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September 24, 2007
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(Vol. Twenty; No. 20)
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We All Know He’s a Liar |
“There’s so much of this that’s truly, and I don’t mean this in a cartoon
sense, fantastic. When you’re with the President, does he live in this world?
Or does he just sell it?”
— MSNBC’s Chris Matthews to Senator Joe Biden (D-DE) during live coverage
after Bush’s Iraq speech, Sept. 13.
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Aha! It Really Was Blood
for Oil |
“Harsh accusation: One of the most respected
figures in Washington says the Bush administration went to war in Iraq
because of oil....One of the best known and most highly regarded people in
Washington, the former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, says
the Bush administration went to war in Iraq largely because of oil.”
— Anchor Dan Harris on ABC’s World News, Sept. 16.
“Are we fighting for the American oil companies, for Mobil and
Exxon?...Should we put Exxon signs up over Arlington Cemetery and Mobil
signs up there, like they have at baseball stadiums?”
— MSNBC’s Chris Matthews talking about Greenspan’s “largely about oil”
comment, September 17 Hardball.
vs.
Co-host Matt Lauer: “Liberal bloggers are having a field day with this.
They’re saying, ‘Here’s a Republican saying the administration lied about
the reason to go to war.’ Is that a spin? Is that fair?”
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: “It’s utterly unfair. I was
expressing my view. Saddam Hussein was obviously seeking to get a chokehold
on the Straits of Hormuz....It was necessary to get Saddam out of there.”
— Exchange on NBC’s Today, September 17.
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"Have
to Have" More Government |
“It’s not government-run, but certainly the
government is involved. And, in fact, every industrialized country in this
world that is successful with health care — often more successful than we
are — has a partnership between government and the private sector. And
that’s what I think we have to have in this case.”
— ABC’s medical editor Dr. Tim Johnson discussing Hillary Clinton’s new
health care plan on the September 17 World News with Charles Gibson.
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Yearning for More Liberal
Hillary |
“Critics are saying that this in some ways is the kind of plan you would have
rejected back in 1993....Have you watered down reform?...Some of your
competitors are saying you’ve taken more money from the insurance industry
than any other candidate, so the question is, is there a conflict looming on
the horizon? Are you losing some leverage in asking these insurance companies
to get on board and make tough choices?”
— NBC’s Matt Lauer to Hillary Clinton on Today, Sept. 18.
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Matt Pushes for “Lobbying
Tax” |
Ex-President Bill Clinton: “Well, that’s not a bad idea.”
— NBC’s Today, September 5.
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Pining for Return to
Clinton Era |
“Nobody can bask in applause with quite so
much style — the gentle wave, the grin the shape of a sideways comma, the
sense that he knows he deserves the accolades and yet is humbled by all the
clapping, which makes people clap harder....He still has this way of
presenting his ideas for reforms as simple, elegant solutions....Listening
to the man think out loud again, it was hard not to pine for an era before
bad news got really bad, before Sept. 11 showed up on the calendar every
year as Patriot Day.”
— Washington Post staff writer David Segal on the launch of Bill
Clinton’s latest book, September 5 Style section.
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Conservatives = Flat-Earthers |
"The connection of Reagan’s emphasis on tax
reduction to his late [1980] campaign surge was lost on reporters covering
the Republican candidate. One of them was Walter Isaacson, a
twenty-eight-year-old Time correspondent. The former Rhodes scholar, in his
second year with the magazine, was given the plum assignment of covering
Reagan. On the campaign trail that last week, he introduced himself to me
and started a conversation about Reagan’s and my tax-cutting views. He said
he believed I was the only journalist he knew who actually supported
Kemp-Roth, which accurately reflected the political press corps’ mind-set.
‘I just wonder if you could explain to me how you got there,’ he said.
Walter sounded like a modern scientist encountering somebody who believed
the earth was flat.”
