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1. Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War' Charles Gibson's interview with Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, the first since her selection, not surprisingly focused mostly on pressing her to prove she's qualified for the job and quizzing her about foreign policy issues. He suggested her willingness to unhesitatingly accept John McCain's offer demonstrated "hubris" and he delved into what he described as her "provocative comments" on the Iraq war being part of "God's plan." When he seemingly caught her unaware of the definition of the "Bush Doctrine," he outlined its tenets without embarrassing her, yet he also veered close to condescension in asking if she had "ever travel[ed] outside the country" and: "Have you ever met a foreign head of state?" Gibson began the World News excerpt with what he termed "the central question," namely: "Can you look the country in the eye and say 'I have the experience and I have the ability to be not just Vice President, but perhaps President?'" Gibson paraphrased her as saying "our national leaders are sending U.S. soldiers on a task that is from God." He demanded: "Are we fighting a holy war?" Unconvinced by her answer about how she only meant, as Lincoln urged, "let us pray that we are on God's side," Gibson pounced: "But you went on and said, 'There is a plan and it is God's plan.'" He soon followed up again: "Are you sending your son on a task that is from God?" 2. Part 2: Gibson Pushes Palin to Concede Global Warming 'Man-Made' ABC's Charles Gibson pressed Sarah Palin repeatedly, in a fresh interview excerpt aired on Thursday's Nightline, to cry uncle and concede global warming is "man-made" -- but even when she did he wasn't satisfied and pushed for more of a mea culpa. Gibson presumed not believing global warming is "man-made" is some kind of shameful oddity as he wondered: "Do you still believe that global warming is not man-made?" Palin offered that "I believe that man's activities certainly can be contributing to the issue of global warming," but that wasn't enough for Gibson, who held up John McCain as the oracle and lectured: "But it's a critical point as to whether or not this is man-made. He says it is. You have said in the past it's not." To which Palin promised "John McCain and I are gonna be working on what we do about it." Still not satisfied, Gibson argued: "Yes, but isn't it critical as to whether or not it's man-made, because what you do about it depends on whether its man-made?" Palin repeated herself ("That is why I'm attributing some of man's activities to potentially causing some of the changes in the climate"), which finally led Gibson, "color me a cynic," to gloat "it sounds to me like you're adapting your position to Senator McCain's." 3. ABC's John Berman Suggests Palin Politicizing Son's Iraq Service On Thursday's Good Morning America, reporter John Berman raised the issue of whether Alaska Governor Sarah Palin was politicizing her son's military service. Observing that Governor Palin would be giving a speech later in the day at a deployment ceremony to send her son off to Iraq, Berman critiqued: "And it [the speech] will be open to television cameras. It's such a drastic difference, from the way her own running mate John McCain handled his own son's deployment." A few seconds later, Berman again referenced the deviations between McCain's son Jimmy, also in the military, and Palin's child. "Jimmy's six-month deployment came and went with hardly any public notice. Why? Because John McCain never mentioned it on the stump." He added: "That stands in stark contrast to what Governor Sarah Palin told more than 40 million viewers about her son during the Republican convention last week." 4. Barbara Walters: Palin 'Had Such a Glorious Ride with the Media' What media outlets are the ladies of ABC's The View watching? After Joy Behar the previous day spoke of an alleged media love affair with Sarah Palin, Barbara Walters echoed Joy's charge on Thursday's show. Responding to Joy Behar's statement that a "Bush operative" wrote Palin's speech, Elisabeth Hasselbeck noted the media's double standard in that they never inquired as to who wrote Obama's speech. Barbara Walters then jumped in and exclaimed that Governor Palin has "had a glorious ride with the media." Elisabeth Hasselbeck sarcastically responded: "It was glorious when they attacked her daughter too." 5. Women at McCain-Palin Event 'Recoil' from New York Times Reporter A New York Times reporter told