Re: [CTRL] CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?

2004-09-25 Thread Jim Rarey
-Caveat Lector-



I only posted this so we could watch and see if CBS was 
stupid enough to walk into this trap even with the "warning" from Insight. Given 
CBS's track record, anything anti-Bush from them, truthful or not,. will be 
considered a "hit" piece, They brought it on themselves. 
JR

- Original Message - 
From: Bill Shannon 

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, September 25, 2004 12:46 AM
Subject: Re: [CTRL] CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit 
Job?
-Caveat 
Lector- 


  
  

  So now any critical examination of 
  Dumbya's regimeby CBS will be an "anti-Bush hit 
  job?"
  Better tell that to Viacom head 
  honcho Sumner Redstone, aBushite and owner of CBS, thathis 
  network is being mean to the boy president. Maybe he'll eventell 
  their mommies to lay off the moron.
  
  Bill.
  
  ---Original Message---
  
  
  From: Conspiracy Theory Research 
  List
  Date: 09/24/04 
  23:39:05
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Subject: [CTRL] CBS 
      Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?
  
  http://www.insightmag.com/news/2004/09/20/Politics/Cbs-Planning.Another.AntiBush.Hit.Job-730861.shtml
  
  Insight on the News - Politics Issue: 
  9/20/04 
  
  
  CBS Planning Another 
  Anti-Bush Hit Job?By 
  Cliff Kincaid The CBS 
  scandal gets worse every day. Now, in an amazing twist, Michael Isikoff of 
  Newsweek was on Chris Matthews' MSNBC "Hardball" show last Wednesday night 
  claiming that CBS had been planning to air a story about the White House 
  using forged documents to make the case for war against Iraq.CBS, 
  reportedly, postponed the story so it could go on the air attacking 
  President Bush on the National Guard issue. It backfired when 60 Minutes 
  itself got caught using forged documents. Still, Isikoff indicates that 60 
  Minutes is planning to air the anti-Bush piece, perhaps as early as Sunday 
  night, September 26. here is only one big problem-the anti-Bush 
  story, as described by Isikoff and eagerly embraced by Democrat partisan 
  Matthews, is completely false. It's as phony as those National Guard 
  documents. The Iraq-uranium link, the subject of much media 
  misinformation, has been documented and confirmed by authoritative reports 
  from Britain's Lord Butler, who had been a cabinet secretary under five 
  different Prime Ministers, and the Senate Intelligence 
  Committee. In an article on the Newsweek 
  website, Isikoff claims that 60 Minutes had originally planned to run a 
  story about "how the U.S. government was snookered by forged documents 
  purporting to show Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium from 
  Niger."Isikoff says the story, narrated by CBS correspondent Ed 
  Bradley, "asked tough questions about how the White House came to embrace 
  the fraudulent documents and why administration officials chose to include 
  a 16-word reference to the questionable uranium purchase in President 
  Bush's 2003 State of the Union."Isikoff says 60 Minutes has been 
  working on the story for more than six months. It is amazing that, 
  18 months after Bush uttered those 16 words, Isikoff, 60 Minutes, and 
  Chris Matthews still can't or won't get the story straight. 
  Bush's famous 16 words were: "The British Government has learned 
  that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from 
  Africa." Bush never said that Saddam "purchased" uranium. While 
  the Bush administration mishandled the controversy under a media assault 
  and even backed away from what the President said, subsequent 
  investigations confirm that Saddam Hussein was seeking uranium from 
  Africa.Lord Butler's July 14, 2004, report called Bush's words 
  "well-founded." It reported that,"a) It is accepted by all parties 
  that Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999."b) The British 
  Government had intelligence from several different sources indicating that 
  this visit was for the purpose of acquiring uranium. Since uranium 
  constitutes almost three-quarters of Niger's exports, the intelligence was 
  credible."c) The evidence was not conclusive that Iraq purchased, 
  as opposed to having sought, uranium and the British Government did not 
  claim this. "d) The forged documents were not available to the 
  British Government at the time its assessment was made, and so the fact of 
  the forgery does not undermine it."FactCheck.org, a group headed 
  by former CNN and Wall Street Journal reporter Brooks Jackson, examined 
  the controversy and declared, "Both the Butler report and the Senate 
  Intelligence Committee report 

[CTRL] CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?

2004-09-24 Thread Jim Rarey
-Caveat Lector-



http://www.insightmag.com/news/2004/09/20/Politics/Cbs-Planning.Another.AntiBush.Hit.Job-730861.shtml

