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1. CBS: 'Down and Dirty' Palin Like Agnew w/ 'Nasty' Attack on Obama A week-and-half before he'll moderate the third and final presidential debate, CBS's Bob Schieffer opened Sunday's Face the Nation by calling a foul on one team as he took sides and denounced Sarah Palin's daring to say, that "our opponent is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own country," as a sign of "a campaign that's turned down and dirty," as well as "nasty," thanks to John McCain's "new attack dog" who "took after Barack Obama in a style reminiscent of Spiro Agnew when he was Richard Nixon's running mate." In the Washington press corps, a comparison to Agnew is no compliment. Later in the program, he fretted to New York Times columnist David Brooks: "Do you think it's going to get nastier and nastier? It does look as if McCain is really going on the attack. You saw what Sarah Palin said." Brooks assured Schieffer it would be an ineffective tactic. The AP's Douglass K. Daniel, in a Sunday "news analysis," alleged "her attack was unsubstantiated and carried a racially tinged subtext" since "in a post-Sept. 11 America, terrorists are envisioned as dark-skinned radical Muslims, not the homegrown anarchists of Ayers' day 40 years ago" and thus "portraying Obama as 'not like us' is another potential appeal to racism." 2. Newsweek's Thomas: Palin 'Has a Little Bit of Huey Long in Her' Evan Thomas, Editor at Large with Newsweek, on Friday night likened Sarah Palin to Louisiana's infamous demagogic Democrat of the 1920s, Huey Long. On Inside Washington, a weekly show produced and aired over the weekend by Washington, DC's ABC affiliate, but first broadcast Friday night on the local PBS station, Thomas reacted to Palin's suggestion in the VP debate that the Vice President has a legislative role: "Here's what's disturbing: Either she didn't know, because actually the legislative role is just about zero as Biden says, or scarier she has a little bit of Huey Long in her. The kind of -- you could see her being a demagogue, saying 'I got to do this, the rules are in the way, to heck with the rules, let's do it.'" 3. NBC's Today: After Week of Knocking Palin, No Debate 'Melt Down' All week leading up to Thursday night's debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin, NBC's Today show suggested that the Republican vice presidential nominee could be a disaster on stage, pointing out how "conservatives question her qualifications;" "the McCain campaign is worried;" "Palin stumbled again;" and "not ready for prime time." But on Friday morning, after Palin proved the hand-wringers wrong, co-host Matt Lauer suggested that the "melt down" expectations were never the right yardstick for pundits. Lauer asked Tom Brokaw: "Everything you read and hear about the debate this morning is going to say that Governor Palin exceeded expectations, but in your opinion did she exceed expectations simply because she didn't melt down on the stage or did she show the kind of grasp of the issues and the subjects required to hold the second highest job in the land?" 4. Post-Debate, Today Show Finds 'Undecided' Voters Against Palin Despite Today's earlier praise of Sarah Palin's debate performance, Amy Robach managed to assemble seven "undecided voters" (and reported that five voted for Bush) who did not express high opinions of the Alaska Governor. On the October 3 edition, Robach found women voters she identified as undecided and from key battleground states. Although the discussion began with two of the women offering positive remarks about Governor Palin, the positive feedback ended there. Polling these seven women, Robach found "nearly every one" held a less favorable view of Sarah Palin after viewing the debate. One voter claimed Palin "has sealed the deal for me" and she "is in no way ready...to be Vice President." Another "made up [her] mind" because "Palin didn't do it for me." Curiously, one "undecided" voter wanted a candidate that would "end the war" and because of Biden's promise she was swayed to the Obama/Biden ticket. 5. Letterman Upset Palin in 'Passenger Seat,' Mocks 'How's My Hair?' Perfectly encapsulating the coastal left's blind derision of Sarah Palin as an inexperienced "beginner" and thus unqualified, when the very same smart aleck cheap shots about her could be directed at the man with whom they have fallen in love, Barack Obama, David Letterman on Friday night asked guest Brian Williams if the nation can risk "a beginner in the passenger seat" (what about in the driver's seat?) and, in a sexist cheap shot, imitated Palin adjusting her hair during a 9/11 crisis as he impersonated her voice: "How's my hair?" That led an uncomfortable Williams to lean back and sigh, prompting Letterman to acknowledge "that's unfair. I'm sorry." 