6/02: NBC Suggests Bill O'Reilly Fueled Murder of Dr. George Tiller
  6/01: NBC's Williams Cues Up Obama: 'That's One She'd Rather Have Back'
  5/29: Nets Push 'Abortion Rights' Advocates' Concerns on Sotomayor
  5/28: CBS on Sotomayor: 'Can't Be Easily Defined by Political Labels'

  Home
  Notable Quotables
  Media Reality Check
  Press Releases
  Media Bias Videos
  Special Reports
  30-Day Archive
  Entertainment
  News
  Take Action
  Gala and DisHonors
  Best of NQ Archive
  The Watchdog
  About the MRC
  MRC in the News
  Support the MRC
  Planned Giving
  What Others Say
MRC Resources
  Site Search
  Links
  Media Addresses
  Contact MRC
  MRC Bookstore
  Job Openings
  Internships
  News Division
  NewsBusters Blog
  Business & Media Institute
  CNSNews.com
  TimesWatch.org
  Eyeblast.tv

Support the MRC



www.TimesWatch.org


 

The 2,503rd CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
6:45am EDT, Friday October 5, 2007 (Vol. Twelve; No. 176)

 
Printer Firendly Version

Tell a friend about this site


1. NBC Sees Scandal in 'Abusive' Interrogations; MSNBC: 'More Lies'
Presuming Bush administration dissembling and illegality, NBC anchor Brian Williams considered it "big" news Thursday night that the administration "secretly authorized abusive interrogation techniques for terrorism suspects, including torture, despite denial from everyone from President Bush on down. And the policy remains even though the Supreme Court ruled against it." Picking up on the front page New York Times disclosure of the classified documents, which neither ABC nor CBS considered newsworthy, NBC ran a slanted story that, other than one short soundbite from White House Press Secretary Dana Perino about how "they were safe, necessary and lawful, these techniques, and have helped save American lives," aired only condemnatory comments as Andrea Mitchell assumed the methods are torture. She reminded viewers that "after a political firestorm, devastating pictures from Abu Ghraib and a Supreme Court ruling," last year the President promised the U.S. "does not torture" and yet the Justice Dept. under Alberto Gonzales issued memos "authorizing much harsher techniques, including head-slapping, waterboarding, frigid temperatures..." With "More Lies?" displayed on screen under a photo of Bush, MSNBC's Live with Dan Abrams began by re-playing Mitchell's report.

2. Thomas Confirms Toobin Never Spoke to Him; Toobin Calls Him 'Nut'
During his Monday smackdown on the Laura Ingraham radio show, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin declined to say yes or no when Laura asked him if he had ever met or interviewed Justice Clarence Thomas before he had claimed, on CNN, that the Justice was "furious all the time." Toobin suggested Ingraham should ask Thomas. In a soundbite Ingraham aired at the top of the 10am EDT hour Thursday on her radio show, after his hour-long interview was done, Thomas confirmed that he granted no interview to Toobin. Thomas said he "would have no clue" who Toobin was if he saw him on the street. Deep into his Monday interview on NPR's Diane Rehm show, Toobin explained the difference between Justice Thomas and Justice Antonin Scalia. Thomas was "a nut." He added at show's end that Thomas's legal views were "highly unusual and extreme." He also predicted that if elected President, Hillary Clinton would nominate Barack Obama to the Supreme Court, a "political masterstroke" for Hillary since Obama would be an "unassailable nominee."

3. Newsweek Slants 'Ask Hillary' Questions to the Fluffy Left
Newsweek has posted a Hillary Clinton question-and-answer session on their Web site, selecting eight questions out of "more than 1,000 queries from readers," but the "best questions" Newsweek plucked out of the pile often suggested a hostility to America's current state under Team Bush, with "huge deficits," a "collapsing" middle class, and a teacher "appalled" at the underfunded No Child Left Behind education plan. One asked how she could convince the "Clinton haters" to leave divisiveness behind. Another wondered whether she would plow on with investigations of the actions of "Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Gonzales, etc.?" But there were no questions about her Iraq vote, Clinton scandals, or Democratic corruption of any kind.

