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1. Unlike Other Nets, ABC Again Refuses to Tag Hamas as "Terrorist" While CBS and NBC reporters were willing Thursday night to outright tag, without any qualifiers or attributions to others, Hamas as a "terrorist" group, for the second night in a row, ABC's World News Tonight distanced itself from the term -- even avoiding it during a friendly profile of a terrorist. ABC anchor Bob Woodruff teased from Jerusalem: "Tonight, a monumental shake-up in the Middle East. Hamas declared the winner of the Palestinian elections. The U.S. calls them terrorists." But that was it for the label. Woodruff proceeded to refer to Hamas as "the militant Islamic group that calls for the destruction of Israel" and he conceded "there is no question that Hamas is more militant and more overtly Islamic than the secular leaders it defeated." Woodruff also noted that "through its military wing," Hamas "has led the fight against Israel," but he then put a nice and generous face on Hamas, adding that "through its charities" Hamas has "provided free schooling, medicine and food." Without calling her or her murdering sons either "murderers" or "terrorists," Wilf Dinnick touted the "sacrifice" for the cause of the mother of suicide bombers: "She vowed to do whatever Hamas asks of her....And if that means sacrificing her three remaining sons, Um Nidal says she's willing." 2. CBS Evening News Picks Up on Majority Backing of Eavesdropping Despite the decision by the editors of CBSNews.com not to highlight the finding in a new CBS News/New York Times poll, of how 61 percent believe President Bush authorized wiretaps in order to "fight terrorism," with just 29 percent saying he did it just to "expand the powers of the presidency," on Thursday's CBS Evening News John Roberts alerted viewers to the finding. Roberts relayed: "On the NSA spying program, President Bush went into today's press conference with a boost. A new CBS News/New York Times poll found 61 percent of Americans believe the eavesdropping is meant to fight terror and the majority support that [53 percent back Bush authorizing wiretaps]." When Roberts ended his piece, anchor Bob Schieffer marveled at how "it looks to me as if the President has decided to make this a political issue to show that he is strong in the fight against terrorism and perhaps the Democrats are weak. And I must say, looking at that poll, he may be succeeding." 3. NYT's Dowd: Clinton's Lies "Endearing," Bush "Lies" In His Bubble Appearing on Keith Olbermann's Thursday January 26 Countdown show on MSNBC, while comparing President Bush's words on his NSA wiretapping program with Bill Clinton's "lying," New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd made known her view that she found Bill Clinton's lying "poignant and endearing" because "when Bill Clinton would deceive, he would throw in a semantic clue that let you know he was deceiving." She further added that "He would let you know he was lying, and then the right wing would come down so hard on him and over-punish him." Regarding Bush's citation of Iraq's liberation as a major justification for the war in the absence of WMD, Dowd pontificated that "you cannot do things that start with a lie, and they just lead to trouble down the road." 4. Mike Wallace: "I Was the House Conservative at CBS News" Catching up with a claim from a couple of weeks ago, on Tim Russert's weekend CNBC show back on January 14, CBS's Mike Wallace, who said that he voted for Richard Nixon in 1960 and 1968, insisted that "I was the house conservative at CBS News for a while." If he's what people at CBS consider conservative...