6. Sonnenfeld: Bush to Go Out by 'Destroying All Life on Earth' Catching up with an item from a few days ago: Barry Sonnenfeld, a movie director (Men in Black) and now the Emmy-winning executive producer and director of ABC's dramady Pushing Daisies, predicted on Wednesday's Late Show that amongst the things he's "worried" President Bush will do before leaving office is "go out by pushing the button and destroying all life on Earth." That was too much for David Letterman, hardly a Bush fan (in June he asked if Bush has "any humanity?"), who responded: "It's just a little bleaker than I would have hoped for -- the idea that he would actually detonate the planet in a moment of despair." Sonnenfeld, who speculated about Bush hiding bin Laden, also wondered why Americans wouldn't vote for the "really smart" Barack Obama over John McCain who "finished second to last in his graduating class in college" and Sarah Palin, who "went to five different colleges," and so "I'm thinking maybe she's got other talents than intelligence." 7. Ex-Newsweek Top Editor Osborn Elliott a Left-Wing Reagan-Basher Osborn Elliott, the top editor of Newsweek from 1961 to 1976 and Dean of the Columbia School of Journalism from 1979 to 1986, passed away last Sunday, September 28, at age 83. He was retired when the Media Research Center was founded in 1987, but he didn't hesitate in 1992 and 1995 to express his hostility to conservatives and he serves as a reminder that the Angry Left populated the highest levels of the mainstream news media long before the blogosphere gave them new venues. He helped to organize a "Save Our Cities" rally in 1992 where he accused Republicans of having "savaged our urban schools, our housing, our health care, our social services," denounced "Democrats who have collaborated in this butchery" and charged: "We hold accountable those who waste our billions on a military with no enemy to fight." Three years later he equated "Reaganism" with "social Darwinism" as he castigated journalists for being too nice to Reagan: "By failing to...adequately expose the inane contradictions of supply-side theories, aka Reaganomics, I believe journalism deserves some of the blame for ills that now afflict us." CBS: 'Down and Dirty' Palin Like Agnew w/ 'Nasty' Attack on Obama A week-and-half before he'll moderate the third and final presidential debate, CBS's Bob Schieffer opened Sunday's Face the Nation by calling a foul on one team as he took sides and denounced Sarah Palin's daring to say, that "our opponent is someone who sees America as imperfect enough to pal around with terrorists who targeted their own country," as a sign of "a campaign that's turned down and dirty," as well as "nasty," thanks to John McCain's "new attack dog" who "took after Barack Obama in a style reminiscent of Spiro Agnew when he was Richard Nixon's running mate." In the Washington press corps, a comparison to Agnew is no compliment. Later in the program, he fretted to New York Times columnist David Brooks: "Do you think it's going to get nastier and nastier? It does look as if McCain is really going on the attack. You saw what Sarah Palin said." Brooks, whom Schieffer labeled as a "conservative columnist," assured Schieffer it would be an ineffective tactic since "Republicans have been using this attack -- too dangerous, too liberal" for "too long" and "you can't win that way anymore." Sunday night, ABC reporter David Wright described Palin's reference to Bill Ayers as "incendiary" as he asserted on World News: "Today, in San Francisco, Sarah Palin defended her incendiary comments that Barack Obama has been 'palling around' with terrorists." Earlier in the day, ABC's This Week host George Stephanopoulos had scolded guest Tim Pawlenty about Palin's charge: "When Governor Palin says of Obama 'this is not a man who sees America as you do,' it sure does sound like she is questioning Senator Obama's patriotism." The AP's Douglass K. Daniel, in a Sunday "news analysis," alleged "her attack was unsubstantiated and carried a racially tinged subtext that John McCain himself may come to regret." Daniel asserted that "in a post-Sept. 11 America, terrorists are envisioned as dark-skinned radical Muslims, not the homegrown anarchists of Ayers' day 40 years ago" and thus "portraying Obama as 'not like us' is another potential appeal to racism." An excerpt from the October 5 AP dispatch by the Washington bureau reporter: By claiming that Democrat Barack Obama is "palling around with terrorists" and doesn't see the U.S. like other Americans, vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin targeted key goals for a faltering campaign. And though she may have scored a political hit each time, her attack was unsubstantiated and carried a racially tinged subtext that John McCain himself may come to regret.... Palin's words avoid repulsing voters with overt racism. But is there another subtext for creating the false image of a black presidential nominee "palling around" with terrorists while assuring a predominantly white audience that he doesn't see their America? In a post-Sept. 11 America, terrorists