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1. Nets Lead With Murtha, His Hit on Cheney's Lack of Military Time Though more than a year ago Democratic Congressman John Murtha denounced the Iraq war, asserting that "we cannot prevail in this war at the policy that's going today," on Thursday night ABC, CBS and NBC all led by championing Murtha's call for the immediate withdrawal of troops and showcased his ridicule of Vice President Cheney's lack of military service. With the text on screen, CBS's Bob Schieffer highlighted how Murtha "noted the Vice President had never served in the military and said, and I quote, 'I like guys who got five deferments and had never been there, then send people to war and don't like to hear suggestions about what needs to be done.'" NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams led by touting: "When one Congressman out of 435 members of Congress speaks out against the war in Iraq, it normally wouldn't be news, but it was today, because of who he is. Congressman John Murtha, a Vietnam veteran....Today, John Murtha said the U.S. must get out of Iraq. It's a debate that has followed President Bush halfway around the world." ABC anchor Bob Woodruff distorted President Bush's comments in Asia as he insisted Bush "took every chance he could to say that people who question his rationale for going to war in Iraq are not only wrong, but irresponsible and unpatriotic." In fact, Bush and Cheney are upset about being charged with "lying" to get the nation into a war, not at general criticism. ABC gave Cheney barely 30 seconds, but devoted more than 90 seconds to a "1st Person" excerpt from Murtha. 2. Michael Moore Goes to CNN Where Cooper Trumpets His Bush Attack Between the lead story on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 Thursday night from Joe Johns on Democratic Congressman John Murtha's call for withdrawing troops from Iraq and a piece by Candy Crowley on Bush and Cheney striking back at their war critics, Cooper read a statement from White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan comparing Murtha with Michael Moore. Cooper followed that with a retort from Moore himself released "exclusively to CNN." Cooper read how McClellan asserted that given Murtha's past support for a "strong America," it "is baffling that he is endorsing the policy positions of Michael Moore and the extreme liberal wing of the Democratic Party." After finishing his recitation of McClellan's statement, Cooper hyped how "just moments ago Michael Moore released this statement exclusively to CNN." With the text on screen, Cooper relayed the comment from the far-left filmmaker: "'Unfortunately, the President doesn't understand that it is mainstream middle America who has turned against him and his immoral war, and that it is I and the Democrats who represent the mainstream. It is Mr. Bush who is the extremist.'" 3. CNN Gives Time to October 17 Grandmothers Against the War Protest How slow a news day must it be to consider something that happened a month earlier to be hot news? Or, in CNN's case, if the cause is correct, does the network keep trying to get the story on the air and eventually manages to find a slot to slip it in? Thursday's American Morning featured a favorable segment about 18 members of Grandmothers Against the War who were arrested in Manhattan 30 days earlier, on OCTOBER 17. Soledad O'Brien first narrated month-old video of the dozen and a half women, including a 90-year-old who screamed: "Get 'em home! Bring the guys home! We have no rights over there! No business! We got plenty to take care of right here." O'Brien then sat down live in-studio with a 74-year-old who got a bunch of sympathetic questions from O'Brien who even asked her to hold up pictures of her grandchildren. 4. Letterman's "Top Ten Signs There's Global Warming" From the November 17 Late Show with David Letterman, as read from Las Vegas by Tom Hanks to promote a Sunday TBS special, Earth to America, a comedy show meant to promote StopGlobalWarming.org, a group endorsed by Walter Cronkite, the "Top Ten Signs There's Global Warming." (On the activist group's Web site Cronkite boasted of his interest in saving "all the living things -- flora, fauna, human and animal" and charged that "the governments of the world have tarried long enough, and the United States is scarcely without doubt the greatest culprit among them.") Nets Lead With Murtha, His Hit on Cheney's Lack of Military Time
