just played for a national championship. The story was picked up by media outlets facing the news vacuum of a long holiday weekend. Finally, the evidence was preserved by video-sharing Web sites.

"Chatter on the Web makes outrage spread father, faster and hotter than ever before," said Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page, who appeared on Imus's show several times during the 1990s.

In May 2000, Imus was under attack from people who called his show racist and took out an ad in the New York Times criticizing him. As that controversy crested, Page went on Imus's show and asked half-jokingly: "Am I your last black friend in America?"

During that appearance -- Page's last on the show -- the columnist asked Imus to swear off racially and otherwise offensive humor.

"I, Don Imus, do solemnly swear that I will promise to cease all simian references to black athletes," Imus said. Further, Page urged Imus to swear off "homophobic epithets . . . xenophobia . . . no more mocking Indians as Gunga Din," and so forth. Both Imus and Page chuckled through much of the pledge.

"I am very disappointed about him going off the wagon," Page said yesterday. He said Imus's suspension is merited, "but he's still getting special treatment because he's worth a lot of money to these companies," meaning CBS Radio and NBC Universal, which owns MSNBC.

"It's easy for me to say I won't be on his show again -- I haven't been asked back," Page said. "But I couldn't look myself in the mirror if I went on again."

Imus's pledge in 2000, which was quickly broken, was written by Brooklyn author Philip Nobile, a longtime critic of the radio host. The shock jock's suspension and excoriation are sweet vindication of a decade-long quest -- almost: "Only if he's fired," Nobile said yesterday.

"The fact is, Imus is a skinhead in elite-media dress," said Nobile, who once was a guest on the Imus show. "It is the shame of elite journalists and politicians to enable him to thrive on his bigotry shtick."

Despite its incendiary content, Imus's daily program defies simple categorization. Imus and a crew of sidekicks banter about news, politics, sports and popular culture, with the often cranky host often veering off into idiosyncratic comments and diatribes.

It is also a platform for an array of Imus's philanthropic causes, from his cattle ranch and camp for children with cancer to his advocacy of autism research. The show once featured more song parodies and sketches -- an enduring Imus character was a preacher named Billy Sol Hargis -- but these have been downplayed in recent years in favor of discussion and interviews with prominent guests.

The range of Imus's racial commentary is also more complicated than the current controversy would suggest. After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, he said the government's sluggish response reflected an indifference to New Orleans's poor and black residents. When former congressman Harold Ford Jr., who is black, lost his bid for the Senate last fall, Imus blamed racial prejudice. And as Imus himself has noted, he has hosted countless minority children at his cattle ranch and camp in New Mexico.

Although Imus has hosted some of Washington's most famous figures on his show, ratings suggest that he's actually a marginal figure among viewers and listeners in the region. But Imus's show, which last year generated as much as $20 million in total revenue for flagship station WFAN in New York, is low-cost, high-revenue programming for MSNBC.

Imus is scheduled to return from his suspension April 30 -- just in time for the spring TV ratings sweeps in May.

-Staff writers Chris Cillizza and Lisa de Moraes contributed to this report.



To: altair19 who wrote (104217)4/11/2007 6:16:39 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361678
 
This is a risky but principled positioned taken by Obama...Why...? By commenting on Imus too much and calling for the firing then he may "upset" some of the very powerful talking heads in Washington who are good friends with Imus -- I'm talking about folks like Tim Russert, Newsweek's Alter and Fineman, Congressional Quarterly's Craig Crawford, NBC Anchor Brian Williams, CBS political consultant Jeff Greenfield, etc....What does this mean...? Not sure yet...but these folks could possibly make life more difficult for Obama if they wanted to...These talking heads write the stories and moderate the programs that much of mainstream America consumes. Nothing wrong with stating a personal opinion BUT ultimately the advertisers and viewers will make the final decision...A number of high profile corporations are starting to withdraw advertising -- if more firms like American Express and Proctor & Gamble pull advertising then that will make life difficult for Imus and his backers at CBS Radio and MSNBC...fyi...

Obama First White House Contender to Call for Imus' Firing Over Racial Slur

By JAKE TAPPER

April 11, 2007— - In an interview with ABC News Wednesday afternoon, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., called for the firing of talk radio host Don Imus. Obama said he would never again appear on Imus' show, which is broadcast on CBS Radio and MSNBC television.

