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In the last week, we've heard from Bahrain and Spain.

Whether they were mainly on the plain they didn't say.

Thanks!

bh




THE SCOOP for April 5, 1999
___________________________

CNN's Kosovo Identity Crisis
also: Bob Dole, Sex Criminal
© 1999 Bob Harris
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

[] = italics


So my big sister calls me this week.

My sister is a major bonus.  Great sense of humor.  Heart oversized like
movie popcorn.  And really, really smart.

Anybody who doesn't like my sister has no business being on this planet.

Sis calls me up because she's trying to be a good citizen and has
therefore watched hours of TV news reports about the Crisis In Kosovo.
Big sis has endured dozens of furrowed brows, scores of scary pictures,
and hours of flashy graphics.  CNN's special Kosovo theme music churns
like a bellicose jingle in her head.

And sis calls because after days of Fox and MSNBC telling her what just
blew up, she still doesn't quite follow how exactly the whole mess really
started, how it might best end, or what to think about it in any case,
other than it's obviously really bad.

Just like most Americans.  Including the ones in Washington.

My sister's one of the smartest people I know.  Her only mistake was in
believing, as most of us have been trained to believe since birth, that TV
is a good way to learn about a subject in depth.

It is not.

TV is a good way to learn about which subjects are on fire.

Here's how mindless Kosovo coverage can be:

You remember when the news came in last Wednesday that three U.S.
servicemen had been captured by the Serbs.  Soon, CNN showed Serbian
videotape of the prisoners.

CNN also reported that the three captured servicemen had not yet been
identified.  CNN's anchors repeated this several dozen times for over two
hours, often as the Serbian video was playing on the air.

Hello?

The names of all three servicemen were [right there on the videotape] --
in Serbian, granted, but in HUGE OBVIOUS PRINT -- directly under the faces
of each soldier as they were shown individually.

Duh.

Figuring this out was hardly a stretch.  Serbian is phonetic, albeit with
Cyrillic characters.  Any speaker of Russian, Bulgarian, Ukrainian,
Macedonian, or several other Slavic languages could read the names
instantly.  I speak maybe thirty or forty words in all those languages
combined, and even I could read the prisoners' names easily.

Evidently, during a state of war with Serbia, there's not a single person
at supposedly the world's leading TV news outlet who speaks Serbian.  Or
Russian.  Or any Slavic language.

Would CNN have covered World War II without anyone on staff who could
translate [Mein Kampf]?

Is it possible that the classy news joint that brings us Bob Novak, Al
Hunt, and John Sununu doesn't employ a single person who at least knows
enough to realize all that fancy writing probably means something?  Or
even owns a freaking dictionary with which to transliterate a freeze frame?

OK.  Maybe that's asking too much.  Fine.

But how about this: the soldiers' surnames were also plainly visible in
the videotape -- and in [English] -- above the right shirt pocket of their
uniforms.

And the TV anchors, who are presumably neither blind nor stupid although
I'm learning to keep an open mind, prattled over and over that they had no
information as to the men's identities.

[DUH.]

I don't mean to pick on CNN per se.  I only have one TV -- which feels a
little like saying "I only have one flesh-eating bacterial infection" --
so I didn't get the chance to see if Fox or MSNBC or maybe somebody on the
Weather Channel figured out what all those funny letters meant.  Probably
not.

We live in an era where war reporting consists largely of
Pentagon-approved reporters repeating Pentagon statements and press
releases over combat footage provided by the Pentagon.

Which affects public opinion.  Which affects national policy.  And
eventually, it affects even our ability to think for ourselves.

If the Pentagon says that three captured servicemen have not been
identified, then their identities are indeed unknown -- even when their
names are right in front of our eyes.

My sister now understands better what's going on in Kosovo, precisely
because she's no longer waiting around for Laurie Dhue and Laura Ingraham
to show her more scary pictures.  She's reading up on the subject and
forming her own opinion.

Word is that Bill Clinton has recently started reading a book on the
history of the region, too.

How thoughtful, after bombing it for a week.

___________________________

And now, something completely unrelated...

All over Alabama, people are buzzing with joy: thanks to a District Court
ruling, sex toys are again legal.

