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Bay Center, Washington from U.S. Hwy 101

Friday, 10 October 2008
Stossel and ABC encouraging young voters to stay home, because they're allegedly too dumb to vote
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Too dumb to vote? Well what's so significant about that age group. Look at all the voters in 2000, 2004 - even 2006 who were too dumb to vote but voted anyway.

 

 

From Crooks & Liars

 

The Show: ABC's 20/20 Friday 10th October. The message: young people are too dumb to vote and should stay home instead. That's the thrust of a segment by John Stossel, self-proclaimed "libertarian" and regular contributor to the hard-right's fanzine, Commentary.

 

Click on C&L link to read entire article. Well worth it.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Friday, 10 October 2008 11:46 AM PDT
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Tuesday, 29 July 2008
Hannity hates America.
Now Playing: I endorse this opinion
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal
"At the Unitarian Church in Knoxville, Tennessee, Jim Adkisson, a fan of yours, killed two people, wounded five others, and left an entire congregation and country shaken by his actions. Actions prompted, as he testified in his own written notes, by the ideas contained in your words."
on broadcast betrayal ...
I endorse this opinion

Docudharma : Congratulations

 
[Excerpt]

Congratulations, Sean Hannity. Congratulations, Bill O Reilly, Ann Coulter, Michael Savage, Michelle Malkin, Laura Ingraham, Rush Limbaugh.
.......and anyone else who supports that shit and makes it profitable.
...... YOU MADE THIS HAPPEN. THIS BLOOD IS ON YOUR HANDS.

 

And this via RD and Huffpo 

 


Affidavit: Man admits church shooting, says liberals should die


Jim Adkisson said liberals should be killed because they're ruining the nation, according to an affidavit.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:40 AM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, 30 July 2008 7:13 AM PDT
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Monday, 25 February 2008
Can't find one long-lasting culture founded on public patriotism
Now Playing: Networks and Reporters Desparate for an angle
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Pike Boomdropper came by tonight to invite me to a public meeting. Said the the movers and the shakers in the neighborhood have decided that a body might not be a patriot if they're not wearin a little lapel on their bib overalls when they go into the tavern to talk real man talk.

Said his wife was setting up a special meeting of the Ladies' Home Culture Club to draw up a petition for the village of Bay Center to pass a resolution declaring Obama an Arnold Benedict to our country cause he aint got no flyin flutterin flag badge of courage on his suit lapel.

Rumor has it that Obama also ain't willing to hold his hand on his stomach when he says the pledge. Don't recall hearing that Obama refused to say the pledge - which ought to be the better test than where he puts his hands.  Heck, when I was in high school I knowed a kid put his hand on his girl friend's chest every time the pledge was being said. He thought it was funny.

Course that was before desperate networks with desperate needs decided that even the most trivial of topics might earn a buck.

Can you imagine all the cheeks-puffed, red-face pundit/patriots who've found more than one way to betray the public seating and groaning about whether or not a lapel makes a fellow patriotic?

I do know that the Republican Party is full of partiots who advocated and voted for war and never served back when they could. I do know that some of the biggest chest pounders for war based on flag wavin have themselves been unwilling to put their boots where their mouths are.

I don't watch much cable and what little I do is on MSN. The other two sell nothing but trivialities - you know, the mountain groans and labors and gives birth to a mouse

.

 Hail The Irrelevant Broadcast Patriots


Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:54 PM PST
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Friday, 18 January 2008
When Tony as an old Cold Warrior is aroused by Fluffy Erica Jong, it means something.
Now Playing: My Friend Tony is upset again
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Tony and me - we're veterans. He's a former First Shirt (First Sargent - not to be confused with Sargent Majors who seem to be most famous when they get accused of sexual abuse of female underlings.)

No, Tony and me - we're conservative about America's core values. When Tony forwards me stuff that has him aroused, it's worth reading.

 

 Like this morning's email revealing that Erica Jong has got him aroused. No ...  not "aroused" from the viagra point of view. But from the "By God This Time They've Gone Too Far" kind of arousal.

Now years ago Tony and I had no time for Erica's frivolous writings in the 70's.

You know ... 

  Erica Jong is the author of eight novels including Fear of Flying; Fanny, Being the True History of the Adventures of Fanny Hackabout-Jones; Shylock's Daughter (formerly titled Serenissima); Inventing Memory, a story of mothers and daughters, and the new novel SAPPHO'S LEAP. Several of her novels have been worldwide bestsellers. Her other books include the nonfiction works Fear of Fifty: A Midlife Memoir; The Devil at Large, a study of Henry Miller; Witches; and What Do Women Want, and six volumes of poetry. - Huffo

Tony and I were Cold Warriors fighting for Cold War stuff and values. These were the values that still meant the good old fashioned American Pie stuff and not the fluffy directions Jong's honest, self-revealing and pop-psychology stuff were taking us.

