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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 07:58:24 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: John Kerry Portrayed as a Victim of Aggressive Bush
    Team Attacks

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
     10:55am EDT, Tuesday April 27, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 68)
 The 1,705th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> John Kerry Portrayed as a Victim of Aggressive Bush Team Attacks
> "Keep Your Laws Off My Body!" Screamed Left-Wing Celebrities
> CBS Followed NY Times in Pairing Tillman with Homeless Vet

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1) John Kerry appeared on Monday's Good Morning America on ABC to
respond to evidence he's contradicted himself on throwing away his
war medals, but instead of making Kerry's credibility the focus of
the day's news, ABC and the other networks painted Kerry's post-
Vietnam War actions as an unfair burden and/or Kerry as a victim
of unfair attacks from pro-Bush political operatives. Peter
Jennings framed the story around Kerry's "dilemma: After brave and
honorable service in Vietnam, a post-war record that dogs him."
CBS's Dan Rather portrayed the Bush team as the aggressor: "The
Bush-Cheney re-election campaign launched another attack today on
Democratic challenger..." NBC's Kelly O'Donnell ignored ABC's role
as she blamed "political digging" and claimed questions about the
"credibility" of both candidates had been "renewed." CNN anchor
Aaron Brown framed the news through a prism hostile to Bush as he
recited a litany of supposed Bush-Cheney failures as he implied
disgust at how they still had the chutzpah to criticize Kerry.

2) A lot of screaming, left-wing rants from celebrities, and the
founder of CNN, during Sunday afternoon's "March for Women's
Lives" rally on Washington, DC's Mall carried live by C-SPAN.
Actress Whoopi Goldberg screamed "never again!" as she held up a
coat hanger. "Keep your laws off my body!" yelled actress Ashley
Judd. Actress Susan Sarandon ranted: "We reject, Mr. Bush, your
hypocrisy, your greed, your disrespect for women's bodies, for
women everywhere!" Actress Camryn Manheim claimed that "the far
right have already squandered your Social Security," so "they
better put our uteruses in a lockbox and keep their hands off
them!"

3) Update: Saturday's New York Times paired, on its front page,
the killing in Afghanistan of NFL star-turned Army Ranger Pat
Tillman and the plight of supposedly homeless Army veteran Nicole
Goodwin -- just as did the CBS Evening News that night, as
highlighted in the April 26 CyberAlert.


    > 1) John Kerry appeared on Monday's Good Morning America on
ABC to respond to a story from ABC's Brian Ross about how, in
contradiction to what he's maintained since, he stated in a 1971
interview that during a protest his threw away his own medals from
the Vietnam War, but instead of making Kerry's very contentious
interview with Charles Gibson or his credibility the focus of the
day's news, ABC and the other networks painted Kerry's post-
Vietnam War actions as an unfair burden and/or Kerry as a victim
of unfair attacks from pro-Bush political operatives.

    With "Kerry's Dilemma" as the on-screen heading, ABC anchor
Peter Jennings framed the story, "We'll take 'A Closer Look'
tonight at John Kerry dilemma: After brave and honorable service
in Vietnam, a post-war record that dogs him."

    Despite Kerry's personal attack on President Bush, as he
charged that Bush "can't even show or prove that he showed up for
duty in the National Guard," and a new matching Kerry TV ad, CBS's
Dan Rather portrayed the Bush team as the aggressor: "The Bush-
Cheney re-election campaign launched another attack today on
Democratic challenger, Senator John Kerry, implying the United
States would be less safe with Kerry as President. The Kerry
campaign fired back with a counter-attack against President Bush's
campaign."

    CBS reporter Byron Pitts continued the theme of a dedicated
campaigner for jobs knocked off message by an illegitimate issue:
"Starting out on a three-state bus tour through blue collar towns
in key swing states, Senator John Kerry had hoped to talk solely
about jobs in America, but instead was forced to respond to the
latest Republican attacks on his record on national security."