are envisioned as dark-skinned radical Muslims, not the homegrown anarchists of Ayers' day 40 years ago. With Obama a relative unknown when he began his campaign, the Internet hummed with false e-mails about ties to radical Islam of a foreign-born candidate. Whether intended or not by the McCain campaign, portraying Obama as "not like us" is another potential appeal to racism. It suggests that the Hawaiian-born Christian is, at heart, un-American. Most troubling, however, is how allowing racism to creep into the discussion serves McCain's purpose so well. As the fallout from Wright's sermons showed earlier this year, forcing Obama to abandon issues to talk about race leads to unresolved arguments about America's promise to treat all people equally. John McCain occasionally looks back on decisions with regret. He has apologized for opposing a holiday to honor Martin Luther King Jr. He has apologized for refusing to call for the removal of a Confederate flag from South Carolina's Capitol. When the 2008 campaign is over McCain might regret appeals such as Palin's perhaps more so if he wins. END of Excerpt For the entire spiel: www.breitbart.com [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, is adapted from a Sunday night posting on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] From the Sunday, October 4 Face the Nation on CBS:
BOB SCHIEFFER: Today on Face the Nation: the Palin factor, the bailout package and a campaign that's turned down and dirty. Down in the polls, the McCain campaign has found a new attack dog: ....
SCHIEFFER: Well, good morning again. We had two major events last week. First, Congress passed the bailout. We won't know for a while if it is going to work. What we do know is that we have a very hot presidential campaign, and we saw last week the second thing, the emergence of the -- Sarah Palin as the McCain camp's new attack dog. Yesterday she took after Barack Obama in a style reminiscent of Spiro Agnew when he was Richard Nixon's running mate. Listen to what she said in California. ...
SCHIEFFER: Do you think it's going to get nastier and nastier? It does look as if McCain is really going on the attack. You saw what Sarah Palin said.
Newsweek's Thomas: Palin 'Has a Little Bit of Huey Long in Her' Evan Thomas, Editor at Large with Newsweek, on Friday night likened Sarah Palin to Louisiana's infamous demagogic Democrat of the 1920s, Huey Long. On Inside Washington, a weekly show produced and aired over the weekend by Washington, DC's ABC affiliate, but first broadcast Friday night on the local PBS station, Thomas reacted to Palin's suggestion in the VP debate that the Vice President has a legislative role: "Here's what's disturbing: Either she didn't know, because actually the legislative role is just about zero as Biden says, or scarier she has a little bit of Huey Long in her. The kind of -- you could see her being a demagogue, saying 'I got to do this, the rules are in the way, to heck with the rules, let's do it.'" Earlier on the October 3 show, Thomas, until 2006 Newsweek's Assistant Managing Editor and before that the magazine's Washington bureau chief, contended she reflected the worst aspects of President George W. Bush: "The thing that worries me the most is she has this George Bush quality to make up her mind before she has the facts and she's dogmatic and, you know, she's impulsive, and the things that get you into trouble when you're President of the United States." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Friday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Answer.com's look at Huey Long: www.answers.com Inside Washington's home page: www.insidewashington.tv Newsweek's Thomas bio: www.newsweek.com
NBC's Today: After Week of Knocking Palin, No Debate 'Melt Down' All week leading up to Thursday night's debate between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin, NBC's Today show suggested that the Republican vice presidential nominee could be a disaster on stage, pointing out how "conservatives question her qualifications;" "the McCain campaign is worried;" "Palin stumbled again;" and "not ready for prime time." But on Friday morning, after Palin proved the hand-wringers wrong, co-host Matt Lauer suggested that the "melt down" expectations were never the right yardstick for pundits. Lauer asked Tom Brokaw: "Everything you read and hear about the debate this morning is going to say that Governor Palin exceeded expectations, but in your opinion did she exceed expectations simply because she didn't melt down on the stage or did she show the kind of grasp of the issues and the subjects required to hold the second highest job in the land?" [This item, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, was posted Friday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Brokaw admitted Palin had displayed a "winning" personality: "I rarely get into that who won and who lost and how far she raised the bar. I do think that she