From:

http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Thursday June 15, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 102)

Gore Conceded He's No Computer Expert; FNC: Baptists Blast
Clinton; NYPD Can't Win; "Prosperity Tour"

1) Al Gore, who last year boasted how he "took the initiative in
creating the Internet," denied any knowledge of how many of his
subpoenaed e-mails were lost, conceding, during a Fox News
Channel interview, "I'm not an expert on computers."

2) Al Gore's tenants complained the repairs haven't been made and
that he reneged on the promise of other housing, FNC's Brit Hume
relayed. Time, Newsweek and U.S. News all refused to inform their
readers about the condition of Gore's rental property.

3) CBS focused on how the Southern Baptist Convention passed
resolutions "critics say" show them "bent on exclusion." But FNC
noticed the keynote sermon: "We have a Southern Baptist in the
White House with the morals of an alley cat."

4) Wednesday night ABC featured Texas death row poster boy Gary
Graham; CBS's Jim Axelrod acknowledged the belief that police
"were too lax" at the Puerto Rican Day parade because they did
not want "to appear heavy-handed" with an ethnic crowd; and NBC
noted how Gore wants to shake up the race with early debates.

5) CBS and NBC on Tuesday night spotlighted Gore's "progress and
prosperity" tour, though CBS's John Roberts noted how Gov. Pataki
"claims Al Gore had little to do with the economic turnaround;
it was old-fashioned American hard work, fueled by tax cuts."

6) NBC's Tom Brokaw described a court decision to not create a
new right as a ruling which "further restricts" rights.


    > 1) As Sergeant Schultz always deflected on Hogan's Heroes,
"I know nothing!" On Wednesday Al Gore, who last year boasted
about how he "took the initiative in creating the Internet,"
denied any knowledge of how his subpoenaed e-mails were lost by
conceding, during a Fox News Channel interview, "I'm not an
expert on computers."

    The background: Late last week, in a disclosure bannered
across the front page of the June 9 Washington Times, but which
was nearly completely ignored by the television media, the White
House claimed that a problem with its computer back-up system
meant e-mail sent to Gore's office between March 1998 and April
1999 could not be retrieved. No network show touched the
revelation on Thursday or Friday. On Sunday, Tony Snow raised the
development with Dan Burton on Fox News Sunday and Burton
mentioned it on Meet the Press, but Tim Russert did not pursue
the comment.

    Now back to Wednesday, June 14: On FNC's Special Report with
Brit Hume reporter Wendell Goler narrated a piece which provided
excerpts from his interview earlier in the day with Gore.
Following a report on nuclear data missing from Los Alamos, Hume
segued to Goler's re-cap of an earlier interview:

    "Vice President Gore meanwhile has had some missing data of
his own to deal with, that year's worth of e-mails that were
somehow not preserved and that investigators would like to see.
Fox News White House correspondent Wendell Goler asked him about
that and other things in an interview from Scranton, Pennsylvania
where Gore was campaigning. Well Wendell, what did you get?"

    Goler relayed live from Washington, DC: "Brit, the guy who
says he helped invent the Internet says he's not a computer whiz,
at least not enough to have picked up on the fact that e-mails to
his office weren't being saved in 1998 and 1999. Congressional
investigators say those e-mails might have shed light on Gore's
involvement a number of their investigations, but in his first
broadcast comments on the subject Gore told Fox News that all he
knew was that the system briefly broke down."

    Gore, hemmed and hawed on tape via satellite: "The problem I
asked about was three days of e-mails that disappeared [nervous
chuckle] and computers crash and that's what happened and I asked
them to make sure it didn't happen again. [pauses and shrugs] And
I don't know about the back-up tapes. I read about that in the
papers recently. I don't know anything about why that happened
or, [hesitating and shaking his head] or how it happened. I'm not
an expert on computers."

    Goler moved on to other subjects Gore is more used to talking
about, such bashing Bush's tax cuts and the Los Alamos mess, but
Gore was clearly uncomfortable in responding to the question
about e-mail -- probably because no other reporter has queried
him about the matter.

    CNN, for instance, avoided the topic in its interview with
Gore replayed on Wednesday's Inside Politics. Early in the show
CNN showed Gore responding to a couple of questions from Jeanne
Meserve about his campaign having to move a Pennsylvania event
out of a Catholic hospital because a local Catholic leader
objected to Gore's abortion stand. Later, viewers saw a nearly
six-minute long excerpt of the interview, but not a word from
Meserve about e-mail or his rental house. Instead, she asked
about his efforts to gain credit for the good economy, if the
surplus provides a rationale for Bush's tax cut, if the Los
Alamos mess means Bill Richardson is off the VP list, and if he
considers Ralph Nader a threat.

