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1. CBS Commentator Charges Bush Doesn't Give "a Damn" About Blacks CBS News Sunday Morning "contributor" Nancy Giles, in the only commentary aired on the show on Sunday, delivered a blistering diatribe in which she charged that "if the majority of the hardest hit victims of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans were white people, they would not have gone for days without food and water" and insisted that "the real war is not in Iraq, but right here in America. It's the War on Poverty, and it's a war that's been ignored and lost." She complained that "we've repeatedly given tax cuts to the wealthiest and left our most vulnerable American citizens to basically fend for themselves." Giles scolded Bush for finding photo-ops with some "black folks to hug" while he skipped "the messy parts of New Orleans." She castigated Bush for how he "has put himself at risk by visiting the troops in Iraq, but didn't venture anywhere near the Superdome or the convention center, where thousands of victims, mostly black and poor, needed to see that he gave a damn." 2. Race-Baiting by Blitzer & Brown; Race Raised by Williams & Koppel CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Friday afternoon repeatedly prodded reluctant Congressional Black Caucus member Elijah Cummings to blame racism for delays in rescuing hurricane victims in New Orleans. When Cummings demurred from such a blanket accusation, Blitzer wouldn't give up: "There are some critics who are saying, and I don't know if you're among those, but people have said to me, had this happened in a predominantly white community, the federal government would have responded much more quickly. Do you believe that?" Later, on CNN's NewsNight, Aaron Brown took up the same agenda with Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones, lecturing her: "Now, look, here's the question, okay? And then we'll end this. Do you think the reason that they're not there or the food is not there or the cruise ships aren't there or all this stuff that you believe should be there, isn't this a matter of race and/or class?" ABC's Ted Koppel charged on Nightline that "the slow response to the victims of Hurricane Katrina has led to questions about race, poverty and a seemingly indifferent government." 3. Moran Hits Bush on "Resources" for Iraq Over Hurricane Victims ABC's Terry Moran on Friday afternoon put politics at the forefront in hurricane disaster coverage when, on a storm-ravaged Biloxi street, he confronted President Bush about how "one of the things you hear here is people saying 'there's a lot of resources being devoted to Iraq. Now this country needs them.' And they're frustrated about that. What do you say to the people who say there's too much money being spent on Iraq and it's time to bring it home?" ABC News led its 1:22pm EDT special with anchor Dan Harris insisting that spending on Iraq is "a common complaint -- what we're hearing from many people about the resources being spent in Iraq." Friday's World News Tonight featured Moran's question. 4. Totenberg Blames Tax Cuts for Flood Disaster in New Orleans Sounding like a parody of a liberal, but in all seriousness, NPR and ABC reporter Nina Totenberg charged on Inside Washington, at the end of a discussion about how National Guard equipment deployed to Iraq is supposedly impairing rescue efforts, that "for years, we have cut our taxes, cut our taxes and let the infrastructure throughout the country go and this is just the first of a number of other crumbling things that are going to happen to us." An astounded Charles Krauthammer pleaded: "You must be kidding here." But Totenberg reaffirmed: "I'm not kidding." 5. Damon on Kanye West's Anti-Bush Outburst: "I Let Out a Cheer" Monday's Access Hollywood teased with a clip of rapper Kanye West's blast on Friday's Concert for Hurricane Relief broadcast on several NBC channels, "George Bush doesn't care about black people," followed by a clip of actor Matt Damon: "I let out a cheer." The program also featured a clip of this ludicrous claim from West on the fund-raising show: "We already realize a lot of the people that could help are at war right now fighting another way and they've given them permission to go down and shoot us." A few minutes later on Access Hollywood, co-host Nancy O'Dell touted how "it was Kanye West's anti-Bush remarks that caught the attention of Matt Damon and Susan Sarandon in Italy" at the Venice Film Festival. Viewers then heard this from actress Susan Sarandon: "I don't think that's an original thought, but it's probably true." Immediately after Sarandon, Access Hollywood played a longer soundbite from Damon who claimed the White House press corps is too nice to Bush and thus "not one of them's an honest journalist." 