-Caveat Lector-

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 08:50:55 -0500
From: cyber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fw: MRC Alert: Bush So Awful That Clift Yearns for Nixon's Return

William,
Since I believe you missed this morning's CyberAlert, I wanted to forward it
to you!
Thanks,
Kristina
----- Original Message -----
From: "Media Research Center" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Cyber Alerts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, January 27, 2003 3:35 AM
Subject: MRC Alert: Bush So Awful That Clift Yearns for Nixon's Return


>              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
>     5:35am EST, Monday January 27, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 16)
>   The 1,423rd CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996
>
> Bush So Awful That Clift Yearns for Nixon's Return; Great
> Headline: "Homeland Lost to D.C."; Thomas: Only Bush and "His
> Courtiers" Want War; NY Times Finds Average "Republicans" to
> Denounce Tax Cuts; Williams Deplores Opinion in Cable News: He
> Should Know; MRC Bias Documentation Makes it All the Way to
> Jerusalem; "Top Ten Army Reservist Pet Peeves"
>
>     #### 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/cyb20030127.asp ####
>
> 1) President George W. Bush is so awful in the eyes of Newsweek's
> Eleanor Clift that on the McLaughlin Group over the weekend,
> during which she assigned Bush an "F" grade at the halfway mark of
> his term, she yearned for the return of Richard Nixon to the
> presidency: "I'd like to have Richard Nixon back actually. I think
> he'd be a huge improvement."
>
> 2) Most accurate headline in years: "Homeland Lost to D.C." Sounds
> like what conservatives have been complaining about as federal
> power and mandates grow more intrusive, but it was actually
> referring to something else, though related.
>
> 3) Another round of left-wing looniness from Helen Thomas, this
> one during Friday's White House press briefing. She demanded of
> Press Secretary Ari Fleischer: "Who in this country, besides the
> President and his courtiers, want to go to war with Iraq?" She
> followed up by equating U.S. possession of "weapons of mass
> destruction" with Iraq's possession of them: "We have weapons of
> mass destruction. Eight other countries have them."
>
> 4) The New York Times managed to quote two "Republicans" in a
> Friday story on how its poll found declining approval for
> President Bush and his economic policies, but both "Republicans"
> trashed Bush from the left. One charged: "The tax cuts helped only
> the wealthy." The poll juxtaposed the tax cut with reducing the
> federal deficit and "preserving" Social Security, as if it's an
> either/or choice. The poll also distorted what Supreme Court
> appointees can do on abortion by asking if Bush will nominate
> "justices who will vote to make abortion against the law?"
>
> 5) CNBC/NBC anchor Brian Williams got an early start in
> proclaiming his loyalty to the Democratic Party cause. At age 7-
> and-a-half he wrote a letter to President Lyndon Johnson, signing
> it, "One of your young Democrats." That revelation came at a forum
> last week with Williams in Austin, Texas during which he
> complained that in cable news "there's too much opinion and
> attitude slipping in." He should know. Recently he's fretted about
> the "patriotism police" and decreed Jimmy Carter "the best former
> President in...the last 200 years."
>
> 6) The MRC's research is so compelling that even Jim Pinkerton in
> Jerusalem cited us on FNC's Fox Newswatch and the Super Bowl
> preview edition of USA Today featured a "Feedback" quote from a
> particularly insightful member of the MRC staff. That would be me.
>
> 7) As announced by ten Army National Guard reservists, Letterman's
> "Top Ten Army Reservist Pet Peeves."
>
>
>     > 1) President George W. Bush is so awful in the eyes of
> Newsweek's Eleanor Clift that on the McLaughlin Group over the
> weekend she yearned for the return of Richard Nixon to the
> presidency: "I'd like to have Richard Nixon back actually. I think
> he'd be a huge improvement."
>
>     Clift's pining for Nixon came after she charged that Bush's
> new economic team "will be a disaster" because they are selling
> "the same stupid policy" as the old team, yet before she awarded
> Bush an "F" grade for his first two years in office.