4. 'View' Fight: Goldberg Belittles Hasselbeck's Abortion Position
Is Whoopi Goldberg becoming the Rosie O'Donnell type bully? It appeared that way on Wednesday's The View on ABC when a discussion about Hillary Clinton's $5,000 per baby entitlement plan quickly descended into a heated exchange between Elisabeth Hasselbeck and Whoopi Goldberg about abortion. When Hasselbeck noted that $5,000 a baby could lead to fewer abortions in the world, Whoopi told Hasselbeck to "back off" because Hasselbeck has never "been in a position" where she "had to make that decision." Goldberg, who in 1997 outed Katie Couric as a fellow participant in a "pro-choice" march, also added that Hasselbeck should have "a little bit of reverence" for women who've had abortions and then she contended abortion was a made a right to prevent any more women from being "found bleeding, dead, with hangers in their bodies."

5. Letterman's 'Top Ten Signs Hillary Clinton Is Getting Cocky'
David Letterman's "Top Ten Signs Hillary Clinton Is Getting Cocky."


 

NBC Sees Scandal in 'Abusive' Interrogations;
MSNBC: 'More Lies'

     Presuming Bush administration dissembling and illegality, NBC anchor Brian Williams considered it "big" news Thursday night that the administration "secretly authorized abusive interrogation techniques for terrorism suspects, including torture, despite denial from everyone from President Bush on down. And the policy remains even though the Supreme Court ruled against it." Picking up on the front page New York Times disclosure of the classified documents, which neither the ABC nor CBS evening newscasts considered newsworthy, the NBC Nighty News ran a very slanted story that, other than one short soundbite from White House Press Secretary Dana Perino about how "they were safe, necessary and lawful, these techniques, and have helped save American lives," aired only condemnatory comments as reporter Andrea Mitchell assumed the methods are torture.

     She reminded viewers that "after a political firestorm, devastating pictures from Abu Ghraib and a Supreme Court ruling," last year the President promised "the United States does not torture" and "I will not authorize it," yet the New York Times reported that in 2005 the Justice Department under Alberto Gonzales issued memos "authorizing much harsher techniques, including head-slapping, waterboarding, frigid temperatures and 'combined effects' -- using several practices simultaneously, despite dissent on his staff. Today leading Democrats vowed to pass new laws." Without any consideration for how the memos could have been written to allow the use of the techniques in only the most dire circumstances, and thus the techniques may not have been employed, Mitchell warned: "There's also a big impact on foreign policy. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has promised U.S. allies that the administration does not use torture, even though officials say she knew about the memos."

     MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann, not surprisingly, led with the topic and at the top of the next hour, 9pm EDT, MSNBC's Live with Dan Abrams began by re-playing Mitchell's report, a story Abrams set up while "More Lies?" was displayed on screen under a photo of President Bush.

     [This item was posted late Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     An excerpt from the lead of the October 4 New York Times article, at the top of the front page, "Secret U.S. Endorsement of Severe Interrogations," by Scott Shane, David Johnston and James Risen (Risen is the reporter who divulged the interception of overseas phone calls to suspected terrorists):

When the Justice Department publicly declared torture "abhorrent" in a legal opinion in December 2004, the Bush administration appeared to have abandoned its assertion of nearly unlimited presidential authority to order brutal interrogations.

But soon after Alberto R. Gonzales's arrival as attorney general in February 2005, the Justice Department issued another opinion, this one in secret. It was a very different document, according to officials briefed on it, an expansive endorsement of the harshest interrogation techniques ever used by the Central Intelligence Agency.

The new opinion, the officials said, for the first time provided explicit authorization to barrage terror suspects with a combination of painful physical and psychological tactics, including head-slapping, simulated drowning and frigid temperatures....

     END of Excerpt

     For the article in full: www.nytimes.com

     A transcript of the October 4 NBC Nightly News story, which followed the lead story on Senator Larry Craig's refusal to leave the Senate:

     BRIAN WILLIAMS: One of the other big stories of this evening: New revelations, first reported by the New York Times, that the Bush administration secretly authorized abusive interrogation techniques for terrorism suspects, including torture, despite denial from everyone from President Bush on down. And the policy remains even though the Supreme Court ruled against it. Our chief foreign affairs correspondent, Andrea Mitchell, has more.