    +++ Watch Gore's nervous chuckling, hesitation, head shaking,
frowning and odd pauses in his answer. Thursday morning MRC
Webmaster Andy Szul will post, in a RealPlayer format, an excerpt
from FNC's story. Go to: http://www.mrc.org

    Gore's Internet invention claim came during a March 9, 1999
interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer on Late Edition/Prime Time.
Blitzer didn't offer any challenge when Gore bragged: "During my
service in the United States Congress I took the initiative in
creating the Internet." To watch this exchange via a RealPlayer
clip, go to the March 12, 1999 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/1999/cyb19990312.html#6


    > 2) Al Gore has yet to complete his promised repairs to his
tenant's home, WTVF-TV reported, but only FNC noticed. On the
June 14 Special Report with Brit Hume, the anchor of the same
name related an item highlighted in Hotline:

    "Vice President Gore's Tennessee tenant says her toilet still
won't flush and her kitchen floor isn't fixed either despite a
visit from the plumber last week and Gore's promise that repairs
would be made immediately. Tracy Mayberry, who rents a house on
Gore's farm in Carthage, Tennessee, told Nashville's channel 5
that Gore also reneged on his promise of other housing while the
work was done. Gore's office said it's had troubling finding
people to do the work but that it will be done this week."

    Meanwhile, the rest of the media continue to make sure as few
people as possible ever hear about how far Gore let his
neighboring house deteriorate.

    This week's MRC MagazineWatch, about the June 19 issues,
discovered: "All three news magazines completely ignored any
reference to a renter on Gore's family property calling him a
‘slumlord' over inattention to the house's crumbling condition.
At least U.S. News did mention, albeit briefly, the disappearance
of more than a year of subpoenaed Gore e-mails announced last
week."

    Other items in the MagazineWatch complied by Ken Shepard and
Tim Graham:

    -- U.S. News and Time's Internet edition decried the
"cascading perversions" of campaign-finance law. Both condemned
advertising by groups the media have dubbed the "527s," and
lobbied for Congress to close these latest legal loopholes.

    -- Time's Jessica Reaves explored the meaning of approving
estate tax cuts: "The rich may be poised to get a whole lot
richer -- and congressional Democrats could be staring at an
election year gold mine."

    -- The news magazines could be worse. In the June edition of
Vogue, Julia Reed smothered Al Gore with affection: "When Senator
Gore lost anyway, he famously vowed that ‘the truth will rise in
Tennessee,' and it did, in 1976, when the 28-year-old Al Gore ran
for and won his father's old seat in the House of
Representatives."

    To read these items, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/magwatch/mag20000613.html


    > 3) "Critics say it's one more sign this gathering of
believers is bent on exclusion," declared CBS's Byron Pitts in a
Wednesday night story about how the Southern Baptist Convention
(SBC) passed resolutions on how only men can be pastors and
condemning homosexuality. FNC sent a correspondent to the Orlando
gathering and he also reported on the same resolutions, but only
after pointing out how Baptist leaders condemned Bill Clinton and
Al Gore for not being faithful to their religion.

    CNN's The World Today also carried a full story on the
convention by Mark Potter. He didn't mention the condemnation of
Bill Clinton, but in relaying the resolutions on women as pastors
and homosexuality he avoided CBS's loaded language about
intolerance.

    Byron Pitts began his June 14 CBS Evening News report:

    "Their theme this year, Partners in the Harvest, but [when]
the Southern Baptist Convention voted, however, there was not
room in their field of faith for women pastors."

    After a clip of a pastor saying only men can be ordained,
Pitts continued: "It's a limitation Reverend Julie Pennington-
Russell calls outrageous. She's one a handful of pastors of a
Southern Baptist Church."

    Following a soundbite from Pennington-Russell, Pitts
highlighted the views of a gay activist: "Today‘s resolution also
included a statement on homosexuality. The SBC calls it a sin,
critics say it's one more sign this gathering of believers is
bent on exclusion."