>
>     Assessing President Bush at the halfway mark of his term,
> Clift asserted: "Old economic team was a disaster. The new
> economic team is selling the same stupid policy. They'll be a
> disaster too. Ari Fleischer is a mouthpiece. He gives away
> nothing. The press can't stand him. The President loves him
> because this is the most secretive and arrogant administration we
> have seen -- probably since the days of Richard Nixon."
>     John McLaughlin, who worked in the Nixon White House, jokingly
> cautioned Clift: "Be careful now Eleanor."
>     Clift responded: "I'd like to have Richard Nixon back
> actually. I think he'd be a huge improvement."
>
>     He's tanned, rested and ready for Eleanor.
>
>
>
>     > 2) Most accurate headline in years: "Homeland Lost to D.C."
> Sounds like what conservatives have been complaining about for
> years as federal power and mandates grow more intrusive.
>
>     In this case, however, the headline in Friday's Northern
> Virginia Journal actually referred to the decision by Secretary of
> Homeland Security Tom Ridge to locate, at least temporarily, his
> department's offices in the District instead of, as expected, in
> Northern Virginia.
>
>     Ridge picked a building inside a U.S. Navy communications
> facility on Nebraska Ave. NW, placing him right next door to the
> WRC-TV/NBC News building where Meet the Press and the McLaughlin
> Group are produced, along with The George Michael Sports Machine,
> for those of you into Sunday night sports shows.
>
>
>
>     > 3) Another round of left-wing looniness from Hearst
> Newspapers columnist and former UPI reporter Helen Thomas, this
> one during Friday's White House press briefing. She demanded of
> Press Secretary Ari Fleischer: "Who in this country, besides the
> President and his courtiers, want to go to war with Iraq?"
>
>     She followed up by equating U.S. possession of "weapons of
> mass destruction" with Iraq's possession of them as if the U.S.
> and Iraq have equal consideration for the lives of people and
> would use them to achieve morally equivalent goals: "We have
> weapons of mass destruction. Eight other countries have them."
>
>     MRC analyst Ken Shepherd caught the insipidness which occurred
> a bit before 11am EST on January 24. The exchange:
>
>     Thomas: "Who in this country, besides the President and his
> courtiers, want to go to war with Iraq?"
>     Fleischer: "I'm not aware of anybody here who wants to go to
> war with Iraq, Helen. But the President very much wants to protect
> the peace by making sure that Saddam Hussein cannot engage in war
> against us."
>     Thomas: "Is he aware that there is widespread opposition to
> war in this country?"
>     Fleischer: "Do you think that the majority of the Americans
> are opposed to war with Iraq, Helen?"
> Thomas: "I think so. What do you think?"
>     Fleischer: "Well, I think if you take a look at all the public
> surveys on this issue, there's a lot of Americans who believe that
> Saddam Hussein does, indeed, pose a threat. And they believe?"
>     Thomas: "They'll give their brothers, their husbands, their
> children?"
>     Fleischer: "?and they believe that if the President, knowing
> what he knows, makes the determination that the best way to
> protect the American people from the risks that we have seen our
> nation is vulnerable to?"
>     Thomas: "So he believes people want to go to war?"
>     Fleischer: "?is to disarm Saddam Hussein from having weapons
> of mass destruction, the President will make a case if he makes
> that decision. "
>     Thomas: "We have weapons of mass destruction. Eight other
> countries have them."
>     Fleischer: "And how many resolutions has the United Nations
> passed urging us to not have the weapons that we have that have
> successfully kept the peace for 50 years?"
>     Thomas: "How many other nations have defied U.N. resolutions
> and gotten away with it?"
>     Fleischer: "None like Saddam Hussein on a measure that has
> been this unequivocal, where the world has called on him?"
>     Thomas: "I could give you chapter and verse otherwise."