     ANDREA MITCHELL: After a political firestorm, devastating pictures from Abu Ghraib and a Supreme Court ruling, last year the President made this promise:
     PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH, SEPTEMBER 6, 2006: The United States does not torture. It's against our laws and it's against our values. I have not authorized it and I will not authorize it.
     MITCHELL: But as first reported by the New York Times, a full year earlier, then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales approved two secret memos, specifically authorizing much harsher techniques, including head-slapping, waterboarding, frigid temperatures and "combined effects" -- using several practices simultaneously, despite dissent on his staff. Today leading Democrats vowed to pass new laws.
     SENATOR TED KENNEDY ON THE SENATE FLOOR: The White House overruled all those pesky officials who told them what they didn't want to hear, who told them that torture is wrong and illegal.
     SENATOR PATRICK LEAHY: The President and those working with him are saying basically we're above the law. The law applies to everybody else. It doesn't apply to us.
     MITCHELL: Two years ago John McCain, who was tortured in Vietnam, led Congress to outlaw the practices. Today the White House insisted it is not breaking that ban.
     DANA PERINO, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: They were safe, necessary and lawful, these techniques, and have helped save American lives.
     MITCHELL: But tonight McCain wants the White House to explain.
     SENATOR JOHN McCAIN: We're going to make inquiries of the administration and find out whether any of the techniques such as waterboarding are still being employed. And if they are, we're going to have to act again.
     MITCHELL: There's also a big impact on foreign policy. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has promised U.S. allies that the administration does not use torture, even though officials say she knew about the memos.
     PHILIP ZELIKOW, FORMER STATE DEPT COUNSELOR: It has a corrosive effect because it seems that the ideals we stand for in the world are undermined by our practices and our policies.
     MITCHELL: Tonight officials still say they don't torture prisoners, but others say it depends on what your definition of torture is. Andrea Mitchell, NBC News, Washington.

 

Thomas Confirms Toobin Never Spoke to
Him; Toobin Calls Him 'Nut'

     During his Monday smackdown on the Laura Ingraham radio show, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin declined to say yes or no when Laura asked him if he had ever met or interviewed Justice Clarence Thomas before he had claimed, on CNN, that the Justice was "furious all the time." Toobin suggested Ingraham should ask Thomas. In a soundbite Ingraham aired at the top of the 10am EDT hour Thursday on her radio show, after his hour-long interview was done, Thomas confirmed that he granted no interview to Toobin. Thomas said he "would have no clue" who Toobin was if he saw him on the street.

     The October 3 CyberAlert item, "Ingraham Smacks Down CNN's Toobin on Clarence Thomas's 'Rage,'" recounted:

On Monday night's Anderson Cooper 360, CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin unspooled a wild, unsubstantiated theory that Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is "furious all the time" and when Cooper asked if his "hatred of the media" started with the Anita Hill charges, Toobin said that event sent his rage into "the stratosphere." Toobin also criticized CBS for not cross-examining Thomas on sexual harassment on 60 Minutes, when "subsequent evidence" (books by liberal reporters) "generally favors Anita Hill, not him, in what really happened between them."

On Tuesday's Laura Ingraham radio show, Toobin accepted an interview invitation, and Ingraham, who was a clerk for Justice Thomas, lit into him about his Cooper interview. She found it "incredibly condescending," and also "appalling and stupid." She asked Toobin if he knew Thomas, and he changed the subject, referring to the theme of anger in his writings and speeches. Later, when Ingraham asked Toobin if he had ever met or interviewed Thomas for his new Supreme Court book, The Nine, he wouldn't even say yes or no. (Ingraham took that as a no.)

     For the October 3 CyberAlert article in full: www.mrc.org

     Deep into his Monday interview on NPR's Diane Rehm show, Toobin explained the difference between Justice Thomas and Justice Antonin Scalia. Thomas was "a nut." He added at show's end that Thomas's legal views were "highly unusual and extreme." He also predicted that if elected President, Hillary Clinton would nominate Barack Obama to the Supreme Court, a "political masterstroke" for Hillary since Obama would be an "unassailable nominee."