Let's back up here.  Actually, Alabama was home to two bizarre political
stories this week, both of which revolve around issues usually best kept
private.

[Weird story #1:] Lieutenant Governor Steve Windom presides over a thin
majority in the Alabama state Senate, where there was a petty squabble
over the house rules.  And Windom realized that his opposition would seize
the moment and take control if he so much as took a bathroom break.

So he didn't.

Instead, he brought along a pitcher, and for two [days] the Senate chamber
also served as Windom's personal water chamber.  Eventually, the
opposition relented, possibly just from the smell.

This is why the Lieutenant Governor is called the Number Two man in the
state.

At least the dude sticks to principle, among other things.  I'd suggest a
run at the White House, but frankly, naming the guy king might be more
appropriate.  After all, he's already proven he can preside over a throne.

[Weird story #2:] the state of Alabama actually tried to outlaw sex toys.
Of course, then only outlaws will have sex toys, and frankly you don't
want the criminals having all the fun.

The law, written by state Senator Tom Butler -- who obviously has more
issues than the [National Geographic] -- punished the sale of such devices
with up to a year in prison.  And what a fine place to clear up any
unusual sexual habits [prison] can be.

It wasn't long before the law was challenged in District Court by six
women, each of whom either who sells, distributes, or just really really
likes the device in question.  As Sherri Williams, the owner of a store
called Pleasures, explained, "I'm not just going to lay down and die."

Certainly not in the Shakespearean sense, anyway.

Fortunately, the judge ruled the law was -- in sophisticated legal terms
-- insane.

Good thing, too.  Otherwise, Alabama law would have an unusual set of
priorities:

In Alabama, it would be OK for the Lieutenant Governor to spend two solid
days peeing into an armload of tupperware in front of the entire state
Senate.

But he couldn't touch himself with a vibrator.

That would be indecent.

In Alabama, vibrators would be considered dangerous to the public and
therefore outlawed.

Handguns would be fine.  Handguns would be considered constitutionally
protected.  But not vibrators.  Not unless you can get so worked up you
can fire a bullet.

Which is doubtful.

In Alabama, the Attorney General, a Republican, would have argued
successfully that there is no fundamental right to sell, advertise, or
purchase a product solely in pursuit of sexual pleasure.

Ever heard of Viagra?

Gee, I guess Alabama would have to lock up Bob Dole.

Thank God someone is finally trying to stand up to these dangerous sex
criminals.

___________________________

Bob Harris is a radio commentator, political writer, and humorist who
has spoken at almost 300 colleges nationwide.  His email address is
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

To receive a free email subscription to The Scoop, just send a blank email
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________

Bob's Big Plug-O-Rama™ (updated 4/5/99):

Check THIS out: "This Is Bob Harris," my daily radio feature, is now
broadcast by Armed Forces Radio to over 140 countries around the world --
and during the Rush Limbaugh program at that!

Back here in the U.S., syndication is rolling.  Almost 70 stations and
counting, with a new station signing up every few days now.  Yippee!  Call
your favorite station and ask for the feature.  They pay attention, honest.

We're recording at the Museum of TV & Radio in Beverly Hills
(http://www.mtr.org), who let me cavort in their fishbowl studio in
exchange for gratuitous plugs, including this one.  If you live in L.A.,
the sessions are free and open to the public, so drop on by.

Internet portal site The Mining Company has a list of about a dozen
recommended political humorists posted at
http://politicalhumor.miningco.com/msub14.htm.  I made the cut, along with
Mort Sahl, Art Buchwald, P.J. O'Rourke, Dave Barry, Mark Russell, the
Smothers Brothers, Will Durst, Mark Twain, and Will Rogers.  Is that cool
or what?

My first book, [Steal This Book And Do Life Without Parole], will be in
bookstores this fall.  Visit my fab publisher at
http://www.commoncouragepress.com, or check out the cover art
http://www.bobharris.com/

Speaking of which, http://www.bobharris.com/ is up, complete with an
archive of radio stuff, notes on my [Jeopardy!] ordeal, a list of my bad
personal habits, and more.  Drop in and say hi.

Mother Jones online (http://www.motherjones.com) now carries The Scoop.  I
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