>     Fleischer: "I'm aware that you try to."
>
>     Indeed she does. I'm becoming convinced that Fleischer calls
> on Thomas because of how bad she makes the White House press corps
> look to anyone watching the briefing on a cable news channel.
>
>
>
>     > 4) The New York Times managed to quote two "Republicans" in
> a Friday story on how a New York Times/CBS News poll found
> declining approval for President Bush and his economic policies,
> but both "Republicans," MRC analyst Patrick Gregory noticed,
> trashed Bush from the left. Apparently, those are the only kind of
> Republicans Times reporters know.
>
>     One "Republican" woman complained about how Bush "is
> concentrating on the war effort in Iraq and not worrying about the
> country," and another "Republican" woman insisted: "We should not
> be cutting taxes as long as there is a deficit." Sounding more
> like Tom Daschle than any Republican, she charged: "The tax cuts
> helped only the wealthy."
>
>     The poll generated low approval numbers for the tax cut
> because it juxtaposed the tax cut with reducing the federal
> deficit and "preserving" Social Security, as if it's an either/or
> choice. One question, for instance, read: "If you had to choose,
> would you prefer reducing the federal budget deficit or cutting
> taxes?" The deficit won 48 to 44 percent. Of course conservatives,
> with whom the Times apparently has no contact, would suggest that
> if tax cuts spur economic growth they would reduce the deficit.
>
>     Nonetheless, the Times/CBS News pollsters also wondered:
> "Which do you think is better way to improve the national economy:
> cutting taxes or reducing the federal budget deficit?" Lowering
> the deficit was preferred by 56 percent compared to 36 percent for
> cutting taxes.
>
>     Another juxtaposition question: "If you had to choose, would
> you prefer preserving programs like Social Security and Medicare
> or cutting taxes?" Tax cuts said a mere 12 percent compared to 85
> percent for "preserving" Social Security.
>
>     On another front, the poll distorted the abortion debate by
> using this phrasing: "When George W. Bush appoints Supreme Court
> Justices, do you think he is likely to appoint Justices who will
> vote to keep abortion legal OR Justices who will vote to make
> abortion against the law?"
>
>     That's a false choice since upholding Roe v. Wade will keep
> abortion legal, but if the justices overturn Roe v. Wade abortion
> will not become illegal since that would simply return to the
> states the power to regulate abortion and in most places it would,
> most likely, remain legal.
>
>     The abortion question was #32 in survey. The tax questions
> were numbers 37, 38 and 42. You can see the entire poll at:
> http://www.nytimes.com/packages/html/politics/20030124POLL_RESULTS.html
>
>     Now an excerpt from the January 24 story, "Bush's Backing,
> Though Still Strong, Shows Steady Decline," by Adam Nagourney and
> Janet Elder:
>
> President Bush's public support has eroded steadily over the last
> 12 months, with a rising number of Americans expressing discontent
> both with his economic policies and his handling of foreign
> affairs, the latest New York Times/CBS News poll shows.
>
> The poll, taken at the midpoint of Mr. Bush's term as he prepares
> to deliver his second State of the Union address on Tuesday, found
> that 59 percent of Americans approve the way he is performing his
> job. That figure is the lowest it has been since the terrorist
> attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. But the
> president's ratings were unusually high after Sept. 11, 2001 and,
> by historical standards, remain strong today....
>
> Half of all respondents said Mr. Bush did not share their
> priorities for the country, an increase of 14 points from when the
> question was asked a year ago. That is a question pollsters watch
> closely to measure potential vulnerabilities of a candidate....
>
> The survey found that Americans disagree with Mr. Bush on issues
> like cutting taxes, affirmative action and appointing judges who
> oppose abortion rights. Those are all issues that Democratic
> presidential candidates have been raising against him in early
> campaign swings through Iowa and New Hampshire.
