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1. Totenberg Advises Democrats to Hit GOP on Tax Cuts for the Rich When, on this past weekend's Inside Washington, host Gordon Peterson recited a list of issues Democratic congressional candidates could use against Republican incumbents -- "you've got Iraq, you've got Harriet Miers, you've got Katrina, you got Tom DeLay being indicted. You've got a lot of ammunition" -- NPR reporter Nina Totenberg jumped in to shout: "And you've got the tax cuts!" She soon offered her recommendation on how Democrats should campaign: "One of the other things is you say, 'look, we're in this mess fiscally and they want to increase the tax cuts for the most wealthy people in the United States,' the top one half of one percent would get a hundred thousand dollars, people who make over a million dollars or something like that." 2. CBS Paints Longtime DeLay Critic, Who Calls Him a "Hog," as Fresh On Friday's CBS Evening News, correspondent Lee Cowan filed a story on Congressman Tom DeLay's appearance in a Texas courtroom, which on some counts was balanced, but which glaringly highlighted a Republican critic of Tom DeLay who referred to him as a "hog." Although Fort Bend Star publisher Beverly Carter has been a longtime critic of DeLay who even endorsed his opponent in last year's election, Cowan simply referred to her as a "Republican precinct chairwoman," thus giving her credibility as if she were simply a typical local Republican leader. 3. Franken Jokes About Execution for Treason of Rove, Libby & Bush "And so basically, what it looks like is going to happen is that Libby and Karl Rove are going to be executed" because "outing a CIA agent is treason," left-wing author and radio talk show host Al Franken asserted Friday night, to audience laughter, on CBS's Late Show with David Letterman. Franken qualified his hard-edged satire: "Yeah. And I don't know how I feel about it because I'm basically against the death penalty, but they are going to be executed it looks like." Franken later suggested that President Bush is at risk of receiving the same punishment, since Karl Rove likely told him what he did, but he added a caveat: "I think, by the way, that we should never ever, ever, ever execute a sitting President." 4. Spike Lee: "Not Far-Fetched" to Say Levees Deliberately Destroyed Declaring "it's not far-fetched," movie director Spike Lee affirmed on Friday night's Real Time with Bill Maher on HBO, that he believes Louis Farakhan's allegation that a levee was destroyed in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina in order to flood the nearly all-black ninth ward. Lee contended that "a choice had to be made, one neighborhood got to save another neighborhood and flood another 'hood, flood another neighborhood." ABC News reporter Michel Martin chimed in with how "anybody with any knowledge of history can understand why a lot of people can feel this way, that that's a reasonable theory." But she went on to dismiss the theory, prompting Lee to demand: "Presidents have been assassinated. So why is that so far-fetched?" To hearty applause from the Los Angeles audience, Lee asked: "Do you think that election in 2000 was fair? You don't think that was rigged?" Lee argued: "If they can rig an election, they can do anything!" Lee soon got into a heated exchange with MSNBC's Tucker Carlson as he raised the "Tuskegee experiment" as proof the U.S. government is capable of any abuse of blacks. Lee made similar allegations on CNN back on October 11. Totenberg Advises Democrats to Hit GOP on Tax Cuts for the Rich When, on this past weekend's Inside Washington, host Gordon Peterson recited a list of issues Democratic congressional candidates could use against Republican incumbents -- "you've got Iraq, you've got Harriet Miers, you've got Katrina, you got Tom DeLay being indicted. You've got a lot of ammunition" -- NPR reporter Nina Totenberg jumped in to shout: "And you've got the tax cuts!" She soon offered her recommendation on how Democrats should campaign: "One of the other things is you say, 'look, we're in this mess fiscally and they want to increase the tax cuts for the most wealthy people in the United States,' the top one half of one percent would get a hundred thousand dollars, people who make over a million dollars or something like that." [This item was posted early Sunday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To add your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] Totenberg's been on a crusade. On the same show last month, as detailed in a September 26 CyberAlert posting (see: www.mrc.org ), she dismissed the idea of cancelling $24 billion of transportation bill earmarks, to pay for Katrina recovery, as small change and suggested that "if you canceled the tax cuts, you'd get $225 billion." A week earlier, she asserted that President Bush's New Orleans speech "would have been a great opportunity to say, 'look, I'm for tax cuts, but we need a Katrina tax, we need to really pay, to do this and to pay for it.'" See the September 19 CyberAlert: www.mrc.org And two weeks before that, as recounted with a video clip in the September 6 CyberAlert, Totenberg blamed tax cuts for the levee breakage: "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." Check: www.mrc.org I caught Totenberg's latest outburst on the Friday night airing of Inside Washington on WETA-TV channel 26, Washington, DC's PBS affiliate. The program is taped at ABC's Washington, DC affiliate, WJLA-TV, channel 7 (actually in Arlington, Virginia), where it airs Sunday morning at 10am after This Week. It also runs Saturday nights at 7pm on NewsChannel 8, the local all-news cable channel owned by the ABC affiliate. The exchange:
Gordon Peterson: "If you're running against a Republican in a vulnerable district, you've got Iraq, you've got Harriet Miers, you've got Katrina, you got Tom DeLay being indicted. You've got a lot of ammunition." At that point she was cut off by panelist Colby King, a Washington Post editorial writer and columnist.
