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The 1,925th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
12:35pm EST, Thursday March 3, 2005 (Vol. Ten; No. 39)
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1. CBS Charges Conservative Group with "Slime" Tactics Against AARP
Dan Rather led Wednesday's CBS Evening News by touting how a new poll found most opposed to President Bush's Social Security reform plan and how a majority "say they would support raising the amount of wages subject to Social Security payroll taxes." CBS ignored Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's latest comments in favor of private accounts, but denigrated a small conservative group with a little-seen anti-AARP ad. Rather asked John Roberts: "Are there or are there not signs that this fight is going down the slime, smear, nasty road?" Without citing AARP's smearing of private account supporters, Roberts responded: "Oh, Dan, absolutely there are. A conservative retirees' lobby, USA Next, has teamed up with the brain trust behind last year's Swift Boat ads to take on the AARP." NBC's David Gregory noted the anti-AARP ads, but also pointed out how Greenspan urged "Congress to fix Social Security by adding private accounts."

2. Sharpton Thanks Matthews for a Great Anti-Bush SS Plan Soundbite
"That was a great soundbite, Chris. I might use it," left-wing former Democratic presidential candidate Al Sharpton told MSNBC's Chris Matthews on Tuesday night after Matthews went on a rant about how Bush's Social Security plan will create more debt financed by the Japanese, so "why don't they just start paying people in their Social Security checks with yen, because we're getting money from them to pay the older folks their regular check?"

3. When Juvenile Executions Okayed, Nets Stressed Condemnation
Tuesday's Supreme Court decision voiding the death penalty sentences of 72 convicted murderers, who committed their crimes as juveniles, drew barely more than a yawn from Wednesday morning's network news shows. NBC barely touched it while ABC and CBS didn't trumpet how conservatives were upset about it. But in 1989, when the court had ruled capital punishment for juveniles was allowable, ABC and CBS emphasized liberal condemnation. Back then, ABC's Morton Dean highlighted how "another high court ruling has triggered cries of protest from death penalty opponents" and CBS's Charles Osgood proclaimed that "two Supreme Court decisions are coming under fire this morning from death penalty opponents."

4. Rather Cries During Interviews, Still Believes Memos Authentic
On Tuesday's Imus in the Morning on MSNBC, the New Yorker's Ken Auletta revealed that Dan Rather, in "the dozen or so hours of interviews we did, he cried very often, and unashamedly by the way. He wasn't, you know, embarrassed by the tears, but I think this is a man whose life is flashing before him and who worries that he's going to be judged, his entire career is going to be judged by that September 8th broadcast and not by the other good things he's done throughout his journalistic career." In the magazine, Auletta revealed that Rather was "heartened that the panel declared that it couldn't prove political bias or that the documents were fake."

5. Welcome to the New CyberAlert and Our Two New Versions
Welcome to the new CyberAlert. Those who are reading this via e-mail have successfully joined one of the lists for one of the three versions of CyberAlert now available: HTML, table of contents or plain text. If you don't like the version you picked, follow the instructions in this item below on how to switch to a different version. HTML and table of contents subscribers can click on the headline over this text block.


 

CBS Charges Conservative Group with "Slime"
Tactics Against AARP

     Dan Rather led Wednesday's CBS Evening News by touting how a new poll found most opposed to President Bush's Social Security reform plan and how a majority "say they would support raising the amount of wages subject to Social Security payroll taxes." CBS ignored Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's latest comments in favor of private accounts, but denigrated a small conservative group with a little-seen anti-AARP ad. Rather asked John Roberts: "Are there or are there not signs that this fight is going down the slime, smear, nasty road?" Without citing AARP's smearing of private account supporters, Roberts responded: "Oh, Dan, absolutely there are. A conservative retirees' lobby, USA Next, has teamed up with the brain trust behind last year's Swift Boat ads to take on the AARP." NBC's David Gregory noted the anti-AARP ads, but also pointed out how Greenspan urged "Congress to fix Social Security by adding private accounts."

     ABC's World News Tonight avoided the Social Security debate and while Peter Jennings cited Greenspan's testimony, he only reported Greenspan's criticism of the large budget deficits and how consideration should be given to raising taxes. Jennings read this short item: "The Federal Reserve Chairman, Alan Greenspan, warned the Congress today about the federal deficits. They were, he said, unsustainable, and lawmakers should consider spending cuts and maybe even tax increases. The President's budget anticipates a record $427 billion shortfall in the new fiscal year."