     Reverend Mel White of "Soul Force" got a clip before Pitts
gave the other side some time, but he challenged the assessments
of an advocate of the two resolutions: "Police arrested gay
rights demonstrators outside the convention. Still convention
leaders, like Reverend Paige Patterson, make no apologies."

    Patterson, former President Southern Baptist Convention: "Sin
is sin and whenever we-"

    Pitts: "Murder?"

    Patterson: "Certainly."

    Pitts: "Stealing?"

    Patterson: "Certainly."

    Pitts: "You equate those two things with homosexuality?"

    Patterson: "In terms of the fact that they all fall in the
category of sin, yes. You know if you fall in a swimming pool it
doesn't matter if you fall in the deep end or the shallow end,
you're still wet."

    Pitts gave time to a third critic: "Reverend Daniel Vestal,
who started an organization of former Southern Baptist churches,
sees a problem in the SBC's theology."

    Vestal, Cooperative Baptist Fellowship: "Baptists look like
they are no more because of what they are against, rather than
because of what they're for."

    Pitts concluded: "With 15 million members nationwide, the SBC
concedes it could lose more followers over its new policies. ‘We
are here to win souls,' said one member, ‘not a popularity
contest.'"


    Viewers of FNC's Special Report with Brit Hume got a much
different take on the convention. Hume marveled:

    "The President of the country's largest protestant
denomination is denouncing President Clinton and Vice President
Gore for not honoring their religious beliefs in office. Mr.
Clinton has been criticized before for his actions in the Monica
Lewinsky case but rarely in terms as strong as those used at the
Southern Baptist Convention meeting."


    FNC's Bret Baier opened his piece by showing Reverend Bailey
Smith, in the "keynote sermon," exclaiming from the stage: "We
have a Southern Baptist in the White House with the morals of an
alley cat."

    Baier also played this from Smith: "Everybody said ‘Oh isn't
it great to have a Southern Baptist in the White House.' I'm
ready for a Christian myself."

    Viewers also heard the SBC's President, Reverend James
Merritt, tell Baier: "Clinton and Gore are Southern Baptists at
least in name only."



    > 4) Wednesday night ABC featured clips from an interview
with Texas death row convict turned anti-Bush/death penalty
poster boy Gary Graham; a day after NBC Nightly News ran a story
CBS picked up on the "wilding" in Central Park as Jim Axelrod
actually acknowledged that some think the police "were too lax
with those gathered" for the Puerto Rican Day parade because they
did not want "to appear heavy-handed with such an ethnic crowd";
and NBC reported on how the Gore camp wants early debates in
order to shake up the race because they are "supremely confident
that when debates finally happen their candidate will prevail" on
"maturity and experience."

    The stock market scheme arrests of organized crime figures
topped the June 14 World News Tonight on ABC and the NBC Nightly
News while the CBS Evening News went first with the talks between
North Korea and South Korea. For the second night in a row, all
ran full stories on the nuclear data missing from Los Alamos.

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Mike von Fremd narrated a piece
about his interview with Gary Graham, though he did point out
that Graham, supposedly falsely convicted for a murder at a
grocery store, was also convicted of shooting two people in other
robberies, and he let Diane Clements of Justice for All warn that
if Graham is let out Texans better lock their doors. Von Fremd
concluded:

    "Gary Graham is one of the most activist inmates on death
row. He's calling for 10,000 people to gather outside the death
chamber to protest his execution. He's become part of the great
debate."

    Only because the national media have taken up his cause.

    "Death Penalty Study: A Left-wing Scam," declared the
headline over a frontpagemag.com piece, brought to my attention
by a reader, on the death penalty study promoted by all the
networks Monday night. In the June 12 Web site piece David
Horowitz undermined the premise of those stories recounted in the
June 13 CyberAlert:

On the front page of your paper this morning (June 12) you will
find the latest left-wing academic-political scam, a Columbia
University "study" of the death penalty which purports to show
that "the system is broken."

Naturally the left-wing media (the New York Times, the LA Times,
etc.) is presenting this political scam as solid evidence that 1)
there are vast miscarriages of justice in death penalty cases and
2) George Bush is a heartless Republican. The New York Times'
headline goes like this: DEATH SENTENCES BEING OVERTURNED IN 2 OF
3 APPEALS. WIDE REACHING STUDY. REVERSALS ARE ATTRIBUTED TO
ERRORS BY DEFENSE LAWYERS, POLICE AND PROSECUTORS.