So when Tony as an old Cold Warrior is aroused by Fluffy Erica Jong, it means something. I read the Erica Jong/Huffpo article Tony arousingly sent me.  

And agreed when she said this:

I want to talk not about candidates but about our media turning every presidential election into a high school popularity contest.

 

And this:

Our magazines and newspapers are so dumbed down that they never discuss issues, only stereotype or attack or puff up candidates -- and all for the most idiotic things -- like their marriages, which in truth we know nothing about -- or their weight or their clothes or their hair. They don't discuss brains, intelligence, psychological maturity, but only who's up or down in the polls, cuter in photos, who misted up, cried or didn't cry, said "my friends" like Reagan or mimicked Bill Clinton's style or JFK's or whomever's. Our press is a disgrace.

 And this:

We never discuss psychological depth because hey, who cares if the president's a bomb-happy dry-drunk trying to play out an Oedipal war with his father? We never talk about people being tested in power or how steady they are or whether they read books or understand what they read because we judge them on their looks. Or one idiotic sound byte, taken out of context.

And this:

I like shooting my mouth off on the Op-Ed page as much as anyone. Besides women writers are only drafted for the most trivial subjects. We comment on style not substance, beards not policy, clothes and shoes and chick lit and cooking. The men get the big topics like war, though women have the most to lose--like their children whom they carried and nursed and suckled and love more than themselves--as of course do many men.

And this:

If Eleanor Roosevelt were alive and running, they'd talk about her big teeth and her hoity toity accent. If JFK were alive and running, they'd reveal his affair with Marilyn and slander his wife for it. If Jackie O were alive and running, they'd say she fucked Onassis -- which she did -- while she was married to JFK. If Plato were alive and running, they'd say he was gay--though many Greeks were bisexual and thought nothing of it.

So kids, if you elect a President of the United States like you elected the President of the GO in High School, you deserve what you get.

Now I'm sure Tony and me ain't never gonna read Fear of Flying mostly cause we're too busy digging through bull pucky and trying to cope with news proclaimers' Fear of Substance

 


 

 

NOTE:  Tony gets a copy of these posts. He responded right back as follows:

Good Morning Old Chap. 

I like your website.  Very sophisticated and eye-catching.  I think I will start reading it more often. 

By the way, I did read Fear of Flying and she is a decent writer.  I would be surprised if you didn't read her work as well.

Even though I was on the war wagon in the 60s and a hot shot PI in the 70s, I still tried to keep up with what was going on politically in our great country. 

I was even a registered Conservative fighting for less government at one time until I realized those guys were only interested in power and money, not the people they represented; and as far as I can figure, our country is supposed be about protecting and taking care of the citizens and being an example to the world of the right kind of freedom and justice, not just exploiting and manipulating them for corporate greed and trying to do the same around the world.

So how did NAFTA actually help the US? Wasn't this the precursor to outsourcing our economy?

I found it interesting that one state has made it law that only American flags made in the US can be sold there.

Ah, we can go on and on. 

You, better than most, know the drill.  I am impressed you have taken a step back from the political arena and are not wasting your precious time shilling for the Democrats. 

We are way beyond parties these days. Most politicians today seem to be self-serving, willing to sell out for success.  They have lost their way at our expense.

Here is a great quote for you for your Blog a Rag about war from a truly great author, Tom Clancy in "The Bear and the Dragon"

"Wars are not rational acts.  They are not begun by rational men.  They are begun by people who don't care a rat fuck about the people they rule, who are willing to get their fellow men killed for their own narrow purposes."


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:50 AM PST
Updated: Friday, 18 January 2008 2:53 PM PST
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Thursday, 25 October 2007
They're everywhere! Behind every bush, every garbage dumpster and every forest fire in America!
Now Playing: Fox Bullshit
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Rachel Maddow to Keith Olbermann via Crooks and Liars 

Rachel Maddow to Keith Olbermann 

They have to come up with super-human powers for Al Qaeda because they want to use Al Qaeda to justify a super-extreme agenda for the United States of America.

If you really, really want to radically transform our government and radically transform who we are as a country;

if you want East German style policing, and people informing on their neighbors, and you want to get rid of the Fourth Amendment, and you want endless wars conducted for profit;

if you want to completely get rid of the safety net function and the regulatory function of the government; if you have an agenda that radical, you better have a really radical justification for it.

And so they have to elevate this band of death cults, fundamentalist criminals into a threat that is greater than the Soviet Union ever was when they not only had a military but they had thousands of nuclear weapons pointed at our country.

They have to make Al Qaeda even worse than that.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:56 AM PDT
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Friday, 3 August 2007
When will it finally end?
Now Playing: How many more peaks must Rupert surmount?
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Mike Lukovich via TRUTHDIG

Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:42 PM PDT
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Wednesday, 11 July 2007
When I want news I can trust I have to find it myself
Now Playing: When I want to know what the government wants me to know ...
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

I can always watch CNN, Wolf Blitzer, Gupta and company.