Though more than a year ago Democratic Congressman John Murtha denounced the Iraq war, asserting that "we cannot prevail in this war at the policy that's going today," on Thursday night ABC, CBS and NBC all led by championing Murtha's call for the immediate withdrawal of troops and showcased his ridicule of Vice President Cheney's lack of military service. "On military matters, no Democrat in Congress is more influential," CBS Evening News anchor Bob Schieffer asserted in bucking up Murtha's credentials at the top of his newscast, insisting therefore "all of Washington listened" to him. The media certainly did. With the text on screen, Schieffer soon highlighted how Murtha "noted the Vice President had never served in the military and said, and I quote, 'I like guys who got five deferments and had never been there, then send people to war and don't like to hear suggestions about what needs to be done.'" Schieffer asked John Roberts: "So, in this kind of situation, the White House has got to be worried about, because this is clearly a sign that support for the war is beginning to fade on Capitol Hill." "An influential Democrat who supported the war says American troops should come home now," anchor Bob Woodruff trumpeted at the top of ABC's World News Tonight. Woodruff distorted President Bush's comments in Asia as he insisted Bush "took every chance he could to say that people who question his rationale for going to war in Iraq are not only wrong, but irresponsible and unpatriotic." ABC's new White House reporter, Martha Raddatz, then claimed that "a visibly perturbed President called Democrats 'irresponsible' for continuing to criticize his administration's use of pre-war intelligence." And Raddatz highlighted how "Murtha ripped into the Vice President, taking aim at his lack of military service." In fact, Bush and Cheney are upset about being charged with "lying" to get the nation into a war, not at general criticism. ABC gave Cheney barely 30 seconds, but devoted more than 90 seconds to a "1st Person" excerpt from Murtha. [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] As for the eager pick up by the networks of Murtha's criticism of Cheney for daring to form military policy when the former Secretary Defense never served in the military, I trust the journalists will soon point out the hypocrisy of Murtha who presumably backed non-veteran Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 over war veterans George H. W. Bush and Bob Dole. Criticizing the war is not new for Murtha. As the May 7, 2004 MRC CyberAlert noted, Ted Koppel featured Murtha's anti-war take as he "opened the May 6 Nightline, over video of bomb-damaged trucks and Humvees and a wounded U.S. soldier: 'No one ever said it would be easy, but few predicted it would be like this. Today, the most hawkish Democrat on the Hill said this: [Murtha]: 'We can not prevail in this war at the policy that's going today.'" Back in June, the networks also embraced a Congressman who turned against the war when GOP U.S. Representative Walter Jones called for a pull-out in 2006. The Sunday, June 12 CBS Evening News led with opposition to the war, including Jones, and the newscast on Monday night, June 13, returned with another story in which Bill Plante, as recounted in the June 14 CyberAlert, touted how Plante showcased the media's new favorite Republican: "But U.S. deaths in Iraq, now over 1,700, and the continuing insurgency are prompting a volley of second thoughts from Republicans. Congressman Walter Jones, the man who coined the term 'Freedom Fries' to protest the lack of French support in the war, now wants a timetable for U.S. withdrawal."
