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1. ABC's Robin Roberts Tosses Softballs to Obama While Bashing Bush Interviewing Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama in New Orleans on Monday's Good Morning America, co-host Robin Roberts tossed softballs to Obama as she asserted that politicians from "both parties" would be coming to the formerly hurricane ravaged region to "point out the Bush administration's shortcomings in fixing many problems that still exist, like those being forced to still live in trailers." While the ABC co-host didn't explain who was forcing the residents to live in trailers, she did offer the 2008 Democratic candidate a comfortable interview where the only tough questions came from the left. GMA guest co-host Bill Weir teased the segment by optimistically spinning Obama's "plan to bring New Orleans back." Roberts proceeded to ask the Senator about friendly topics, such as his desire to "reach out to Republicans." In fact, the only time she challenged the candidate was with a query from the left. Responding to Obama's goal of forcing insurance companies to pay into a national disaster reserve, she complained, "A lot of people are going to say, 'Senator Obama, the insurance company, they have laid many roadblocks, many people think, in this recovery role.' Is it realistic to think that they would be a part of something like this?" 2. Clift Frets Over 'Refusal to Let Government Spend Any Money' Add Newsweek's Eleanor Clift to the list of journalists who ludicrously believe adversity to tax hikes have left the nation unable to repair infrastructure. On the McLaughlin Group over the weekend, she blamed crumbling infrastructure on how "now we have this tax-averse society, rallied by the Republicans, tax-averse where everything becomes sort of a right-wing, libertarian refusal to let government spend any money or raise any money." Conservatives would wish. 3. Abrams on CNN Series: 'Shameful Advocacy Masked as Journalism' On Monday's MSNBC Live with Dan Abrams, host and MSNBC General Manager Abrams attacked CNN's God's Warriors series for "a defense of Islamic fundamentalism and the worst type of moral relativism," and as "shameful advocacy masked as journalism," quipping that series host Christiane Amanpour "avoided getting bogged down in objectivity." Abrams further took exception with Amanpour for comparing those who support Israel's defense strategy to Muslim terrorists: "Christians and Jews, for example, who support Israel's strategy for self-defense are just as much God's warriors, according to Amanpour, as the Islamic radicals who blow themselves and others up in an effort to destroy the world as we know it." 4. CNN's Bernard Shaw Blames Racism for Illegal Immigration Debate During an August 6 interview, posted online, with Television Week, former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw blamed racism for the debate over whether illegal immigrants should be in the country as he referred to "some people who still believe that people of color are not needed in this country." In response to a question about diversity in the newsroom, Shaw contended that "each generation fights the same battle, only it becomes more subtle, more sophisticated, but it's still a war" before tying in the illegal immigration debate. Without using the word "illegal" in referring to illegal immigrants, he seemed surprised that some would want to enforce immigration laws: "Look at the immigration battle right now. We have about 13 million people who have been living in this country for years, raising their children, educating them, and there's actually an argument about whether they should be here. They are here, and they are a vital part of the American fabric." 5. Saunders Discredits Media-Hyped Slam on Conservative Intellect FNC's Brit Hume on Monday night picked up on a column by the San Francisco Chronicle's Debra Saunders which discredited the media spin on an AP/Ipsos poll that found liberals read one more book a year than conservatives, a finding Pat Schroeder, President of the American Association of Publishers claimed illustrated how conservatives can't think beyond slogans. The AP and CNN's Jack Cafferty both jumped on Schroeder's slam. Hume noted that Saunders "says Ipsos told her the one book difference between liberals and conservatives is within the poll's margin of error and not statistically significant. The company also said that since the poll did not ask respondents if they read newspapers or magazines, it does not, therefore, say anything about their general level of knowledge or information." 6. AccuWeather's Bastardi: Intense Hurricanes Part of Natural Cycle On the Tuesday, August 21 The O'Reilly Factor on FNC, AccuWeather senior meteorologist Joe Bastardi poured cold water on claims that a global warming trend has been the cause of hurricanes of increased intensity as he contended that the Northern Hemisphere similarly saw periods of increased hurricane activity in past decades, going back to the 1890s: "We're back in the '30's, '40's and 50's. This back and forth cycle that occurs, we saw it in the 1890s to 1910....And people are just getting carried away and fascinated when, if they go back and look at what happened before, you can see the similarities." 7. Letterman's 'Top Ten Reasons Alberto Gonzales Resigned' Letterman's "Top Ten Reasons Alberto Gonzales Resigned." ABC's Robin Roberts Tosses Softballs to Obama While Bashing Bush Interviewing Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama in New Orleans on Monday's Good Morning America, co-host Robin Roberts tossed softballs to Obama as she asserted that politicians from "both parties" would be coming to the formerly hurricane ravaged region to "point out the Bush administration's shortcomings in fixing many problems that still exist, like those being forced to still live in trailers." While the ABC co-host didn't explain who was forcing the residents to live in trailers, she did offer the 2008 Democratic candidate a comfortable interview where the only tough questions came from the left. GMA guest co-host Bill Weir teased the segment by optimistically spinning Obama's "plan to bring New Orleans back." Roberts proceeded to ask the Senator about friendly topics, such as his desire to "reach out to Republicans." In fact, the only time she challenged the candidate was with a query from the left. Responding to Obama's goal of forcing insurance companies to pay into a national disaster reserve, she complained, "A lot of people are going to say, 'Senator Obama, the insurance company, they have laid many roadblocks, many