    Over on the NBC Nightly News, Kelly O'Donnell ignored ABC's
role as she blamed "political digging" and claimed questions about
the "credibility" of both candidates had been "renewed." O'Donnell
insisted: "Political digging unearthed old film of Kerry and
renewed questions about military service and credibility for both
campaigns." O'Donnell lamented: "Tonight, as his bus tour rolls
through three battleground states, John Kerry tries to focus on
jobs, with events from the past never far behind."

    FNC's Carl Cameron, on Special Report with Brit Hume, and
CNN's Candy Crowley, on NewsNight, at least correctly credited the
day's news to the news media over political underhandedness. On
CNN's NewsNight on Monday night, Crowley ran a clip of Kerry
maintaining on ABC how "this is a complete distraction by the Bush
administration. It's their attack method. This is what they do and
it's coming from a president who can't even prove that he actually
showed up for duty in the National Guard." But she then corrected
him as she led into a soundbite from Karen Hughes the day before
on CNN's Late Edition: "It is the news media looking through the
Kerry records but Republicans are happy to stoke whatever is
there."

    CNN anchor Aaron Brown framed the day's news through a prism
hostile to the Bush camp and favorable toward the Kerry team. He
led his broadcast by taking a shot at both campaigns as he charged
that "the President and the Vice President both managed to use the
system to avoid service in Vietnam. John Kerry surely said some
things after his service there that were too harsh and unfair to
most American soldiers fighting the war."

    Brown demanded: "We can do this tit-for-tat until November and
no one will gain a thing, so our advice: Let's get on to today."

    Setting up a clip from Dick Cheney's speech in Missouri
earlier in the day, Brown recited a litany of supposed Bush-Cheney
failures as he seemed to imply disgust at how they still had the
chutzpah to criticize Kerry: "The best defense is a good offense
they say and the Bush campaign seems to be buying. On a week when
the President and Vice President will go before the 9/11
commission, on a week when the Supreme Court will hear a case to
open the records of the Vice President's energy task force and, on
a week that will end on May 1st, the anniversary of the
President's speech declaring major combat over in Iraq, the Vice
President took to the stump today to say John Kerry's judgment on
national security is questionable. He also made light of the
Senator's claim that he enjoys the support of many foreign leaders
where Iraq is concerned."
    Cheney: "Senator Kerry said that he has met with foreign
leaders, and I quote 'who can't go out and say this publicly but
boy they look at you and say you've got to win this. You've got to
beat this guy. We need a new policy, things like that.' In any
case, come November, the outcome of the election will be
determined by the voters of the United States not by unnamed
foreign leaders."

    Brown then set up the above-quoted Crowley piece: "Senator
Kerry, meanwhile, was dealing with other comments, comments made
long ago that will not go away."

    A befuddled Brown soon ruminated: "It is a somewhat strange
set of circumstances that 33-year-old questions are being asked of
a candidate who volunteered to go to Vietnam and served with
distinction, however briefly. How can that be, we wondered? And,
as we often do when we wonder, we asked Jeff Greenfield for his
thoughts."

    Greenfield argued that the Bush campaign is using Kerry's
post-Vietnam War comments to suggest that Kerry doesn't support
today's troops in Iraq.

    (Earlier in the day, just past 10am EDT on CNN's Live Today,
anchor Daryn Kagan marveled at how the Bush camp would dare raise
Vietnam-era service. The MRC's Rich Noyes caught how this was the
way Kagan set up a story on Kerry's appearance on GMA to respond
to an ABC News story: "It's pretty interesting to hear the Bush
camp go into this area of Senator Kerry's military record. It
seems like that's the last place they'd want to go, because not
wanting to draw any more attention to President Bush's military
record, which took them so long to quiet down.")


    More on the Monday night, April 26 stories, on ABC, CBS and
NBC:

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Jennings noted how the campaigns
"traded accusations, quite furiously at times, over which
candidate can better protect the country. The attacks are personal
and very pointed."