When I want to know what the dumbed down in this country are expected to know ...

when I want to know what mushrooms are given to know ...

I could tune into Faux News.

We've almost decided to cancel our cable TV and restrict all three sets in our house to DVD's ...

... risk living without the higher information available thanks to Big pharma, Big business and government manipuation and non-step distraction frpom what's really important by repetitive entertainment and sensational but shallow  news of titillating import.

 But if we take the boob out of toob, what happens if a tsunami threatens Willapa Bay? Wouldn't we need TV to update?

You know ... "we interrupt this hard-on commercial to bring you breaking news about a tsunami headed for Willapa Bay." 

 But then isn't that what radio is supposed to do?

And doesn't the county sheriff have a phone system to warn residents of this kind of stuff?

Don't we need to know amber alert stuff and what armed and dangerous felon or registered sex offender is on the run out of Seattle or Portland and headed our way?

Heck, I don't know. I think I'll take a chance on telephone, internet, radio and watching from the beach.

At least if I watch from the beach what I see will be real and not brought to me by Big Anything but God.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:20 AM PDT
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Sunday, 17 June 2007
There's nothing for Demo's to gain by debating on Fox News
Now Playing: Debating before an audience of the weakest civic-minds in the country.
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal
I'm a registered independent voter who feels that I can inform myself quite well without attending any political broadcast worship services complete with hat-passers and speakers throwing the political orthodoxy at me throught their own editorial scripture.

And ya know, an outhouse is no place to find the essence of roses.

The cosmetic odorifically bottled scents for civically challenged white men that exude from the Fox Farmland continue to miss the target:

"Evening in the Barnyard" for the rural white Reflublican voters,

"Three Days on a Troop Train," for the neocon intellectuals and their fighting keyboard Red Guard

"Lazarus of the 96 Hours," - "yea, he stinketh Lord." for the spiritually gullible.

Roger Ailes of "My Armpits Keep the Flies Away From My Nose" fame, can claim that dealing with Fox and Al Qaeda are equally difficult. But in reality, walking around an open septic tank is the sign of a wise politician who'll more readily qualify for my vote.

Go Digby 

 
Tool Time

by digby

Sunday, June 03, 2007


Joan Vennochi must have really been pushing her deadline to come up with this ignorant screed today, excoriating the Democratic field for refusing to debate on Fox:
IF YOU can't face the bad boys of Fox News, how can you face the bad boys of Iraq or Iran?

That's very cute, but it misses the point entirely. What the Democrats are saying is that unlike George W. Bush they aren't dumb enough to legitimize the enemy's propaganda. By pretending that Fox is a news network instead of the official house organ of the Republican Party the Democrats would be doing what Bush has done with al Qaeda --- behaving with such predictable idiocy that it inspires the other side's recruiting.

Furthermore, it's a waste of time. FOX is a partisan Republican network and the Democrats are trying to get Democratic primary votes (who do not and will not watch FOX for any reason.) They might as well be holding the debate in Dick Cheney's office. The vast, vast majority of Fox's audience are older, white, male right-wingers, hard core 28 percenters who would rather stick needles in their eyes than vote for a Democrat. It's ridiculous to think Democrats have any chance of persuading the audience of a network whose most popular show stars a man who says this:

O'REILLY: OK, I think it's a small part, but I think it's there. On the other side, you have people who hate America, and they hate it because it's run primarily by white, Christian men. Let me repeat that. America is run primarily by white, Christian men, and there is a segment of our population who hates that, despises that power structure. So they, under the guise of being compassionate, want to flood the country with foreign nationals, unlimited, unlimited, to change the complexion -- pardon the pun -- of America. Now, that's hatred, too. It's a different kind of hatred, but it's hatred and best exemplified by The New York Times, which today says in its editorial, quote: "Those who want [the immigration] bill to be better are horribly conflicted by it. Their emotions still seem vastly overmatched by the ferocity of the opposition from the restrictionist right, with talk radio lighting up over 'amnesty,' callers spitting out the words with all the hate they can pour into it," unquote.

Now, this is a theme of The New York Times, that if you oppose the immigration bill that you hate Latinos. Now, there's a segment that does, but most oppose it on policy. They just think it's bad policy, rewarding bad behavior. Bad policy. But The New York Times, which is an open border, OK, let-everybody-in concern -- that's what they want, because they want a totally different power structure in America.

Number one, they realize that 40 million new citizens -- and that's, you know, probably the estimate that if you let all the illegal immigrants and all their extended families come here, which is what The New York Times want, would wipe out the two-party system. You'd only have a Democratic party, because new immigrants are probably gonna break 3-to-1 Democrat, and that's what The New York Times wants. But more than that, they want to change the white, Christian male power structure. That's what they want.


I think he knows his audience very well, don't you?