was winning for herself. She had winning ways on stage. And what she did was put aside all those low expectations that people had about her. Did she bring people across the line to the McCain campaign? That's the real test." Correspondent Andrea Mitchell also admitted that Palin had performed well: "Sarah Palin stopped the bleeding with a performance that by most accounts should be enough to refocus this campaign on the main act, the candidates for president of the United States....Sarah Palin: confident....folksy....locking on to the camera, even on occasion winking to the audience -- clearly well-practiced, as she at times sidestepped questions to answer her own....Such a strong performance that supporters will love it even though critics will still find much to question." Earlier this week, Today joined the chorus of those doubting Palin, largely as the result of her recent interviews with CBS's Katie Couric. # Monday, September 29, Matt Lauer began today: "Showtime, the pressure builds on Republican VP choice Sarah Palin as some conservatives question her qualifications." Lauer asked former GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney about Palin's abilities: "She's gotten some tough reviews in this interview with Katie Couric, this past week, and some have now called for her to step aside....Are you worried, at all, going into Thursday's debate that opposite Joe Biden, she's, she's not gonna look vice presidential, or presidential for that matter?" # Tuesday, September 30: After running through an alleged gaffe by Palin regarding U.S. intervention in Pakistan, Andrea Mitchell summed up: "In fact the McCain campaign is so worried about Palin's ability to debate Joe Biden, she's gone home with the McCains, for debate camp in Arizona, supervised by McCain's own top strategists. Matt?" # Wednesday, October 1: Lauer asked NBC political director Chuck Todd if the perceived missteps would somehow help Palin by lower expectations: "Let me start with tomorrow night's vice presidential debate and Sarah Palin, whose, whose critics have been tough on her for the interview she's or given over the last couple of days. Is it possible she's now lowered expectations so much that this will work to her benefit?" Todd argued that regardless of what pundits expected, Palin would not be able to skirt by with a sub-par performance: "We play this game a lot and campaigns try to play the expectations game but she may have gone beyond that at this point. I mean, when you think about the fact that one out of three sitting vice presidents eventually become President of the United States, I think that she's not going to be able to get away with just being able to say, well, expectations are, you know, below the floorboards. That's fine for an interview with a news anchor. That's not gonna be fine for a 90 minute debate where she's gonna be expected to be on her toes for the entire 90 minutes. So I don't think the expectations game is what they ought to be playing here. It's about staying, staying on par and being a legitimate national candidate." # Thursday, October 2: The morning of the debate, co-host Ann Curry said the question was "whether Palin is really up to the job," and reporter Andrea Mitchell highlighted how Palin "stumbled again" in an interview with Couric, and declared Palin the "decided underdog" in the debate:
ANN CURRY: Of course the economy will be a part, a major part of tonight's one and only vice presidential debate between Sarah Palin and Joe Biden. Well, people around the nation are expected glue the to their sets with questions swirling about Biden's wild card reputation and whether Palin is really up to the job. NBC's Andrea Mitchell is in St. Louis this morning with a preview. Hey, Andrea, good morning. Lauer asked GOP strategist Mike Murphy about Palin: "Some of the reviews for her interview appearances over the last couple of weeks have been withering. I mean, David Brooks, the conservative columnist, said a it was a catastrophe, that he couldn't watch it. He had to turn away. So what exactly does she have to do to walk out of this debate tonight with not only her head held high but with the chances for the Republican ticket intact?" Friday morning, the spin was that Palin had knocked all such doubts away, but rather than concede that the media was guilty of drawing broad conclusions about Palin based on just a few minutes of videotape, NBC's analysts emphasized their speculation that the overall race still favored the Democrats. Here are some highlights from Friday's coverage, as transcribed the MRC's Justin McCarthy: MATT LAUER: Good morning. Mission accomplished, Sarah Palin and Joe Biden square off in their first and only debate with no knock-out punches. Did either of them manage to sway any undecided voters?...
ANN CURRY: And this debate that everybody seemed to watch is now history. Both Joe Palin- or Joe Biden and Sarah Palin seemed to accomplish what they meant to do Matt.