Nonsense. What the report actually does is to take the record of
anti-death penalty appeals court judges who overturned sentences
mainly for political reasons and then to present these statistics
as though they reflected what would have been actual miscarriages
of justice had the sentences been carried out.

For example, the Report records that 87% of the death penalty
cases in California between 1973 and 1995 were "reversed." The
implication is that the death sentences were wrongly imposed. But
this is far from the truth. What these reversals represent is a
political campaign by the left to subvert the death penalty – the
law be damned. No one was executed in California after 1973
(Governor "Moon Beam" Jerry Brown was elected in 1972), until the
anti-death penalty chief justice of the California Supreme Court
(appointed by Brown) was removed....

    END Excerpt

    To read the rest, go to:
http://www.frontpagemag.com/notepad/hn06-12-00.htm


    -- CBS Evening News. Tuesday night CNN's The World Today and
the NBC Nightly News ran pieces on the Central Park "wilding" and
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani discussed it on Wednesday's Today.
CBS caught up Wednesday night, but ABC's World News Tonight has
yet to air a story on the incident which is filling hours on the
cable news channels.

    Anchor Dan Rather introduced the CBS story: "Police here in
New York City, criticized in the past for overreacting in tense
situations, are now under fire for allegedly under-reacting,
being too blase, too passive. An investigation is underway to
determine if police did ignore pleas from victims of a so-called
‘wilding,' savagery in which thugs went on a rampage in Central
Park."

    Over amateur video, Jim Axelrod opened by focusing on
complaints about police inaction when told men were tearing the
clothes off innocent women in the park. He linked that to
killings: "So once again New York's police department is under
fire. This video joins a recent catalog of images surrounding
allegations of police brutality and insensitivity towards
minorities. But this time there's a twist. Some New Yorkers are
wondering if the police were too lax with those gathered here in
Central Park for the Puerto Rican Day parade -- not wanting to
appear heavy-handed with such an ethnic crowd."

    David Grandison: "Their reaction was no reaction. They really
just stood there"

    Axelrod: "David Grandison was there Sunday shooting this home
video."

    Grandison, who himself is black, recounted: "It seemed to me
like, ‘hey they're minorities, let them do what they want, let
them go wild. You know we don't care, we're just going to let
them do their thing.'"

    New York City Police Commissioner Howard Safir countered:
"That's just nonsense. We police all our parades exactly the
same."

    Axelrod concluded: "Tonight the police commissioner says the
focus belongs on the thugs who did this. Some victims say police
should have done more to stop it and some cops on the beat say
they're damned if they do, damned if they don't."

    -- NBC Nightly News. Lisa Myers used Ted Forstman's promise,
of $500,000 each to Gore and Bush for the charity for their
choice if they agree to a debate on education, as a hook for a
look at how each camp views debates. Bush wants to wait until the
fall and then look presidential while Gore wants to debate during
the summer in order to shake up the race and to get debates in
before the Olympics and World Series crowd out politics. Myers
concluded: "Tonight, Bush advisers say they've not totally ruled
out early debates. The Gore camp claims to be supremely confident
that when debates finally happen their candidate will prevail --
not necessarily on charm, but on maturity and experience."


    > 5) NBC and CBS picked up Tuesday night on Al Gore's
"progress and prosperity" tour. NBC's Claire Shipman did not
challenge the premise that Gore deserves credit for the economy
and in a list of Gore campaign problems she skipped e-mail and
his Tennessee tenants, which I guess really aren't problems since
the networks have made sure no one knows about them, but she did
admit that "with big government surpluses predicted it's
tough...for Gore to argue against a Bush tax cut."

    CBS's John Roberts allowed Gore to tout himself, but unlike
Shipman, Roberts raised questions about how much credit Gore
deserves: "New York Governor George Pataki claims Al Gore had
little to do with the economic turnaround; it was old-fashioned
American hard work, fueled by tax cuts."

    Anchor Tom Brokaw introduced the June 13 NBC Nightly News
story: "And the new, kinder, gentler Vice President Al Gore
tonight is starting a new phase of his campaign, promoting the
economic record of the last eight years. His series of speeches
coincide with the news that the federal surpluses are greater
than ever."

    Claire Shipman agreeably began: "After a year of fits and
starts, wardrobe changes and personality makeovers, today, Al
Gore comes back to the obvious: the economy. Standing with former
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, he claims prosperity as his
major campaign advantage."