    Terry Moran outlined how Cheney in Missouris launched the
Bush-Cheney campaign's new line of attack on how Kerry called for
reductions in key weapons systems and how a new Bush ad stresses
that point. The Democrats, Moran observed, "responded rapidly"
with DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe claiming that while Kerry was
fighting in Vietnam, Cheney got deferments. Meanwhile, the Kerry
campaign maintained that Cheney wanted cuts in the same programs
cited in the Bush ad. Moran played a clip of a new Kerry ad: "This
election is about character. It's between John Kerry who left no
man behind and George Bush who simply left."

    Later, Jennings got to the segment he had teased up top: "So
we are going to take 'A Closer Look' tonight at John Kerry's
Vietnam dilemma. By all accounts, he served honorably in the
Vietnam War, and then he came home and got very involved in the
anti-war movement. In running for President, Senator Kerry
emphasizes his military service. And now Vietnam is also a
difficult issue to shake. Here's ABC's Dan Harris."

    Harris began, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth:
"John Kerry, the decorated soldier in the jungles of Vietnam, is
now a familiar sight. Increasingly, however, so too is this: John
Kerry fending off questions about what he did after the war."
    John Kerry, from West Virginia on Monday's GMA: "Charlie,
you're wrong. That is not what happened."
    Harris: "Today, it was questions about this event. Had Kerry
told the truth about whether he threw away his medals or his
ribbons at a 1971 anti-war protest in Washington?"
    Kerry on GMA: "This comes from a president and a Republican
Party that can't even answer whether or not he showed up for duty
in the National Guard. I'm not going to stand for it."
    Harris acknowledged: "While Senator Kerry insists much of this
is driven by partisan politics, at least some of the anger about
his Vietnam-era activities existed long before he was a candidate
for President. The anger stems from a speech Kerry made before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee where he became the face of the
anti-war movement, calling attention to alleged atrocities
committed by U.S. soldiers."
    Kerry in 1971: "-cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly shot
at civilians, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis
Khan-"
    Harris: "For some Vietnam veterans, including former Marine
Fred Williams, those comments still sting."
    Fred Williams, Vietnam Veteran: "When I think about the guys
that we lost over there, and that he desecrates the memory of
those people, I think it's very bad."
    Mac Owen, Vietnam Veteran: "He did it, it seemed to me, on the
backs of the rest of us by coming back and by essentially accusing
the rest of us of war crimes and gooks and the like."
    Harris: "In a recent interview with ABC News, Kerry,
surrounded by his fellow veterans, said he regretted some of the
language he had used as a 27-year-old activist but that he'd been
essentially correct."
    Kerry: "And I don't back down one inch from the decision I
made from whether or not I think I was right today. I admire these
guys who stood up and spoke their conscience."
    Harris: "Notwithstanding Kerry's past comments, Vietnam
veterans, including former Senator and triple amputee, Max
Cleland, are some of Kerry's strongest supporters."
    Former Senator Max Cleland (D-GA): "He earned the right, just
like all of us Vietnam veterans earned the right, and all veterans
earned the right to say whatever they want to."
    Harris: "Kerry's Vietnam-era experience has been the source of
his most powerful television ads-"
    Clip of ad: "John Kerry: The military experience to defend
America."
    Harris: "-and campaign events. But it's also become the source
of some of his most difficult moments."
    Kerry, as he rips off microphone after GMA interview ended:
"God, they're doing the work of the Republican National
Committee."
    Harris: "Dan Harris, ABC News, New York."