two women at a McCain rally who considered the paper to be biased: "You have to read the New York Times. Don't just listen to what Bill O'Reilly says." Jennifer Rubin of Commentary magazine had a great on-the-ground report from Wednesday's McCain-Palin rally in Fairfax, Va., in which an anonymous Times reporter (who could be Elisabeth Bumiller) demonstrated why many Americans don't trust the paper. Rubin was in the designated media area next to "a well-known New York Times reporter" who was trying to get some interviews with the pro-McCain crowd, when Rubin overheard the flustered reporter trying to convince the women, who "recoiled" when they heard she was from the New York Times, to talk to her. Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War' Charles Gibson's interview with Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, the first since her selection, not surprisingly focused mostly on pressing her to prove she's qualified for the job and quizzing her about foreign policy issues. While Gibson certainly treated her with more respect than would have many other national media figures, he did suggest her willingness to unhesitatingly accept John McCain's offer demonstrated "hubris" and he delved into what he described as her "provocative comments" on the Iraq war being part of "God's plan." When he seemingly caught her unaware of the definition of the "Bush Doctrine," he outlined its tenets without embarrassing her, yet he also veered close to condescension in asking if she had "ever travel[ed] outside the country" and: "Have you ever met a foreign head of state?" Gibson began the World News excerpt, of the session recorded in Fairbanks, with what he termed "the central question," namely: "Can you look the country in the eye and say 'I have the experience and I have the ability to be not just Vice President, but perhaps President of the United States of America?'" When she denied any hesitation about her abilities, Gibson asserted: "Doesn't that take some hubris?" After she cited her energy expertise, he countered: "National security is a whole lot more than energy." He moved on to quizzing her about how, if the U.S. followed her advice to admit Ukraine and Georgia into NATO, "wouldn't we then have to go to war if Russia went into Georgia?", whether she'd let Israel attack Iran and if she would approve of cross-border raids into Pakistan. That segment consumed the first ten minutes or so of World News which ended with another interview excerpt in which Gibson paraphrased her as saying in June that "our national leaders are sending U.S. soldiers on a task that is from God." After supporting You Tube video of Palin, Gibson demanded: "Are we fighting a holy war?" Unconvinced by her answer about how she only meant, as Lincoln urged, "let us pray that we are on God's side," Gibson pounced: "But you went on and said, 'There is a plan and it is God's plan.'" He soon followed up again: "Are you sending your son on a task that is from God?" [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Plugging that second segment after the first one, Gibson declared: "Governor Palin made some provocative comments about the war in a recent appearance at an Alaskan church." This first interview was dedicated to national security. A second session, to be/which has been done since the first one will deal with other topics and these and other excerpts will air on Thursday's Nightline as well as Friday on Good Morning America, World News and 20/20. ABCNews.com has posted a story about the interview, with video clip: abcnews.go.com Another ABCNews.com page has a transcript of much of the interview, including portions which did not air on World News, but is missing some of what aired: abcnews.go.com Below is my corrected transcript of what ran on the Thursday, September 11 World News. This first segment aired over about the first ten minutes of the newscast and includes a couple of paragraphs that are not part of the posted transcript and, again, matches the editing of what aired and so does not include all of what ABC posted online:
CHARLES GIBSON: Governor, let me start by asking you a question that I asked John McCain about you, and it is really the central question. Can you look the country in the eye and say "I have the experience and I have the ability to be not just Vice President, but perhaps President of the United States of America?" Interview segment at the end of the newscast:
GIBSON: You said recently, in your old church, "Our national leaders are sending U.S. soldiers on a task that is from God."