     [This item, by Tim Graham, was posted Thursday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     When a caller from Texas asked if Thomas was competent enough to be on the Court, both Toobin and NPR's other guest, Jeffrey Rosen of The New Republic, agreed he was competent -- but Thomas was a nut:

     TOOBIN: I think he's perfectly competent. I don't think that is the issue. I think what matters about these justices is what their ideologies are, and he is the most conservative justice to serve on the court, I think, since the 1930s, but is he capable-
     REHM, sounding stunned: More so than Scalia?
     TOOBIN: Oh, much more than Scalia. I was at a synagogue where Justice Scalia was giving a speech not too long ago and someone asked him to compare your judicial philosophy and Justice Thomas's, and he talked for a while, and he said, 'well, look, I'm a textualist. I'm an originalist, but I'm not a nut.' And I think that sums up a little bit the difference between the two. Justice Thomas believes that much of the New Deal is unconstitutional. Justice Scalia doesn't.
     ROSEN: Diane, you're looking shocked!
     REHM: Wow, yeah!

     Rosen disagreed with Toobin's theory that ideology was what mattered. It was still the question of Thomas's roiling anger: "Temperament, personality matter. It's the fact that Thomas is so angry...the fact that he can't get over this wound, this indignity, that he's always been so angry, that makes him more radical than people who are essentially ofthe same ideology like Scalia or even Roberts. This is an example of someone undone by his temperament."

     At the end of the hour, a caller from Hillary Clinton's adopted area of Westchester, New York worried strangely that Thomas had returned to a " a fundamentalist, Calvinistic form of Roman Catholicism." (Calvinism and Catholicism are rarely confused as synonymous.) Toobin said religion doesn't matter: "What matters about Thomas is his legal views and they are highly unusual and extreme."

     When asked what kind of Supreme Court justice Democrats would pick, and whether those picks would oppose the death penalty, Toobin placed Hillary in the political center:

     TOOBIN: Hillary Clinton...she's no radical. She supports the death penalty. Not that you asked, but if Hillary Clinton's President, I think she'll appoint Barack Obama to the Supreme Court. [Rosen laughs.] It's no joke, absolutely.
     ROSEN: You think before the primary?
     TOOBIN: Before the primary, no, I think it would be a political masterstroke; legally, I think he'd be an unassailable nominee, and it would also have that great Clinton Machiavellian edge of getting him out of the way.

     For audio of the October 1 radio session: www.wamu.org

 

Newsweek Slants 'Ask Hillary' Questions
to the Fluffy Left

     Newsweek has posted a Hillary Clinton question-and-answer session on their Web site, selecting eight questions out of "more than 1,000 queries from readers," but the "best questions" Newsweek plucked out of the pile often suggested a hostility to America's current state under Team Bush, with "huge deficits," a "collapsing" middle class, and a teacher "appalled" at the underfunded No Child Left Behind education plan. One asked how she could convince the "Clinton haters" to leave divisiveness behind. Another wondered whether she would plow on with investigations of the actions of "Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Gonzales, etc.?" But there were no questions about her Iraq vote, Clinton scandals, or Democratic corruption of any kind.

     [This item, by Tim Graham, was posted Thursday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     Newsweek began its Q&A with the explanation: "Last month NEWSWEEK invited readers to submit questions to Democratic front runner Hillary Clinton. We received more than 1,000 queries from readersā€"the bulk of them about Iraq, the economy, health care and education. We forwarded a selection of the best questions to Sen. Clinton. Here are her answers." Left unsaid: Was Hillary handed just these eight inquiries? Or was she allowed to narrow it down further?

     Here's how the questions appeared in order, with snippets of Hillary's answers. First, the "huge deficits" question, which could come across as centrist, sort of a Ross Perot/Concord Coalition query:

     "How are you going to deal with the huge deficit? Where will you find the money to pay for health-care reform? -- Sarah, Miami"

     Hillary said: "We have a lot of work to do to reverse President Bush's fiscal recklessness," and claimed she would put the country on the path to balanced budgets.

