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The 2,054th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
1:10pm EDT, Tuesday September 20, 2005 (Vol. Ten; No. 167)

 
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1. NBC Finds Oklahomans to Nudge Bush to Raise Taxes and Leave Iraq
NBC gave time Monday night to criticism of President Bush from the right as David Gregory, in noting how the libertarian Cato Institute reported that spending is up one-third under Bush, relayed how "conservatives are getting fed up, openly complaining about the return of big government under George W. Bush." Gregory proceeded to relate Senator John McCain's recommendation that the prescription drug entitlement be cancelled as well as former Senator John Edwards' call for tax cuts to be repealed. But in a second story, Mike Taibbi traveled to Oklahoma where he highlighted those who want the U.S. to leave Iraq and raise taxes. Taibbi summarized: "At the Oklahoma City state fair, some said forget about Iraq, we've got to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf coast, whatever the cost." A man then declared: "If it takes more taxes, I'd be willing to throw in some more." A second man argued: "We really need to spend more time working at home on issues here." Taibbi then challenged the GOP to follow that path: "Tulsa Republican Congressman John Sullivan has heard comments like those, and says the country is watching to see how his party performs."

2. To Blitzer's Amazement, Turner Defends Jong, Treatment of People
Monday afternoon on CNN, to Wolf Blitzer's astonishment, Ted Turner, just back from a visit to North Korea, declared his belief in the sincerity of North Korea and how the U.S. can trust the regime's new deal to not build nuclear weapons. Turner rejected the "despotic" characterization of Kim Jong Il, insisting that "he didn't look too much different than most other people," or that he treats his people brutally since Turner saw the people "were thin," but "they were riding bicycles." When Turner declared North Korea is not a "threat" to the U.S., Blitzer suggested their missiles could reach the U.S., prompting environmentalist Turner to dismissively retort: "Well, what, the Aleutian Islands? There's nothing up there but a few sea lions." with audio


 

NBC Finds Oklahomans to Nudge Bush to
Raise Taxes and Leave Iraq

     NBC gave time Monday night to criticism of President Bush from the right as David Gregory, in noting how the libertarian Cato Institute reported that spending is up one-third under Bush, relayed how "conservatives are getting fed up, openly complaining about the return of big government under George W. Bush." Gregory proceeded to relate Senator John McCain's recommendation that the prescription drug entitlement be cancelled as well as former Senator John Edwards' call for tax cuts to be repealed. But in a second story, Mike Taibbi traveled to Oklahoma where he highlighted those who want the U.S. to leave Iraq and raise taxes. Taibbi summarized: "At the Oklahoma City state fair, some said forget about Iraq, we've got to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf coast, whatever the cost." A man then declared: "If it takes more taxes, I'd be willing to throw in some more." A second man argued: "We really need to spend more time working at home on issues here." Taibbi then challenged the GOP to follow that path: "Tulsa Republican Congressman John Sullivan has heard comments like those, and says the country is watching to see how his party performs."

     Gregory began his September 19 NBC Nightly News story: "The true cost of Katrina is only beginning to sink in. A $200 billion estimate, at least for reconstruction, much of it to be paid by taxpayers. That's on top of the roughly $200 billion taxpayers have already spent in Iraq to date. Conservatives are getting fed up, openly complaining about the return of big government under George W. Bush. Chris Edwards of the libertarian Cato Institute."
     Chris Edwards, Cato: "We may never see a balanced budget in our lifetimes again if the President continues spending like this."
     Gregory: "Again today the White House warned that Katrina will swell the $333 billion deficit, but so far has not asked Americans for any sizeable sacrifice."
     Scott McClellan: "First of all, we are going to meet the needs of the people in the region. The President is adamant about that."
     Gregory: "According to deficit hawks at the Cato Institute, federal spending has shot up one-third since Mr. Bush took office. Even today, NASA unveiled a new space capsule costing more than $100 billion for travel to the moon. But some Republicans in Congress are looking to cut costs. One target, the President's $700 billion prescription drug benefit for seniors set to hit the books next year."
     Senator John McCain: "Let's go back to square one. $700 billion already on a broken entitlement program that isn't going to work."
     Gregory: "Democrats, meanwhile, have called on the President to roll back his tax cuts, something he's said he won't do."
     Former Senator John Edwards: "Now he says he wants to cut waste, but he won't touch two more tax cuts for millionaires that haven't even taken effect yet."
     Gregory: "Does the deficit matter to the White House? Not nearly as much as Katrina these days, and the recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that Americans ranked the deficit near the bottom of the government's priorities. David Gregory, NBC News, the White House."
    
