For Immediate Release: Tim Scheiderer (703) 683-5004 - Wednesday, June 1, 2005
Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, and Aaron Brown Offer the Passionate Liberal
Rebuttal to Mark Felt's Critics
Anchors Gush Over Heroism of "Deep Throat"
In nearly every journalism school in America, students
are taught the legend of Watergate, of how heroic reporters Bob Woodward and
Carl Bernstein used the heroic anonymous source "Deep Throat" to defend the
constitutional order. This legend, peddled commercially as the book and movie
deals that produced All The President's Men, is almost never taught as
how to take down a Republican President for political gain and personal profit.
A few years ago, the impeachment of Bill Clinton was routinely savaged by
liberal reporters as a saga with "no heroes." (See box.) But
Tuesday's Vanity Fair scoop naming Deep Throat as former FBI second banana
Mark Felt made some TV news veterans giddy with the notion of heroism: |
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Dan Rather. On the CBS Evening News, reporter Jim Axelrod allowed former Richard Nixon aide Chuck Colson to say Felt was wrong to
leak to the press, the rebuttal came from the Old Media. "I think he performed a
public service," said disgraced anchorman Dan Rather. "Widespread criminal
conspiracy led by the President of the United States. I, for one, think it would
have succeeded had it not been for Woodward, Bernstein, Bradlee, and the source
to whom they promised anonymity."
Aaron Brown. As Colson told him Felt's actions were
"demeaning," CNN NewsNight anchor Aaron Brown retorted: "Why is it not
honorable?...Believing that an institution you've devoted your life to, care a
lot about and is important to the country, is being used in an improper way, and
the only way you have to solve it or to deal with that is to go outside that
agency, why isn't that honorable?"
Although Brown aired more critical views of Felt from
Colson and David Gergen and liberal journalist Timothy Noah, he remained adamant
in his personal viewpoint. When Noah found no hero in Watergate, Brown replied:
"I want to spin that in an absolutely heroic way. That what actually he saw
happening was the political side of Washington trying to take control of an
institution with enormous power, that needs to operate outside of whoever is in
government at any given time, not unaccountably, but independently."
Tom Brokaw. Former NBC anchor Tom Brokaw strongly
objected to Pat Buchanan on the June 1 Today: "I think Pat said yesterday said
that Mark Felt was a traitor. A traitor to what, the truth?...This was true, it
was illegal activity. This was not somebody acting as a private citizen in their
own company. This was the highest elected official we have in this country."
Katie Couric added: "These were not personal
dalliances." Brokaw vaguely admitted JFK's behavior in the White House was
"shocking," and that former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover "used to use
information to increase his own base," but "it was not nearly of the magnitude
of this. This is a president who was an unindicted co-conspirator. We had a lot
of people who went to jail, who had a full and fair hearing in the federal court
system, and Richard Nixon, a lot of people believe, should have gone to jail as
well." Anchormen can't be objective in reliving the liberal glory days. -
Tim Graham and
Brent Baker
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