people think, in this recovery role.' Is it realistic to think that they would be a part of something like this?" [This item, by Scott Whitlock, was posted Monday afternoon on the MRC's blog, Newsbusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Roberts also failed to ask the Senator about his wife's now-very much disputed comment that "if you can't run your own house, you can't run the White House." (The Obama camp has vociferously denied this to be an attack on Hillary Clinton.) Wouldn't the subject at least warrant a mention though? Finally, it must also be noted that co-host Weir asserted that New Orleans has only received $6 billion in federal aide to rebuild. (However, the federal government has actually allocated $114 billion for the entire area effected by Katrina. See: www.foxnews.com ) A transcript of the segment, which aired at 7:08am on August 27: Bill Weir teased: "And as the second anniversary of Katrina approaches, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is speaking out on his plan to bring New Orleans back. Robin Roberts talks to him in an exclusive interview."
Bill Weir: "Turning now to the politics of Hurricane Katrina. This week's two year anniversary has made New Orleans a political magnet for so many presidential candidates and many of them will make a campaign stop in the Crescent City there this week and here is what they'll find two years in: $6 billion in federal aid has gone to clean-up and rebuilding. 256 miles of that city's flood wall system is now working, but they have another 100 miles to rebuild. And only about seven percent of the residents in the devastated lower ninth ward have come home, less than a 1000 people in that neighborhood. Robin Roberts is in the Crescent City this morning for an exclusive interview with one of those presidential hopefuls, Senator Barack Obama. Robin, good morning."
Clift Frets Over 'Refusal to Let Government Spend Any Money' Add Newsweek's Eleanor Clift to the list of journalists who ludicrously believe adversity to tax hikes have left the nation unable to repair infrastructure. On the McLaughlin Group over the weekend, she blamed crumbling infrastructure on how "now we have this tax-averse society, rallied by the Republicans, tax-averse where everything becomes sort of a right-wing, libertarian refusal to let government spend any money or raise any money." Conservatives would wish.
In fact, as the Heritage Foundation's Brian Reidl outlined in a March report, "in 2006, inflation-adjusted federal spending topped $23,000 per household for the first time since World War II" as "federal spending has increased by 42% (23% after inflation) since 2001" and "defense and homeland security are responsible for just above one-third of all new spending since 2001." So it's hardly as if the federal government, with an annual budget of $2.6 trillion, is starved for money. It's just being spent on adding a prescription entitlement to Medicare ($822 billion over ten years) instead of highways ($286 billion over six years). PDF of Reidl's report: www.heritage.org
In a discussion prompted by the early August bridge collapse in Minnesota, Clift whined on the McLaughlin Group aired over the August 24-27 weekend, but probably taped a week or two earlier to provide a vacation for John McLaughlin:
Abrams on CNN Series: 'Shameful Advocacy Masked as Journalism' On Monday's MSNBC Live with Dan Abrams, host and MSNBC General Manager Abrams attacked CNN's God's Warriors series for "a defense of Islamic fundamentalism and the worst type of moral relativism," and as "shameful advocacy masked as journalism," quipping that series host Christiane Amanpour "avoided getting bogged down in objectivity." Abrams further took exception with Amanpour for comparing those who support Israel's defense strategy to Muslim terrorists: "Christians and Jews, for example, who support Israel's strategy for self-defense are just as much God's warriors, according to Amanpour, as the Islamic radicals who blow themselves and others up in an effort to destroy the world as we know it." After contending that Amanpour attempted to "understand" violent Muslim fundamentalists without trying to "understand" evangelical Christians and Israelis, Abrams played a clip of Amanpour in which she "blames the warrior Jews" for the anger of radical Muslims. Amanpour: "Muslims, like people everywhere, abhor terrorism. The small minority who resorts to violence is symptomatic of something many of us have failed to understand: the impact of God's Jewish warriors goes far beyond these rocky hills. The Jewish settlements have inflamed much of the Muslim world." [This item, by Brad Wilmouth, was posted Tuesday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Abrams soon brought aboard Muslim author Asma Hasan, Air America host Reverend Wilton Gaddy, and terrorism analyst Steve Emerson for a discussion of the topic, during which Emerson labeled the CNN series as "the most unfair series" and "the most dishonest series on television that I've seen in my 20 years of reporting or covering terrorism." Emerson further criticized Amanpour for not showing examples of violent Muslim extremists in Europe such as the Madrid and London bombings, and for portraying Jews and Christians as "demons." Emerson: "I thought that, in part, the actual dogma of this series actually focused mainly on Jews and Christians as being the demons, and in fact, one could accuse her of actually engaging in anti-Christian and anti-Semitic behavior by the selection of facts she chose to choose." Abrams showed a clip of Amanpour speaking to Christian youth leader Ron Luce of Teen Mania Ministries during which she contended that campus rules prohibiting female students from wearing short skirts and prohibiting male students from using the Internet without supervision reminded her of "totalitarian regimes," and compared the female dress code to what the Taliban did. Amanpour: "But that's what the Taliban said. They kept women in their house because men couldn't be trusted around them." (For more on the six-hour series aired last week and again over the weekend, see the August 27 CyberAlert item, "CNN's 'God's Warriors' Reflects MSM's Bias Against 'Big 3' Faiths," online at: www.mrc.org ) Below is a transcript of relevant portions of the Monday, August 27 MSNBC Live with Dan Abrams:
DAN ABRAMS: For the past week, CNN has been proudly promoting and then celebrating its series called God's Warriors, presumably a look at radicals of different religions willing to fight for their cause. My take: I think it's fair to say it was not what it claimed or promised to be. ...