CURRY: But let's begin with a spirited debate in St. Louis between Joe Biden and Sarah Palin. NBC's Andrea Mitchell was there and she's got more for us this morning. Hey Andrea, good morning.
LAUER: Tom Brokaw is moderator of "Meet the Press" and he'll be moderating the next presidential debate next Tuesday night. Tom, good morning to you....Everything you read and here about the debate this morning is going to say that Governor Palin exceeded expectations, but in your opinion did she exceed expectations simply because she didn't melt down on the stage or did she show the kind of grasp of the issues and the subjects required to hold the second highest job in the land?
Post-Debate, Today Show Finds 'Undecided' Voters Against Palin Despite Today's earlier praise of Sarah Palin's debate performance, Amy Robach managed to assemble seven "undecided voters" (and reported that five voted for Bush) who did not express high opinions of the Alaska Governor. On the October 3 edition, Robach found women voters she identified as undecided and from key battleground states. Although the discussion began with two of the women offering positive remarks about Governor Palin, the positive feedback ended there. Polling these seven women, Robach found "nearly every one" held a less favorable view of Sarah Palin after viewing the debate. One voter claimed Palin "has sealed the deal for me" and she "is in no way ready...to be Vice President." Another "made up [her] mind" because "Palin didn't do it for me." Curiously, one "undecided" voter wanted a candidate that would "end the war" and because of Biden's promise she was swayed to the Obama/Biden ticket. [This item, by the MRC's Justin McCarthy, was posted Friday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The transcript of the segment in the 8am half hour of Friday's program: ANN CURRY: One group watched last night's vice presidential debate very closely, undecided voters, especially women. Our national correspondent Amy Robach watched it last night with a group of them. Hey Amy.
AMY ROBACH: Hey Ann. That's right. And before the debate these women were truly torn about who they should vote for but when I spoke to them after it was all over last night some of them had their minds made up. We gathered together seven undecided women from swing states like Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Colorado. Five voters who in 2004 cast ballots for Bush, one for Kerry, and one who is going to the polls for the first time in 2008. So a lot of pundits thought tonight that it was very important for Sarah Palin, Governor Palin, to prove that she had a real understanding of the issues. How many people now have a more favorable view of her?
Letterman Upset Palin in 'Passenger Seat,' Mocks 'How's My Hair?' Perfectly encapsulating the coastal left's blind derision of Sarah Palin as an inexperienced "beginner" and thus unqualified, when the very same smart aleck cheap shots about her could be directed at the man with whom they have fallen in love, Barack Obama, David Letterman on Friday night asked guest Brian Williams if the nation can risk "a beginner in the passenger seat" (what about in the driver's seat?) and, in a sexist cheap shot, imitated Palin adjusting her hair during a 9/11 crisis as he impersonated her voice: "How's my hair?" That led an uncomfortable Williams to lean back and sigh, prompting Letterman to acknowledge "that's unfair. I'm sorry." Letterman, however spent the first half of Friday's Late Show before Williams came out and most of his time with Williams ridiculing Palin, and McCain for choosing her. Though the NBC Nightly News anchor Williams tried to separate himself from the remarks, and made some gentle counter-points as he preferred to joke about how he's the only one of the three anchors yet to get an interview with Palin, Williams never made the obvious point that much of Letterman's upset over Palin's inexperience could be directed to the top of the competing ticket. Or certainly could have been when he emerged last year as a candidate, but was not. [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted late Friday night, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The exchange on the October 3 Late Show:
DAVID LETTERMAN: How should a person feel about John McCain in having made this choice? To me it seems like we're in such a mess now, here at home and around the world, that do we really want a beginner in the passenger seat?
Sonnenfeld: Bush to Go Out by 'Destroying All Life on Earth' Catching up with an item from a few days ago: Barry Sonnenfeld, a movie director (Men in Black) and now the Emmy-winning executive producer and director of ABC's dramady Pushing Daisies, predicted on Wednesday's Late Show that amongst the things he's "worried" President Bush will do before leaving office is "go out by pushing the button and destroying all life on Earth." That was too much for David Letterman, hardly a Bush fan (in June he asked if Bush has "any humanity?"), who responded: "It's just a little bleaker than I would have hoped for -- the idea that he would actually detonate the planet in a moment of despair." Sonnenfeld, who speculated about Bush hiding bin Laden, also wondered why Americans wouldn't vote for the "really smart" Barack Obama over John McCain who "finished second to last in his graduating class in college" and Sarah Palin, who "went to five different colleges," and so "I'm thinking maybe she's got other talents than intelligence."