6. Network Reporters Assess Rehnquist Through a Liberal Prism The death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist on Saturday night didn't get as much media attention as such a passing normally would, but I did notice that network reviews of his career approached his views negatively from the left. Instead of saying he championed the rights of crime victims, religious expression and of treating all equally without regard to race, CBS reporter Jim Stewart fretted that "under Rehnquist, criminals found it hard to get multiple appeals in federal court. The line between church and state became more porous. Affirmative action became more difficult to implement." CNN's Jeffrey Toobin trumpeted the survival of liberal policies: "Against the Chief Justice's wishes, the Constitution still protects a woman's right to choose abortion and a homosexual's right to have private consensual sex. Affirmative action survives. States may no longer execute the mentally retarded." ABC's Manuel Medrano relayed how "Rehnquist critics charged he was hostile to the rights of women and minorities, and accused him of harassing black voters." CBS Commentator Charges Bush Doesn't Give "a Damn" About Blacks CBS News Sunday Morning "contributor" Nancy Giles, in the only commentary aired on the show on Sunday, delivered a blistering diatribe in which she charged that racism was behind the slow response to the hurricane victims in New Orleans, rationalized looting, claimed the real war is the one on poverty that's being lost thanks to tax cuts, and mocked President Bush for visiting Iraq but skipping the Superdome -- thus showing he doesn't give "a damn" about black people. Giles asserted that "if the majority of the hardest hit victims of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans were white people, they would not have gone for days without food and water" and insisted that "the real war is not in Iraq, but right here in America. It's the War on Poverty, and it's a war that's been ignored and lost." She complained that "we've repeatedly given tax cuts to the wealthiest and left our most vulnerable American citizens to basically fend for themselves." Giles scolded Bush for finding photo-ops with some "black folks to hug" while he skipped "the messy parts of New Orleans." She castigated Bush for how he "has put himself at risk by visiting the troops in Iraq, but didn't venture anywhere near the Superdome or the convention center, where thousands of victims, mostly black and poor, needed to see that he gave a damn." For a video excerpt, in both Real and Windows Media formats, check the Sunday night posting of this item on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog where you can add your comment: newsbusters.org
For the CBSNews.com posting of the text of the September 4 commentary by Giles: www.cbsnews.com
Substitute host Harry Smith introduced Giles' taped piece, which aired about 55 minutes into the 90-minute news program: "That many of those suffering most in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina are poor and black has outraged a lot of people. Justifiably so, in the opinion of contributor Nancy Giles."
Giles was a runner-up, for the "I Hate You #!*#! Conservatives Award" in the MRC's "DisHonors Awards of 2004: Roasting the Most Outrageously Biased Liberal Reporters of 2003," for this bombast on the October 5, 2003 Sunday Morning, in the wake of Limbaugh's prediction that the sports media would do what it could to prevent a black quarterback from failing: To watch RealPlayer video of that: www.mrc.org For Giles' own Web site: www.nancygiles.com
Race-Baiting by Blitzer & Brown; Race Raised by Williams & Koppel CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Friday afternoon repeatedly prodded reluctant Congressional Black Caucus member Elijah Cummings to blame racism for delays in rescuing hurricane victims in New Orleans. Blitzer asked Cummings on The Situation Room: "Do you believe, if it was, in fact, a slow response, as many now believe it was, was it in part the result of racism?" When Cummings demurred from such a blanket accusation, Blitzer wouldn't give up: "There are some critics who are saying, and I don't know if you're among those, but people have said to me, had this happened in a predominantly white community, the federal government would have responded much more quickly. Do you believe that?" Later, on CNN's NewsNight, Aaron Brown took up the same agenda with Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones: "What I'm wondering is, do you think black America's sitting there thinking, if these were middle class white people, there would be cruise ships in New Orleans?" When she wouldn't take the bait, Brown lectured: "Now, look, here's the question, okay? And then we'll end this. Do you think the reason that they're not there or the food is not there or the cruise ships aren't there or all this stuff that you believe should be there, isn't this a matter of race and/or class?" Opening Friday's NBC Nightly News, Brian Williams predicted that the "catastrophic hurricane strike, and the U.S. government response to it, will in the years or decades to come, perhaps necessitate a national discussion on race, on oil, politics, class, infrastructure, the environment and more." ABC's Ted Koppel charged on Nightline that "the slow response to the victims of Hurricane Katrina has led to questions about race, poverty and a seemingly indifferent government." [This item was posted Saturday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. For the node where you can post your comments: newsbusters.org ] # CNN's The Situation Room, 4:21pm EDT on September 2, as provided by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth. Blitzer interviewed Cummings on the show's set by a big table with video screens in the background. The relevant exchanges:
Wolf Blitzer: "Congressman, thanks very much for joining us. You're looking at these pictures. As you know, many African-American members of Congress earlier today said they've been ashamed and outraged by the federal government's response to Hurricane Katrina. Give us your thoughts as of right now."