I can't explain why the Congressional Black Caucus Institute is still willing to lend credibility to FOX's bogus claim to being fair and balanced by sponsoring this debate. They are being used as cover for the disgusting swill like that above which FOX's stars spew around the clock every single day and I think it's a mistake. I'm very glad that most of the Democratic candidates have declined to participate.

And in any case there is no excuse for Biden and Kucinich to suggest that their rivals are racist for failing to appear at this debate. Both of them should be ashamed of themselves. Joan Vennochi may just be another columnist on a deadline taking an easy shot but these two should know better.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:00 AM PDT
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Saturday, 16 June 2007
Right Wing Talk Radio: useful and necessary as a rubber crutch
Now Playing: Think Progress.rog: Mike Savage and his Orc's behaving badly.
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

From ThinkProgress.org 

C-SPAN Gets Savaged By Right-Wing Radio Listeners

 Last week, right-wing radio host Michael Savage was presented a Freedom of Speech award at Talkers Magazine’s annual New Media Seminar. C-SPAN, which aired portions of the two-day event, chose to not air Savage’s acceptance speech because the conservative talker only appeared in a pre-recorded DVD speech.

Savage is now claiming he is a victim of censorship. Repeatedly attacking C-SPAN this week as “fascists” and modern versions of the “brownshirt movement in Hitler’s Germany,” Savage encouraged his listeners to call and email CSPAN about their supposed “blacklisting” of his speech.

On Washington Journal this morning, host and C-SPAN CEO Brian Lamb read aloud some of the emails he has received from alleged listeners of Savage’s show. The emails defending Savage are filled with personal attacks, referring to Lamb as an “ass loser Communist,” “pervert,” “bed-wetting commie,” and worse. Watch it:

Michael Savage is obviously not responsible for the content of these emails. But it’s worth noting that such attacks are standard fare for Savage’s radio show. According to Savage, MoveOn.org members are “rat-bastard Communists,” supporters of the Fairness Doctrine are “Nazis” and “no different than the Bolsheviks in 1917,” and Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) says things that “Goebbels would be proud of.

As Lamb notes in his introduction to the emails, Savage is also using the faux controversy to make money by charging his fans $20 apiece to buy a copy of the supposedly censored speech.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 10:39 AM PDT
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Sunday, 20 May 2007
Broadcast Betrayal Update
Now Playing: Media Matters
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

Excerpts from Media Matters:

The Lack of Gender & Ethnic Diversity on the Sunday Morning Talk Shows

Not only are the Sunday morning talk shows on the broadcast networks dominated by conservative opinion and commentary, the four programs -- NBC's Meet the Press, ABC's This Week, CBS' Face the Nation, and Fox Broadcasting Co.'s Fox News Sunday -- feature guest lists that are overwhelmingly white and overwhelmingly male.

Image:sanjoseca.gov 

And the top-rated Sunday show -- Meet the Press -- shows the least diversity of all. The NBC program is the most male and nearly the most white (Face the Nation beats it out by 1 percentage point), and it has the highest proportion of white males to all other guests.

A breakdown of the guests who appeared on the Sunday shows in 2005 and 2006 shows that men dominate these shows. In fact, men outnumber women by a 4-to-1 ratio on average.

 


Media pounced on Edwards' haircuts, but ignore Giuliani's Iowa farm snub

Image: Wonkette.com

As Media Matters for America documented, the media recently devoted extensive coverage to a report -- first "broken" by Politico senior political writer Ben Smith on April 16 -- that Democratic presidential candidate and former Sen. John Edwards' (NC) campaign spent $800 on two haircuts. The story was covered by major print, broadcast, and cable outlets, and often featured characterizations of Edwards as "pretty" and the "Breck girl" -- echoing Republican and conservative attacks on Edwards dating back to 2004. These same media outlets, however, have shown almost no interest in recent reports that the presidential campaign of former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) scheduled -- and then abruptly canceled -- a campaign rally at the home of two Iowa farmers because they were not wealthy enough to be affected by the estate tax. 

 

In a May 3 article, the Anamosa Journal-Eureka (Jones County, Iowa) reported: "Deb and Jerry VonSprecken of Olin received a call from former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani's campaign office asking them if they would be interested in holding a campaign rally on May 4, after she had donated to his campaign." According to the article, the VonSpreckens, who "have a modest 80 acre farm and raise cattle," agreed to the proposal and prepared for a 75-100 person rally. However, according to Deb VonSprecken, the Giuliani campaign later canceled the event, telling her: "I'm sorry, you aren't worth a million dollars and he is campaigning on the Death Tax right now." According to the Journal-Eureka, a Giuliani campaign spokesman would not comment on the issue. As Media Matters has noted, Republicans and conservatives who support repealing the "death tax" (a poll-tested GOP buzzword for the estate tax) have claimed that it hurts family farms and small businesses -- when in fact a very small percentage of the affected estates -- 2 percent in 2004 -- in which more than half of the assets are farms and family-owned businesses. At the May 3 Republican presidential debate, Giuliani declared: "We have to get rid of the death tax."