Insight on the News - Politics Issue: 9/20/04 



CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit 
Job?By Cliff Kincaid 
The CBS scandal gets worse every day. 
Now, in an amazing twist, Michael Isikoff of Newsweek was on Chris Matthews' 
MSNBC "Hardball" show last Wednesday night claiming that CBS had been planning 
to air a story about the White House using forged documents to make the case for 
war against Iraq.CBS, reportedly, postponed the story so it could go on 
the air attacking President Bush on the National Guard issue. It backfired when 
60 Minutes itself got caught using forged documents. Still, Isikoff indicates 
that 60 Minutes is planning to air the anti-Bush piece, perhaps as early as 
Sunday night, September 26. here is only one big problem-the anti-Bush 
story, as described by Isikoff and eagerly embraced by Democrat partisan 
Matthews, is completely false. It's as phony as those National Guard documents. 
The Iraq-uranium link, the subject of much media misinformation, has 
been documented and confirmed by authoritative reports from Britain's Lord 
Butler, who had been a cabinet secretary under five different Prime Ministers, 
and the Senate Intelligence Committee. In an article 
on the Newsweek website, Isikoff claims that 60 Minutes had originally planned 
to run a story about "how the U.S. government was snookered by forged documents 
purporting to show Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium from Niger."Isikoff 
says the story, narrated by CBS correspondent Ed Bradley, "asked tough questions 
about how the White House came to embrace the fraudulent documents and why 
administration officials chose to include a 16-word reference to the 
questionable uranium purchase in President Bush's 2003 State of the 
Union."Isikoff says 60 Minutes has been working on the story for more 
than six months. It is amazing that, 18 months after Bush uttered those 
16 words, Isikoff, 60 Minutes, and Chris Matthews still can't or won't get the 
story straight. Bush's famous 16 words were: "The British 
Government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant 
quantities of uranium from Africa." Bush never said that Saddam "purchased" 
uranium. While the Bush administration mishandled the controversy under 
a media assault and even backed away from what the President said, subsequent 
investigations confirm that Saddam Hussein was seeking uranium from 
Africa.Lord Butler's July 14, 2004, report called Bush's words 
"well-founded." It reported that,"a) It is accepted by all parties that 
Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999."b) The British Government had 
intelligence from several different sources indicating that this visit was for 
the purpose of acquiring uranium. Since uranium constitutes almost 
three-quarters of Niger's exports, the intelligence was credible."c) The 
evidence was not conclusive that Iraq purchased, as opposed to having sought, 
uranium and the British Government did not claim this. "d) The forged 
documents were not available to the British Government at the time its 
assessment was made, and so the fact of the forgery does not undermine 
it."FactCheck.org, a group headed by former CNN and Wall Street Journal 
reporter Brooks Jackson, examined the controversy and declared, "Both the Butler 
report and the Senate Intelligence Committee report make clear that Bush's 16 
words weren't based on the fake documents. The British didn't even see them 
until after issuing the reports-based on other sources-that Bush quoted in his 
16 words." Ironically, one of th
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Re: [CTRL] CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?

2004-09-24 Thread Bill Shannon
-Caveat Lector-






So now any critical examination of Dumbya's regimeby CBS will be an "anti-Bush hit job?"
Better tell that to Viacom head honcho Sumner Redstone, aBushite and owner of CBS, thathis network is being mean to the boy president. Maybe he'll eventell their mommies to lay off the moron.

Bill.

---Original Message---


From: Conspiracy Theory Research List
Date: 09/24/04 23:39:05
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [CTRL] CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?

http://www.insightmag.com/news/2004/09/20/Politics/Cbs-Planning.Another.AntiBush.Hit.Job-730861.shtml

Insight on the News - Politics Issue: 9/20/04 


CBS Planning Another Anti-Bush Hit Job?By Cliff Kincaid The CBS scandal gets worse every day. Now, in an amazing twist, Michael Isikoff of Newsweek was on Chris Matthews' MSNBC "Hardball" show last Wednesday night claiming that CBS had been planning to air a story about the White House using forged documents to make the case for war against Iraq.CBS, reportedly, postponed the story so it could go on the air attacking President Bush on the National Guard issue. It backfired when 60 Minutes itself got caught using forged documents. Still, Isikoff indicates that 60 Minutes is planning to air the anti-Bush piece, perhaps as early as Sunday night, September 26. here is only one big problem-the anti-Bush story, as described by Isikoff and eagerly embraced by Democrat partisan Matthews, is completely false. It's as phony as those National Guard documents. The Iraq-uranium link, the subject of much media misinformation, has been documented and confirmed by authoritative reports from Britain's Lord Butler, who had been a cabinet secretary under five different Prime Ministers, and the Senate Intelligence Committee. In an article on the Newsweek website, Isikoff claims that 60 Minutes had originally planned to run a story about "how the U.S. government was snookered by forged documents purporting to show Iraqi efforts to purchase uranium from Niger."Isikoff says the story, narrated by CBS correspondent Ed Bradley, "asked tough questions about how the White House came to embrace the fraudulent documents and why administration officials chose to include a 16-word reference to the questionable uranium purchase in President Bush's 2003 State of the Union."Isikoff says 60 Minutes has been working on the story for more than six months. It is amazing that, 18 months after Bush uttered those 16 words, Isikoff, 60 Minutes, and Chris Matthews still can't or won't get the story straight. Bush's famous 16 words were: "The British Government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." Bush never said that Saddam "purchased" uranium. While the Bush administration mishandled the controversy under a media assault and even backed away from what the President said, subsequent investigations confirm that Saddam Hussein was seeking uranium from Africa.Lord Butler's July 14, 2004, report called Bush's words "well-founded." It reported that,"a) It is accepted by all parties that Iraqi officials visited Niger in 1999."b) The British Government had intelligence from several different sources indicating that this visit was for the purpose of acquiring uranium. Since uranium constitutes almost three-quarters of Niger's exports, the intelligence was credible."c) The evidence was not conclusive that Iraq purchased, as opposed to having sought, uranium and the British Government did not claim this. "d) The forged documents were not available to the British Government at the time its assessment was made, and so the fact of the forgery does not undermine it."FactCheck.org, a group headed by former CNN and Wall Street Journal reporter Brooks Jackson, examined the controversy and declared, "Both the Butler report and the Senate Intelligence Committee report make clear that Bush's 16 words weren't based on the fake documents. The British didn't even see them until after issuing the reports-based on other sources-that Bush quoted in his 16 words." Ironically, one of th









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