     Anchor Brian Williams set up a second story: "Now to how Americans, the taxpayers themselves, are feeling about the question of who should pay for all this recovery and how. NBC's Mike Taibbi is in Oklahoma with heartfelt answers from the American heartland."

     Taibbi began: "In Oklahoma as in so many other states, they've opened up their hearts to Katrina victims."
     Man to another man: "I feel your hurt. I really do."
     Taibbi: "And at the Council Road Baptist Church in Bethany, they've opened up their wallets too, donating money and time to help hundreds of evacuees like Warnell and Natty Nelson get through these days and weeks of crisis."
     Warnell Nelson to a group in a room: "We thank everybody."
     Taibbi: "But even in red state Oklahoma, Republican politicians aren't convinced that on a national level, the party's figured the specifics about how to pay for the recovery. Senator Tom Coburn says maybe this isn't the time to make President Bush's tax cuts permanent, or to fund all those pork barrel projects costing hundreds of millions."
     Senator Tom Coburn, last Thursday: "This is a moral question, it's not just an economic question."
     Taibbi: "At the Oklahoma City state fair, some said forget about Iraq, we've got to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf coast, whatever the cost."
     Man at fair: "If it takes more taxes, I'd be willing to throw in some more."
     Second man at fair: "We really need to spend more time working at home on issues here."
     Taibbi: "Tulsa Republican Congressman John Sullivan has heard comments like those, and says the country is watching to see how his party performs."
     Congressman John Sullivan: "We're in charge right now, and it's on our plate, and we need to do it right. If we don't do it right, we're going to pay the price."
     Taibbi: "In the meantime, the Nelsons are considering giving up on their beloved New Orleans and settling in Oklahoma."
     Warnell Nelson: "I miss New Orleans. I love New Orleans, because that's my home. But right now, this is my home."
     Taibbi: "Kelly Stuart, from the Baptist Church, is helping them settle in, convinced that the thousands of victims were ignored by their government."
     Kelly Stuart: "For their immediate needs and emotional recovery itself, I think they were failed."
     Minister before a group: "Father, we pray that-"
     Taibbi concluded: "And says that's why her church, the private sector, will give all the help it possibly can without waiting for any government input. Mike Taibbi, NBC News, Stroud Oklahoma."

 

To Blitzer's Amazement, Turner Defends
Jong, Treatment of People

     Monday afternoon on CNN, to Wolf Blitzer's astonishment, Ted Turner, just back from a visit to North Korea, declared his belief in the sincerity of North Korea and how the U.S. can trust the regime's new deal to not build nuclear weapons. Turner rejected the "despotic" characterization of Kim Jong Il, insisting that "he didn't look too much different than most other people," or that he treats his people brutally since Turner saw the people "were thin," but "they were riding bicycles."


Listen to MP3 audio clip
  Text of clip + audio archive

     When Turner declared North Korea is not a "threat" to the U.S., Blitzer suggested their missiles could reach the U.S., prompting environmentalist Turner to dismissively retort: "Well, what, the Aleutian Islands? There's nothing up there but a few sea lions."

     The lively exchange, caught by the MRC's Megan McCormack, took place at 3:25pm EDT on The Situation Room with Blitzer in DC and Turner via satellite from New York City.