    -- CBS Evening News. From Cannonsburg, Pennsylvania, Byron
Pitts framed the day's news from Kerry's perspective: "Starting
out on a three-state bus tour through blue collar towns in key
swing states, Senator John Kerry had hoped to talk solely about
jobs in America. But instead was forced to respond to the latest
Republican attacks on his record on national security."
    Kerry, in his bus: "These people have a truth deficit."
    Pitts: "It was a war or words all day."
    Cheney, in speech: "The Senator from Massachusetts has given
us ample grounds to doubt the judgment and the attitude he brings
to bear on vital issues of national security."
    Pitts: "Cheney's speech signaled the start of a $10 million ad
campaign."
    Bush ad: "Yet John Kerry has repeatedly opposed weapons vital
to winning the war on terror: Bradley fighting vehicles, Patriot
missiles-"
    Kerry on bus, to Pitts: "That's the most bogus thing I've ever
hear in my life. I have voted for the largest defense budgets in
the history of our country."

    (One wonders if reporters would be as willing to let a
conservative, who has voted for social spending cuts, to boast of
how he or she has "voted for the largest welfare budgets in the
history of our country"?)

    Pitts continued: "Meantime, Democrats want to take Kerry's
military record versus George W. Bush's."
    Kerry ad: "This election is about character. It's between John
Kerry, who left no man behind, and George Bush who simply left."
    Pitts: "Democrats believe Kerry's record on national security,
his service in Vietnam, are his strong points. But now the Bush
campaign is trying to turn those positives into negatives. The
latest questions about Kerry's credibility, this 1971 interview
where a young John Kerry, decorated war hero, says he tossed his
medals over the White House fence in protest of the Vietnam War."
    Interviewer: "How many did you give back, John?"
    Kerry: "I gave back, I can't remember, six, seven, eight,
nine."
    Pitts: "Years later he said he kept his medals and only tossed
away his ribbons."
    Kerry on bus to Pitts: "I'm not going to let somebody, who
can't even prove that he actually did his National Guard service,
start questioning what we did in 1971 in protest of the war."
    Pitts concluded: "With the national at war yet again, who did
what 30 years ago is an issue for both campaigns. Kerry believes
if the Republicans have picked this fight, they've picked the
wrong one."


    -- NBC Nightly News. Tom Brokaw's tease, in contrast to the
spin on ABC and CBS, reflected how Kerry's changing story was the
news of the day: "Symbols of war. John Kerry: In the '70s he said
one thing about his war medals and protests, now it's something
else. New questions for the Vietnam veteran as he takes a shot at
the President's military record."

    Kelly O'Donnell, however, treated Kerry as a victim as she
began by maintaining that "the political digging unearthed old
film of Kerry and renewed questions about military service and
credibility for both campaigns. In this 1971 public affairs show,
John Kerry talked about tossing Vietnam honors as an act of
protest. Republican officials now charge Kerry has changed his
story on this controversial event."
    Interviewer: "How many did you give back, John?"
    Kerry: "I gave back, I can't remember, six, seven, eight,
nine."
    Interviewer: "Well, you were awarded the bronze star, a silver
star and three Purple Hearts."
    Kerry: "And above that I gave back my others."
    O'Donnell: "But in what some call a contradiction, over the
last twenty years Kerry has repeatedly said he threw his ribbons,
not his medals. Today Senator Kerry called this a phoney
controversy. He said veterans used the words ribbons and medals
interchangeably and that he's remained consistent. While he has
let other criticize President Bush's military service, today Kerry
did so himself."
    Kerry on GMA: "This comes from a President who can't even show
or prove that he showed up for duty in the National Guard."
    Kerry, beside his bus: "And if George Bush wants to ask me
questions about that through his surrogates, he owes America an
explanation of whether or not he showed up for duty in the
National Guard. Prove it."
    O'Donnell: "From the Republican side, a new attack ad."
    Bush ad: "Yet John Kerry has repeatedly opposed weapons-"
    O'Donnell: "Vice President Cheney in Missouri today challenged
Kerry's stand on Iraq and his votes on defense spending."
    Cheney: "In any case, come November the outcome of the
election will be determined by the voters of the United States,
not by unnamed foreign leaders."
    O'Donnell: "Kerry's aides say they are puzzled by attacks
about the Vietnam-era because they claim their response reminds
voters Kerry is a decorated veteran."
    Terry McAuliffe: "George Bush could have gone to Vietnam. He
chose not to. Dick Cheney could have gone to Vietnam and he chose
not to."
    O'Donnell concluded: "But tonight, as his bus tour rolls
through three battleground states, John Kerry tries to focus on
jobs, with events from the past never far behind."