For the June 14 CyberAlert item: www.mediaresearch.org ABC and CBS led Thursday night with how four backbench Members of Congress held a press conference to publicize their resolution calling for a draw down of troops in Iraq by October of 2006, but neither network uttered a word about Democratic Senator Dick Durbin's outlandish comparison of the treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo to "Nazis, Soviets in their gulags" or Pol Pot. Only NBC reported Durbin's comparison, but that brief item aired only after Kelly O'Donnell touted the vision of "North Carolina Republican Walter Jones, who today alongside two Democrats and a fellow Republican, proposed what many Americans, weary of the violence in Iraq, appear increasingly eager to see, a withdrawal date for U.S. troops." On ABC, anchor Elizabeth Vargas announced: "We start tonight with the Bush administration and the growing discontent over the war in Iraq. On Capitol Hill today, a resolution was introduced that would require U.S. troops to begin pulling out of Iraq a year from this fall. The resolution was sponsored by a small, bipartisan group of Congressmen, but it is a first." On the CBS Evening News, after anchor Bob Schieffer led with "Bad numbers: The President's job approval rating is dropping as support for the war and his handling of Social Security continues to fade," John Roberts trumpeted: "In the most serious split over the President's Iraq policy, two Republican House members today joined with Democrats urging President Bush to start bringing U.S. troops home from Iraq in October of 2006." END of Excerpt from previous CyberAlert
For the June 17 CyberAlert item in full: www.mediaresearch.org # ABC's World News Tonight. Bob Woodruff's tease: "On World News Tonight: The war over the war. President Bush lashes out at his critics on Iraq. Today, an influential Democrat who supported the war says American troops should come home now." Congressman John Murtha: "Our military is suffering. The future of our country is at risk." Woodruff led his newscast: "Good evening. We start tonight with the debate over the war in Iraq, more nasty and more vitriolic than ever. Today, an influential member of Congress, a decorated war veteran, who had supported the war called it 'a flawed policy, wrapped in illusion.' And said U.S. troops should withdraw now. President Bush is on a week-long trip to Asia. But he took every chance he could to say that people who question his rationale for going to war in Iraq are not only wrong, but irresponsible and unpatriotic. Our new chief White House correspondent, Martha Raddatz, begins our coverage, Martha."
Raddatz, from DC: "Bob, the White House was trying to silence critics of the war this week with an aggressive defense. But the fighting is getting worse every day. Five times today, during remarks in Asia, a visibly perturbed President called Democrats 'irresponsible' for continuing to criticize his administration's use of pre-war intelligence."
Congressman Geoff Davis: "And what they have done is cooperated with our enemies and are emboldening our enemies."
Schieffer: The President is in South Korea tonight on his way to China, but the war and his critics' charges continued to dog him even as he travels. That part of the story now from White House correspondent John Roberts, who is with the President."
Williams began: "Good evening. When one Congressman out of 435 members of Congress speaks out against the war in Iraq, it normally wouldn't be news, but it was today because of who he is. Congressman John Murtha, a Vietnam veteran, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, is a 37-year veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, who voted for both gulf wars. Vice President Cheney once called him one of his strongest allies in Congress back when Cheney ran the Pentagon. Today, John Murtha said the U.S. must get out of Iraq. It's a debate that has followed President Bush halfway around the world. We begin tonight with NBC's David Gregory, who's traveling with the President in South Korea."
David Gregory, in Busan: "Far from home, touring one of Korea's oldest temples, Mr. Bush has found the growing debate over Iraq impossible to escape."
Michael Moore Goes to CNN Where Cooper Trumpets His Bush Attack Between the lead story on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 Thursday night from Joe Johns on Democratic Congressman John Murtha's call for withdrawing troops from Iraq and a piece by Candy Crowley on Bush and Cheney striking back at their war critics, Cooper read a statement from White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan comparing Murtha with Michael Moore. Cooper followed that with a retort from Moore himself released "exclusively to CNN." Cooper read how McClellan asserted that given Murtha's past support for a "strong America," it "is baffling that he is endorsing the policy positions of Michael Moore and the extreme liberal wing of the Democratic Party." After finishing his recitation of McClellan's statement, Cooper hyped how "just moments ago Michael Moore released this statement exclusively to CNN." With the text on screen, Cooper relayed the comment from the far-left filmmaker: "'Unfortunately, the President doesn't understand that it is mainstream middle America who has turned against him and his immoral war, and that it is I and the Democrats who represent the mainstream. It is Mr. Bush who is the extremist.'"
It's interesting that when Moore wanted to get out his attack on President Bush the first outlet he considered was CNN. The 10pm EST Anderson Cooper 360, in leading with Murtha, matched the news judgment of the evening newscasts on ABC, CBS and NBC, as detailed in item #1 above.