     Then came the "haters" question: "Whether it's fair or not, you and your husband are polarizing figures to many Americans. America needs some healing after all of the divisiveness of the last eight years. During the campaign and after, how will you convince the Clinton-haters that you can be a good president for all the people? -- Cynthia, Denver"

     Hillary insisted naysayers about her Senate career hardly stopped her from winning 67 percent of the vote in 2006 (against the almost unknown and unreported Mayor of Yonkers), and concluded: "Anyone who gets the Democratic nomination is going to be subjected to the withering attacks that come from the other side. I think I have proven that I can not only survive them but also surpass them." Translation: She's proven that the media will ignore the scandals, and then lightly gloss over them when forced to acknowledge them, with words like "Clinton haters" employed to describe those annoying people who actually want to see tax returns or other facts.

     Then, the obligatory army-to-Darfur question: "For four years now, American citizens have been witness to the genocide and mass atrocities in Darfur. What specifically will you do as president to help bring this to an end? Will you authorize the use of U.S. military assets to help protect the lives of innocent Darfurian civilians? -- Kristen, Des Moines, Iowa"

     Hillary wants UN peacekeepers on the ground, and maybe a NATO no-fly zone: "It is long past time that we bring the international community together through American leadership to end the genocide in Darfur. We must quit giving lip service and start acting."

     Then: "If elected, how will you handle any investigations that may pop up into the actions of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Gonzales, etc.? Should the investigations continue or should the country move on? -- Steven, Raleigh, N.C."

     Hillary made no promises to impeach or imprison Team Bush players, but tried to throw some partisan red meat: "For the last six and a half years we have seen a dangerous experiment in extremism in the White House. The Bush-Cheney administration has elevated partisan politics and cronyism over competence and professionalism."

     Cronyism over competence? This, from the woman who threw career employees out of the White House Travel Office and replaced them with buddies and relatives?

     Next: "As the first woman president, what would you do differently from the men that have preceded you? -- Dan, Ladera Ranch, Calif."

     What a toughie. Blah blah blah, she's not running because she's a woman, but, by the way, she's a wildly inspirational figure: "Fathers are driving long distances to bring their daughters to my events. Women in their 90s are telling me that they were born before women had the right to vote and that they want to live long enough to see a woman in the White House. When I am elected, we will have made history by working together."

     Then, more sinking America: "The middle class seems to be collapsing. A few Americans are becoming well off, but many more are finding it harder and harder to live an acceptable life. What will you do to keep me, my family and my friends from sinking to low-income or poverty levels, as the jobs we did go away? -- Tim, Sandusky, Ohio"

     Hillary agreed: "Americans are facing increasing costs of living, from housing to energy to health care to college; health-care premiums have nearly doubled in the last six years, while wages have been stagnant." In this answer, Hillary sounds the most like Bill scribbled in the margins: "I believe it's time to reject President Bush's philosophy of a 'you're on your own' society and to replace it with shared responsibility for shared prosperity."

     Then: "As a 58-year-old self-employed female Realtor, I can no longer afford health insurance. If I become ill or partially disabled I will have to surrender my home, my car and any other assets in order to receive medical care. This is a constant worry. What is your health-insurance plan? -- Carol, Greenwood, Ind."

     Don't say candidates never get open-ended sales questions any more. Hillary says her "American Choices Health Plan" will "put the consumer in the driver's seat by offering more choices and lowering costs." As if her last health plan did any of that.

     The last question, on imaginary ruthless education cuts: "As a teacher I am appalled at No Child Left Behind. The emphasis is on testing for both children and teachers, yet no money is given to support this or anything else. Our classes are getting larger; help is being cut. What would you do to set education right again? -- Jeanne, Rockingham, Vt."

     Hillary felt her pain: "It is an unfunded mandate that encourages teachers to teach to the test, and the curriculum is being narrowed. I hear story after story about music and art or physical education or field trips being cut out of the school day to make more time for drilling and routine work that prepare students for standardized tests."

     The "exclusive Web forum," posted October 2, is online at: www.msnbc.msn.com

     It's too bad Newsweek just published first names for these Hillary-pleasing questioners, which makes it little harder to wonder whether Cynthia in Denver runs the local Democratic Party, or Tim in Sandusky is an organizer for Kucinich for President.

