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Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 06:32 AM
[Malkin] American clown journalism 101


http://www.townhall.com/opinion/col.../15/186535.html



Quote:


American clown journalism 101

Journalists around the world are being targeted by suicide bombers, threatened with "hate crimes" prosecutions and thrown in jail for defending a free press from crazed Islamists.

You wouldn't know it from the circus-show antics of the American media.

Vice President Dick Cheney, as you all are aware from the Beltway press corps' incessant flapping and yapping, was involved in an accidental shooting during a weekend quail hunting trip in Texas. The victim is recovering.

It's the me-me-media hyperventilators who need intensive care.

Peacock Network News correspondent David Gregory, whose self-absorption rivals the leading brand of paper towels, threw a snit fit over the 18-hour delay in public disclosure of the incident. His exchange on Monday with White House press secretary Scott McClellan was a walking advertisement for beta blockers.

McClellan: "David, hold on, the cameras aren't on right now. You can do this later."

Gregory: "Don't accuse me of trying to pose to the cameras. Don't be a jerk to me personally when I'm asking you a serious question."

McClellan: "You don't have to yell."

Gregory: "I will yell! If you want to use that podium to try to take shots at me personally, which I don't appreciate, then I will raise my voice, because that's wrong!"

McClellan: "Calm down, Dave, calm down."

Gregory: "I'll calm down when I feel like calming down!"

Funny thing is, I can't recall the mainstream media melting down over the 30-hour delay -- presided over by Hillary Clinton, according to internal records -- in releasing the late White House counsel Vincent Foster's suicide note to authorities and her own husband. Can you?

News anchors who couldn't find the Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights if you put it under klieg lights pontificated about 28-gauge shotguns and hunting etiquette. CNN personality Kyra Phillips, in a rare moment of cable news humility, giggled self-consciously as she asked a correspondent to explain the difference between birdshot and bullets. "I think I might sound stupid," I heard her say.

Yes, but at least she didn't look stupid.

On that front, Washington Post reporter Dana Milbank outdid them all. Appearing on MSNBC to provide his fair and balanced analysis of the political fallout from Cheney's accident, Milbank donned a blaze orange stocking hat and matching reflective vest. Emulating a hunter in danger of being shot by Cheney, Milbank looked more like a Hooters parking attendant. Or a colorblind "Where's Waldo?" wannabe. Or a fugitive from a prison crew assigned to pick up roadside trash on Interstate 495.

"Lighten up," you say. Okay. I suggest the Washington Post run a large color photo of the costumed Dana Milbank with his bylined pieces from now on. That way, all readers may enjoy the hilarity every time Milbank's work as "Washington Post National Political Reporter" is published as objective news.

The bad joke of American journalism is made all the more odious by the plight of endangered defenders of press freedom abroad. Last week, Abdel Halim Akram Sabra, editor of the independent weekly Al-Hurriya, journalist Yahya Al Aabed and editor of the Yemen Observer Mohammed Al Asaadi, were arrested for publishing the Mohammed Cartoons -- something most of our right-to-know poseurs in the U.S. media still refuse to do.

The arrested journalists' newspapers, along with another publication, Al Rai Al Aam, have all been shut down for printing the cartoons, which were first published by the Jyllands-Posten in Denmark five months ago to underscore the chilling effect of Islamism on European artists. In Johannesburg, South Africa, the high court allowed a Muslim group to pre-emptively block the publication of the cartoons by the nation's leading weekly, the Sunday Times.

In Calgary, Canada, the publishers of the Jewish Free Press and Western Standard magazine face civil lawsuits by local Muslims for publishing the cartoons. In Jordan and Algeria, a total of four other journalists face trial for publishing the cartoons. The original cartoonists have been targeted by Islamic terrorist groups and are in hiding.

Yet, here we are, as embassies blaze and editors cower in fear and radical imams ululate against the West, watching our esteemed media go Looney Tunes over an isolated hunting accident.

Who do you think will have the last laugh?

Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 06:50 AM
Memo Links First Lady To Handling Of Suicide Note
Hillary Rodham Clinton

http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/1996...ter/index.shtml

WASHINGTON (AllPolitics, Aug. 27) -- The same day Hillary Clinton was scheduled to speak at the Democratic National Convention, newly released documents suggest she was behind the 30-hour delay in releasing late White House counsel Vincent Foster's suicide note to authorities.

How the White House handled Foster's 1993 death, and the possibility that administration officials improperly removed documents from his office or impeded an official search of it, has been the subject of intense scrutiny by congressional Republicans and the media.