Before we talk about some of this other stuff, Asma, what do you think about the comments that I just made? ...
ABRAMS: Reverend Gaddy, let me ask you this. Let me play this piece of sound for you where, again, Christiane Amanpour compares some of the fundamentalist Christians to the Taliban. And I want to ask you if you think this is a fair comparison. ...
ABRAMS: Steve Emerson, I want to play you this piece of sound. It's a final one. ... And this is again suggesting, let's listen, and then we'll talk about it.
CNN's Bernard Shaw Blames Racism for Illegal Immigration Debate During an August 6 interview, posted online, with Television Week, former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw blamed racism for the debate over whether illegal immigrants should be in the country as he referred to "some people who still believe that people of color are not needed in this country." In response to a question about diversity in the newsroom, Shaw contended that "each generation fights the same battle, only it becomes more subtle, more sophisticated, but it's still a war" before tying in the illegal immigration debate. Without using the word "illegal" in referring to illegal immigrants, he seemed surprised that some would want to enforce immigration laws: "Look at the immigration battle right now. We have about 13 million people who have been living in this country for years, raising their children, educating them, and there's actually an argument about whether they should be here. They are here, and they are a vital part of the American fabric." [This item, by Brad Wilmouth, was posted Saturday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of Television Week's interview with Shaw, as posted on their Web site, from August 6:
TELEVISION WEEK question: "What is the state of diversity in the newsroom today?"
For the interview in full: www.tvweek.com
Saunders Discredits Media-Hyped Slam on Conservative Intellect FNC's Brit Hume on Monday night picked up on a column by the San Francisco Chronicle's Debra Saunders which discredited the media spin on an AP/Ipsos poll that found liberals read one more book a year than conservatives, a finding Pat Schroeder, President of the American Association of Publishers claimed illustrated how conservatives can't think beyond slogans. The AP and CNN's Jack Cafferty both jumped on Schroeder's slam. Hume noted that Saunders "says Ipsos told her the one book difference between liberals and conservatives is within the poll's margin of error and not statistically significant. The company also said that since the poll did not ask respondents if they read newspapers or magazines, it does not, therefore, say anything about their general level of knowledge or information." [This item was posted Monday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Last Tuesday, the AP distributed a story with Schroeder's comments, "Book Chief: Conservatives Want Slogans." Al Fram's dispatch began: Liberals read more books than conservatives. The head of the book publishing industry's trade group says she knows why -- and there's little flattering about conservative readers in her explanation. "The Karl Roves of the world have built a generation that just wants a couple slogans: 'No, don't raise my taxes, no new taxes,'" Pat Schroeder, president of the American Association of Publishers, said in a recent interview. "It's pretty hard to write a book saying, 'No new taxes, no new taxes, no new taxes' on every page." Schroeder, who as a Colorado Democrat was once one of Congress' most liberal House members, was responding to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll that found people who consider themselves liberals are more prodigious book readers than conservatives.... END of Excerpt
For the AP article in full, as posted by Breitbart: www.breitbart.com For the August 23 CyberAlert article: www.mrc.org
Hume's "Grapevine" item in full on the August 27 Special Report with Brit Hume: An excerpt from the August 26 San Francisco Chronicle column by Debra Saunders, "Bookless versus clueless," which the DrudgeReport.com had showcased on Sunday: WHEN a new Associated Press-Ipsos poll found, as reported by the Associated Press, that "liberals read more books than conservatives," the president of the American Association of Publishers promptly shoved her foot in her mouth. Pat Schroeder, the former Democratic congresswoman from Colorado, proclaimed, "The Karl Roves of the world have built a generation that just wants a couple of slogans: 'No, don't raise my taxes, no new taxes.' It's pretty hard to write a book saying, 'No new taxes, no new taxes, no new taxes,' on every page." She also told AP that liberals "can't say anything in less than paragraphs. We really want the whole picture, want to peel the onion." Maybe you shouldn't pay any attention to me. According to Schroeder, as a conservative, I've got a bumper sticker for brains. Silly me, I looked into the poll -- which liberals have hailed as proof of their intellectual superiority -- and