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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 07 Jan 2003 02:30:15 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Bush's Tax Plan 'Gives the Most to the Rich'

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     6:25am EST, Tuesday January 7, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 3)
  The 1,410th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

Bush's Tax Plan "Gives the Most to the Rich"; ABC Finds
Millionaire Against Tax Cuts for the Rich; Another Anti-Bush
Harangue from Helen Thomas; NBC Reveals Saudi Terrorist Wanted to
Donate to Bush, But...; CBS's Enron Movie Spikes References to
Clinton

    #### Distributed to more than 11,600 recipients by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/welcome.asp For 2002:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive02.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030107.asp ####

1) The broadcast networks on Monday night, especially CBS, pushed
the liberal spin that the Bush tax cut proposals will unfairly
benefit the rich. Assuming all money belongs to the government,
CBS's John Roberts insisted "the President's plan would give the
most to the rich." CBS's Byron Pitts highlighted how "a middle
class wife" saw Bush's plan as "little more than a feel-good gift
that won't give much to most Americans -- especially the middle
class." ABC's Peter Jennings conveyed how Democrats "say that it
grossly favors the wealthy."

2) ABC decided on Monday morning to showcase a family which
welcomes the Bush tax cut plan, but which worries about how "it'll
cost in the long run," and how other "critics of the President's
plan say it favors the rich." On Good Morning America, Mellody
Hobson even found opposition from a millionaire: "A person with a
million-dollar income will get an estimated $24,000 in savings.
Even wealthy investors like Bill Bartholomay, chairman of the
Atlanta Braves, are uneasy."

3) Another left-wing harangue from Hearst Newspapers columnist
Helen Thomas at the White House press briefing. On Monday, Thomas
demanded to know why Bush wants "to drop bombs on innocent
Iraqis?" She whined about how the Iraqis are "not attacking" the
U.S. and wondered if this is "your revenge? Eleven years of
revenge?" She also sputtered about how "many countries don't have,
people don't have the decision" on U.S. policy, adding in disgust:
"Including us."

4) A Saudi terrorist wanted to donate to the Bush presidential
campaign, NBC News correspondent Lisa Myers reported Monday night
but, in a change from the Clinton era, Myers learned that "a
Republican fundraiser said no because it's illegal to take
contributions from foreigners."

5) Update: The author on whose book CBS based its movie about
Enron revealed that the movie's producers removed references to
the Clinton administration. Brian Cruver told the Houston
Chronicle: "In the book, as far as connections to the Bush
administration, to me it was a bipartisan corruption, and I have
as much information in the book about connections to (Bill)
Clinton as (George W.) Bush. But the movie has taken a more
one-sided view of that." Indeed it did.


    >>> Now online, the January 6 edition of Notable Quotables,
the MRC's bi-weekly compilation of the most outrageous, sometimes
humorous, quotes in the liberal media. Amongst the quote headings:
"Sliming Frist's Conservative Votes...And Impugning All
Republicans"; "Equating Conservative Stances With Segregationist
Sentiments"; "Daschle Is Really a Centrist?"; "Awed by the
Greatness of Jimmy"; "Those Costly, Foolish Tax Cuts"; "Mocking
Missile Defense" and "CBS's Ever-Alert Watchdog." To read it all:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/2003/nq20030106.asp
    For the Adobe Acrobat PDF which matches the hard copy format:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/2003/pdf/Jan62003nq.pdf <<<


    > 1) The broadcast networks on Monday night, especially CBS,
advanced the liberal spin that the Bush tax cut proposals, to
accelerate the income tax rate reductions and eliminate the tax on
dividends, will unfairly benefit the rich. No story bothered to
put the dollar value of tax reductions by income level into the
context of how the wealthier bear the burden of paying most of the
income taxes collected while at least a third of Americans pay no
income tax and, therefore, cannot pay any less.