— Robert Novak in his new book, The Prince of Darkness: 50 Years
Reporting in Washington. Isaacson rose to run Time magazine and
was later President of CNN.
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Fox News Worse than
Terrorists |
"Al Qaeda really hurt us, but not as much as Rupert Murdoch has hurt us,
particularly in the case of Fox News. Fox News is worse than Al Qaeda — worse
for our society. It’s as dangerous as the Ku Klux Klan ever was.”
— MSNBC anchor Keith Olbermann in an interview with Playboy
magazine, October issue.
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“The Osama bin Laden tape. First, why is he still free to make one? And in it
he criticizes congressional Democrats and just rants without making a specific
threat or point. So he’s Sean Hannity?”
“He criticizes the Democrats, makes vague threats, is cranky, and has a bad
dye job on his beard. Brent Bozell? No, there’s another Osama bin Laden tape.”
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann teasing an upcoming segment on a new bin Laden
tape, Sept. 7 Countdown. |
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News to Katie: “It’s Not
All Bad” |
Katie Couric in Iraq: “What would you
like people to know that you don’t think they’re hearing back home?”
Army Sgt. Jamie Wall: “The good things, the good things that happen
out here, the good things that soldiers do for the Iraqis and how the Iraqis
react to us. It’s not all bad.”
Army Sgt. Brady Marcus: “If we pulled out now, the gangs would take
over, the streets would be in mayhem, and this place would be a disaster
area. That’s just my opinion.”
Couric: “Sounds like in your opinion there’s no easy answer.”
Marcus: “There’s not an easy answer. We’re at war, Katie, and it’s
not an easy thing to get through.”
— CBS Evening News, September 5.
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Finally, a Viable Peace
Plan |
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Decrying Fox’s “Censorship” |
NBC’s Bob Faw: “We are, we brag, an open society. But Sunday on Fox
TV, when Sally Field swore about the war, her profanity was bleeped....”
Washington Post’s Tom Shales: “To censor her, supposedly on the
grounds of profane language, but perhaps on the grounds of what she said
politically, that’s a very dangerous thing to happen in America.”...
Faw: “Increasingly, more seems off limits. Returning coffins of dead
soldiers and sailors, for example, can no longer be photographed as they
once were.”
— NBC Nightly News, September 18.
“Some say the Fox network, owned by well-known conservative Rupert Murdoch,
was engaged in political censorship. Fox said the comments might be
considered inappropriate by some viewers....It’s the Sally Field case that
is provoking the real cries of political censorship because Fox cut off not
only her expletive, but also her entire thought.”
— ABC’s Dan Harris on Good Morning America, Sept. 18.
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Clinton “Almost Got” Osama |
CNN’s
Larry King: “Are we ever going to get Osama?”
Former President Bill Clinton: “Well, not if we don’t put the right
resources into the right places.”
King: “You almost got him.”
Clinton: “I did.”
— CNN’s Larry King Live, September 5.
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Bin Laden as Innocent as
O.J. |
Rapper
Mos Def: “I don’t believe it was bin Laden today....”
Host Bill Maher: “You don’t think bin Laden knocked down the World
Trade Center?”
Def: “Absolutely not....I don’t. You know what, I don’t....In any
barbershop I am so not alone, I’m so not alone.”
Maher: “That doesn’t mean you’re right.”
Def: “That don’t mean it is not valid neither. Highly-educated people
in all areas of science have spoken on the fishiness around the whole 9/11
theory....The way that this government has pursued its foreign interests has
been meddlesome, murderously meddlesome.”
— HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher, September 7.
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PUBLISHER: L.
Brent Bozell III
EDITORS: Brent H. Baker, Rich Noyes, Tim Graham
MEDIA ANALYSTS: Geoffrey Dickens, Brad Wilmouth, Scott
Whitlock, Matthew Balan and Kyle Drennen
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE: Michelle Humphrey
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Holly Schnitzler
MEDIA CONTACT: Colleen O’Boyle (703) 683-5004 |
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