Blogger and media critic Greg Sargent highlighted the Journal-Eureka article on May 10, confirmed the details of the story with the Iowan paper and the VonSpreckens, and wrote that the "Rudy campaign just confirmed to me that its non-denial to the paper is real." On May 11, Sargent reported that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) "put in a personal call today to an Iowa woman that was snubbed by Rudy Giuliani's campaign, asking to meet with her and apologizing to her on 'behalf of all politicians,' the woman told me this evening."

However, a Media Matters Nexis search revealed that this story has been almost completely ignored by the media in the 11 days since it was first reported, even after McCain's reported phone call. The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and USA Today have not reported on the story. In his May 14 "Media Notes Extra" online column, Post media critic Howard Kurtz noted that the story "has gained some traction in the liberal blogosphere," but he dismissed blogger Kevin Drum's observation that "Giuliani's gang was playing an old time conservative game: trying to find a family farm that would eventually have to be sold in order to pay inheritance

taxes," writing: "Come on -- don't all politicians look for people who illustrate the problem that their plan (on taxes, Social Security, whatever) is going to solve?" When asked about the story during a May 11 washingtonpost.com online discussion, Washington Post congressional reporter Jonathan Weisman

responded: "There really aren't too many farmers affected by the death tax, although most of them think they are, so if

that's his criteria, he's gonna have some trouble stumping in farm country." The Politico's Smith and Jonathan Martin noted the

story on their respective blogs, but it was completely ignored by CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, CBS, and NBC. ABC noted the story on its Political Radar weblog on May 12.

Giuiliani In Drag photo from:thebluerepublic.com 


Conservative media tout flawed poll to call Dems 9-11 conspiracy theorists

Several conservative commentators have misrepresented the results of an April 20-May 1 Rasmussen Results poll question -- which was itself ambiguous -- to accuse a substantial percentage of Democrats of believing that President Bush knew about the 9-11 attacks in advance and deliberately did nothing to stop them. According to Rasmussen Reports, respondents were asked, "Did Bush know about the 9/11 attacks in advance?" Twenty-two percent replied that he did, 55 percent that he did not, and 22 percent were not sure. According to the poll: "Thirty-five percent of Democrats believe he did know, 39% say he did not know, and 26% are not sure. Republicans reject that view and, by a 7-to-1 margin, say the President did not know in advance about the attacks. Among those not affiliated with either major party, 18% believe the President knew and 57% take the opposite view."

In his May 15 nationally syndicated column, titled "Just How Crazy Are the Dems?" National Review Online editor-at-large Jonah Goldberg claimed that the poll found Democrats "are evenly divided on the question of whether George W. Bush knew about the 9/11 terrorist attacks in advance," and declared that "a majority of Democrats in this country are out of their gourds." Yet as Goldberg himself admitted, the poll question was ambiguous. As Goldberg said, "Many Democrats are probably merely saying that Bush is incompetent or that he failed to connect the dots or that they're just answering in a fit of pique." In other words, respondents could have been merely saying that Bush received ample warning of possible attacks.

Indeed, President Bush received a briefing on August 6, 2001, titled "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US," which indicated that Osama bin Laden wanted to conduct terrorist attacks on U.S. cities, that members of his Al Qaeda terrorist network had lived in or traveled to the U.S. for years, that bin Laden had previously said he wanted to hijack an American aircraft, and that "FBI information since that time indicate[d] patterns of suspicious activity in this country consistent with preparations for hijackings." Investigative journalist Ron Suskind wrote in his

 

Image: www.piratenews.org 

 book The One Percent Doctrine: Deep Inside America's Pursuit of Its Enemies Since 9/11 (Simon & Schuster, June 2006) that Bush responded to this report by telling his CIA briefer, "All right, you've covered your ass."

Others have also touted this poll but ignored the ambiguity of the question entirely, in some cases misrepresenting the question and responses and ridiculing Democratic voters as delusional conspiracy theorists.

  • On the May 7 edition of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, host Bill O'Reilly characterized the poll question as having said more than it actually did -- that "35 percent of American Democratic voters believe President Bush knew about the 9-11 attacks in advance and allowed them to happen." He later claimed that it indicated that "35 percent of Democratic voters believe that President Bush stood by and allowed 3,000 Americans to die on the streets." O'Reilly repeatedly referred to this as "madness," and claimed, "Sane people do not make that kind of leap."
  • On the May 7 broadcast of his nationally syndicated radio show, Rush Limbaugh claimed that according to the poll, "35 percent of this country's Democrats think that there was a government conspiracy about this and allowed these attacks to happen." He asserted that due to the poll, that "it's no longer funny to call [Democrats] kooks and freaks and so forth. This is -- they are deranged, dangerously uninformed, misinformed, or what have you." He continued: "The Democrat [sic] Party is not mainstream. It is literally a bunch of deranged, delusional radicals." Limbaugh postulated the poll results were due to the influence of the American news media and education system, which had "poison[ed] people's minds" against Bush since the attacks of 9-11.
  • In a May 9 post to his blog at townhall.com, nationally syndicated radio host Michael Medved claimed that according to this poll, "a stunning 61% of Democrats believed that the President of the United States may well have collaborated in the murder of 3,000 of his fellow citizens." He cited this poll as proof of "Democratic paranoia and conspiracy mongering," which he asserted "pushes the party to the lunatic fringe and leftwing edge of national opinion."