     -- Dan Rather led the March 2 CBS Evening News with the bad poll numbers for Bush: "Good evening. President Bush is about to launch a renewed all-out battle to win public support for changing Social Security. From all appearances, it is an uphill battle. Take a look at a new CBS News/New York Times poll. More than half of Americans polled say the President's plan for private accounts is a bad idea [51 to 43 percent]. It gets majority support from only the youngest adults, those 18 to 29 [good idea by 55 to 37 percent]. But if adding private accounts means cutting now guaranteed benefits, even they say no [60 to 31 percent]. A majority of all Americans polled say they would support raising the amount of wages subject to Social Security payroll taxes [61 percent], but few would back raising the retirement age. So those are the numbers. Let's go to the White House now and John Roberts. John?"

     For the CBSNews.com rundown of the survey results: www.cbsnews.com

     Roberts echoed Rather: "Dan, no question, President Bush faces long odds to get his Social Security plan through. It has become a political battle worthy of an election year. On Capitol Hill today, Republicans swung back hard against attacks from the AARP and its all-out campaign, in print and online, to derail the President's proposal for personal retirement accounts." [video of newspaper ad with only "Winners & Losers" headline visible, and brief look at AARP Web site and, if viewers looked quickly, they could see most of "Strengthen Don't Destroy" on the Web page CBS showed]
     Tom DeLay, House Majority Leader: "It is incredibly irresponsible of the AARP to be against a solution that hasn't even been written yet."
     Roberts: "President Bush has made changes to Social Security a centerpiece of his second term. Today he urged Americans to reject the critics."
     George W. Bush: "Older Americans have nothing to worry about. Nothing changes. I don't care what the propaganda says, you're taken care of and will be taken care of. But younger Americans need to worry."
     Roberts: "Mr. Bush did get a much needed boost when the Fed chairman told Congress today changes are needed and quickly. The President has set a deadline of year's end, but leaders of his own party aren't sure they can get it done."
     Bill Frist, Senate Majority Leader, on Tuesday: "In terms of whether it'll be a week, a month, six months or a year as to when we bring something to the floor, it's just too early."
     Roberts: "President Bush has lined up Air Force One, his Vice President, Cabinet secretaries and aides for a 60-day, 60-city blitz to sell his plan. But top Republicans admit the opposition is better organized than they are. And Democrats have declared any plan with private accounts will never fly."
     Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader: "As far as I'm concerned, the plan the President has is not one that we're going to accept."
     Roberts: "But Republican sources say the most troubling statement of the week came from one of their own -- Senator Charles Grassley, who would be a key author of any legislation. Grassley said, 'If the idea doesn't catch fire with the public in two to three weeks, it could well be dead.' Dan?"

     Rather then asked: "Well, John, are there or are there not signs that this fight is going down the slime, smear, nasty road?"
     Roberts affirmed from the White House lawn: "Oh, Dan, absolutely there are. A conservative retirees' lobby, USA Next, has teamed up with the brain trust behind last year's Swift Boat ads to take on the AARP. The first product of that collaboration is this Internet ad which brands the AARP as liberal activists and claims the organization is anti-military and pro-gay marriage. The ad only ran for a short time on one conservative Web site, but it is a clear sign the gloves are off. Dan."

     As Roberts spoke, viewers saw a still shot of the ad, as displayed on a left-wing Web site critical of it, with an "x" over a soldier next to a check mark over a picture of two men kissing: www.dailykos.com

     The home page for USA Next: www.usanext.org

     The AARP's Web page viewers briefly saw in the Roberts story: www.aarp.org

     Unlike the little-known USA Next, AARP has tons of money and has spent a lot of it on high-priced ads in widely-distributed major newspapers, ads which call Bush's plan "extreme" and "radical" and claim it will "destroy" the program and "hurt all generations."

     AARP and USA Next share one thing in common, however: Neither put their ads on their own Web sites.


     -- Brian Williams teased Wednesday's NBC Nightly News: "Uphill battle: President Bush to renew his push to restructure Social Security as Republicans lash out at critics, including the AARP."

     Williams led the broadcast, as corrected against the closed-captioning by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth: "Good evening. Ask a senior citizen in this country what organizations they belong to, and there is a good chance they will mention AARP. Its huge membership gives it enormous power in Washington. But it's been under attack by some because it is one player in a high-stakes effort to reform Social Security. The President is pushing private investment accounts. The Democrats say that idea is dead. It is clear that fixing whatever may ail Social Security may be easier said than done. And we begin here tonight with NBC's David Gregory."