to Tag Hamas as "Terrorist" While CBS and NBC reporters were willing Thursday night to outright tag, without any qualifiers or attributions to others, Hamas as a "terrorist" group, for the second night in a row, ABC's World News Tonight distanced itself from the term -- even avoiding it during a friendly profile of a terrorist. ABC anchor Bob Woodruff teased from Jerusalem: "Tonight, a monumental shake-up in the Middle East. Hamas declared the winner of the Palestinian elections. The U.S. calls them terrorists." But that was it for the label. Woodruff proceeded to refer to Hamas as "the militant Islamic group that calls for the destruction of Israel" and he conceded "there is no question that Hamas is more militant and more overtly Islamic than the secular leaders it defeated." Woodruff also noted that "through its military wing," Hamas "has led the fight against Israel," but he then put a nice and generous face on Hamas, adding that "through its charities" Hamas has "provided free schooling, medicine and food." Following his opening story on the election victory by Hamas, Woodruff set up a piece on how "one of its most-celebrated figures," a woman who won a seat, "is a mother who sent her sons to their deaths." With "A Bombers' Mother" as the on-screen tag, Wilf Dinnick provided a non-judgmental look at how "Palestinians voted for Miriam Farahat because she's made astonishing sacrifices in her quest to destroy Israel. Farahat has sent three of her six sons on suicide missions. That's why her supporters call her Um Nidal, the 'Mother of the Struggle.'" Without ever calling her or her murdering sons either "murderers" or "terrorists," Dinnick concluded with her "sacrifice" for the cause: "Today, she vowed to do whatever Hamas asks of her. 'I am ready to serve,' she says. And if that means sacrificing her three remaining sons, Um Nidal says she's willing." [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] (Good Morning America tri-host Robin Roberts apparently didn't get the memo about not calling Hamas "terrorist." At the top of the 8am half hour on Thursday's GMA, the MRC's Brian Boyd noticed, Roberts reported: "Big news while you were sleeping. Overnight the stunning results in the Palestinian election. Surprise victory for the terror group Hamas." But seconds later, news reader Kate Snow returned the show to Woodruff-mode as she distanced herself from the description: "A stunning upset this morning in the Middle East. Hamas, which the U.S. considers a terrorist group, looks to be the big winner in the Palestinian parliamentary elections.") A promo, aired during Thursday's World News Tonight, touted Woodruff's insights: "Right at the moment history is made in the Middle East, Bob Woodruff is again right there. The only network news anchor on the scene with the unmatched reporting you can only get by being there, live inside the story." On the January 26 CBS Evening News, anchor Bob Schieffer echoed Woodruff as he cited "Hamas, which the United States brands a terrorist organization." But from the Palestinian territories, CBS reporter David Hawkins didn't hesitate to refer to "the terrorist group's landslide win." NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams declared outright in his tease: "The terrorist group Hamas wins the Palestinian elections." Introducing his lead story, Williams reported that "the Palestinian elections had defied the exit polls and swung the other way to Hamas, a terrorist group." NBC reporter Martin Flectcher described Hamas as "Islamic militants" and as "a fundamentalist Muslim group devoted to the destruction of Israel."
On Wednesday's World News Tonight, Woodruff asserted: "Hamas, which the U.S. calls a terrorist organization..." See: www.mediaresearch.org Transcripts from Thursday night, January 26 coverage of Hamas, with the ABC transcripts provided by Brad Wilmouth, who corrected the closed-captioning against the video:
# CBS Evening News. Bob Schieffer's lead:
Woodruff moved directly to a second story: "Hamas, in the past, has used suicide bombings to devastating effect. And one of its most-celebrated figures is a mother who sent her sons to their deaths. Tonight, she is an elected official. Here's ABC's Wilf Dinnick."
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Backing of Eavesdropping
Despite the decision by the editors of CBSNews.com not to highlight the finding in a new CBS News/New York Times poll, of how 61 percent believe President Bush authorized wiretaps in order to "fight terrorism," with just 29 percent saying he did it just to "expand the powers of the presidency," on Thursday's CBS Evening News John Roberts alerted viewers to the finding. Roberts relayed: "On the NSA spying program, President Bush went into today's press conference with a boost. A new CBS News/New York Times poll found 61 percent of Americans believe the eavesdropping is meant to fight terror and the majority support that [53 percent back Bush authorizing wiretaps]." When Roberts ended his piece, anchor Bob Schieffer marveled at how "it looks to me as if the President has decided to make this a political issue to show that he is strong in the fight against terrorism and perhaps the Democrats are weak. And I must say, looking at that poll, he may be succeeding."
For the CBSNews.com article on the poll: www.cbsnews.com [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Joining, in progress, Roberts' January 26 story on the Bush press conference, as he arrived at the poll numbers which were displayed on screen:
Roberts: "On the NSA spying program, President Bush went into today's press conference with a boost. A new CBS News/New York Times poll found 61 percent of Americans believe the eavesdropping is meant to fight terror [compared to 29 percent who said "expand presidential power"] and the majority support that [53 percent back Bush authorizing wiretaps]. The President insisted again today he's on solid legal ground and was skeptical about increasing talk in Congress to write new laws covering the program."