    CBS's John Roberts adopted the liberal construct as he
described how "the President's proposal would accelerate tax cuts
already planned for the years 2004-2006 across the board,
including tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans." A tax cut does
not "give" anything to anyone, it simply means less will be taken
by the government, but that's not how Roberts painted it as he
insisted that "the President's plan would give the most to the
rich." (The Democratic plan would "give" money to people since
people who did not pay income taxes would still get a rebate.)

    CBS followed Roberts with a piece from Byron Pitts devoted to
showing how the Bush plan helps only the rich. Pitts focused on
the views of "a middle class wife" who saw Bush's plan as "little
more than a feel-good gift that won't give much to most Americans
-- especially the middle class." Pitts supported her jealousy: "We
asked accountant Avery Neumark to do the math. Under the
President's overall tax plan, a person earning $175,000 per year
could save $3,500. Someone earning $50,000 could expect to get
back an extra $1,000. Anyone earning $25,000 -- zero." Pitts let
Neumark proclaim: "If you went to summarize this tax proposal as
we see it today, the winners are the wealthy."

    Of course, the more you pay in taxes the more a cut of an
equal percentage provides in tax reduction dollar-wise, but Pitts
didn't bother to examine how much each taxpayer in his example
pays currently.

    ABC also highlighted the rich are helped the most angle. Terry
Moran noted on World News Tonight that "at his first Cabinet
meeting of the year, Mr. Bush sounded almost defensive, denying
his plan was skewed to benefit the rich." Moran concluded that if
Bush gets his way we all lose: "White House officials say that
with a Republican-controlled Congress, they are confident that the
President will get a lot of what he wants, but there's a cost to
that kind of success -- a ballooning deficit."

    Next, setting up a look at the Democratic proposal, anchor
Peter Jennings employed an overwrought adjective to convey the
damage feared by Democrats: "They say that it grossly favors the
wealthy with little benefit for the overall economy."

    NBC gave the least time to the liberal spin about how the Bush
plan is skewed in favor of the rich, but Tom Brokaw still put the
Bush plan in terms of the Democratic spin. He teased at the top of
NBC Nightly News: "Taxing questions. The President's plan for the
economy. Big breaks for the wealthy or help for all taxpayers?"

    Brokaw opened his show: "Good evening. What's the best way to
help the American economy? When Congress reconvenes tomorrow
President Bush will have control of the House and Senate. And he
intends to use all that power to push through a huge new tax cut
designed to generate economic growth in the long term, but in the
short term it's mostly generating criticism from the political
opposition and skepticism from some economic analysts. This is the
beginning of what could be an epic battle."

    Now, more about the CBS and ABC stories on Monday night,
January 6:

    -- CBS Evening News. Dan Rather led the broadcast: "Good
evening. President Bush will announce tomorrow another round of
tax cuts. They are controversial. Here's why. Republicans say they
are necessary to help the economy. Democrats say they are too
heavily weighted in favor of the wealthiest Americans. The
Democrats are putting out a plan of their own. John Roberts begins
CBS News coverage of the duel over wartime tax cuts."