     Gregory began: "On Capitol Hill today, it was Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan sounding the alarm urging Congress to fix Social Security by adding private accounts before the program can no longer keep its promises to seniors."
     Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve Chairman: "We owe future retirees as much time as possible to adjust their plans for work, saving, and retirement spending."
     Gregory: "But the President's push for private accounts remains a tough sell. The Senate's Democratic leader today:"
     Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader: "All 45 Senate Democrats are united. We are not going to let this happen."
     Gregory: "Many Republicans now are worried. Majority Leader Frist said this week it's too soon to tell whether reform can pass this year. Other Republicans reported hostility toward White House ideas during recent town hall meetings in their districts. Some say they are not reassured by the President's claim that voters will reward Republicans who put their names behind Social Security reform. And another blow to the White House today, the latest Pew Research poll shows falling support for private accounts, just 46 percent, down eight points from December. House Republican leader Tom DeLay accused the powerful senior lobbying group AARP for the organized opposition."
     Tom DeLay, House Majority Leader: "Well, evidently, their role is to be the spokesman for the Democratic party. I mean, they came out against a solution before a solution's even been written."
     Gregory: "AARP, which represents 35 million seniors, angered Democrats by supporting the President's prescription drug benefit, but has now become a Republican target. The conservative group USA Next launched an Internet ad campaign accusing the group of being pro-gay marriage and anti-military. Such attacks, says an AARP spokesman, are an attempt at distraction."
     David Certner, AARP Director of Federal Affairs: "This is about making sure we have a secure Social Security system for the future, and we want to make sure we do it the right way."
     Gregory concluded: "Tonight, White House officials dismissed the naysayers, insisting it's still early in the fight. And they argue here that at least the President so far has convinced many Americans that some changes are needed."

 

Sharpton Thanks Matthews for a Great
Anti-Bush SS Plan Soundbite

     "That was a great soundbite, Chris. I might use it," left-wing former Democratic presidential candidate Al Sharpton told MSNBC's Chris Matthews on Tuesday night after Matthews went on a rant about how Bush's Social Security plan will create more debt financed by the Japanese, so "why don't they just start paying people in their Social Security checks with yen, because we're getting money from them to pay the older folks their regular check?"

     The MRC's Geoff Dickens caught the exchange on the March 1 Hardball.

     Matthews: "What about the bigger problem, Reverend Sharpton? We're talking about the President's plan, which is, on top of the half-trillion dollars in deficit we have each year now in the federal government, adding more and more debt, more and more money we owe the Chinese and Japanese investors. Now he comes along and, as part of his plan, he says, to finance the plan of personal accounts, we're gonna borrow up to $2 trillion over the next 10 years again from the international markets, again from the Chinese and Japanese investors. I mean, why don't they just start paying people in their Social Security checks with yen, because we're getting money from them to pay the older folks their regular check?"
     Sharpton, from New York or New Jersey: "Well, that was a great soundbite, Chris. I might use it, because that's exactly what we're going toward, paying Social Security-"
     Matthews tried to backtrack: "That's not my job, Reverend Sharpton, to give you soundbites. But I do think about, the financing of this thing is what I think scares older people. They may like the idea of personal accounts. What they're worried about is, is the money gonna keep coming if we keep borrowing it?"

 

When Juvenile Executions Okayed, Nets
Stressed Condemnation

     Tuesday's Supreme Court decision voiding the death penalty sentences of 72 convicted murderers, who committed their crimes as juveniles, drew barely more than a yawn from Wednesday morning's network news shows. NBC barely touched it while ABC and CBS didn't trumpet how conservatives were upset about it. But in 1989, when the court had ruled capital punishment for juveniles was allowable, ABC and CBS emphasized liberal condemnation. Back then, ABC's Morton Dean highlighted how "another high court ruling has triggered cries of protest from death penalty opponents" and CBS's Charles Osgood proclaimed that "two Supreme Court decisions are coming under fire this morning from death penalty opponents."

     (But the morning shows on Wednesday of this year did not completely ignore news from the criminal justice system -- all three programs ran full reports on the opening statements in the Michael Jackson child molestation trial.)

     [The MRC's Rich Noyes checked the MRC's archive for the 1989 contrast and submitted a draft of this item for CyberAlert.]