The MRC's Brad Wilmouth provided me with a transcripts of Cooper's reading, on the November 17 Anderson Cooper 360, of the McClellan and Moore statements:
CNN Gives Time to October 17 Grandmothers Against the War Protest How slow a news day must it be to consider something that happened a month earlier to be hot news? Or, in CNN's case, if the cause is correct, does the network keep trying to get the story on the air and eventually manages to find a slot to slip it in? Thursday's American Morning featured a favorable segment about 18 members of Grandmothers Against the War who were arrested in Manhattan 30 days earlier, on OCTOBER 17. Soledad O'Brien first narrated month-old video of the dozen and a half women, including a 90-year-old who screamed: "Get 'em home! Bring the guys home! We have no rights over there! No business! We got plenty to take care of right here." O'Brien then sat down live in-studio with a 74-year-old who got a bunch of sympathetic questions from O'Brien who even asked her to hold up pictures of her grandchildren. The MRC's Megan McCormack caught Soledad O'Brien's plug for the 9:45am EST story on the November 17 American Morning: "Still to come this morning, they are grannies and they've got a cause, and they say they're not afraid to go to jail over it. Got a story of these outraged grandmothers, just ahead on American Morning."
O'Brien set up her narration of video from October 17: "Anti-war protesters taking to the streets in New York City. That's not really much of a surprise. They were then charged with disorderly conduct and hauled off to jail. That's not much of a surprise, either. What might surprise you, though, is the average age of the group, somewhere about 80 years old. Here's the grandmas' story."
O'Brien then introduced her in-studio guest: "Joan Wile is one of those arrested. She joins us in the studio this morning. And she's with Grandmothers Against the War. Nice to see you. Thanks for coming in to talk to us. And I should say, nice to see you not in cuffs. Because for a while, you were, you spent a couple of hours in jail, right?"
Grandmothers Against the War's Web site: www.grandmothersforpeace.org
Letterman's "Top Ten Signs There's Global Warming" From the November 17 Late Show with David Letterman, as read from Las Vegas by Tom Hanks to promote a Sunday TBS special, Earth to America, a comedy show meant to promote StopGlobalWarming.org, a group endorsed by Walter Cronkite, the "Top Ten Signs There's Global Warming." (On the activist group's Web site Cronkite boasted of his interest in saving "all the living things -- flora, fauna, human and animal" and charged that "the governments of the world have tarried long enough, and the United States is scarcely without doubt the greatest culprit among them.") 10. "I just bought ocean front property in Topeka, Kansas" 9. "Glaciers are receding faster than Letterman's hairline" 8. "'Cool Ranch' Doritos really 'Lukewarm Ranch' Doritos" 7. "No matter what you teach them, parrots only say, 'I'm sweating my nuts off'" 6. "Ed Sullivan Theater is now a balmy 48 degrees" 5. "Paris Hilton saying, 'That's hot' even about stuff that is so not" 4. "No shirt, no shoes? You still get service" 3. "Average temperatures have risen one degree over the last one hundred years -- One degree! That's what this is all about?!" 2. "Ted Williams' head just woke up asking for iced tea" 1. "I'm so disoriented from the heat, I agreed to do a lame Top Ten List" Nice that the Letterman writers snuck in #3, the most accurate report in years aired on CBS about global warming. The two-hour TBS show which will air twice on Sunday night, was taped Thursday night as part of The Comedy Festival being held at Caesar's Palace. The performers: Jack Black, Cedric "The Entertainer," Rob Corddry, Larry David, Will Ferrell, Tom Hanks, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Bill Maher, Steve Martin, Kevin Nealon, Ray Romano, Martin Short, Ben Stiller, Wanda Sykes, Robin Williams, The Cast Of Avenue Q, Robert F Kennedy Jr. and Triump The Insult Comic Dog. TBS's page for the show: www.tbs.com Overview of the show, with a prominent link to StopGlobalWarming.org: www.tbs.com The Web site for the liberal activist group, which is pushing a "virtual march on Washington": stopglobalwarming.org
A sidebar lists dozens of "featured marchers," including Senator John McCain and Walter Cronkite. The page for the ex-CBS Evening News anchor provides his reasoning for joining the cause:
Cronkite's page: stopglobalwarming.org
-- Brent Baker
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