    Gore: "None of this happened by accident. It happened
because, together with the American people, we put in place a
brand new economic strategy."

    Shipman: "Gore aides brag they've spent, quote, ‘a fortune'
on polling and research to figure out how Gore can make the
economy a winning issue."

    Bill Carrick, Democratic strategist: "They're trying to make
a case that the stewardship of the economy for the last eight
years has been pretty strong, and 'Stick with us, and we'll make
even more progress.'"
    Shipman rued: "Sounds simple, but experts say prosperity
helps George W. Bush, too. With big government surpluses
predicted, it's tough, for example, for Gore to argue against a
Bush tax cut. But in an interview today, the Vice President still
calls Bush fiscally irresponsible."
    Gore: "Well, he has overshot even the largest estimates of
what the surplus will be."

    Shipman: "Gore and his advisers are hoping that focusing on
the booming economy will put his campaign back on firm ground. A
lot of this spring was marred by internal sniping, clumsy moves
on Elian Gonzalez, a negative campaign style that the Vice
President now calls a mistake and a drop in the polls. In fact,
Gore's been so frustrated that in the last two weeks, he's shaken
up his campaign team yet again, adding a new high-level manager,
tripled the size of his staff, hired Clinton's record-breaking
money man Terry McAuliffe to run the convention and launched a
$25 million DNC-sponsored ad campaign."

    Shipman concluded: "Gore will spend the coming months
pitching his theme of economic prosperity to a public that
everyone agrees isn't paying much attention yet. And he's well
aware if he can't get people to focus on their wallets, he'll
have a hard time coming up with a better theme."

    Over on the June 13 CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather
announced the Gore strategy: "The U.S. economy has run so strong
for so long, some Americans may take it as a given. And the Gore
for President campaign feels the Vice President is not getting
any of the credit and that he deserves some. So the Gore campaign
is making this its latest selling point in what could be
make-or-break industrial states on Election Day. CBS News chief
White House correspondent John Roberts has more on the Gore
strategy and the Bush camp's reaction to it."

    Roberts explained: "It brought him the vice presidency in
1992, yet it was only this week that Al Gore's campaign woke up
and realized, despite unprecedented economic growth, it's still
the economy, stupid."

    Craig Crawford, Hotline newsletter: "The good news for Al
Gore is the economy's booming. The bad news, he doesn't get the
credit for it."

    Gore in speech: "America has done well. But I'm here today to
tell you, you ain't seen nothing yet."

    Roberts elaborated: "So today, he kicked off a cross-country
prosperity tour in key battleground states to throw a spotlight
on his administration's economic record. Over the next three
weeks, he'll detail new proposals to save Social Security and
Medicare, but most importantly, Gore will talk about how he would
keep the prosperity going."

    After another Gore soundbite Roberts allowed Bush backers to
respond: "For their part, the Bush campaign is ridiculing Gore's
tour, saying he is now laying claim to having invented
prosperity. And in New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, Republican
governors complain the Vice President is bragging on himself just
a little too much."

    Gore: "We turned this great state around."

    New York Governor George Pataki: "You know, I don't take
offense so much as it makes me kind of laugh."

    Roberts: "New York Governor George Pataki claims Al Gore had
little to do with the economic turnaround; it was old-fashioned
American hard work, fueled by tax cuts, a formula embraced by
George W. Bush."

    Pataki: "I think to continue this prosperity, we have to have
additional tax cuts in Washington. We can't just sit back and go
on a victory tour, as Al Gore is doing, and say, 'Look at how
prosperous we are.'"

    Roberts concluded: "It is crucial for Gore to capture some of
the credit. Recent polls show the majority of Americans think
George W. Bush would take better care of the economy. And if
history is any guide, the candidate who wins on the economy wins
the White House."

    But, of course, winning the economy really means winning the
media to your side to portray the economy as booming and give you
credit for it, and Gore's got a lot better chance of doing that
than does Bush.


    > 6) Wacky spin of the week. Here's how Tom Brokaw introduced
a June 12 NBC Nightly News story: "And from the U.S. Supreme
Court tonight a ruling that further restricts patient rights as
they attempt to deal with their HMOs."

    The court just refused to expand rights by rejecting a call
for creating a new right to sue HMOs in federal court, so hardly
a "restriction" of anything since, as Yogi Berra could have said,
the status quo remains unchanged. -- Brent Baker


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  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================

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