    For the online version of the Brian Ross story which aired on
Monday's God Morning America, with a video clip from the 1971
Kerry appearance on WRC-TV in Washington, DC:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/Politics/Investigation/kerry_vietnam_medals_040425-1.html

    For the story as printed in Monday's New York Times, which
noted that the video was found in the National Archives:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/26/politics/campaign/26MEDA.html



    > 2) A lot of screaming, left-wing rants from celebrities, and
the founder of CNN, during Sunday afternoon's "March for Women's
Lives" rally on Washington, DC's Mall carried live by C-SPAN.

    Actress Whoopi Goldberg screamed "never again!" as she held up
a coat hanger. She argued: "There is a war going on....It's a war
on women. Access to family planning, sex education, abortion --
it's been attacked and restricted. Explain to me how if you do not
have family planning you can bitch about abortion!" She also
preposterously charged: "The government continues to slash and
destroy critical family planning."

    "Keep your laws off my body!" yelled actress Ashley Judd
before she asked: "Can you hear me 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue?!"
Actress Susan Sarandon ranted about how "we are here today with
our daughters, with our mothers, with our husbands, with our
boyfriends, with our sisters, with our lovers, and in solidarity
with our sisters all over the world, to tell you to keep our hands
off our bodies! We will not be gagged! We will not be silenced!
And we will vote!" Sarandon charged: "We reject, Mr. Bush, your
hypocrisy, your greed, your disrespect for women's bodies, for
women everywhere!"

    Actress Camryn Manheim warned that "we are one vote away on
the Supreme Court from throwing women back to the 19th century."
She claimed that "the far right have already squandered your
Social Security," so "they better put our uteruses in a lockbox
and keep their hands off them!" In a personal shot at the Bush
family, she contended: "I've heard a lot of women say that they
wish opponents of reproductive rights, like George W. Bush, could
get pregnant. Personally, I'm glad George Bush can't get pregnant
because we don't need any more Bushes in this town."

    And in a seemingly unintentional self-parody, Ted Turner
proclaimed: "I am anti-war, anti-poverty, anti-AIDS, anti-hunger,
anti-hate, and I am pro-UN, pro-freedom, pro-competition, pro-
democracy, pro-woman and pro-choice."

    The MRC's Jessica Anderson took down, in sequence, the most
obnoxious rants and scream-fests from those on stage at the
rally/protest carried by C-SPAN on Sunday, April 25 starting at
about 2pm EDT:

    -- Whoopi Goldberg: "This is no joke. This is still America.
This is not a fundamentalist country. The separation of church and
state must be maintained. We need to help stop the attacks on
women's reproductive rights in the name of religion, not only here
at home, but all over the world. Does anybody remember this [holds
up wire coat hanger]? You remember what this was used for? There's
a whole generation out there standing with us who don't know what
this is for. A couple of people said to me, 'Why are you carrying
a hanger?' I said because this is what life was like before
choice. This was the choice. This was it, and I'm here to tell you
never again. We are not going backwards, child, never again. Never
again. You understand me, young women under 30? This is what we
used! Never again! Never again! Never again! Never again! Never
again! Never again! Never again will this be the choice of any
woman in our hemisphere, in our world. Never again.
    "There is a war going on. It's not the one we see on TV every
day, it's a war on women. Access to family planning, sex
education, abortion -- it's been attacked and restricted. Explain
to me how if you do not have family planning you can bitch about
abortion! Explain that to me! If you're not going to help people
get the information they need, back off! Back off!
    "They're talking about the loss of Roe v. Wade. The Supreme
Court is split five to four on the issue. For now we've got five
votes and the anti-choice people, they've got four. But we can all
count one vote protecting the freedoms we've fought for [sic].
It's not enough. We are one vote away from going back to this
[holds up hanger again]. You understand? One vote away. It's not
even an option. We're not going back. It's not going to happen.
The government continues to slash and destroy critical family
planning -- safe delivery, prenatal care, AIDS/HIV prevention
funding. Here and around the world, we've seen critical life-
saving dollars diverted so that abstinence-only programs can
exist. Excuse me! Excuse me! That cannot be the only choice.
Everybody makes a mistake....
    "Women are dying around the world from illegal abortions. We
stand here, we're marching, but let me explain something to you.
As we stand, one woman is dying every six minutes. Now let's do
the math. Since we left at 10 a.m., thereabouts, over 30 women
have died needlessly. Today alone, thirty women are dead because
they got pregnant in the wrong country. That's why we're here. The
struggle has to go on until every woman in every country in the
world has the right to control her life! If we can stand together
in a way that this nation has never seen before, we can turn the
tide. We can turn the tide! We need to get everybody out. We need
to register people to vote. We need to explain to them what the
issue really is. It's okay to have your opinion, but you must keep
choice. Even God gave you freedom of choice! And what God has
given you, let no man tear asunder, child! God gave us freedom of
choice! They say that's what elevates us above the animals. Well,
let's exercise that choice! Let's make the right choice, put the
right person in office this time! Quit fooling around!"

    Goldberg's page on the Internet Movie Database:
http://imdb.com/name/nm0000155/

    NBC's page for her sit-com on that network:
http://www.nbc.com/Whoopi/


    -- Ted Turner: "It's an honor and a privilege to be here today
with all of you and to have been able to take part in this
historic occasion. As you all know, I'm a businessman and a
philanthropist. I believe in conserving our national resources. I
adhere to the idea that government should be as small as possible
and generally stay out of our lives. I am a champion of freedom
and free markets, and I am pro-choice. As a philanthropist, I
express my compassion for the world. We work to save endangered
species and lands under assault. We work to reduce nuclear threats
and prevent health pandemics. We support the United Nations and
its efforts to promote peace, progress, cooperation and justice. I
am anti-war, anti-poverty, anti-AIDS, anti-hunger, anti-hate, and
I am pro-UN, pro-freedom, pro-competition, pro-democracy, pro-
woman and pro-choice. I believe that women should have equal and
completely equal rights with men. Thank you very much."


    -- Ashley Judd: "Keep your laws off my body! Can you hear me
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue?! Say it with me so they can hear us.
Keep your laws off my body! Say it to Congress. Keep your laws off
my body! The average woman needs three decades of birth control or
she will have 12 to 15 pregnancies in her lifetime. You don't want
us to have to abort those pregnancies? Have health insurance cover
our birth control."

    The Internet Movie Database page for Ashley Judd, who is
probably best known for her roles in the movies High Crimes and
Double Jeopardy: http://imdb.com/name/nm0000171/

