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1. Nets Jump on Charge Oil Lobbyist Edited Global Warming "Science" NBC, MSNBC and CNN jumped Wednesday night on a front page New York Times story, "Bush Aide Edited Climate Reports: Ex-Oil Lobbyist Softened Greenhouse Gas Links," a story based on a disgruntled staffer who went to the left-wing Government Accountability Project, which the Times nicely described as "a nonprofit legal-assistance group for government whistle-blowers." NBC's David Gregory dubbed it simply a "watchdog group." NBC anchor Brian Williams asserted: "Tonight the question, 'Is the administration putting politics above science?'" Like NBC and the New York Times, CNN anchor Aaron Brown presumed there is scientific consensus about the cause and threat of global warming when, in fact, much of the science is in dispute. Brown asked: "Now, are scientific facts subject to change? Apparently, yes." Brown saw "the fox guarding the hen house" before CNN's Suzanne Malveaux stressed how "critics say the Bush administration, in particular, is out of step with much of the rest the world in its refusal to sign the Kyoto climate treaty and also in its focus over questions about global warming." 2. Confronted by Hannity, Rosie O'Donnell Rages Against Bush & Rice Filling in Tuesday for Star Jones on ABC's daytime show The View, Rosie O'Donnell angrily yelled and screamed at guest Sean Hannity, as he's shown in playing back brief excerpts the last two nights on his FNC program. Amongst O'Donnell's outlandish allegations, she claimed that "Christopher Reeve died without hope because of the religious -- separation -- lack of separation of church and state by this administration. The man died without hope of a cure because of the lack of stem cell research." She repeatedly yelled that Hannity was "delusional" in denying widespread "torture" by the U.S. of prisoners and re-affirmed her charge that George Bush is "a war criminal," arguing that "he should be tried at the Hague." When Hannity pointed out how "50 million people are free because George W. Bush is President today," O'Donnell fired back: "And how many American poor children are dead, fighting a war that was never needed?" And when Hannity suggested Condoleezza Rice as a presidential candidate, O'Donnell clenched her teeth with her eyes bulging as she explained: "That's my head almost exploding. I think she's going to unzip herself and it's going to be Dick Cheney's twin brother." 3. Raines' Premise Kerry Earned Better Grades than Bush Discredited John Kerry's long-delayed release of his military records this week included, the Boston Globe's Michael Kranish revealed Tuesday, his Yale grades which "show that Bush and Kerry had a virtually identical grade average at Yale University four decades ago." As OpinionJournal.com's James Taranto pointed out Wednesday, that undermines the premise of former New York Times Executive Editor Howell Raines, who in an August 27, 2004 Washington Post op-ed asked: "Does anyone in America doubt that Kerry has a higher IQ than Bush? I'm sure the candidates' SATs and college transcripts would put Kerry far ahead." 4. "Top Ten Ways George Bush Can Regain His Popularity" Letterman's "Top Ten Ways George Bush Can Regain His Popularity." Nets Jump on Charge Oil Lobbyist Edited Global Warming "Science" NBC, MSNBC and CNN jumped Wednesday night on a front page New York Times story, "Bush Aide Edited Climate Reports: Ex-Oil Lobbyist Softened Greenhouse Gas Links," a story based on a disgruntled staffer who went to the left-wing Government Accountability Project, which the Times nicely described as "a nonprofit legal-assistance group for government whistle-blowers." NBC's David Gregory dubbed it simply a "watchdog group." NBC anchor Brian Williams asserted: "Tonight the question, 'Is the administration putting politics above science?'" Like NBC and the New York Times, CNN anchor Aaron Brown presumed there is scientific consensus about the cause and threat of global warming when, in fact, much of the science is in dispute. Brown asked: "Now, are scientific facts subject to change? Apparently, yes." Brown saw "the fox guarding the hen house" before CNN's Suzanne Malveaux stressed how "critics say the Bush administration, in particular, is out of step with much of the rest the world in its refusal to sign the Kyoto climate treaty and also in its focus over questions about global warming."