With some mix of seriousness and humor you can judge yourself by watching the video clip (though how funny is it to joke about the President as some kind of religious zealot out to murder millions?), Sonnenfeld told Letterman he's "worried since it's October that George Bush will do one of three things: Either find bin Laden, who've they've had somewhere for eight months waiting to bring out" or "let's start a war with Iran. That's always a possibility." Then: [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Saturday night, with video, on the MRC's blog, NewwsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Asked by Letterman, on the show the day before the VP debate, his take on that and the election, Sonnenfeld -- without actually naming any of the candidates, but with his targets and implications pretty clear -- expounded: "I'm very lucky and surround myself with people who are smarter than me. So, metaphorically, what I wonder is why don't Americans do that and actually vote for someone who is really smart, was a President of the Harvard Law Review; as opposed to two people, one who finished second to last in his graduating class in college and the other one, who I believe, went to five different colleges. Now, if I'm me and Chloe [his daughter] goes to five different colleges, I'm thinking maybe she's got other talents than intelligence." IMDb's page for Sonnenfeld: www.imdb.com For the June 12 CyberAlert item on Letterman casting douby Bush has any "humanity," check: www.mrc.org Late Show's rundown of the October 1 show: lateshow.cbs.com The exchange on the Wednesday, October 1 Late Show with David Letterman on CBS:
BARRY SONNENFELD: Here's what I don't understand, Dave. I got the Emmy award for Pushing Daises in great deal because I surround myself with people smarter than me -- you know, the DP Michael Weaver, Michael Wiley, Brian, -- they're all much smarter than me, they're better than me. But I know I'm going to get all the credit. [audience laughter] And I did and I won the Emmy, and thank you very much and it was a thrilling moment.
Ex-Newsweek Top Editor Osborn Elliott a Left-Wing Reagan-Basher Osborn Elliott, the top editor of Newsweek from 1961 to 1976 and Dean of the Columbia School of Journalism from 1979 to 1986, passed away last Sunday, September 28, at age 83. He was retired when the Media Research Center was founded in 1987, but he didn't hesitate in 1992 and 1995 to express his hostility to conservatives and he serves as a reminder that the Angry Left populated the highest levels of the mainstream news media long before the blogosphere gave them new venues. He helped to organize a "Save Our Cities" rally in 1992 where he accused Republicans of having "savaged our urban schools, our housing, our health care, our social services," denounced "Democrats who have collaborated in this butchery" and charged: "We hold accountable those who waste our billions on a military with no enemy to fight." (Screen shot, to be added to the posted version of this CyberAlert, is from that Saturday, May 16, 1992 event.) Three years later he equated "Reaganism" with "social Darwinism" as he castigated journalists for being too nice to Reagan: "By failing to...adequately expose the inane contradictions of supply-side theories, aka Reaganomics, I believe journalism deserves some of the blame for ills that now afflict us." [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Saturday on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Monday, September 29 Washington Post obituary: www.washingtonpost.com The two quotes from the archive of the MRC's Notable Quotables: # "We hold accountable Republicans who have savaged our urban schools, our housing, our health care, our social services. We hold accountable Democrats who have collaborated in this butchery...We hold accountable those who waste our billions on a military with no enemy to fight." -- Osborn Elliott, Newsweek editor-in-chief from 1961-76, in his speech as co-chairman of the "Save Our Cities" rally, May 16, 1992. # "By allowing a kind of social Darwinism -- aka Reaganism -- to go mostly unchallenged, and by failing on the other hand to adequately expose the inane contradictions of supply-side theories, aka Reaganomics, I believe journalism deserves some of the blame for ills that now afflict us. These include a deficit that hobbles us and a debt load that will bend us low for years to come." -- Former Newsweek Editor-in-Chief Osborn Elliott in the John Hershey Memorial Lecture, quoted in the March/April 1995 Columbia Journalism Review.
-- Brent Baker
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