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:30 AM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 20 May 2007 9:45 AM PDT
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Sunday, 15 April 2007
Record of Iraq War Lies to Air April 25 on PBS
Now Playing: David Swanson/AfterDowningStreet.org on Bill Moyers
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

David Swanson has written an excellent piece about Bill Moyers' upcoming video that will show on PBS on 4/15/2007. Swanson's article can be found at After Downing Street.org


Article published in its entirety according to Fair Use Law



Record of Iraq War Lies to Air April 25 on PBS

davidswanson at afterdowningstreet.org Evidence | Media

By David Swanson

 

Bill Moyers has put together an amazing 90-minute video documenting the lies that the Bush administration told to sell the Iraq War to the American public, with a special focus on how the media led the charge. I've watched an advance copy and read a transcript, and the most important thing I can say about it is:


Watch PBS from 9 to 10:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 25. Spending that 90 minutes on this will actually save you time, because you'll never watch television news again – not even on PBS, which comes in for its share of criticism.

 

While a great many pundits, not to mention presidents, look remarkably stupid or dishonest in the four-year-old clips included in "Buying the War," it's hard to take any spiteful pleasure in holding them to account, and not just because the killing and dying they facilitated is ongoing, but also because of what this video reveals about the mindset of members of the DC media.

 

Moyers interviews media personalities, including Dan Rather, who clearly both understand what the media did wrong and are unable to really see it as having been wrong or avoidable.

 

It's great to see an American media outlet tell this story so well, but it leads one to ask: When will Congress tell it?

 

While the Democrats were in the minority, they clamored for hearings and investigations, they pushed Resolutions of Inquiry into the White House Iraq Group and the Downing Street Minutes. Now, in the majority, they've gone largely silent. The chief exception is the House Judiciary Committee's effort to question Condoleezza Rice next week about the forged Niger documents.

 

But what comes out of watching this show is a powerful realization that no investigation is needed by Congress, just as no hidden information was needed for the media to get the story right in the first place. The claims that the White House made were not honest mistakes. But neither were they deceptions. They were transparent and laughably absurd falsehoods. And they were high crimes and misdemeanors.

 

The program opens with video of President Bush saying
"Iraq is part of a war on terror. It's a country that trains terrorists, it's a country that can arm terrorists. Saddam Hussein and his weapons are a direct threat to this country."

 

Was that believable or did the media play along?

 

The next shot is of a press conference at which Bush announces that he has a script telling him which reporters to call on in what order. Yet the reporters play along, raising their hands after each comment, pretending that they might be called on despite the script.

 

Video shows Richard Perle claiming that Saddam Hussein worked with al Qaeda and that Iraqis would greet American occupiers as liberators. Here are the Weekly Standard, the Wall Street Journal, William Safire at the New York Times, Charles Krauthammer and Jim Hoagland at the Washington Post all demanding an overthrow of Iraq's government. George Will is seen saying that Hussein 

"has anthrax, he loves biological weapons, he has terrorist training camps, including 747s to practice on."

 

But was that even plausible?

 

Bob Simon of "60 Minutes" tells Moyers he wasn't buying it. He says he saw the idea of a connection between Hussein and al Qaeda as an absurdity:

"Saddam, as most tyrants, was a total control freak. He wanted total control of his regime. Total control of the country. And to introduce a wild card like al Qaeda in any sense was just something he would not do. So I just didn't believe it for an instant."

 

Knight Ridder Bureau Chief John Walcott didn't buy it either. He assigned Warren Strobel and Jonathan Landay to do the reporting, and they found the Bush claims to be quite apparently false. For example, when the Iraqi National Congress (INC) fed the New York Times' Judith Miller a story through an Iraqi defector claiming that Hussein had chemical and biological weapons labs under his house, Landay noticed that the source was a Kurd, making it very unlikely he would have learned such secrets. But Landay also noticed that it was absurd to imagine someone putting a biological weapons lab under his house.

 

But absurd announcements were the order of the day. A video clip shows a Fox anchor saying

"A former top Iraqi nuclear scientist tells Congress Iraq could build three nuclear bombs by 2005."