     On the June 27, 1989 Good Morning America, news anchor Morton Dean highlighted liberal outrage. MRC's Jessica Barnes took down Dean's introduction to a story by reporter Tim O'Brien: "Another high court ruling has triggered cries of protest from death penalty opponents. The Justices have decided that executing mentally retarded convicts and minors is not cruel and unusual punishment."

     Over on CBS's This Morning, the MRC's Brian Boyd transcribed how news anchor Charles Osgood took a similar approach: "Two Supreme Court decisions are coming under fire this morning from death penalty opponents. The Court ruled that capital punishment can be imposed on murderers who are as young as 16 when they commit their crimes. The justices also said that mentally retarded murderers could be executed."

     But on Wednesday morning's Early Show, CBS found no one outraged either by the Supreme Court's reversal or the activist logic it used to get there. News anchor Julie Chen read a two-sentence item: "The Supreme Court has ruled that murderers who killed before they were 18 years old can not be executed. That means Washington sniper Lee Malvo and dozens of other convicted killers will serve life in prison instead."

     On Good Morning America newsreader Robin Roberts portrayed the reverse ruling as merciful: "A decision in another case will spare the lives of more than 70 death row inmates across the country. The Supreme Court ruled it's unconstitutional to execute offenders who were under 18 when they committed their crimes." But the subsequent story by ABC reporter Manuel Medrano did focus on the "outraged" reaction of the mother of a man car-jacked and killed by a teenager.

     For its part, NBC's Today skipped reporting on the Supreme Court's upholding of the death penalty back in 1989. On Wednesday, news anchor Ann Curry had only a single sentence: "On Tuesday, the high court ruled that the death penalty for juveniles is unconstitutional."

     The March 2 CyberAlert recounted Tuesday night coverage: In reporting the Supreme Court's decision to bar the death penalty for those under 18, the networks on Tuesday night stressed how out of step the U.S. had become with the rest of the world and ABC and CBS gave equal time to relatives of murderers as to victim's families. NBC anchor Brian Williams heralded how the ruling "ends a practice that drew ridicule for years from some of America's closest friends around the world." Peter Jennings trumpeted how "this brings the U.S. into line with much of the world." ABC's Manuel Medrano highlighted how "most of the world has already outlawed juvenile executions" and lamented how the U.S. "was among only a handful of countries permitting such executions." Medrano relayed how one woman "is relieved that today's decision means her father's death sentence will never be carried out." CBS's Jim Stewart passed along how a murderer's mother "was relieved, arguing that crimes committed as a juvenile don't deserve the ultimate grown-up punishment." See: www.mediaresearch.org

 

Rather Cries During Interviews, Still
Believes Memos Authentic

     On Tuesday's Imus in the Morning on MSNBC, the New Yorker's Ken Auletta revealed that Dan Rather, in "the dozen or so hours of interviews we did, he cried very often, and unashamedly by the way. He wasn't, you know, embarrassed by the tears, but I think this is a man whose life is flashing before him and who worries that he's going to be judged, his entire career is going to be judged by that September 8th broadcast and not by the other good things he's done throughout his journalistic career." In the magazine, Auletta revealed that Rather was "heartened that the panel declared that it couldn't prove political bias or that the documents were fake."

     Appearing via phone on the March 1 Imus in the Morning on MSNBC, Auletta reported: "The poignancy of Rather to me, and what I tried to convey to readers in that piece, is here he is at 73 looking at a precipice and wondering is this the last time? Am I going to have an opportunity to go to 60 Minutes Wednesday, or is it going to be cancelled? And if it is cancelled, will they allow me to go to 60 Minutes Sunday? And it's not clear they will. So he's wondering -- he loves to fish, he loves sports, but that's not what really interests him. He wants to work, and will he be able to work at age 74 as he is at age 73? And that creates this sense of his life flashing before his eyes, and it's one of the reasons why throughout the dozen or so hours of interviews we did he cried very often, and unashamedly by the way. He wasn't, you know, embarrassed by the tears, but I think this is a man whose life is flashing before him and who worries that he's going to be judged, his entire career is going to be judged by that September 8th broadcast and not by the other good things he's done throughout his journalistic career."