    Roberts began with the Bush arguments, as taken down by MRC
analyst Brad Wilmouth: "With an election year looming, an ailing
economy could be a huge liability for President Bush. And big
problems, the White House believes, require big solutions."
    George W. Bush: "This is a plan that provides tax relief to
the working citizens. It's a plan that is a very fair plan."
    Roberts: "Six hundred billion dollars over ten years, the
President's proposal would accelerate tax cuts already planned for
the years 2004-2006 across the board, including tax cuts for the
wealthiest Americans. The President would also eliminate the tax
on stock dividends, hoping to boost investment in large
corporations and light a fire under Wall Street. Democrats, who
also want to be seen as trying to put money back into the hands of
voters, today came out with a plan of their own."
    Rep. Robert Menendez (D-NJ): "-that the Democratic economic
stimulus plan we announced today is fair, it is immediate, and it
is effective for all Americans."
    Roberts: "The Democrats' plan is far smaller than the
President's, $136 billion over a single year, a one-time economic
shot in the arm. It would give all Americans a rebate of up to 10
percent of the first $6,000 they earn and extend tax breaks to
large businesses that invest in new equipment in the next 12
months, when they say it's needed most. Both plans also propose to
extend unemployment benefits and give new tax breaks to small
businesses. They are as much about political insulation as they
are economic stimulation, says former Congressional Budget Office
Chief Robert Reischauer."
    Robert Reischauer, Urban Institute: "Many politicians want to
tell the American people, 'We feel your pain.' They also want to
tell the American voters, 'Don't blame me if something goes wrong.
I tried to do something to help.'"
    Roberts considered the Bush plan's benefits to the rich its
most noteworthy element: "Democrats are already trying to lay
blame, accusing President Bush of class warfare for throwing
another bone to the rich, complaining his plan will saddle the
nation with even more debt. The President's plan would give the
most to the rich and reduce tax receipts in the short-term. But
the White House argues you have to spend money to make money."
    Bush: "It's a plan that recognizes when somebody has more of
their own money, they're likely to spend it and that's what
creates more jobs."
    Roberts concluded from the White House: "Some economists argue
that a stimulus package isn't likely to have much of an effect on
the economy. The real drag, they argue, is uncertainty about Iraq,
and that by the time a stimulus takes effect, perhaps later this
summer, that issue may be off the table and the economy already
growing."

    CBS then served as an arm of the House Democratic leadership
as the network set out to demonstrate how Bush's plan does just
what the Democrats claimed. Rather asked: "If President Bush and
his Republicans get their version of tax cuts through Congress,
who would get what and what would you get out of it? CBS News
correspondent Byron Pitts has the bottom line on that."

    Pitts just happened to find a woman who mimicked the talking
points of Nancy Pelosi: "For Joanne Lessner, a middle class wife,
mother of two and freelance writer, President Bush's $600 billion
economic plan, as she sees it, is little more than a feel-good
gift that won't give much to most Americans -- especially the
middle class."
    Joanne Lessner, taxpayer: "This is sort of like a box of
chocolates. It's nice, I'll eat them, I'll take my $400, and then
it'll be gone. It's not a lasting, it's not a lasting gift."
    Pitts: "That $400 rebate check will go to families like the
Lessners as part of the President's child tax credit. As for Mr.
Bush's proposal to eliminate the dividends tax, the bigger your
wallet, the bigger the benefit. Estimates are 74 percent of the
tax break in 2003 will go to people making more than $100,000 a
year, and 25 percent to those making more than a million dollars."
    Avery Neumark, Certified Public Accountant: "When you go to
the lower brackets, there is no savings."
    Pitts: "We asked accountant Avery Neumark to do the math.
Under the President's overall tax plan, a person earning $175,000
per year could save $3,500. Someone earning $50,000 could expect
to get back an extra $1,000. Anyone earning $25,000 -- zero."
    Neumark helpfully pointed out: "If you went to summarize this
tax proposal as we see it today, the winners are the wealthy."
    Pitts: "Joanne Lessner does not see herself as wealthy but
rather as a working woman concerned about her family, concerned
about a possible war with Iraq and the economy long-term."
    Lessner: "I would like a stimulated economy. So what's the
gift equivalent of a stimulated economy? A rollex watch, I don't
know."
    Pitts: "That's nice."
    Lessner: "Not bad, huh?"
    Pitts: "And not part of the President's economic plans,
either. Byron Pitts, CBS News, New York."

    Talk about TV gimmickery over substantive reporting.


    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Peter Jennings opened the show:
"Good evening, everyone. It is somewhat belated, but we hope you
had a good New Year's and that there was reason in your house to
celebrate. It's going to be a difficult year in many ways. To name
only two issues: War is a real possibility, and the economy is a
challenge, to say the least. The Congress and the President are
back at work in Washington today. The President and the Democrats
have competing plans to stimulate the economy. The President's
involves $600 billion in further spending and tax reductions. So
we start with our White House correspondent Terry Moran. Terry,
the big formal announcement is tomorrow, but we know the details
today."