Aaron Brown set up an interview Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus: "Numbers are part of the story. They are not the story. Two- thirds of the population of New Orleans is African-American, 30 percent of the city's residents -- 30 percent -- live below the poverty line. It's a difficult question to ask. Race is always a difficult thing to talk about in the country. But it certainly has become a part of the story."
Brown's first allegation in the form of a question: "I don't know if it's race or class, to be honest. But I was just thinking about that hospital evacuation you were talking about earlier. You do get the feeling that poor people in the country get shafted."
The MRC's Brad Wilmouth caught how Bob Woodruff asserted from a New Orleans sidewalk: "Many of these evacuees believe they're being ignored because they're black. They feel officials may be more sympathetic if they knew some victims are white."
Moran Hits Bush on "Resources" for Iraq Over Hurricane Victims ABC's Terry Moran on Friday afternoon put politics at the forefront in hurricane disaster coverage when, on a storm-ravaged Biloxi street, he confronted President Bush about how "one of the things you hear here is people saying 'there's a lot of resources being devoted to Iraq. Now this country needs them.' And they're frustrated about that. What do you say to the people who say there's too much money being spent on Iraq and it's time to bring it home?" ABC News led its 1:22pm EDT special with anchor Dan Harris insisting that spending on Iraq is "a common complaint -- what we're hearing from many people about the resources being spent in Iraq." Friday's World News Tonight featured Moran's question. Real Player and Windows Media video clips of Moran posing his question were posted Friday afternoon with this item on the MRC's blog: NewsBusters.org. For the node with the video, and option to post a comment, go to: newsbusters.org
On the September 2 World News Tonight, Moran asserted: "Throughout the gulf coast region, part of Mr. Bush's political base, you hear a lot of criticism." Earlier in the day, Dan Harris, at ABC in New York, opened an ABC News Special Report at 1:22pm EDT:: "We're going to go back to Biloxi, Mississippi where President Bush has been taking questions from reporters on the ground. He took a question, in fact, about a common complaint -- what we're hearing from many people about the resources being spent in Iraq. Let's listen."
Viewers then heard audio of ABC News White House correspondent Terry Moran, with distant video of media crews and others around Bush, outside in a Biloxi neighborhood: [ABC had an audio and video jump and missed a couple of words near the end of Moran's question, but I caught the missed words in NBC's later 1:48pm EDT playback of the same q and a.] Bush answered Moran: "I just completely disagree. We've got a job to defend this country in the war on terror and we've got a job to bring aid and comfort to the people of the Gulf coast and we'll do both. We've got plenty of resources to do both..."
Totenberg Blames Tax Cuts for Flood Disaster in New Orleans Sounding like a parody of a liberal, but in all seriousness, NPR and ABC reporter Nina Totenberg charged on Inside Washington, at the end of a discussion about how National Guard equipment deployed to Iraq is supposedly impairing rescue efforts, that "for years, we have cut our taxes, cut our taxes and let the infrastructure throughout the country go and this is just the first of a number of other crumbling things that are going to happen to us." An astounded Charles Krauthammer pleaded: "You must be kidding here." But Totenberg reaffirmed: "I'm not kidding." In fact, under the Bush administration domestic spending has soared much faster than inflation, a trend illustrated by the huge transportation bill this year packed with spending on infrastructure projects. And if infrastructure spending has suffered in some way, massive new spending on such things as a prescription entitlement program are just as responsible. For a RealPlayer or Windows Media clip of Totenberg in action, go to the Saturday night posting of this item on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog: newsbusters.org Inside Washington, a panel show taped on Fridays at the ABC affiliate in Washington, DC, WJLA-TV, airs every weekend on three Washington, DC TV stations: Friday night at 8:30pm on PBS affiliate WETA-TV, channel 26; Saturday at 7pm on NewsChannel 8, a Washington, DC area all-news cable channel owned by the ABC affiliate; and Sunday mornings at 10am, right after This Week, by that affiliate, WJLA-TV, channel 7. (I caught Totenberg's reasoning during a showing on NewsChannel 8 delayed to 9:30pm because of coverage of the Navy-University of Maryland football game.) WJLA-TV's page for the show: www.insidewashington.tv My transcript of the exchange:
Nina Totenberg: "And let us say one other thing. For years, we have cut our taxes, cut our taxes and let the infrastructure throughout the country go and this is just the first of a number of other crumbling things that are going to happen to us." And that ended the opening segment.