 

'View' Fight: Goldberg Belittles Hasselbeck's
Abortion Position

     Is Whoopi Goldberg becoming the Rosie O'Donnell type bully? It appeared that way on Wednesday's The View on ABC when a discussion about Hillary Clinton's $5,000 per baby entitlement plan quickly descended into a heated exchange between Elisabeth Hasselbeck and Whoopi Goldberg about abortion. When Hasselbeck noted that $5,000 a baby could lead to fewer abortions in the world, Whoopi told Hasselbeck to "back off" because Hasselbeck has never "been in a position" where she "had to make that decision."

     Goldberg, who in 1997 outed Katie Couric as a fellow participant in a "pro-choice" march, also added that Hasselbeck should have "a little bit of reverence" for women who've had abortions and then she contended abortion was a made a right to prevent any more women from being "found bleeding, dead, with hangers in their bodies."

     For the September 30, 1997 CyberAlert posting, "Katie Couric 'outed' by Whoopi Goldberg on Monday's Today -- outed as a closet 'pro-choice' abortion marcher," go to: www.mediaresearch.org

     [This item, by Justin McCarthy, was posted Wednesday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ]

     The exchange on the October 3 edition of The View:

     ELISABETH HASSELBECK: I was very, at heart, I'm very against this policy because I believe it's more of a gift.
     JOY BEHAR: Are you against Social Security, too?
     HASSELBECK: No. Against this policy, but then I realized that there is a benefit because I feel like this could maybe cause less abortions in the world. You know, people would keep having kids instead.
     WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Elisabeth, Elisabeth, can I ask you one question, can I ask you a question? I just have to ask you this question since you opened this door.
     HASSELBECK: Sure
     GOLDBERG: Have you ever been in a position to have to make that decision?
     HASSELBECK: Never, never.
     GOLDBERG: Okay, then back off a little bit. Back off a little bit. Very few people want to have abortions.
     HASSELBECK: I'm sure they don't.
     GOLDBERG: See, I was listening.
     HASSELBECK: I was just affirming what you said.
     GOLDBERG: Most people do not want to have abortions. Most women do not have them with some sort of party going on. It is the hardest decision that a woman ever -- wait -- ever has to make. So, when you talk about it, a little bit of reverence to the women out there who have had to make this horrible decision. And one of the reasons that, that we have had to make this decision is because so many women were found bleeding, dead, with hangers in their bodies because they were doing it themselves. The idea of this was to make it safe and clean. That was the reason the law came into effect. That was why it was done.

 

Letterman's 'Top Ten Signs Hillary Clinton
Is Getting Cocky'

     From the October 4 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Signs Hillary Clinton Is Getting Cocky." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com

10. Already selected her victory pantsuit

9. Canceled today's campaign appearances; Went to see "Good Luck Chuck"

8. Spent most of the last debate listening to her iPod -- just a reminder: The new iPod Touch is now in stock at your local Apple store

7. Hired Faith Hill to beat up women who've hit on Bill

6. Assembled a Las Vegas crew to steal her football memorabilia

5. Calling Giuliani during speeches to say she loves him

4. Already issuing memos about putting White House toilet seats down -- the ladies know what I'm talking about!

3. Responds to difficult questions with, "Oh no you didn't!"

2. Greeted Obama yesterday by saying, "Wanna be my bitch?"

1. Told Bill he can start dating again


     And from the Late Show Web site, some of the "Top Ten Extra" submissions posted online:

     - Canceled her order for 20,000 rigged voting machines

     - To re-adjust to White House living, crawled into bed with George and Laura last night

     - When candidates criticize her debates, she jots down their name while mumbling "Send to Gitmo"

     Those are online at: www.cbs.com

-- Brent Baker

 


 


Home | News Division | Bozell Columns | CyberAlerts 
Media Reality Check | Notable Quotables | Contact the MRC | Subscribe

Founded in 1987, the MRC is a 501(c) (3) non-profit research and education foundation
 that does not support or oppose any political party or candidate for office.

Privacy Statement

Media Research Center
325 S. Patrick Street
Alexandria, VA 22314