The newly released memo, written by White House lawyer Miriam Nemetz, quotes then-White House chief of staff Mack McLarty as saying Mrs. Clinton "was very upset and believed the matter required further thought and the president should not yet be told" about Foster's note.

According to the document, Mrs. Clinton "said they should have a coherent position and should have decided what to do before they told the president."

That contradicts sworn testimony to the Senate Whitewater Committee from Clinton staffers that the first lady had no role whatsoever in the handling of Foster's note.

An attorney for McLarty said today his client had only conferred with former White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum on the matter, and that at no time had he dealt with Mrs. Clinton.

Nussbaum also promptly released a statement saying, "No one suggested to me that the first lady had any view with respect to how the Foster note should be handled. It was my decision to delay, for one day, producing the note, so that the president...could have an opportunity to view it first."

Administration Whitewater counsel Mark Fabiani said in a statement the newly disclosed information was unreliable, since it "passed through five different people before it was ever taken down in a lawyer's notes."

Republicans have been baffled over why the president wasn't told about Foster's note for 30 hours when the first lady knew about it immediately.

Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 06:51 AM
More liberal hypocricy. I guess Gregory was home taking his afternoon nap. You know how cranky he gets if he doesn't have his nap...

MadScot
Feb 15, 2006, 07:51 AM
Come talk to me when this gets as much press as Monica.

Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 08:01 AM
With Monica, the President looked us, the american people, in the eye and lied his azz off. And the press was all upset with the Republicans for calling him out on it.

Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 08:20 AM
The point of this thread is to show the hypocrisy the media exhibits when dealing with two scenarios of the same weight.

Hillary waits 30 hours to tell Bill about Vince Foster committing suicide. Nothing in the media about that delay.

White House waits 18 hours to tell the media about the accidental shooting and the media is calling for Cheney's resignation and lambasting the White House for waiting so long?

You really don't see the point or the hypocrisy? I mean are you really willing to admit that you don't understand ?

MadScot
Feb 15, 2006, 02:47 PM
The point of this thread is to show the hypocrisy the media exhibits when dealing with two scenarios of the same weight.

Hillary waits 30 hours to tell Bill about Vince Foster committing suicide. Nothing in the media about that delay.

White House waits 18 hours to tell the media about the accidental shooting and the media is calling for Cheney's resignation and lambasting the White House for waiting so long?

You really don't see the point or the hypocrisy? I mean are you really willing to admit that you don't understand ?

I understand quite well thank you.
There is only a little similarity to the two incidents. The Foster death was reported right away. This shooting wasn't reported until the next day. Cheney didn't even talk to the police until the next day. That's not normal in any shooting accidental or not, it makes people wonder why. You are equating not releasing details of an incident with not telling anyone that an incident happened at all. How many times have we heard the Bush people say we're not commenting on details of an ongoing investigation. The press salivated over the Foster death for a long time so no I don't see hypocrisy on behalf of the press here. I find the notion that the mainstream press has a liberal bias hysterical. Some may not have noticed the exodus of liberal reporters from CNN after the 2000 election but I did. If you read real liberal press you see exactly what I mean. The press took off the gloves on Bush during the primaries when they let his mud slinging at McCain go unchecked. Even many Republican lawmakers are not happy over the WH handling of this.



Cheney’s response a concern to GOP (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11355784/from/RSS)
Vice President Cheney's slow and unapologetic public response to the accidental shooting of a 78-year-old Texas lawyer is turning the quail-hunting mishap into a political liability for the Bush administration and is prompting senior White House officials to press Cheney to publicly address the issue as early as today, several prominent Republicans said yesterday.

The Republicans said Cheney should have immediately disclosed the shooting Saturday night to avoid even the suggestion of a coverup and should have offered a public apology for his role in accidentally shooting Harry Whittington, a GOP lawyer from Austin. Whittington was hospitalized Saturday night in Corpus Christi, Tex., and was moved back into the intensive-care unit after suffering an abnormal heart rhythm yesterday morning.

"I cannot believe he does not look back and say this should have been handled differently," said Vin Weber, a former Republican congressman from Minnesota who is close to the White House. Weber said Cheney "made it a much bigger issue than it needed to be."

Average Joe
Feb 15, 2006, 03:05 PM
No I don't think you do understand, it was posted to point out the double-standard being displayed by the media, who didn't make such a fuss about the Clinton WH "not disclosing a suicide note to the authorities for 30 hours".