Damon on Kanye West's Anti-Bush Outburst: "I Let Out a Cheer" Monday's Access Hollywood teased with a clip of rapper Kanye West's blast on Friday's Concert for Hurricane Relief broadcast on several NBC channels, "George Bush doesn't care about black people," followed by a clip of actor Matt Damon: "I let out a cheer." The syndicated NBC Productions program also featured a clip of this ludicrous claim from West on the fund-raising show: "We already realize a lot of the people that could help are at war right now fighting another way and they've given them permission to go down and shoot us." A few minutes later on Access Hollywood, co-host Nancy O'Dell touted how "it was Kanye West's anti-Bush remarks that caught the attention of Matt Damon and Susan Sarandon in Italy" at the Venice Film Festival. Viewers then saw this from actress Susan Sarandon as she stood at some sort of an event: "I don't think that's an original thought, but it's probably true." (With Access Hollywood's quick-cut editing, it's hard to know what people are specifically referring to.) Immediately after Sarandon, Access Hollywood played a longer soundbite from Damon who claimed the White House press corps is too nice to Bush and thus "not one of them's an honest journalist." Full quote follows, as well as Colin Farrell's charge that white people would have been rescued faster. [For more about West's allegations, check this Friday night NewsBusters posting by Tim Graham: newsbusters.org For the Monday night posting of this item on NewsBusters.org, go to: newsbusters.org ] Damon's soundbite in full, as he sat in front of a poster for a movie (with title obscured): "So this guy just with this moment, you know, on live television made a statement that hopefully now Bush will come out and address because he doesn't have to address anything else because, you know, the, you know, the White House press corps, you know, they should all have their credentials taken away. Not one of them's an honest journalist, not one of them asks a question of the guy." At another point, Access Hollywood played this clip from actor Colin Farrell at a fund-raiser in Miami held for Katrina's victims: "If it was a bunch on white people on roofs in the Hamptons, I don't have any f[bleep]ing doubt there would have been every single helicopter, every plane, every single means that the government has to help these people." The Internet Movie Database's bio page for Matt Damon: www.imdb.com For Susan Sarandon: www.imdb.com For Colin Farrell: www.imdb.com
Network Reporters Assess Rehnquist Through a Liberal Prism The death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist on Saturday night didn't get as much media attention as such a passing normally would, but I did notice that network reviews of his career approached his views negatively from the left. Instead of saying he championed the rights of crime victims, religious expression and of treating all equally without regard to race, CBS reporter Jim Stewart fretted that "under Rehnquist, criminals found it hard to get multiple appeals in federal court. The line between church and state became more porous. Affirmative action became more difficult to implement." CNN's Jeffrey Toobin trumpeted the survival of liberal policies: "Against the Chief Justice's wishes, the Constitution still protects a woman's right to choose abortion and a homosexual's right to have private consensual sex. Affirmative action survives. States may no longer execute the mentally retarded." ABC's Manuel Medrano relayed how "Rehnquist critics charged he was hostile to the rights of women and minorities, and accused him of harassing black voters." The MRC's Brad Wilmouth gathered these quotes from over the weekend:
# CBS News reporter Jim Stewart in a story aired on both the September 4 Sunday Morning and CBS Evening News:
At 11:53pm EDT, CNN played a taped piece from Bruce Morton: "Ronald Reagan nominated him for Chief Justice in 1986. That was a tougher fight. Rehnquist tried to explain a memo he'd written when clerking for Justice Robert Jackson, the one in the middle, in 1952, saying that Plessy versus Ferguson, the doctrine of separate-but-equal schools for blacks and whites, was right and should be reaffirmed. Jackson joined the other eight justices in voting no, that separate in education was inherently unequal. Still, Rehnquist got confirmed."
On Sunday's Good Morning America, co-host Bill Weir asserted: "This man left a tremendous impact on the high court. He opposed abortion, supported the death penalty and prayer in schools. Maybe best remembered for stopping the Florida recount in the 2000 presidential election, but how will history remember Chief Justice William Rehnquist? Joining us this morning from Washington, ABC News Supreme Court correspondent Manuel Medrano.".
Medrano checked in from the steps of the Supreme Court where he emphasized how conservative the court has supposedly become: Medrano soon saw hypocrisy: "It was Rehnquist's commitment to states' rights that will leave the most lasting impression on the court. As Chief Justice he consistently led the conservative majority in overturning congressional legislation that they felt threatened state sovereignty and worked to tip the balance of power back to the states. Ironically, though, the court's most controversial decision overturned a ruling by a state court. When the Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide recount of votes in the 2000 presidential contest between Al Gore and George Bush, the court decided 5 to 4 to halt the recount ending Al Gore's hopes and bringing victory to George Bush. Rehnquist will go down in history as the man who inherited a liberal court and moved it steadily to the right. A conservative legacy his replacement is sure to continue."
-- Brent Baker
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