CBS Paints Longtime DeLay Critic, Who Calls Him a "Hog," as Fresh On Friday's CBS Evening News, correspondent Lee Cowan filed a story on Congressman Tom DeLay's appearance in a Texas courtroom, which on some counts was balanced, but which glaringly highlighted a Republican critic of Tom DeLay who referred to him as a "hog." Although Fort Bend Star publisher Beverly Carter has been a longtime critic of DeLay who even endorsed his opponent in last year's election, Cowan simply referred to her as a "Republican precinct chairwoman," thus giving her credibility as if she were simply a typical local Republican leader. [This item, by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth, was posted Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your thoughts, go to: newsbusters.org ] The story began with Cowan relaying DeLay's criticisms of Judge Bob Perkins for links to the liberal advocacy group MoveOn.org, followed by a soundbite of DeLay accusing prosecutor Ronnie Earle of abusing his power. Cowan then proceeded to highlight "some Republicans who aren't buying it" and showed a couple of soundbites from Carter without conveying her anti-DeLay history to provide context. Notably, according to an article in the New York Times that ran on April 17 of this year, Carter admitted to having "got crosswise" with DeLay eight years earlier over his involvement in a local election for sheriff. Cowan did at least provide some balance by next highlighting a woman who "runs a neighborhood program for foster children that DeLay and his wife started years ago" and noted that he is "still plenty popular" in the district. Still, the failure to properly identify Carter gave an impression of greater Republican division in the district than perhaps really exists. (NewsBusters contributor Noel Sheppard reported: The problem is that Carter has been an outspoken foe of DeLay's for quite some time. John Judis of the New Republic wrote of this in May: "Beverly 'B.K.' Carter, grandmother and longtime editor of The Fort Bend Star, a weekly she publishes out of a strip mall in Stafford, Texas, holds up her a newly acquired t-shirt. It has a picture of Tom DeLay, Carter's U.S. representative, and says, 'the best Congressman money can buy.' She chuckles at the shirt but then frowns at the thought of the man it depicts. 'Every year he has done things that were questionable.'" See: www.tnr.com
Schieffer: "Tom DeLay has stepped aside as the House Republican Leader at least until charges that he violated campaign finance laws are decided, but that could take a while. Today, he went into a Texas court and managed to bring the whole proceeding to a dead stop. Lee Cowan now with our 'Inside Story.'"
Lee Cowan: "At times, it was hard to tell whether the Congressman's first court appearance was a criminal proceeding or a political debate. Within minutes, DeLay's attorney had the judge defending his ties to the Democratic party and liberal organizations like MoveOn.org."