    Moran confirmed: "We do, Peter, and this plan turns out to be
bigger, more expensive, and more focused on the long-term than
many expected. You might look at it not so much as a short-term
economic stimulus package than as a kind of sequel to the original
Bush tax cut. At his first Cabinet meeting of the year, Mr. Bush
sounded almost defensive, denying his plan was skewed to benefit
the rich."

    After running through the proposal, Moran concluded by warning
of the ominous impact if Bush succeeds: "White House officials say
that with a Republican-controlled Congress, they are confident
that the President will get a lot of what he wants, but there's a
cost to that kind of success -- a ballooning deficit. Peter,
should the President get a package like this and should the
country go to war against Iraq, the deficit could reach a quarter
of a trillion dollars."

    Jennings then set up a look at the Democratic plan: "The
Democrats have already launched a pretty aggressive attack on the
President's plan, even before the formal announcement tomorrow.
They say that it grossly favors the wealthy with little benefit
for the overall economy. ABC's Linda Douglass is on Capitol Hill
tonight. And, Linda, the Democrats in the House of Representatives
put forward an alternative plan."

    Douglass started her story: "They did, Peter, because they say
that the President's plan is simply too expensive and will plunge
the country further into debt. The Democrats' plan is more modest
than the President's -- $100 billion in tax breaks and benefits
aimed at lower and middle class taxpayers."

    The reason why the $25,000 taxpayer cited by Pitts will not
get a tax cut is because he or she pays little or no income tax
now, certainly none if they have any dependents. As noted in the
past two CyberAlerts, but it's relevant enough to keep reminding
ourselves, a minority of taxpayers pay most of the taxes. On
October 24 of last year the Joint Economic Committee released the
latest IRS data for 2000. Here's the table:

    > Top 1%: Adjusted Gross Income of more than $313,469, pays
37.42 percent of all income tax collected

    > Top 5%: $128,336, pays 56.47 percent

    > Top 10%: $92,144, pays 67.33 percent

    > Top 25%: $55,225, pays 84.01 percent

    > Top 50%: $27,682, pays 96.09 percent

    > Bottom 50%: less than $27,682, pays a mere 3.91 percent

    For the press release with those numbers:
http://www.house.gov/jec/press/2002/10-24-02.htm

    For six pages of detailed IRS tables, in PDF format:
http://www.house.gov/jec/press/2002/irs2.pdf

    I think I'll keep running these numbers until a network
decides to inform its viewers of how the income tax burden
disproportionately falls on a limited number of taxpayers and so
giving them a larger tax break dollar-wise is hardly unfair.



    > 2) ABC decided on Monday morning to showcase a family which
welcomes the Bush tax cut plan, but which worries about how "it'll
cost in the long run," and how other "critics of the President's
plan say it favors the rich." On Good Morning America, Mellody
Hobson even found opposition from a millionaire: "A person with a
million-dollar income will get an estimated $24,000 in savings.
Even wealthy investors like Bill Bartholomay, chairman of the
Atlanta Braves, are uneasy."

    MRC analyst Jessica Anderson caught the January 6 piece
narrated by Hobson, identified as ABC's financial consultant and
President of Ariel Capital Management. She suggested: "Everyone
could use a little extra money in their pocket, but when you
calculate how Bush's proposed tax plan will affect different
American households, the math is very different."