there's not a lot there in "the whole picture." The poll found that among people polled who read at least one book in the last year, liberals read nine books and conservatives read eight. When I called Michael Gross, associate vice president of Ipsos public affairs, to find out more about the Ipsos poll, he told me the one-book difference "is within the margin of error, it's not a statistically significant difference." The poll also found that moderates who said they read at least one book a year, on average, read five books a year. By Schroeder's lights, moderates must be really simple-minded sloganeers. As a conservative, I am not proud to read that 34 percent of conservatives -- as opposed to 22 percent of liberals and moderates -- said they had read a book within the last year. Then again, because the poll did not ask people if they read newspapers or magazines, Gross noted, "I don't think it says anything about people's general level of information." Then there's the quality issue. A person could read nine romance novels in a year and qualify as Aristotelian by Schroeder's logic.... While she berated conservatives for buying into slogans, she flaunted her prejudices. Her idea of thinking in paragraphs: Not letting facts get in the way. END of Excerpt
For the Saunders column in full: www.sfgate.com
AccuWeather's Bastardi: Intense Hurricanes Part of Natural Cycle On the Tuesday, August 21 The O'Reilly Factor on FNC, AccuWeather senior meteorologist Joe Bastardi poured cold water on claims that a global warming trend has been the cause of hurricanes of increased intensity as he contended that the Northern Hemisphere similarly saw periods of increased hurricane activity in past decades, going back to the 1890s: "We're back in the '30's, '40's and 50's. This back and forth cycle that occurs, we saw it in the 1890s to 1910....And people are just getting carried away and fascinated when, if they go back and look at what happened before, you can see the similarities." After getting his guest to give a summary of the latest on Hurricane Dean, FNC host Bill O'Reilly turned the discussion to global warming: "Of course, environmentalists are going to say this is global warming. And is the fact that the waters are warmer, is that going to make it a tougher fall for hurricanes for the USA?" In his response, Bastardi brought up harsh hurricane seasons from earlier in the century: "We've seen this before. And I coined this term 'time of climatic hardship' because we are back in the 30's, 40's and 50's as far as the overall climate pattern in the Northern Hemisphere. You see, we've seen this before. The problem is a lot of people don't go back and look at those type of things." He soon noted the hurricane that hit New York City in 1938 as he predicted history will likely repeat itself somewhat soon: "You, as a Long Island boy, must have heard tales from your father about the '38 hurricane on Long Island. And that's what we're looking at, and the potential for that type of thing down the road. But if it happens, if it happens again, and I do think it is going to happen within our lifetime, and probably sooner rather than later, some kind of big storm like that, people will go out of their minds. Yet it was there before." Bastardi concluded with his contention that similar cycles occurred in the later 19th to early 20th century, and that in modern times scientists are more able to measure the changes: "We're back in the '30's, '40's and 50's. This back and forth cycle that occurs, we saw it in the 1890s to 1910. But we couldn't measure it then. So we're measuring it now with all these great instruments. And people are just getting carried away and fascinated when, if they go back and look at what happened before, you can see the similarities." [This item, by Brad Wilmouth, was posted Saturday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] A transcript of relevant portions from the Tuesday, August 21 The O'Reilly Factor:
BILL O'REILLY: Now, I understand the water temperatures surrounding the East Coast of the USA are four to five degrees warmer than usual. Bio page for Bastardi at the State College, Pennsylvania-based AccuWeather: www.accuweather.com
Letterman's 'Top Ten Reasons Alberto Gonzales Resigned' From the August 27 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top Ten Reasons Alberto Gonzales Resigned." Late Show home page: www.cbs.com 10. Felt he wasn't incompetent enough for the Bush administration 9. Secretly ordered himself to fire himself 8. Was offered the John Travolta role in the touring production of "Hairspray" 7. Trying his hand at failing miserably in the private sector 6. Didn't want to be around for transition to the Kucinich administration 5. Instead of terrorism, trying to keep Lindsay and Paris off the streets 4. Got a sweet new job at Kinko's 3. Letterman has a guy making a sand sculpture of Biff Henderson 2. Ran out of laws to circumvent 1. Why not go out on top?
-- Brent Baker
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