     In his March 7 New Yorker story, which featured an unflattering up close, full page color photo of Rather, Auletta hinted at Rather's tears as he relayed how Rather apparently still believes the widely-discredited National Guard memos are real. After Rather defended his colleagues as "honorable people" and proclaimed how he's not going "to give them up," Auletta wrote:
     "His eyes were wet, and he paused for a few seconds to compose himself. To friends, he has said he was heartened that the panel declared that it couldn't prove political bias or that the documents were fake. He was puzzled that these facts did not qualify as headlines."
    
     The New Yorker article, "Sign-Off: The Long and Complicated Career of Dan Rather," is not online.

     As Dan Rather's last night as anchor approaches (March 9), check out "Countdown to Dan's Departure: MRC's Documentation of Rather's Record of Liberal Bias."

     The MRC has posted two resources for those interested in quotes and reporting which demonstrate Dan Rather's liberal record:

     -- "Dan Rather's Legacy of Outrageous Liberal Bias," a special four-page Notable Quotables, put together by the MRC's Rich Noyes, with more than 45 quotes from Rather's career. Four of the quotes are accompanied by RealPlayer video clips. Go to: www.mediaresearch.org

     For the Adobe Acrobat PDF which matches the printed version: www.mediaresearch.org


     -- "The Dan Rather File," an exhaustive library of more than 200 quotes and 15 video clips documenting the slanted approach that typified Rather's career. The special Web section provides a breakdown of quotes by year and into 28 topic categories. The MRC's Michael Chapman also added links to our "Dan's Downfall: Forged Documents" collection, and collated a list of Rather's "Corny in Kansas' Rather-isms" and "Rather Lame Denials of Bias." Plus, the special Rather section features links to past "Worst of the Week" reports, as well as "Media Reality Checks" and "CyberAlert" articles dealing with Rather's bias.

     The MRC's Mez Djouadi created the HTML files and converted the videos into RealPlayer clips.

     For the home page of "The Dan Rather File," go to: www.mediaresearch.org

     Rather will be a guest tonight, Thursday, on CBS's Late Show with David Letterman, one of his very few interviews scheduled before he steps down next week.

 

Welcome to the New CyberAlert and Our
Two New Versions

     Welcome to the new CyberAlert. Those who are reading this via e-mail have successfully joined one of the lists for one of the three versions of CyberAlert now available: HTML, table of contents or plain text. If you don't like the version you picked, follow the instructions in this item below on how to switch to a different version. HTML and table of contents subscribers can click on the headline over this text block.

     More than half of our Topica list has successfully signed up on our new distribution system, and I anticipate many more will subscribe once they realize they are no longer getting CyberAlert.

     To help move that process along, in a few hours I'll be sending one last e-mail to the Topica list. Since you are on the new list, you can ignore it.

     If you don't like the version of CyberAlert you have chosen, here's how to switch to a different edition: Use the link at the very bottom of this e-mail to unsubscribe, then go to this page and subscribe to a different edition: www.mediaresearch.org

     Please allow a couple of minutes for the unsubscribe to process through before subscribing to a different version and be sure to reply to the confirmation e-mail.

     You can only have one subscription per e-mail address. So if you wish get more than one version, subscribe via a different e-mail addresses.

     As a reminder, here are descriptions of each of the three version options:

     -- The new "HTML" edition will provide the ability to click on a table of contents listing to jump down to that the article below. This edition will largely match the look of the current posted version. In addition to the "jump down" links in blue, the HTML edition will have graphics of the CyberAlert, MRC and donation logos. The file size of this version will be about twice as large as the current text version, but the HTML e-mail will be wholly contained within itself. That is, once you download the e-mail via a POP account you have it all -- opening the e-mail will NOT cause it to try to access the Web to download graphic files.

     -- The new "Table of Contents Edition" will deliver only the table of contents, the summary paragraphs for each CyberAlert item. Clicking on a table of contents heading will bring you to the posted version ONLINE. So you will have to be online to read anything beyond the table of contents, but this edition will provide a shorter version for those who want a quick rundown and only occasionally want to read more or prefer to read the online version with its accompanying pictures. This edition's file size is about half that of the current text version and one-fourth that of the HTML edition.

     -- The "Plain Text" version, which will match what you have received until today's switch to the new system.

    
     # We spent a lot of time testing the new service on various configurations, but that doesn't mean the HTML and table of contents versions will work for everyone. Address comments, questions and problems to: cyber@mediaresearch.org

     If you have a problem, please tell us the type of e-mail reading software you are using and the name of your Internet service provider.

-- Brent Baker

 

 


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