>
> More than half the respondents said they opposed a centerpiece of
> Mr. Bush's tax cut plan, the elimination of a tax on dividends,
> which Democrats have used to portray Mr. Bush as a friend of the
> rich.
>
> A majority of the poll's respondents -- including 49 percent of
> Republicans -- said reducing the deficit would be more likely to
> revive the economy than would cutting taxes, the course pressed by
> Mr. Bush. The White House announced last week that the budget
> deficit for next year would reach at least $300 billion....
>
> Of particular note, only 44 percent of respondents said they
> approved of how Mr. Bush was managing the economy. That figure is
> almost identical to the 42 percent of respondents who said they
> approved of the way that Mr. Bush's father was handling the
> economy at a similar point in what proved to be his first and only
> term in the White House.
>
> For all the attention on Mr. Bush's ratings, job approval levels
> two years into a president's first term are an imprecise indicator
> of how a chief executive will fare on Election Day. Ronald Reagan,
> with a 37 percent approval rating at this point in his first term,
> went on to win re-election by a landslide, while President George
> Bush, with 62 percent, lost....
>
> On several issues, the poll -- and the comments of respondents in
> follow-up interviews -- suggested that Mr. Bush's views were
> somewhat out of step with many Americans' views.
>
> "President Bush is concentrating on the war effort in Iraq and not
> worrying about the country," said Marianne Reiter, 70, a
> Republican in Queens. "I think he justifies the tax breaks by
> thinking they will get people to vote for him."...
>
> "We should not be cutting taxes as long as there is a deficit,"
> said Nancy Stevens, 65, a Republican who is a retired store owner
> from East Hardwick, Vt., said in a follow-up interview. "The tax
> cuts helped only the wealthy. If we took care of the budget
> deficit, it would trickle down better to the lower income people."
>
> Robert Hall, a 74-year-old retired high school business instructor
> from Louisiana, said: "We didn't have a budget deficit until
> President Bush got in there. All those years we struggled to get
> rid of the deficit and now we're right back into it. The tax cuts
> put us back into the deficit."
>
> Fifty-six percent said that lowering the deficit was the best way
> to improve the national economy, while 36 percent said the best
> way was cutting taxes. And 69 percent said the deficit was "a bad
> thing," while 21 percent said it was a good thing.
>
> And 58 percent of respondents said that Mr. Bush's policies favor
> the rich, compared with 10 percent who said they favored the
> middle class. In addition, 26 percent said they treated everyone
> the same and 1 percent said they favored the poor....
>
>     END of Excerpt
>
>     For the story in its entirety:
> http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/24/national/24POLL.html
>
>
>
>     > 5) CNBC/NBC anchor Brian Williams got an early start in
> proclaiming his loyalty to the Democratic Party cause. At age 7-
> and-a-half he wrote a letter to President Lyndon Johnson, signing
> it, "One of your young Democrats." That revelation came at a forum
> last week with Williams in Austin, Texas during which he
> complained that in cable news "there's too much opinion and
> attitude slipping in."
>
>     Williams should know. He offers a lot of it himself and so he
> certainly doesn't practice what he preaches.
>
>     A couple of weeks ago, on CNBC's The News with Brian Williams,
> he chafed at how the anti-war protesters "will feel the hot breath
> of the patriotism police."
>
>     Last October 11, Williams gushed on his show about the
> greatness of Jimmy Carter: "Is it fair to call him [Jimmy Carter]
> the best former President in, at minimum, modern American history,
> and perhaps, well, I guess, the last 200 years?"
>
>     On his show on September 18 he suggested the "world view" Held
> by the U.S. led to 9/11: "The situation hasn't been this lopsided
> in terms of one breakout superpower on the planet in quite some
> time."
>     Newsweek International Editor Fareed Zakaria: "It hasn't been
> like this since the Roman Empire two millennia ago."
>     Williams: "I was going to say we'd have to go back to the days
> of the Empire, and that gives the U.S. obvious military swagger.
