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1. Stephanopoulos Pushes Racism Claim as Reason for Slow Response ABC's George Stephanopoulos on Sunday gave legitimacy to the charge that racism was behind the slow rescue of hurricane victims in New Orleans. "Did government neglect turn a natural disaster into a human catastrophe and was it rooted in racism?" Stephanopoulos asked on This Week before playing a clip of Kanye West's allegation that "George Bush doesn't care about black people." Stephanopoulos soon contended to Senator Barack Obama: "So many people in this country have looked at so many of the victims being African-American, the sluggish federal response and said racism has to be at play." Stephanopoulos highlighted a Pew poll that found 66 percent of blacks say white victims would have received a quicker response: "What do you say to those anguished and angry African-Americans?" After Obama complained about "passive indifference" to the plight of poor backs, Stephanopoulos wondered: "How do you explain why President Bush didn't seem to get this early on?" At no point did Stephanopoulos raise the responsibility of local leaders or failure of massive spending programs. 2. Alter Urges Bush Go Left to Fix Poverty, "Midcourse Correction" In the cover story for this week's Newsweek, "The Other America," on how Katrina has exposed poverty in America, Jonathan Alter ridiculed President Bush's tax cut policies and then urged "a midcourse correction" for Bush to follow: "He can limit his legacy to Iraq, the war on terror and tax cuts for the rich -- or, if he seizes the moment, he could undertake a midcourse correction that might materially change the lives of millions. Katrina gives Bush an only-Nixon-could-go-to-China opportunity, if he wants it." 3. Bush "Is a Moron!...He's an Idiot...Cheney is Evil....Impeach!"
Some calm and dispassionate political analysis Saturday night on 4. Harvey and Latifah Defend Kanye West, Portray Him as a Martyr During the Friday night (SOS) Saving OurSelves: The BET Relief Telethon, actor/comedian Steve Harvey and singer/actress Queen Latifah came to rapper Kanye West's defense. Harvey imparted: "We love you, brother. And do keep your head up, and we understand what you were trying to say, and you have a lot of people's support in spite of all the ridicule that you're receiving, man. Do stay strong." Latifah saw West as a martyr, chiming in with how "you always going to pay to speak what's on your mind and what's on your heart. But that don't mean you shouldn't say it." Stephanopoulos Pushes Racism Claim as Reason for Slow Response ABC's George Stephanopoulos on Sunday gave legitimacy to the charge that racism was behind the slow rescue of hurricane victims in New Orleans. "Did government neglect turn a natural disaster into a human catastrophe and was it rooted in racism?" Stephanopoulos asked on This Week before playing a clip of Kanye West's allegation that "George Bush doesn't care about black people." Stephanopoulos soon contended to Senator Barack Obama: "So many people in this country have looked at so many of the victims being African-American, the sluggish federal response and said racism has to be at play." Stephanopoulos highlighted a Pew poll that found 66 percent of blacks say white victims would have received a quicker response: "What do you say to those anguished and angry African-Americans?" After Obama complained about "passive indifference" to the plight of poor backs, Stephanopoulos wondered: "How do you explain why President Bush didn't seem to get this early on?" At no point did Stephanopoulos raise the responsibility of local leaders. At the very end of his Sunday show, Stephanopoulos excitedly touted as "something special" his guest this coming Sunday: "Coming up next week, something special. It's been more than five years since his last visit to our program, former President Bill Clinton will be back with his first interview. He'll pick up on the debate we saw today on how Katrina has changed our country and the future of the Democratic Party including whether his wife will lead it." I can't wait.
At the top of the September 11 This Week, Stephanopoulos plugged an upcoming segment: "Plus, did government neglect turn a natural disaster into a human catastrophe and was it rooted in racism?"
Stephanopoulos began his session with Obama, who appeared from Chicago, by asking about whether FEMA's Michael Brown should be fired. He then moved on to race:
Alter Urges Bush Go Left to Fix Poverty, "Midcourse Correction" In the cover story for this week's Newsweek, "The Other America," on how Katrina has exposed poverty in America, Jonathan Alter ridiculed President Bush's tax cut policies and then urged "a midcourse correction" for Bush to follow: "He can limit his legacy to Iraq, the war on terror and tax cuts for the rich -- or, if he seizes the moment, he could undertake a midcourse correction that might materially change the lives of millions. Katrina gives Bush an only-Nixon-could-go-to-China opportunity, if he wants it." Alter offered this tautology which left out the role of job-creating small business and presumed government mandates are the solution: "The primary economic problem is not unemployment but low wages for workers of all races. With unions weakened and a minimum-wage increase not on the GOP agenda, wages have not kept pace with the cost of living, except at the top."
Later, Alter provided his prescription to alleviate poverty: eliminate tax cuts for the very rich so the government has even more to spend. Alter argued: "Beyond the thousands of individual efforts necessary to save New Orleans and ease poverty lie some big political choices. Until Katrina intervened, the top priority for the GOP when Congress reconvened was permanent repeal of the estate tax, which applies to far less than 1 percent of taxpayers. (IRS figures show that only 1,607 wealthy people in Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi even pay the tax, out of more than 4 million taxpayers -- one twenty-fifth of 1 percent.) Repeal would cost the government $24 billion a year. Meanwhile, House GOP leaders are set to slash food stamps by billions in order to protect subsidies to wealthy farmers. But Katrina could change the climate. The aftermath was not a good omen for the Grover Norquists of the world, who want to slash taxes more and shrink government to the size where it can be 'strangled in the bathtub.' I'd bet there is no plan to "slash" food stamps, just a modest proposal to slightly reduce the soaring annual increase in spending on the program. For the September 19 Newsweek cover story: www.msnbc.msn.com
Bush "Is a Moron!...He's an Idiot...Cheney is Evil....Impeach!"