On MSNBC's Countdown, the MRC's Brad Wilmouth noticed, Keith Olbermann introduced the same Gregory piece which had aired on the NBC Nightly News: As for where the science really stands, on the Web site for the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), I caught an interesting review of Michael Chrichton's novel, State of Fear, by CEI adjunct fellow Ronald Baily who compactly summarized the exaggerated hype discredited by Chrichton. An excerpt from "A Chilling Tale," a review in the December 10, 2004 Wall Street Journal: ...."State of Fear" is, in a sense, the novelization of a speech that Mr. Crichton delivered in September 2003 at San Francisco's Commonwealth Club. He argued there that environmentalism is essentially a religion, a belief-system based on faith, not fact. To make this point, the novel weaves real scientific data and all too real political machinations into the twists and turns of its gripping story. For example, the climate computer models relied upon by global-warming proponents like Drake [character in the novel] -- or, in real life, by John Adams (NRDC), Carl Pope (Sierra Club), Kevin Knobloch (Union of Concerned Scientists), and John Passacantando (Greenpeace USA) -- predict that such warming will be strongest at the earth's poles, turning glaciers into floods and raising sea levels. In "State of Fear," Drake warns that Greenland's ice cap is melting and will push the sea level up by 20 feet. (As it happens, on Wednesday of this week Sir David King, Tony Blair's chief scientific adviser, testified with similar alarm before a British legislative committee, saying: "If the ice-sheets in Greenland melt, sea levels would rise 6.5 metres and London would be underwater.") Yet as Mr. Crichton has his scientist Kenner correctly note, Greenland's ice cap is in no imminent danger of melting away. It is well established scientifically that average temperatures in Greenland and Iceland have been falling at the rather steep rate of 2.2 degrees Celsius per decade since 1987. As for temperatures in most of Antarctica, they have been falling for nearly 50 years, and ice there has been accumulating rather than melting. And those sea levels? Nils-Axel Morner, a professor of geodynamics at Stockholm University, has been studying the low-lying atolls of the Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean. He has found "a total absence of any recent sea level rise" and has instead found evidence of a fall in sea level in the past 20 years -- a fact that Mr. Crichton has the good instinct to report in the course of pushing his plot forward. And what about the trend in actual global average temperatures, a question central to the debate in "State of Fear"? According to satellite data, since 1978 the planet has been warming up at a rate, per decade, of 0.08 degrees Celsius. Simple arithmetic reveals that, if the rate continues, the planet will warm by 0.8 degrees Celsius by the end of the century. That compares with an increase of 0.6 degrees Celsius during the 20th century. No catastrophe there. Indeed, Mr. Crichton has one of his characters note the costly uselessness of the supposedly heat-reducing Kyoto Protocols.... END of Excerpt For the review in full: www.cei.org As for the agenda of the Government Accountability Project, a page of praise for it features comments from Ralph Nader and Robert Redford. See: 209.200.93.225 Its page of "Resources/Links" highlights Nader's Public Citizen and a very far-left group, for which it provides this glowing tribute: "Institute for Policy Studies: The Institute for Policy Studies strengthens social movements with independent research, visionary thinking, and links to the grassroots, scholars and elected officials. Since 1963, we have empowered people to build healthy and democratic societies in communities, the U.S., and the world." For the page of links: 209.200.93.225
And the Spring/Summer 2004 edition of the group's newsletter, Bridging the Gap, the latest online, noted the liberal political career of Executive Director Michael Watchman: Now to the NBC and CNN stories, which advanced the liberal agenda to discredit as illegitimate any variation from the liberal stand on global warming. Brian Williams teased the June 8 NBC Nightly News: "Politics and science: Why did a White House official change administration reports on global warming?" Williams et up the subsequent story: "Now to the White House and a report that a White House official who was a former lobbyist for the energy industry edited government climate reports in ways that played down links between greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. Tonight the question, 'Is the administration putting politics above science?' Here is NBC's David Gregory."
Gregory began: "Critics of the administration's global warming policies seized on this morning's report in the New York Times. The disclosure that a former oil industry lobbyist, now chief of staff for the White House Council on Environmental Quality, Philip Cooney, repeatedly edited the administration's scientific reports on global warming. Cooney, who is not a scientist, made revisions that reflected White House doubts about the existence of climate change and whether human activity is responsible for it. In this example from a 2002 draft report on climate change, provided by the watchdog group Government Accountability Project [video of text with edits marked on it], he added that there were, quote, 'significant remaining uncertainties associated with human-induced climate change.' Rick Piltz recently resigned from the government office that coordinates climate change research."
Malveaux, who never credited the Government Accountability Project or even the New York Times, began: "Rick Piltz left the government three month ago, fed up with the Bush administration's approach to science." For the June 8 front page New York Times story by reporter Andrew Revkin: www.nytimes.com
Confronted by Hannity, Rosie O'Donnell Rages Against Bush & Rice Filling in Tuesday for Star Jones on ABC's daytime show The View, Rosie O'Donnell angrily yelled and screamed at guest Sean Hannity, as he's shown in playing back brief excerpts the last two nights on his FNC program. Amongst O'Donnell's outlandish allegations, she claimed that "Christopher Reeve died without hope because of the religious -- separation -- lack of separation of church and state by this administration. The man died without hope of a cure because of the lack of stem cell research." She repeatedly yelled that Hannity was "delusional" in denying widespread "torture" by the U.S. of prisoners and re-affirmed her charge that George Bush is "a war criminal," arguing that "he should be tried at the Hague." When Hannity pointed out how "50 million people are free because George W. Bush is President today," O'Donnell fired back: "And how many American poor children are dead, fighting a war that was never needed?" And when Hannity suggested Condoleezza Rice as a presidential candidate, O'Donnell clenched her teeth with her eyes bulging as she explained: "That's my head almost exploding. I think she's going to unzip herself and it's going to be Dick Cheney's twin brother." The Monday, May 2 CyberAlert recounted how Rosie O'Donnell called President George W. Bush a "war criminal." In a taped interview with FNC's Geraldo Rivera aired on Saturday night to promote O'Donnell's role in the CBS Sunday night Hallmark Hall of Fame movie, Riding the Bus with My Sister, O'Donnell charged that since Bush "invaded a sovereign nation in defiance of the UN, he is basically a war criminal. Honestly. He should be tried at The Hague." In her rant, O'Donnell also insisted it's "scary" how "Dan Rather gets taken off CBS News for writing, for saying a report that essentially was true, that George Bush did not show up."