> Does it give them any kind of moral courage above anyone else and
> anyone's world, and isn't that world view part of what got the
> United States in trouble September 11th?"
>
>     And last July he saw meaning in a common phrase as he raised
> the possibility Bush may be leading the nation into another
> Depression. He asked historian Robert Dallek: "I'm going to put
> two quotes on the screen and ask you if this was an honest mistake
> on the part of the White House, or if the speechwriters had no
> sense of history. The first quote is, 'The economy is
> fundamentally sound.' Herbert Hoover, 1929, a quote that just
> meant we're heading for hell. And here is George W. Bush today,
> 'The fundamentals of our economy are sound.' Is this an honest
> mistake by White House speechwriters, who must know the difference
> or similarities in this case?"
>
>     For a lot more examples of liberal pontificating from
> Williams, see my May 31, 2002 piece for National Review Online
> about the Williams record, "From the Same School: Brian Williams
> is more liberal anchoring from NBC." That's online at:
> http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/comment-baker053102.asp
>
>     In the NRO piece I recounted how to Williams neither Al Gore
> nor Bill Bradley were liberal presidential candidates. On his
> MSNBC show in July of 1999 he lamented how "there is no true
> liberal to be found in this race. There's no Harkin, there's no
> Kennedy, there are just two centrists."
>
>     While he doesn't see any liberals in America, he has no
> problem tagging conservatives as "far right" extremists. Opening
> the December 22, 2000 NBC Nightly News, Williams asserted that in
> picking John Ashcroft for attorney general, President Bush "calms
> the far right politically."
>
>     Matching the environmental lobby's spin, Williams regularly
> condemns SUVs. He demanded in January of 2002: "With the U.S.
> locked in dependence on foreign oil, is it downright unpatriotic
> to drive an SUV?" In early March of 2002 he rued: "Gas-guzzling
> SUVs and light trucks were big winners on Capitol Hill today, but
> there's concern tonight the environment could be the big loser."
>
>     Fast-forwarding to last week, Williams' complaint about
> opinion creeping into the news came at a January 23 forum
> sponsored by Austin's PBS affiliate, KLRU-TV. An excerpt from a
> January 24 Austin American-Statesman story about it by reporter
> Diane Holloway, a piece which was highlighted by Jim Romenesko's
> MediaNews page: ( http://www.poynter.org/medianews/ ) The excerpt:
>
> The influence of cable news on television news coverage is not
> good, a prominent cable news anchor says.
>
> "There's too much opinion and attitude slipping in," said Brian
> Williams, who anchors CNBC's nightly news and will replace Tom
> Brokaw on NBC's newscast after the 2004 elections. "From my corner
> of cable, I don't like what I see going on. Tell us your opinion,
> but don't call it a newscast."
>
> The slap at opinion-soaked news, mostly directed at Fox News, was
> delivered Thursday night at KLRU's Distinguished Speaker Series at
> the LBJ Library. But the topic, "The Future of Television News,"
> was mostly trumped by colorful tales from the trenches delivered
> by CBS anchor-reporter Bob Schieffer, PBS "NewsHour" anchor Jim
> Lehrer and Williams....
>
> And Williams, a New Jersey native, has a Texas connection, too:
> He's a longtime friend of President Johnson's family. Introducing
> Williams at the top of the evening, Evan Smith, editor of Texas
> Monthly, read a letter Williams wrote to LBJ when he was 7 1/2
> years old, signing it, "One of your young Democrats."
>
> "By the way, I'm a registered independent now," Williams said with
> a grin....
>
>     END of Excerpt
>
>     Independently liberal.
>
>     For the story in full:
> http://www.austin360.com/statesman/editions/friday/metro_state_4.html
>
>     Williams' preference for those on the liberal side lasted
> beyond his childhood. While attending, and later dropping out
> from, George Washington University in 1979-80 Williams was an
> intern at the Carter White House.