    Hobson explained: "Dave and Eileen Dahm are like many American
families the President says will benefit from his new tax cut
plan. Dave is a union electrician earning $50,000 a year. Eileen
works at home taking care of their two children. A one percent
income tax cut would save them $133 this year, but more important
for the Dahms is the money they'd save through an increase in
child tax credits for them, another $800. Nine hundred and thirty-
three dollars in their pocket? Money to help them decorate their
home."
    Dave Dahm: "Buy another couch is the only thing that I think
of."
    Hobson: "And that's exactly what the Bush administration is
hoping families will do: spend their savings to stimulate the
economy. While the Dahms welcome the tax cuts, they worry what
it'll cost in the long run."
    Eileen Dahm: "I'm concerned about where people, where that
money's going to and where it's coming from."
    Hobson: "Vaughn White is wondering where his next job will
come from. Four months ago he lost his $50,000 a year counseling
job. As he hunts for work, he receives $425 a week in unemployment
benefits. Right now, those benefits will run out in two months,
but under the Bush plan, unemployment would be extended from six
to nine months. That's an additional $5100 in aid for people like
Vaughn, just when he needs it."
    White: "It would take a lot of stress, you know, out of my
next two or three months of worrying about if I'm going to have
consistent income coming in."
    Hobson: "Critics of the President's plan say it favors the
rich. A person with a million-dollar income will get an estimated
$24,000 in savings. Even wealthy investors like Bill Bartholomay,
chairman of the Atlanta Braves, are uneasy."
    Bartholomay: "I'll take a reduction, but I'm also concerned --
yeah, I've been very lucky and I'm concerned about deficits that
we have to absorb in this country."
    Hobson concluded on an up note for the Bush plan: "Of the
people we spoke to, every single one said that if the plan goes
through, they will either spend the money or invest it in the
stock market. That's the all the Bush White House could hope for."

    If ABC can find a millionaire against the Bush plan you'd
think they could find someone in the middle class who is for it.



    > 3) Another left-wing harangue from Hearst Newspapers
columnist Helen Thomas at the White House press briefing. On
Monday, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd observed, Thomas demanded to know
why President Bush wants "to drop bombs on innocent Iraqis?" She
whined about how the Iraqis are "not attacking" the U.S. and
wondered if this is "your revenge? Eleven years of revenge?"

    Thomas also sputtered about how "many countries don't have,
people don't have the decision" on U.S. policy, adding in disgust:
"Including us."

    The exchange from the top of the press briefing at just past
12:30pm EST on January 6:

    Thomas: "Ari, you said that the President deplored the taking
of innocent lives. Does that apply to all innocent lives in the
world? And I have a follow-up."
    Ari Fleischer, White House Press Secretary: "Well, Helen, I
referred specifically to a horrible terrorist attack in Tel Aviv
that killed scores and wounded hundreds. And the President, as he
said in a statement yesterday deplores in the strongest terms the
taking of those lives and the wounding of those people: innocents
in Israel."
    Thomas: "The follow-up is, why does he want to drop bombs on
innocent Iraqis?"
    Fleischer: "Helen, the question is how to protect Americans
and our allies and friends."
    Thomas, interrupting: "They're not attacking. Have they laid a
glove on you or on the United States, the Iraqs [sic] in eleven
years?"
    Fleischer: "I guess you've forgotten about the Americans who
were killed in the first Gulf War as a result of Saddam Hussein's
aggression then."
    Thomas: "Is this your revenge? Eleven years of revenge?"
    Fleischer: "Now, Helen, I think you know very well that the
President's position is that he wants to avert war and that the
President has asked the United Nations to go into Iraq to help for
the purpose of averting war."
    Thomas: "Would the President attack innocent Iraqi lives?"
    Fleischer: "The President wants to make certain that he can
defend our country, defend our interests, defend the region, and
make certain that American lives are not lost."
    Thomas: "Does he think they are a threat to us?"
    Fleischer: "There is no question that the President thinks
that Iraq is a threat to the United States."
    Thomas: "The Iraqi people?"
    Fleischer: "The Iraqi people are represented by their
government, if there was regime change–"
    Thomas: "So they will be vulnerable–"
    Fleischer: "Actually, the President has made it very clear
that he has no dispute with the people of Iraq. That's why the
American policy remains a policy of regime change. There's no
question the people of Iraq–"
    Thomas: "That's a decision for them to make, isn't it? It's
their country?"
    Fleischer: "Uh, Helen, if you think that the people of Iraq
are in a position to dictate who their dictator is, I don't think
that's been what history has shown. Ron [Fournier of AP]?"
    Thomas: "I think many countries don't have, people don't have
the decision. [pause] Including us."