"I understand MSNBC has suspended Mr. Imus," Obama told ABC News, "but I would also say that there's nobody on my staff who would still be working for me if they made a comment like that about anybody of any ethnic group. And I would hope that NBC ends up having that same attitude."

Obama said he appeared once on Imus' show two years ago, and "I have no intention of returning."

Racial Slur Stirs Trouble for Shock Jock

Last week, Imus referred to the Rutgers University women's basketball team, most of whom are African-American, as "nappy-headed hos." He has since apologized for his remarks, and CBS and MSNBC suspended his show for two weeks.

"He didn't just cross the line," Obama said. "He fed into some of the worst stereotypes that my two young daughters are having to deal with today in America. The notions that as young African-American women -- who I hope will be athletes -- that that somehow makes them less beautiful or less important. It was a degrading comment. It's one that I'm not interested in supporting."

Though every major presidential candidate has decried the racist remarks, Obama is the first one to say Imus should lose his job for them.

His proclamation was the latest in an ever-expanding list of bad news for Imus.

Sponsors, including American Express Co., General Motors Corp., Procter & Gamble Co., and Staples Inc. -- have announced they are pulling advertisements from the show for the indefinite future.

Tuesday, the basketball team held a press conference.

"I think that this has scarred me for life," said Matee Ajavon. "We grew up in a world where racism exists, and there's nothing we can do to change that."

"What we've been seeing around this country is this constant ratcheting up of a coarsening of the culture that all of have to think about," Obama said.

"Insults, humor that degrades women, humor that is based in racism and racial stereotypes isn't fun," the senator told ABC News.

"And the notion that somehow it's cute or amusing, or a useful diversion, I think, is something that all of us have to recognize is just not the case. We all have First Amendment rights. And I am a constitutional lawyer and strongly believe in free speech, but as a culture, we really have to do some soul-searching to think about what kind of toxic information are we feeding our kids," he concluded.

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures



To: altair19 who wrote (104217)4/12/2007 1:36:32 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361678
 
Media honcho Sumner Redstone on the fate of shock jock Don Imus

msnbc.msn.com

____________________

btw, Redstone is the largest shareholder of CBS and may make the final call.



To: altair19 who wrote (104217)4/13/2007 1:13:17 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361678
 
Retired Generals: Bush is ‘Breaking the Army’
_____________________________________________________________

by Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON - President George W. Bush’s ongoing “surge” of some 35,000 troops to add to the 140,000 already deployed in Iraq is highlighting growing concern, particularly among the military brass, that the U.S. army is overstretched and fast becoming “broken”.An increasing number of senior retired officers, some of whom had previously expressed optimism that the active-duty force of some 500,000 soldiers could handle U.S. commitments in the “global war on terror”, now say the current situation today reminds them of 1980, when the service’s top officer, Gen. Edward Meyer, publicly declared that the country had a “hollow Army”.

“The active army is about broken,” former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who also served as chairman of the Armed Forces Joint Chiefs of Staff under President George H.W. Bush 15 years ago, told Time magazine this week, while another highly decorated retired general who just returned from Iraq and Afghanistan described the situation in even more dire terms.

“The truth is, the U.S. Army is in serious trouble and any recovery will be years in the making and, as a result, the country is in a position of strategic peril,” ret. Gen. Barry McCaffrey, former head of the U.S. Southern Command, told the National Journal, elaborating on a much-cited memo he had written for his colleagues at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.

“My bottom line is that the Army is unraveling, and if we don’t expend significant national energy to reverse that trend, sometime in the next two years we will break the Army just like we did during Vietnam,” he added.

In an indication of the growing concern, both Time and the more elite-oriented Journal ran cover stories this week. They both concluded that the Army was rapidly approaching or had already reached “the breaking point”.

“Pressed by the demands of two wars, plus mandates to expand, reorganise, and modernise, the Army is nearing its breaking point,” according to the Journal, which also ran a companion article on how much the service has been forced to lower its mental, physical and moral standards to meet recruitment targets.

Some 15 percent of Army recruits last year were granted “waivers” from the Army’s minimum standards — about half of those were “moral waivers”; that is, they were permitted to enter the service despite prior criminal records. Only 82 percent of recruits had a high school diploma or its equivalent, below the Army’s benchmark of 90 percent and the lowest rate since 1981, according to the Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.