Part 2: Gibson Pushes Palin to Concede Global Warming 'Man-Made' ABC's Charles Gibson pressed Sarah Palin repeatedly, in a fresh interview excerpt aired on Thursday's Nightline, to cry uncle and concede global warming is "man-made" -- but even when she did he wasn't satisfied and pushed for more of a mea culpa. Nightline, which made "War, God and Oil" the on-screen header for excerpts from Gibson's interviews, began with a slightly longer version of what World News carried earlier, mostly about foreign policy, followed by new video from a second interview Gibson conducted as the two walked alongside the Trans-Alaska oil pipeline. Gibson presumed not believing global warming is "man-made" is some kind of shameful oddity as he wondered: "Do you still believe that global warming is not man-made?" Palin offered that "I believe that man's activities certainly can be contributing to the issue of global warming," but that wasn't enough for Gibson, who held up John McCain as the oracle and lectured: "But it's a critical point as to whether or not this is man-made. He says it is. You have said in the past it's not." To which Palin promised "John McCain and I are gonna be working on what we do about it." Still not satisfied, Gibson argued: "Yes, but isn't it critical as to whether or not it's man-made, because what you do about it depends on whether its man-made?" Palin repeated herself ("That is why I'm attributing some of man's activities to potentially causing some of the changes in the climate"), which finally led Gibson, "color me a cynic," to gloat "it sounds to me like you're adapting your position to Senator McCain's." Palin, the Republican VP nominee, rejected his premise: "I think you are a cynic because show me where I have ever said that there's absolute proof that nothing that man has ever conducted or engaged in has had any affect, or no affect, on climate change?" Gibson moved on to how Palin and McCain "agree to disagree" on drilling in ANWR. Will Gibson ever push McCain to adapt to Palin's pro-drilling position? [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted late Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Anchor Martin Bashir introduced the program: "War, God and Oil: What does this relative unknown, who soon could be just a heartbeat from the presidency, think about the key issues facing America today?" ABCNews.com transcript of most of what aired on Nightline from Gibson's second interview with Palin: abcnews.go.com My earlier NewsBusters post, "Gibson Accuses Palin of 'Hubris' and Seeing Iraq as 'a Holy War,'" with a complete rundown of what aired on Thursday's World News which was from Gibson's first session with Palin -- the same interview with which Nightline started. What aired on the September 11 Nightline from Gibson's interview with Palin conducted as the two walked beside the oil pipeline near Fairbanks, picking up after Gibson asked her about where her proposed gas pipeline would run:
CHARLES GIBSON: Let me talk a little bit about environmental policy, because this interfaces with energy policy and you have some significant differences with John McCain. Do you still believe that global warming is not man-made?
ABC's John Berman Suggests Palin Politicizing Son's Iraq Service On Thursday's Good Morning America, reporter John Berman raised the issue of whether Alaska Governor Sarah Palin was politicizing her son's military service. Observing that Governor Palin would be giving a speech later in the day at a deployment ceremony to send her son off to Iraq, Berman critiqued: "And it [the speech] will be open to television cameras. It's such a drastic difference, from the way her own running mate John McCain handled his own son's deployment." A few seconds later, Berman again referenced the deviations between McCain's son Jimmy, also in the military, and Palin's child. "Jimmy's six-month deployment came and went with hardly any public notice. Why? Because John McCain never mentioned it on the stump." He added: "That stands in stark contrast to what Governor Sarah Palin told more than 40 million viewers about her son during the Republican convention last week." [This item, by the MRC's Scott Whitlock, was posted Thursday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Berman continued to make his point clear by citing John Nagl, a senior fellow at the Center for New America Security. He asserted that the Alaska governor's frequent references to her son's deployment date "impose, conceivably, some risks on the soldier and the unit." The ABC journalist went on to draw contrasts between Beau Biden, son of Democratic vice presidential candidate, and the Palins. (The younger Biden is also being sent to Iraq in the fall.) Berman insisted: "But many candidates say they don't want to politicize service and have held back on specifics like deployment dates because of safety concerns." Of course, a simple Google search finds many references to Beau Biden's deployment date: October 3, 2008. See this Washington Post item: voices.washingtonpost.com It seems a bit odd to suggest that speeches by a politician would encourage terrorists to take extra initiative. A transcript of the segment, which aired at 7:05am on September 11:
ROBIN ROBERTS: And Governor Palin is there in Alaska to attend a deployment ceremony for her son, Private First Class Track Palin, whose army unit is heading to Iraq. In this election, the issue of the Iraq War, a deeply personal one for both the Republican and the Democratic tickets. And our John Berman has more on that now. Good morning.