And the most fantastic stories of all were fed to David Rose at Vanity Fair Magazine. We see a clip of him saying

"The last training exercise was to blow up a full size mock up of a US destroyer in a lake in central Iraq."

Landay comments:

"Or jumping into pits of fouled water and having to kill a dog with your bare teeth. I mean, this was coming from people, who are appearing in all of these stories, and sometimes their rank would change."

Forged documents from Niger could not have gotten noticed in this stew of lies. Had there been some real documents honestly showing something, that might have stood out and caught more eyes. Walcott describes the way the INC would feed the same info to the Vice President and Secretary of Defense that it fed to a reporter, and the reporter would then get the claims confirmed by calling the White House or the Pentagon. Landay adds:

"And let's not forget how close these people were to this administration, which raises the question, was there coordination? I can't tell you that there was, but it sure looked like it."

Simon from 60 Minutes tells Moyers that when the White House claimed a 9-11 hijacker had met with a representative of the Iraqi government in Prague, 60 Minutes was easily able to make a few calls and find out that there was no evidence for the claim.

"If we had combed Prague," he says, "and found out that there was absolutely no evidence for a meeting between Mohammad Atta and the Iraqi intelligence figure. If we knew that, you had to figure the administration knew it. And yet they were selling the connection between Al Qaeda and Saddam."

Moyers questions a number of people about their awful work, including Dan Rather, Peter Beinart, and then Chairman and CEO of CNN Walter Isaacson. And he questions Simon, who soft-pedaled the story and avoided reporting that there was no evidence.

 

Landay at Knight Ridder did report the facts when it counted, but not enough people paid attention. He tells Moyers that all he had to do was read the UN weapons inspectors reports online to know the White House was lying to us. When Cheney said that Hussein was close to acquiring nuclear weapons, Landay knew he was lying:

"You need tens of thousands of machines called 'centrifuges' to produce highly enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon. You've got to house those in a fairly big place, and you've got to provide a huge amount of power to this facility."

Moyers also hits Tim Russert with a couple of tough questions. Russert expressed regret for not having included any skeptical voices by saying he wished his phone had rung. So, Moyers begins the next segment by saying "Bob Simon didn't wait for the phone to ring," and describing Simon's reporting. Simon says he knew the claims about aluminum tubes were false because 60 Minutes called up some scientists and researchers and asked them. Howard Kurtz of the Washington Post says that skeptical stories did not get placed on the front page because they are not "definitive."

 

Moyers shows brief segments of an Oprah show in which she has on only pro-war guests and silences a caller who questions some of the White House claims. Just in time for the eternal election season, Moyers includes clips of Hillary Clinton and John Kerry backing the war on the basis of Bush and Cheney's lies. But we also see clips of Robert Byrd and Ted Kennedy getting it right.

 

The Washington Post editorialized in favor of the war 27 times, and published in 2002 about 1,000 articles and columns on the war. But the Post gave a huge anti-war march a total of 36 words.

"What got even less ink," Moyers says, "was the release of the National Intelligence Estimate."

Even the misleading partial version that the media received failed to fool a careful eye.

 

Landay recalls:

"It said that the majority of analysts believed that those tubes were for the nuclear weapons program. It turns out, though, that the majority of intelligence analysts had no background in nuclear weapons."

Was Landay the only one capable of noticing this detail?

 

Colin Powell's UN presentation comes in for similar quick debunking. We watch a video clip of Powell complaining that Iraq has covered a test stand with a roof. But AP reporter Charles Hanley comments:

"What he neglected to mention was that the inspectors were underneath watching what was going on."

Powell cited a UK paper, but it very quickly came out that the paper had been plagiarized from a college student's work found online. The British press pointed that out. The US let it slide. But anyone looking for the facts found it quickly.

 

Moyers' wonderful movie is marred by a single line, the next to the last sentence, in which he says:

"The number of Iraqis killed, over 35,000 last year alone, is hard to pin down."

A far more accurate figure could have been found very easily.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:27 PM PDT
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Saturday, 14 April 2007
Radio & TV Pundits Walking on Eggshells Now
Now Playing: The Imus Scandal
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal

 

Imus' cowboy image over a long career based out of New York City.

Don's a long time city slicker despite the wardrobe suggestion of cow poop and saddle sore background with its implied folksy trail-hand wisdom.

Images: finelineweb.com
The Bill Dulmage Radio & TV Archiv

Don Imus lost his job because what he thought would be cute, funny or acceptable ... wasn't.

Imus has had his radio show for years, inviting an impressive array of public celebrities comparable to the same celebrities who routinely appear on the Tonight Show and David Letterman ... movers and shakers 

I read somewhere yesterday that broadcast personalities have considered an appearance on Imus' show a definite boost to their careers. 

 Imus' on-air personality and style has been a tavern version of Leno or Letterman - complete with foil companion, McGerk, with whom Imus could carry on his cool-guys repartee.