From just over 1.6 million soldiers at the height of the Vietnam War, the Army’s active-duty force fell to a half million troops by the mid-1990s, following the end of the Cold War. Counting reserve and National Guard forces, the Army’s total strength stands at about one million soldiers, of whom less than 400,000 are trained for combat.

While that was considered adequate for conventional conflicts with clear military and political objectives like the first Gulf War, in which the U.S. used overwhelming force to quickly prevail, it has proven far less suitable for the kind of prolonged occupation and unconventional war in which Washington now finds itself engaged in Iraq.

While some in the military brass, like then-Army Chief of Staff Gen. Eric Shinseki, warned the Bush administration even before the 2003 Iraq war that several hundred thousand troops would be required to stabilise the country, Bush’s defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, was determined to show that a “transformed” military — one that used advanced technology to make up for numbers — was the wave of the future, repeatedly rejecting appeals by his commanders, Congress and some of his neo-conservative allies to expand the army’s size.

It was not until Rumsfeld was ousted after last November’s elections, nearly four years into the U.S. occupation, that Bush finally agreed. In January, his new defence secretary, Robert Gates, called for an increase in army ranks to nearly 550,000 and in the Marines, from 175,000 to 202,000.

These increases, however, will be phased in over five years, offering little relief to stresses in the existing force, according to defence experts.

In addition to lowered standards for recruitment, the biggest concerns at the moment have to do with readiness and training. As more troops are rotated into Iraq for the “surge”, the amount of time devoted to training has been substantially reduced.

“Given the new policy of having (U.S.) troops (interact more) among the Iraqis,” Lawrence Korb, the Pentagon’s top personnel officer under President Ronald Reagan, told Time, “they should be giving our young soldiers more training, not less.”

Adding to the readiness problem are shortages of equipment, such as tanks and Humvees, on U.S. bases where training takes place. Instead, as units are rotated out of Iraq, they leave their equipment behind for their replacements to use.

“On the equipment side of the equation, the Army is pretty much broken,” Tom McNaugher, an expert at the RAND Corporation, told the Journal.

Just as the Army has been forced to relax its recruitment standards, it has also been forced to shorten intervals between deployments. While the Army’s recommended standard is a two-year interval between deployments that can last up to one year, the average current interval is substantially less; in some cases, as little as seven months.

Those stresses are particularly difficult to manage for mid-level officers, most of whom have families back at home and have already served as many as three and even four tours of duty in Iraq or Afghanistan.

While retention rates for these ranks remain strong, according to the Pentagon, some experts believe its statistics, which lag by several months, do not reflect what is actually taking place.

“Today, anecdotal evidence of collapse is all around,” according to ret. Maj. Gen. Robert Scales, a former Rumsfeld adviser and a regular commentator on CNN, who previously was optimistic about the war and its impact on the Army.

“The Army’s collapse after Vietnam was presaged by a desertion of mid-grade officers (captains) and non-commissioned officers… Most left because they and their families were tired and didn’t want to serve in units unprepared for war.”

“If we lose our sergeants and captains, the Army breaks again. It’s just that simple. That’s why these soldiers are the canaries in the readiness coal mine,” he told the Washington Times last week. “And… if you look closely, you will see that these canaries are fleeing their cages in frightening numbers.”

Indeed, the Army is currently short about 3,000 mid-career officers, a number that will be impossible to make up as the army expands over the next five years — a situation that Scales called “pretty much irreversible”.

According to a report in the Boston Globe Wednesday, graduates from the military’s officer training academy at West Point are choosing to leave active duty at the highest rate in more than three decades — “a sign to many specialists,” the Globe said, “that repeated tours in Iraq are prematurely driving out some of the Army’s top young officers.”

Of the 903 officers commissioned on graduating from West Point in 2001, 54 percent had left the service by January of this year.

Meyer, the general who pronounced the army “hollow” in 1980, agrees that the army appears headed down the same path as after Vietnam.

“I absolutely see similar challenges confronting the Army today as we faced then in terms of stresses being placed on the force,” he told Journal. “I think the Army is stressed at this point more than in all the time I’ve watched it since at least the end of the Cold War.”

Copyright © 2007 IPS-Inter Press Service.