Barbara Walters: Palin 'Had Such a Glorious Ride with the Media' What media outlets are the ladies of ABC's The View watching? After Joy Behar the previous day spoke of an alleged media love affair with Sarah Palin, Barbara Walters echoed Joy's charge on Thursday's show. Responding to Joy Behar's statement that a "Bush operative" wrote Palin's speech, Elisabeth Hasselbeck noted the media's double standard in that they never inquired as to who wrote Obama's speech. Barbara Walters then jumped in and exclaimed that Governor Palin has "had a glorious ride with the media." Elisabeth Hasselbeck sarcastically responded: "It was glorious when they attacked her daughter too." Sarah Palin's ride with the media has been anything but glorious. In Tuesday's "Worst of the Week" on the "Trashing of Sarah Palin, the MRC's Rich Noyes summarized the media's rough, often unfair treatment of the Alaska Governor: www.mrc.org [This item, by the MRC's Justin McCarthy, was adapted from the posting on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Barbara Walters dismissed such charges of anti-Palin bias, stating "the easiest thing to do is to blame the media." Curiously, Joy Behar, after essentially accusing Palin of being a Bush mouthpiece, joined Elisabeth Hasselbeck in charging sexism in the media. Behar humorously ended the segment declaring: "I want to be open minded." At the end of the first segment, after recounting where all of the co-hosts were on September 11, 2001, Barbara Walters, to an applauding audience, credited the Bush administration for keeping America safe for seven years. Joy Behar passively replied, "okay, we'll give him credit." Relevant portions of the September 11 program:
BARBARA WALTERS: And one more thing because we're very critical, all of us, of different candidates. And the country is very critical of George Bush. And we keep hearing that we're not prepared yet for terrorism. But whatever it is and however it happened, we've been, have not been attacked for seven years. So I think, I think maybe [applause] this is a day to give George Bush a little credit.
BEHAR: Her speech at the Republican Convention was written by a George Bush operative. ....
WALTERS: It's so easy, and maybe I feel this having done interviews with so many candidates. The easiest thing to do is to blame the media. It's sexist, it's that. You know, the woman had, the woman has captured the attention of this country and she does have a magnetic one to fill.
Women at McCain-Palin Event 'Recoil' from New York Times Reporter A New York Times reporter told two women at a McCain rally who considered the paper to be biased: "You have to read the New York Times. Don't just listen to what Bill O'Reilly says." Jennifer Rubin of Commentary magazine had a great on-the-ground report from Wednesday's McCain-Palin rally in Fairfax, Va., in which an anonymous Times reporter (who could be Elisabeth Bumiller) demonstrated why many Americans don't trust the paper. Rubin was in the designated media area next to "a well-known New York Times reporter" who was trying to get some interviews with the pro-McCain crowd, when Rubin overheard the flustered reporter trying to convince the women, who "recoiled" when they heard she was from the New York Times, to talk to her. [This item is adapted from a Thursday posting, on te MRC's TimesWatch site, by Clay Waters: www.timeswatch.org ] An excerpt from the September 10 posting on Commentary magazine's blog: When she told two middle-aged ladies that she was from the Times they recoiled. She breathlessly assured them that "editorial has nothing to do with the news." They stared blankly. She grabbed a copy of the Grey Lady from her bag, as if to point out that there were different pages for opinion and news. They looked skeptical. She pressed on, "Do you read the New York Times?" One of the ladies meekly replied, "I read about the New York Times." I began to chuckle softly. She turned, "Who do you write for? Why are you laughing?" I began to respond that her line was likely not effective with this crowd, but she interrupted, "I do this all the time." She then turned to her interviewee (who was now on the receiving end of a painful sales pitch) and continued, "You have to read the New York Times. Don't just listen to what Bill O'Reilly says." END of Excerpt For the blog post: www.commentarymagazine.com Bumiller's story in Thursday's Times on the rally only quoted one "real" person in the crowd, a man. The incredibly awkward metaphor that appeared in Bumiller's Wednesday evening online post was retained in the print version: "For now, Mr. McCain seems a happy captive in a hijacked campaign. Before Ms. Palin joined the ticket, he typically attracted crowds in the low hundreds for what his own aides admit were at times soporific events." See: www.nytimes.com
-- Brent Baker
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