    Photos of Judd: http://imdb.com/name/nm0000171/photogallery


    -- Susan Sarandon: "At a time when we are sending our young
men and women to a foreign country to fight and die for self-
determination, we are here today to say that we demand that right
also to self-determine here, as well as for the women in foreign
countries. We are here in solidarity with our sisters in Africa
and all over the world who are feeling the devastating effects of
the current administration's gag rule. One of the first acts of
the Bush administration was to reenact a law that effectively
denies reproductive services to millions of women in the
developing world. The gag rule prevents U.S. funding to any
organization that provides abortion service or abortion counseling
as part of their larger commitment to reproductive health. This
means the closure of significant numbers of planning clinics that
serve as one-stop centers that give women access to contraception,
pre- and post-natal health care, management of STDs including HIV
and AIDS. These clinics are often the only health care providers
for entire communities in rural Africa. When clinics close down,
women in Africa do what women in this country did years ago when
they had no legal abortion, they turned to black market abortion.
It is estimated that five million African women seek unsafe, back
alley abortions. More than 34,000 of them die. By restricting
access to contraception, the effect of this rule is more likely to
raise the rate of unsafe abortions."
    [During this line, C-SPAN cuts to a crowd shot, where a woman
is holding a sign saying "abort Bush before his second term." A C-
SPAN employee can be heard yelling, "Whoa, whoa, whoa!" off
camera, and they cut back to Sarandon.]
    Sarandon: "And while this President claims to be concerned
about the spread of AIDS globally, this rule also denies funding
to AIDS organizations that share medical workers or clinical space
with family planning non-profits, thus limiting the treatment and
prevention of AIDS.
    "We are here today with our daughters, with our mothers, with
our husbands, with our boyfriends, with our sisters, with our
lovers, and in solidarity with our sisters all over the world, to
tell you to keep our hands off our bodies! We will not be gagged!
We will not be silenced! And we will vote!...We will call, we will
write letters. We reject, Mr. Bush, your hypocrisy, your greed,
your disrespect for women's bodies, for women everywhere! We
reject your vision of the world and we shall vote in the upcoming
election and prove it! Thank you all! See you in the fall! Power
to you all! Thank you!."
    [During this final shot, C-SPAN again cuts to a crowd shot,
where the woman with the sign can again be seen for a few seconds,
but she sits down.]

    Susan Sarandon's page on the Internet Movie Database:
http://imdb.com/name/nm0000215/


    -- Camryn Manheim: "You heard that CNN has reported that this
is the largest march in the history of the universe! Of course,
Fox is reporting that nobody is here! But I know you're here and
they know you're here! This is a historic day! Another in a noble
list of historic days at this place, where the people of America
stand up for their rights! We must continue to do so while we
still can, at least until the Patriot Act is renewed! I hope John
Ashcroft is listening -- he's just over there, you know -- because
we are a true threat to his vision of America! That's why it is so
great to see so many strong and powerful women coming together to
speak with one voice, but it makes me even happier to see the men
here who understand that this is not just a woman's issue, it's a
human issue! Let's hear it for the boys! We are one vote away on
the Supreme Court from throwing women back to the 19th century, a
world where after making the most difficult decision of a woman's
life, she and her doctor could be prosecuted for murder....We must
make it clear that a hundred million women in this country will
not have their rights rolled back by political extremists! The far
right have already squandered your Social Security. They better
put our uteruses in a lockbox and keep their hands off them!
    "I've heard a lot of women say that they wish opponents of
reproductive rights, like George W. Bush, could get pregnant.
Personally, I'm glad George Bush can't get pregnant because we
don't need any more Bushes in this town. These marches, they're
great! They raise awareness for young women � it's fantastic! But
the single most important thing we can do to protect our right to
choose is to make sure that the next President of the United
States to make an appointment to the Supreme Court is named John
Kerry!
    "I know, I know we have some Republican friends here, and I
thank you so much for your support, but please help bring some
sanity back to your party. What happened to the get-the-
government-off-your-backs Republican Party? The party of civil
rights, the live-free-or-die Republican Party! Now the GOP seems
to be all about dictating to us who we can marry, what we can
listen to on the radio, what medical research we can do, and what
we can do with our own bodies! We need to start dictating to them!
They are public servants, they need to listen to us! If you are
anti-choice and you want to erode the hard-earned rights of women,
you are going to lose!
    "We do not want to be the generation that has to apologize to
our daughters and our granddaughters for allowing them to become
second-class citizens, but it is you, you who must be the
guardians of your lives! Each generation must rekindle the spirit
and the struggle for human rights. Our parents gave us a better
world than they had. It is up to us to preserve it, to protect it
and to improve on it! We will never, ever go back! On behalf of my
mother and all the women she fought beside over the last six
decades, I thank you so much for making this journey and joining
this fight. I'm so proud to stand with all of you and Bush, you
better beware! When women vote, Democrats win!"