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Bush "Lies" In His Bubble Appearing on Keith Olbermann's Thursday January 26 Countdown show on MSNBC, while comparing President Bush's words on his NSA wiretapping program with Bill Clinton's "lying," New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd made known her view that she found Bill Clinton's lying "poignant and endearing" because "when Bill Clinton would deceive, he would throw in a semantic clue that let you know he was deceiving." She further added that "He would let you know he was lying, and then the right wing would come down so hard on him and over-punish him." Regarding Bush's citation of Iraq's liberation as a major justification for the war in the absence of WMD, Dowd pontificated that "you cannot do things that start with a lie, and they just lead to trouble down the road." [This item, by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth, was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your views, go to: newsbusters.org ] The segment started as Olbermann brought aboard Dowd to discuss Oprah Winfrey's apology for pushing discredited author James Frey's fraudulent book. The Countdown host drew parallels between Oprah's apology on her show earlier in the day and Bush's almost simultaneous news conference to answer critics of his controversial NSA spying program. When Olbermann turned his attention to Bush's news conference, he implied that Bush should perhaps apologize for the NSA program: "Maureen, right now, we want to look at a televised event in which nothing close to an apology was even hinted at." After playing clips from the news conference, including Bush's awkward response to one question, Olbermann quipped that "the President will never know that he writes part of my newscast for me every night" and that "it sounded as if the burden of his version of what the definition of 'is' is got to be too much for him today, and he was ready to punt on that one." Olbermann later mocked the administration's attempts to emphasize the international nature of the eavesdropping, posing the question: "Is not the whole idea of this definition, international versus domestic, is this not by itself a red herring? I mean, you could call it intergalactic spying, and the issue is the legality, not the name, right?" Dowd argued that the reason the administration is trying to expand presidential power is because Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld "felt emasculated" when, during their time in the Ford administration, presidential powers were shrunk. Olbermann then moved on to wonder if former President Clinton had somehow set a precedent for Bush's conduct: "Who has enabled this? I mean, in a perverse way, is it almost necessary to say that Bill Clinton paved the way for George Bush to conduct a kind of fingers-in-his-ears, shout la-la-la-la-la presidency?" Dowd then got her chance to compliment Clinton's style of deception: "No, they're two entirely different things because when Bill Clinton would deceive, he would throw in a semantic clue that let you know he was deceiving. 'I did not have sexual relations with that woman.' We knew what he meant by that. You know, 'I did not,' about dope, 'I didn't break the laws of this country.' So it was sort of poignant and endearing. He would let you know he was lying, and then the right wing would come down so hard on him and over-punish him. And in the case of Bush, he's just in a completely different reality. You know, they call us the 'reality-based community,' and they create their own reality, and so Bush is just in a bubble. And when you're in the bubble, you don't know you're in the bubble." Concluding her appearance, Dowd more directly accused Bush of lying as she contrasted Oprah's initial defense of the discredited Frey with Bush's defense of the Iraq invasion after the failure to find WMD: "When Oprah was clinging to supporting Frey, she was doing it for the reason of emotional truth, that millions of people could be helped by his story of redemption. And Bush, with Iraq, said that we, even if it turned out not to be true, the reasons we went to war, it was right because millions of Iraqis would be liberated. But you cannot, you know, do things that start with a lie, and they just lead to trouble down the road." Below is a transcript of relevant portions of the January 26 Countdown show:
Olbermann, at about 8:06pm EST: "And what happens to the two careers here? What happens now to Oprah Winfrey's credibility? What happens to what's left of James Frey's credibility?"
Olbermann, at about 8:09pm EST: "Maureen, right now, we want to look at a televised event in which nothing close to an apology was even hinted at, so if you would stand by for a second, we'll get your reaction to this, but let me first give the headline. The President unexpectedly stepping up to the White House Press Room podium today in day four of the high-intensity push to tamp down the controversy over the warrantless domestic spying or, as the White House calls it, the 'international spying,' on phone calls and e-mails that either began or finished inside this country. 'The program is legal,' the President said. 'It's designed to protect civil liberties, and it's not domestic. Not, not, not.'"
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at CBS News" Catching up with a claim from a couple of weeks ago, on Tim Russert's weekend CNBC show back on January 14, CBS's Mike Wallace, who said that he voted for Richard Nixon in 1960 and 1968, insisted that "I was the house conservative at CBS News for a while." If he's what people at CBS consider conservative... The MRC's Geoff Dickens caught this exchange on the program which runs Saturday nights at 7pm, 10pm and 1am EST:
Tim Russert: "Did you find him [Richard Nixon], in his own way, more personable than Jack Kennedy in terms of one-on-one conversations?" I guess CBS hasn't had a "house conservative" since 1968. -- Brent Baker ![]()
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