    I'm starting to think, especially after he went to her first
on Monday, that Fleischer calls on Thomas because of how bad she
makes the whole press corps look with her over the top left-wing
advocacy and defense of Iraq and Palestinian terrorists.

    If the rest of the White House press corps had any self
respect they'd show disdain for her and laugh the second she
starts to speak. If they won't, it suggests they don't think her
views are unreasonable. After all, they often laugh at the
questions posed by the conservative Les Kinsolving.



    > 4) A Saudi terrorist wanted to donate to the Bush
presidential campaign, NBC News correspondent Lisa Myers reported
Monday night but, in a change from the Clinton era, Myers learned
that "a Republican fundraiser said no because it's illegal to take
contributions from foreigners."

    The claim about the Saudi's wish to support Bush came during a
January 6 NBC Nightly News story by Myers revolving around her
interview with the co-founders of P Tech, the Massachusetts
computer software firm raided by the FBI a few weeks ago because
of concern over investments from Saudi Yasin al-Qadi, whom the
U.S. government has identified as a terrorist financier, and ties
of other P Tech staffers to terrorists.

    The P Tech executives denied the allegations and maintained
that no terrorist has any involvement in their company. Referring
to the CEO, whose name I will not attempt to spell and which NBC
did not put on screen, Myers relayed: "He said in 2000 the man now
accused of financing terror expressed support for George W. Bush,
even wanted to give money to his campaign."
    Myers to the P Tech CEO: "Mr. Qadi wanted to contribute a half
million dollars to George W. Bush's presidential campaign?"
    P Tech CEO: "Correct, and I delivered that message myself."
    Myers reported: "A Republican fundraiser said no because it's
illegal to take contributions from foreigners."

    One wonders if he would have received the same rebuff in 1996
from the Clinton campaign.



    > 5) Update: The author on whose book CBS based its movie
about Enron revealed that the movie's producers removed his
references to the Clinton administration.

    As reported in the January 6 CyberAlert, CBS's Sunday night
movie, The Crooked E: The Unshredded Truth About Enron, got in a
few very straight shots at the company's ties to the Bush
administration, but made no mention of links to the Clinton team
or financial support of any Democrats. In addition to several
references to Ken Lay meeting with President Bush and Vice
President Cheney, the TV movie superimposed images of left-wing
actor Mike Farrell, who played Lay, into photos with the real
George H.W. and George W. Bush, as well as Cheney.

    Alert CyberAlert reader David Fite alerted me to how Brian
Cruver, the Enron employee on whose book, Anatomy of Greed: The
Unshredded Truth From an Enron Insider, the CBS movie was based,
told the Houston Chronicle that by focusing solely on the
company's ties to the Bush administration the movie distorted his
first-hand recounting.

    The January 2 Chronicle quoted Cruver: "In the book, as far as
connections to the Bush administration, to me it was a bipartisan
corruption, and I have as much information in the book about
connections to (Bill) Clinton as (George W.) Bush. But the movie
has taken a more one-sided view of that."

    For the Houston Chronicle story in full with a picture of
Cruver: http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/ae/tv/1721055

    For the January 6 CyberAlert item, which also relates how the
movie opened with a character played by Brian Dennehy basking in
1986 over how he could become "filthy, stinking rich" thanks to
"Reagan in the White House, tax cuts, deregulation," go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030106.asp#1


    > Tuesday night on MSNBC's Donahue: Tom Brokaw for the hour.
Those who saw Monday's Donahue heard a very angry Al Franken
denouncing Bernard Goldberg for citing in his book a quote by John
Chancellor, supposedly taken out of context, provided by a "right-
wing watchdog group." That would be us, I'm proud to say,
especially since it so annoyed Franken. And Franken's out of
context argument was silly. Possibly more in the next CyberAlert
if we have time to get to it.

-- Brent Baker


    >>> Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon
contributions which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-
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