    Camryn Manheim's Internet Movie Database page:
http://imdb.com/name/nm0005179/

    For ABC's page for The Practice, on which Manheim co-stars:
http://abc.go.com/primetime/thepractice/bios/camryn_manheim.html

    Manheim's own Web site declares she's an "Actor, activist,
rebel." See: http://www.camrynmanheim.com/mainframe.html



    > 3) Update: Saturday's New York Times paired, on its front
page, the killing in Afghanistan of NFL star-turned Army Ranger
Pat Tillman and the plight of supposedly homeless Army veteran
Nicole Goodwin -- just as did the CBS Evening News that night, as
highlighted in the April 26 CyberAlert which reported:
    "Saturday CBS Evening News anchor Mika Brzezinski connected
the case of Pat Tillman, the NFL star turned Army Ranger killed in
Afghanistan, with a woman who couldn't get along with her mother
and so had to live elsewhere, as she teased the broadcast, 'A tale
of two soldiers: One honored in death, the other homeless in
life.' Reporter Kelly Cobiella relayed, without any doubt, the
claims of a self-interested advocate: 'There is no federal shelter
to care for veterans. The burden falls on cash-strapped cities
like New York which struggles to provide shelter for hundreds of
veterans from World War II to Iraq. It is a growing problem, says
Mary Brosnahan Sullivan with the Coalition for the Homeless." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040426.asp#1

    Robert Cox of TheNationalDebate.com
( http://www.thenationaldebate.com ) alerted me to how CBS News
had mimicked how the April 24 Times paired the stories.

    Under the headline, "Duty, Loss and Hardship: Two Soldiers'
Stories," the Times on Saturday devoted the bottom right of its
front page to two big (3 inch by 4-and-a-half inch) side-by-side
photos of Tillman and Goodwin, holding her one-year-old baby
daughter, with three paragraph-long plugs below for stories inside
the newspaper. The headline over the three paragraph summary for
Tillman: "Ex-NFL Player Killed on Patrol." Over the paragraphs
about Goodwin: "Home from Iraq, and Homeless."

    Inside, on page A-12 on the Washington edition, reporter Dan
Barry sympathetically began his "About New York" article on
Goodwin:

This is how Nicole Goodwin travels these days: with her 1-year-old
daughter pressed to her chest in a Snugli, a heavy backpack
strapped across her shoulders, and a baby stroller crammed with as
many bags of clothes and diapers as it can hold. When you are a
homeless young mother, these are the things you carry.

And tucked away somewhere are the documents attesting to Ms.
Goodwin's recent honorable discharge from the United States Army,
as well as Baghdad memories that are still fresh.

Two months ago, she returned to Bronx circumstances that were no
less difficult than when she had left them three years earlier; no
yellow ribbons greeted her. Now, every day, she soldiers on to
find a residence where the rent is not covered by in-kind payments
of late-night bus rides to shelters and early-morning rousting.
All the while, she keeps in mind the acronym she learned in the
Army: Leadership. L is for loyalty; D for duty; R for respect; S
for selfless service; H for honor; P for personal courage. "And I
is my favorite," she says. "It's integrity."

On Thursday morning, Ms. Goodwin wheeled her heavy-duty stroller
into the Lower Manhattan office of the Coalition for the Homeless,
a nonprofit organization that is trying to help her. For the last
couple of nights it has put her and her nuzzling daughter, Shylah,
up in a hotel.

"She needed a breather," said Mary Brosnahan Sullivan, its
executive director....

    END of Excerpt

    For the article in full:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/24/nyregion/24about.html

    By reading the piece in full you'll learn she has options with
family members and her mother's apartment. Nonetheless, Barry
concluded: "A war veteran wearing a backpack, pushing a stroller
and carrying a baby stayed in another strange hotel room last
night, mostly because the city of her birth does not know what to
do with her. Welcome home."


-- Brent Baker


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