>
>
>
>     > 6) The MRC's research is so compelling that even someone in
> Jerusalem tracked it down and the Super Bowl preview edition of
> USA Today featured a quote from us, me specifically.
>
>     -- On FNC's Fox Newswatch on Saturday, Newsday columnist Jim
> Pinkerton, appearing from Jerusalem, cited MRC numbers to document
> how the networks aired more stories on the anti-war march than the
> pro-life rally: "The Media Research Center did a comparison. I
> think it was like 39 to 14 stories on the anti-war protest versus
> stories on the pro-life protest."
>
>     Actually, the numbers in the study by the MRC's Tim Graham
> were 26 segments (stories and interviews) aired by ABC, CBS and
> NBC on the anti-war rally versus just nine on the anti-abortion
> march. But Pinkerton got the ratio right.
>
>     To read the January 23 Media Reality Check, which Washington
> Times "Inside Politics" columnist Greg Pierce also cited on
> Friday: http://www.mrc.org/realitycheck/2003/fax20030123.asp
>
>
>     -- One of the two "Feedback" quotes run by USA Today on
> Friday, beneath the column by USA Today founder Al Neuharth,
> "Public wins if press is at Iraq war front," came from the MRC:
>     "The Bush administration should be very wary about granting
> journalists access to the front lines. While most reporters can be
> trusted, all too many will put getting a scoop or highlighting an
> embarrassing military miscue ahead of the success of the U.S.
> military effort and the safety of the troops."
> -- Brent Baker, vice president, Media Research Center"
>
>     My quote isn't online, but Neuharth's column is if you want to
> see to what I was reacting:
>
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/columnist/neuharth/2003-01-23-neuharth_
x.htm
>
>     The other "Feedback" quote came from Major General Paul D.
> Eaton of Fort Benning in Georgia. He declared: "The idea of
> embedded media is absolutely appealing." But then he adopted a
> very questionable assumption: "An unbiased media accompanying the
> troops will provide us with an accurate account of the action."
>
>     "An unbiased media" is the operative phrase. If we had one
> we'd get an "accurate account," but we don't have one.
>
>
>
>     > 7) From the January 24 Late Show with David Letterman, as
> announced by ten Army National Guard reservists from the 719th
> Transportation Company at Fort Dix, New Jersey, the "Top Ten Army
> Reservist Pet Peeves." Late Show Web site:
> http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/
>
> 10. Army rules prohibit me from bringing my pet monkey
> (Sergeant George Scheer)
>
> 9. Water that tastes "canteeny"
> (Specialist Elizabeth Cullen)
>
> 8. People who panned "Kangaroo Jack" before they even saw it
> (Specialist Maurice Mangra)
>
> 7. Rarely get asked to invade fun places, like Tampa
> (Specialist Mariecha Rowe)
>
> 6. Television in the rec room only gets CBS
> (Specialist Carlos Rivera)
>
> 5. I miss the day-to-day challenges of my civilian job -- just
> kidding
> (Sergeant Steven Watt)
>
> 4. When it's my turn to parallel park the tank
> (Sergeant Marilyn Lopera)
>
> 3. Sergeants who yell when a polite suggestion would suffice
> (Specialist Matthew Phillips)
>
> 2. Skipping Salisbury Steak night in the mess hall to do a lame
> comedy bit for Letterman
> (Specialist Joseph Edghill)
>
> 1. Looking at camouflage all day makes you dizzy
> (Sergeant Barbara Andres)
>
>
>     > Anyone know if George Clooney did any fresh liberal Bush-
> bashing on the debut of ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live on Sunday Night?
> It would have aired at about 12:30am EST/11:30pm CST. The company
> which owns Washington, DC's ABC affiliate is refusing to air it on
> any of the ABC stations it owns (Birmingham, Harrisburg,
> Charleston, Little Rock, Roanoke), not because of content but
> because of a financial considerations, so I didn't see it.
>
> -- Brent Baker
>
>
>     >>> Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon
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