You know ... the sort of thing we saw or did in high school when insiders made fun and private jokes about all the outsiders. 

Imus for the most part focused his personal comedic or mocking jabs at public celebrities more deserving of satire, parody and mockery. 

This time, however, his cool-weather-beaten leathered-face mode uttered highly offensive remarks at a group of innocent ladies who - if you remove the momentary fame of an NCAA Basketball Tournament success - in no way deserved, merited or even needed to be dragged into anybody's shock jock good-ole-boy routine.

We've all laughed at this sort of humor for years ... stand up comics, Late Nite Carson, Leno, Letterman and Maher types with their double entendre humor and enough shock-spice to make us laugh ... right?

For years I've told others that I know I'm not supposed to laugh at the belittling of another person, but it's so damn funny.

... for years.

But then, without wanting to wander into some group tent of political correctness, 1st amendment suppression or sanctimony, I still have to say that Imus' statements and the ensuing outrage does suggest that we ought to ask ourselves why that kind of humor is supposed to be funny?

... especially if we or someone we cherish gets treated that way.

 ... or why we even laugh when smirkers smirk ... as if smirking and belittling innocence is  something a decent society tolerates.

It isn't about suppressing 1st amendment rights or creating a world of public "gotchas" where public voices have to walk on egg shells.

It's about awakened social awareness and the silly notion that we don't always have to be crude just because our right to do so is guaranteed. 

News Sources for this story:

Boston Herald 

Chicago Tribune 

St Louis Post Dispatch 

 

 

 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:18 AM PDT
Updated: Saturday, 14 April 2007 10:06 AM PDT
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Thursday, 9 November 2006
A hard-balling toady tries to change his shorts.
Topic: Broadcast Betrayal
We watched election returns last night alternating mostly between MSNBC and CNN with occasional dashes of NBC and Brian Williams.

Chris Matthews has never been the reason I watch MSNBC, nor has the honestly and openly partisan Scarborough. My reason is Keith Olbermann.

Fairly early in the evening but after the rise of a national democratic landslide had become apparent, America's hardballer  must have been sensing his own need to get back in synch with a voter mood and attitude that he and most of his ilk essentially ignored for six years.

... a voter attitude and apathy that Matthews, along with the Republican stampeders, assumed was no mere apathy, but genuine citizen stupidity, short attention span and gullibility.


Republican statements, declarations, justifications and public attacks have irked me for the most part because of the blatant but unspoken assumption that all of us are stupid, gullible and can be talked down to at will.

This was also the basis for much of the major broadcast entities' failure to inform the public. Erroneously perceived as media cowardice in the face of aggressive REAL hardball on the part of the Bush Administration and Republican Party.

<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/election04/image/hardball.jpg" />
What? Hardball questions tossed at Bush?
</div>
I don't believe the failure of the media was based on cowardice, rather a like assumption that our national audience had too many other shallow priorities which includes a lucrative market for published tripe that is marketed and earns prophets from dimwits who aren't interested in serious issues and real news.

This is that attitude most typified by Mr. Hardball himself. Up until last night when Matthews tried to strap on his guns, upgrade his in-your-face swagger with Howard Dean, the reason why Mathews had lost my regard not to mention my attention was his fluctuating toadyness and public deference to repuglican and conservative personalities, alternated with his consistent hardballing (whatever that is supposed to be) of democrats and liberals.

All that across the table blather from Matthews was, I assume, supposed to be straight talk, honesty and bluntness when in reality it was guile presenting itself as honesty and acting parading itself as sincerity on his part.

The tough-guy stance taken last night at the wrong time, for the wrong reasons and quite blatantly a grandstand act compared with the best we've seen from Bush, Rove, Mehlman. That act also compares with the deceptiveness and manipulation of the man Matthews last night said he "really likes" - former Enron clown Ed Gillespie who directed the RNC through its Swift-boat shame and political lies of the election of 2004 and has not proven himself an honest man.

So Matthews - now aware of the blue landslide and where his future audience draw might be -  got tough, throwing hardball questions at Howard Dean.

… Questions he should have consistently asked the elected liars for the past six years and did not

… not with any hardball bluntness, rather lowball soft-pitch deference.

Last night's toughness from Matthews was too little too late, the wrong question for the wrong person and at the wrong time. It was transparently self-serving and in no way was he speaking for me or any other thinking citizen.

Had his interview with Howard Dean included online voting responses like they do in dancing with the stars, Olbermann would have been suddenly the single anchor broadcasting the rest of the election.

It was an obvious self-service moment in which the stink of his own past behavior seemed to be wafted up into the winds now blowing in another direction toward which he never pointed ... but should have.

It was painful to see the two of them sitting there anchoring MSNBC's election coverage.

One anchor who knew and understood what Murrow knew and understood

… the other who really likes Ed Gillespie and who's every hard ball toss has always been a spitter.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:01 AM PST
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