Franken Jokes About Execution for Treason of Rove, Libby & Bush "And so basically, what it looks like is going to happen is that Libby and Karl Rove are going to be executed" because "outing a CIA agent is treason," left-wing author and radio talk show host Al Franken asserted Friday night, to audience laughter, on CBS's Late Show with David Letterman. Franken qualified his hard-edged satire: "Yeah. And I don't know how I feel about it because I'm basically against the death penalty, but they are going to be executed it looks like." Franken later suggested that President Bush is at risk of receiving the same punishment, since Karl Rove likely told him what he did, but he added a caveat: "I think, by the way, that we should never ever, ever, ever execute a sitting President." [This item was posted late Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. The node features video clips, in both RealPlayer and Windows Media formats, of the two exchanges quoted below. Go to: newsbusters.org ] Joining the interview as Franken, who came aboard the October 21 program to plug his new book, The Truth (with jokes), delivered his explanation of the Valerie Plame case:
David Letterman: "The feeling was that this report made the administration's decision to go to war look bad-" A bit later:
Letterman quipped: "The real crime is that there's an adult man walking around in the current administration named Scooter. I mean, we can agree on that, right?" [Audience laughter]
Amazon's page for Franken's new book: www.amazon.com
Spike Lee: "Not Far-Fetched" to Say Levees Deliberately Destroyed Declaring "it's not far-fetched," movie director Spike Lee affirmed on Friday night's Real Time with Bill Maher on HBO, that he believes Louis Farakhan's allegation that a levee was destroyed in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina in order to flood the nearly all-black ninth ward. Lee contended that "a choice had to be made, one neighborhood got to save another neighborhood and flood another 'hood, flood another neighborhood." ABC News reporter Michel Martin chimed in with how "anybody with any knowledge of history can understand why a lot of people can feel this way, that that's a reasonable theory." But she went on to dismiss the theory, prompting Lee to demand: "Presidents have been assassinated. So why is that so far-fetched?" To hearty applause from the Los Angeles audience, Lee asked: "Do you think that election in 2000 was fair? You don't think that was rigged?" Lee argued: "If they can rig an election, they can do anything!" Lee soon got into a heated exchange with MSNBC's Tucker Carlson as he raised the "Tuskegee experiment" as proof the U.S. government is capable of any abuse of blacks. Lee made similar allegations on CNN back on October 11. [This item was posted early Monday morning, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To watch a video clip, in either RealPlayer or Windows Media formats, or to post a comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] From about 45 minutes into Maher's live 11pm EDT show on October 21 produced at CBS Television City in Los Angeles, with panelists Tucker Carlson, Michel Martin and Spike Lee:
Bill Maher: "You did make a movie called Get on the Bus, which was about the Million Man March which was, I can't believe it, ten years ago, and this past Saturday Lewis Farakhan did a kind of reunion of the Million Man March. I don't think we got a million people this time. But he was saying, last Saturday in Washington, that he thinks that the federal government, there was a conspiracy to actually blow up those levees so that they would flood the poor black districts in New Orleans. I have to tell you, I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I don't believe it. But when you see some of the things that have gone on in this country." The conversation deteriorated further with the panelists talking over one another, thus making a transcript difficult. Back on October 13, Washington Times "Inside Politics" columnist Greg Pierce picked up on comments Spike made during an 11am EDT hour appearance on CNN two days earlier following a story about the wild beliefs of some of those in New Orleans, from how the federal government blew up the levees to how al-Qaeda was behind it. Pierce reported: Filmmaker Spike Lee thinks the federal government might have destroyed a levee to drive black people out of New Orleans while saving the white sections of the city after Hurricane Katrina. But it's not clear he will push that notion in a documentary he will make for HBO. Mr. Lee, in an interview Tuesday on CNN, said the documentary will be called "When the Levee Broke." When asked about the levee conspiracy theory, which apparently has gained credence among some New Orleans blacks, Mr. Lee said that "it's not too far-fetched to think that, look, we got a bunch of poor black people here. We got to save these other neighborhoods. What we got to do, dump this in this ward, boom. I believe it." And when interviewer Daryn Kagan asked whether Mr. Lee really believed that theory, the director replied: "I don't put anything past the United States government." But when asked whether he intended to prove that in his documentary, Mr. Lee said: "Well, no, no, no, no, no." However, later in the interview, Mr. Lee said: "And I think that it's a shame what happened, and I don't care how many times Mr. Bush goes to the Gulf or spends a night in a hotel, there's still a lot of grief. And, you know, I don't find it too far-fetched that they try to displace all the black people out of New Orleans." END of Excerpt For Pierce's weekly compilation of political items: www.washingtontimes.com The Internet Movie Database's page for Spike Lee: www.imdb.com
-- Brent Baker
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