     Blitzer set up the September 19 segment: "The White House as they say is cautiously optimistic of a new pledge from North Korea to end its nuclear program. That announcement came today during six-party nuclear arms talks in Beijing. In a statement, North Korea says it's, quote, 'committed to abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs.' North Korea also says it wants to return to the treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons. At the White House this morning, President Bush said he hopes North Korea lives up to its promise."
     President George W. Bush: "They have said, in principle, that they will abandon their weapons programs. And what we have said is, great. That's a wonderful step forward, but now we've got to verify whether or not that happens."
     Blitzer: "'Trust, but verify,' as they used to say. We want to talk a little bit more about today's developments involving North Korea with CNN founder and Chairman of Turner Enterprises, Ted Turner. He's joining us once again from New York. You spent some time recently in North Korea, Ted. Did this agreement come to you as a surprise?"
     Ted Turner: "No. No. I talked with quite a few of the North Korean leaders and South Korean leaders, too, and spent really the most time with the head negotiator for North Korea. And I was really over there to try and persuade North and South Korea to make the DMZ into an international peace park when, when they sign a peace treaty, which I anticipate will be fairly soon, now that we have the six-party talks, we have agreement there. But I had a great time. I am absolutely convinced that the North Koreans are absolutely sincere. There's really no reason -- no reason for them to cheat or do anything to violate this very forward agreement. I mean, I think we can put the North Korea and East Asia problems behind us and concentrate on Iran and Iraq, where, where we still have some ongoing difficulties."
     Blitzer countered: "I've got to tell you, Ted, given the record of North Korea, especially the fact that, in the Clinton administration in '93-'94, they made a similar pledge, which they violated and they backed out of, I'm not exactly sure that I accept all your optimism."
     Turner: "Well, you know, I was optimistic about the Cold War when I got to Russia, too. But I looked them right in the eyes. And they looked like they meant the truth. I mean, you know, just because somebody's done something wrong in the past doesn't mean they can't do right in the future or in the present. That happens all the, all the time."
     Blitzer: "But this is one of the most despotic regimes and Kim Jong Il is one of the worst men on Earth. Isn't that a fair assessment?"
     Turner: "Well, I didn't get, I didn't get to meet him, but he didn't look, in the pictures that I've seen of him on CNN, he didn't look too much different than most other people."
     Blitzer: "But look at the way, look at the way he's, look at the way he's treating his own people."
     Turner asserted: "Well, hey, listen. I saw a lot of people over there. They were thin and they were riding bicycles instead of driving in cars, but ah-"
     Blitzer: "Lot of those people are starving."
     Turner: "I didn't see, I didn't see any, I didn't see any brutality in the capital or out in the, on the DMZ. We went, we visit, drove through the countryside quite a bit to get down to Panmunjom and Kaesong. We traveled around. I'm sure we were on a special route, but I don't see, there's really no reason, North Korea's got enough problems with their, with their economy and their agriculture. I think they want to join the western world and improve the quality of life for their people just like everybody else. And I think that we should give them another chance. It doesn't cost us anything. We already have agreements. And North Korea never posed any significant threat to the United States. I mean, the whole economy of North Korea's only $30 billion a year. It's less than the city of Detroit. It's a small place, and we do not have to worry about them attacking us."
     Blitzer: "You know, they have a million troops within literally a few miles"
     Turner: "A half million."
     Blitzer: "Well, best estimates are a million. A million troops along the DMZ."
     Turner: "We have a half a million troops, of which 28,000 are Americans and they've been there for 50 years. One of the things I said in both North and South Korea is it's time to end the Korean War officially and move on. And get those hundreds of thousands of young men that are sitting there back building hospitals and roads and schools in North and South Korea and improving the gross national product. It's just a waste of time and energy for them to sit there."
     Blitzer: "I think the bottom line, though, Ted, and I think you'd agree, they had this opportunity in the '90s, when they signed this first agreement and they cheated. They didn't live up to it. Now they have a second chance. I hope you're right. I certainly do."
     Turner: "Well I hope I'm right, too. But you know it's, in the Bible says you're supposed to forgive seven times seventy, or something like that, but just because, just because, you know, I mean, in 1940, the Germans were our enemies. For the last 50 years, they've been our allies. Same with the Russians were our enemies before '91 when the Cold War ended. Let's give 'em a break. Give 'em a break And besides, even if they do -- even if they do threaten us again, the threat is non-existent to the United States. They can't threaten us. I mean, it's like a fleet attacking an elephant."
     Blitzer: "What about those ground to ground missiles that they have, and the CIA-"
     Turner: "They can't reach us."
     Blitzer: "Well, they can reach Japan. They can reach South Korea. They can reach a lot of our allies-"
     Turner: "They can't reach the USA, and we can pound them into, into oblivion in 24 hours."
     Blitzer: "But, you don't want to get, you don't want to get to that. There are some estimates, by the way, that could reach Alaska."
     Turner: "Well, what, the Aleutian Islands? There's nothing up there but a few sea lions."
     Blitzer: "Well, you know, this is a serious issue. I hope you're right, as I said-"
     Turner: "I know it's a serious issue. I mean, I didn't go over there to waste my time."
     Blitzer: "No, no, no. I'm just, I'm just saying the point you said-"
     Turner: "Have you ever been there?"
     Blitzer: "I've been to South Korea. I've been to the DMZ."
     Turner: "Have you ever been to North Korea?"
     Blitzer: "No, I've never been to North Korea."
     Turner: "Well, you know, I mean, at least go up there and look in their eyes and have a chat with them before you -- before you accuse them of-"
     Blitzer: "By the way, I've made several requests, but they haven't let me into North Korea. But maybe if I go with you the next time they'll let me in."
     Turner: "Alright, I'll take you. I took Christiane Amanpour with me this time."

-- Brent Baker

 


 


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