Some calm and dispassionate political analysis Saturday night on [This item was posted Sunday night, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org, exposing and combating liberal media bias.] Griffin is the star of the reality show, Kathy Griffin: My Life on the d-List on NBC-Universal's Bravo cable channel, a regular on the E! channel's "red carpet" coverage before awards ceremonies, has had roles in several movies, as well as appearing on such TV shows as NBC's Suddenly Susan sit-com and currently on HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm. The half-hour Weekends at the DL airs Friday and Saturday nights in the Daily Show slot, at 11pm EDT/PDT. D.L. Hughley was the star of the 1998-2002 ABC sit-com The Hughleys and his left-wing politics came through when he tried out last fall to succeed Craig Kilborn as host of CBS's Late Late Show. Griffin sat on a sofa with comedian Laura Hayes and actress Diane Farr, who appears on CBS's Numbers and FX's Rescue Me. A couple of the exchanges which featured Griffin: # Hughley: "We were talking yesterday and there were, you know, of course a lot of the talk is about the hurricane, the unfortunate hurricane and now there's an extreme religious group. It's called Repent America that is saying the people of New Orleans had this coming for all the partying and sins. There are actually people who said that. And my response was that, you know, God don't need -- he don't need to put hits on us. I mean that's what he's got Pat Robertson for. I just, I just never understood if God is telling people all this [bleep], why don't he tell somebody the lottery numbers and then, you know, I don't get how they know what God is telling them." Griffin, over repeated applause: "Because that's typical, it's typical from this moronic administration that I'm sick of. The President is a moron! I'm saying it. I don't care. He's an idiot. Cheney is evil. I'm sick of, impeach them, get them out! I hate them! I hate them. Get them out. They got to go!"
Hughley: "Now, Howard Dean is saying that race played a major factor in the death toll. You know what's funny, I was watching O'Reilly because I do that to see a-" Griffin: "Why do you watch O'Reilly for? He's a moron. He's a fool. O'Reilly's an idiot. He and Hannity can suck it. I hate those two idiots! [applause] Those liars."
Hughley, referring to Exxon: "A $102 million dollars a day. That's more than any company has ever made in a quarter." Griffin, waving her arms: "It's disgusting! What is it going to take for you people? Get Bush out! Impeach. Out! Out! Out! [cheers and applause] It's over! It's over! Never has an administration been so hell bent on keeping us from conserving energy. Everybody should have a hybrid. They're cheaper, you save money on gas and all these rich bastards want to do is keep you buying oil. I'm sick of it. Halliburton got a $500 million contract to clean up New Orleans. That's disgusting. Who is on the board of directors of Halliburton? Dick Cheney. Out! They got to go! Out! [more applause]"
For the Internet Movie Database's (IMDb) page on Hughley: www.imdb.com For IMDB's page on Griffin: www.imdb.com To post your comments and to view a RealPlayer or Windows Media video clip, go to the node for this item on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog: newsbusters.org
Harvey and Latifah Defend Kanye West, Portray Him as a Martyr During the Friday night (SOS) Saving OurSelves: The BET Relief Telethon, actor/comedian Steve Harvey and singer/actress Queen Latifah came to rapper Kanye West's defense. Harvey imparted: "We love you, brother. And do keep your head up, and we understand what you were trying to say, and you have a lot of people's support in spite of all the ridicule that you're receiving, man. Do stay strong." Latifah saw West as a martyr, chiming in with how "you always going to pay to speak what's on your mind and what's on your heart. But that don't mean you shouldn't say it." On Friday, September 2, on NBC's Concert for Hurricane Relief, West ludicrously contended that "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." He later added this slam: "George Bush doesn't care about black people." [This item was posted Friday night, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org, exposing and combating liberal media bias.] The MRC's Brad Wilmouth took down the exchange, from about 9:18pm EDT, during which Harvey, the star of the WB sitcom The Steve Harvey Show (1996-2002) and now host of a WB sketch show called Big Time, and Latifah, a star in the movie Chicago whose birth name was Dana Owens, were standing in front of a phone bank. Their comments followed a brief taped message from West in which he didn't say much and didn't repeat any of his earlier comments. He twice said the situation in New Orleans is "messed up, [blanked] up" (BET killed the sound briefly), and he defended himself by saying that "I say what I really feel." BET then switched to Harvey and Latifah live:
Harvey: "Hey, you know, on a personal note to a young brother like Kanye West, who is being ridiculed for statements, you know, I just wanted to say on his behalf, sometimes, out of hurt and frustration, we say a lot of things, but we love you, brother. And do keep your head up, and we understand what you were trying to say, and you have a lot of people's support in spite of all the ridicule that you're receiving, man. Do stay strong. This is America, it is a free country, and freedom of speech happens to be one of those things."
BET's page on the telethon: www.bet.com IMDb's page on Queen Latifah: www.imdb.com To comment on this item and to watch a RealPlayer or Windows Media video clip, go to the node for it on the MRC's NewsBusters.org blog: newsbusters.org
-- Brent Baker
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