For her rant in full, as well as an MP3 audio clip of it: www.mediaresearch.org There was a lot of crosstalk and panelists talking over one another. For clarity, our transcript leaves out comments from those other than Hannity or O'Donnell when those others tried to interject themselves into the back and forth between Hannity and O'Donnell. Picking up a little bit into the session:
Rosie O'Donnell: "I hear you're like a rabid Republican." Home page for ABC's The View: abc.go.com Check the MRC's new "Hear the Bias!" page later today for an MP3 audio clip or two of O'Donnell's ludicrousness: www.mediaresearch.org
Raines' Premise Kerry Earned Better Grades than Bush Discredited John Kerry's long-delayed release of his military records this week included, the Boston Globe's Michael Kranish revealed Tuesday, his Yale grades which "show that Bush and Kerry had a virtually identical grade average at Yale University four decades ago." As OpinionJournal.com's James Taranto pointed out Wednesday, that undermines the premise of former New York Times Executive Editor Howell Raines, who in an August 27, 2004 Washington Post op-ed asked: "Does anyone in America doubt that Kerry has a higher IQ than Bush? I'm sure the candidates' SATs and college transcripts would put Kerry far ahead."
The August 27 op-ed by Raines ran in both the Washington Post and Britain's far-left Guardian. For the Post version, "The 'Dumb' Factor," go to: www.washingtonpost.com
CyberAlert did not run an item on the August 27 Raines rant, but the June 3, 2004 CyberAlert recounted an earlier diatribe from Raines: Howell Raines, the Executive Editor of the New York Times until he quit last year, penned an article this week for Britain's far-left newspaper, The Guardian, and it certainly erased any doubt that he's a left-wing Bush-hater who sees conservatives and Republicans at the root of evil in politics. He quipped: "If John Kerry was ever a populist, George W Bush is a Rhodes scholar." He complained: "Americans aren't antagonistic toward the rules that protect the rich because they think that in the great crap-shoot of economic life in America, they might wind up rich themselves. It's a mass delusion, of course, but one that has worked ever since Ronald Reagan got Republicans to start flaunting their wealth instead of apologising for it." Kerry, he argued, "must appeal to the same emotions that attract voters to Republicans -- ie greed and the desire to fix the crap-shoot in their favour." See: www.mediaresearch.org WASHINGTON -- During last year's presidential campaign, John F. Kerry was the candidate often portrayed as intellectual and complex, while George W. Bush was the populist who mangled his sentences. But newly released records show that Bush and Kerry had a virtually identical grade average at Yale University four decades ago. In 1999, The New Yorker published a transcript indicating that Bush had received a cumulative score of 77 for his first three years at Yale and a roughly similar average under a non-numerical rating system during his senior year. Kerry, who graduated two years before Bush, got a cumulative 76 for his four years, according to a transcript that Kerry sent to the Navy when he was applying for officer training school. He received four D's in his freshman year out of 10 courses, but improved his average in later years. The grade transcript, which Kerry has always declined to release, was included in his Navy record. During the campaign the Globe sought Kerry's naval records, but he refused to waive privacy restrictions for the full file. Late last month, Kerry gave the Navy permission to send the documents to the Globe.... Under Yale's grading system in effect at the time, grades between 90 and 100 equaled an A, 80-89 a B, 70-79 a C, 60 to 69 a D, and anything below that was a failing grade. In addition to Kerry's four D's in his freshman year, he received one D in his sophomore year. He did not fail any courses. "I always told my Dad that D stood for distinction," Kerry said yesterday in a written response to questions, noting that he has previously acknowledged that he spent a lot of time learning to fly instead of focusing on his studies. Kerry's weak grades came despite years of education at some of the world's most elite prep schools, ranging from Fessenden School in Massachusetts to St. Paul's School in New Hampshire.... END of Excerpt
For the Globe article in full: www.boston.com
"Top Ten Ways George Bush Can Regain His Popularity" From the June 8 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Ways George Bush Can Regain His Popularity." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. Dip into Social Security fund to give every American free HBO 9. Use diplomacy to bring peace to Brad, Jen and Angelina 8. Try fixing Iraq, creating some jobs, reducing the deficit and maybe capturing Osama 7. Figure out a way for the Yankees to win a game 6. Replace his "country simpleton" persona with more lovable "hillbilly idiot" image 5. Use weekly radio address to give Americans a Van Halen twofer 4. Get Saddam to switch to boxers 3. Ditch the librarian and make Eva Longoria First Lady 2. Resign 1. Jump on Oprah's couch while professing his love for Katie Holmes
-- Brent Baker
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