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#1 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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Bush teleconfrence staged
Bush held a teleconfrence with troups and made it appear to be an honest interview. But it turns out it was stagged, the questions were provided to the troups and the whole thing was rehursed.
My concerns and questions are the following: Doesn't this count as propeganda? Wouldn't this be using tax payer money to fund the propeganda? Isn't this a violation of the law? http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,172186,00.html Quote:
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#2 (permalink) |
Tone.
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Well the fact that Bush (read: Rove) staged something to make Bush look good is hardly surprising. The fact that he ordered the soldiers to say exactly what Bush wanted them to say is hardly surprising. The fact that he essentially crafted a lie to attempt to fool the American people into thinking things were rosy and bright in Iraq is hardly surprising.
The REAL surprise is that Fox news reported it without trying to spin it to the favor of the Bush administration. Could this mean Bush has finally pissed off his biggest media supporter? |
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#4 (permalink) |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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This may come as a shock to you but Fox news is not a mouthpiece of the Republican party. Some people just got too used to the Dan Ratheresk left wing news for so long they couldn't see that perhaps there were two sides to a story.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. Last edited by Ustwo; 10-14-2005 at 06:10 AM.. |
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#6 (permalink) |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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The true question is WHY?
IF things are so rosy in Iraq, then why stage this? Even if things truly are going well there, this has ruined the people's belief that they are. Why were the cameras and audio running for all to see the staging being set, and who released it? This smells of a set-up to truly make Bush look bad, so the question is why and whom? These past few weeks since Katrina have really sucked for Bush, publicity wise. - The response and finding out the FEMA Director he placed was not qualified at all. - The nomination of Meirs, again unqualified. - The "God told me to invade Iraq" story. - Rove being tried in the papers and looking guilty as Hell. If he is innocent the press did a job that will ruin him in the public's eyes. And if he is guilty then did he, the man whom W praises as being responsible for his political life, lie to Bush OR is Bush lieing to the people about Rove's innocence? - Delay being indicted for playing with money. - GOP Congresspersons distancing themselves from him. - Wanting Martial Law for the Avian Flu. (I think more than anything just the talk of it scared the GOP enough to start distancing themselves from him.) - Poll numbers hitting extreme Nixonian lows. - And now Fox going after him, and not spinning this? I'd love to hear the GOP who fried Clinton for his staged antics, defend Bush for his staged antics. Clinton's were not in time of war, or trying to sell anything but himself, Bush's are to sell and flatly lie to the people about the war, about the economy (back when the Chinese boxes were taped over to say "Made in America") and so on. Maybe people are starting to get scared of this man and truly want to destroy his power before he abuses it further? Just a guess. And where does this leave Bush patsies like Robertson and Limbaugh and Coulter and O'Reilly and Hannity and company? How can they keep lieing and making excuses when even the party leaders are starting to distance themselves? The man behind the curtain is being shown for what he is and he isn't the great and powerful OZ, he's a man who has some serious problems and appears to be falling apart, while those around him are jumping ship and trying to save themselves.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" Last edited by pan6467; 10-14-2005 at 06:40 AM.. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
Getting it.
Super Moderator
Location: Lion City
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Oh! That's right Fox news is fair and balance... ![]() ![]() Their news reporters might be just like any other news reporters but their list of personalities, including the likes of O'Reily, are nowhere in the "fair and balanced" ball park. When I look up "mouthpiece of the Republican party" I see pictures of Fox News personalities.
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"My hands are on fire. Hands are on fire. Ain't got no more time for all you charlatans and liars." - Old Man Luedecke |
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#8 (permalink) |
Junkie
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People just don't understand what Fox's concept of "fair and balanced" is. They will give both sides generally, but they will slant the focus in favor of one. Most of their personalities are like this, and will have guests/co-hosts arguing a more liberal/democratic side. So that, even if they aren't given equal weight, both sides get presented. I find that the general "news" and not the personality shows that get lumped in with the news programs aren't any worse than CNN or the networks.
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#10 (permalink) |
Rail Baron
Location: Tallyfla
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sure, I'll address them.
Its about as much propaganda as any bush Q&A session. Its not against the law to script out questions. Sorry.
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"If I am such a genius why am I drunk, lost in the desert, with a bullet in my ass?" -Otto Mannkusser |
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#11 (permalink) | |
Gentlemen Farmer
Location: Middle of nowhere, Jersey
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1. Nothing illegal about it. What-so-ever. Just because people HATE Bush doesn't make everything he does illegal.** 2. EVERY single freaking political event, from a press conference to a long range photograph of a fat assed first lady hugging her philandering husband is a staged, rehearsed, and planned event. Get used to it, and stop feigning indignation when it happens. Geez, -bear ** The amount pure hatred from the left continues to astound me.
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It's alot easier to ask for forgiveness then it is to ask for permission. |
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#12 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ontario, Canada
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Propaganda sponsored by the government is illegal in the US. The question is "what is propaganda"? I'm not sure the law, which seems a little toothless, describes that effectively.
Does the government have to explicitly pay someone a cash amount? Or, if a C-in-C commands individual members of the military to be his personal mouthpiece, does that constitute propaganda? I don't think this really qualifies, but it's certainly making him look weak - again.
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Si vis pacem parabellum. |
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#14 (permalink) |
Psycho
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umm, did the amount of pure hatred from the right about Clinton astound you, j8ear? My intent with that question is not to imply that 2 wrongs make a right, but to express my own astonishment.
After watching the Clinton thing, there is no way that pure hatred from one side to the other could astonish me. I'm not even suggesting that the Republicans started it (that's a different discussion) - just asking how anyone could be surprised. Doesn't it seem like the same thing, coming from the same 'place'? Determining that 'place' might be a worthwhile conversation sometime. Envy? Bitterness? A mix of many things, I'm sure... |
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#15 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Indiana
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#16 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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here is a longer piece on this latest bushdebacle.
source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...401016_pf.html it is from one of the many curious blog-like features that dailies seem to imagine make them more "relevant" in the present information climate--but as an overview of the fallout from this, it is instructive.... Quote:
as for the fox reporting, it is hard to say why they were not true to form in this case, that is why they did not try to spin this to the administration's advantage--perhaps because (1) there was no way to do it or (2) because no matter how far to the right fox is, the folk who work for it are officially journalists and themselves have to put up with the white house's riefenstahl-like obsession with generating the illusion of support for bush (when in fact little remains)---and so in all probability they have their own professional axes to grind with being complicit in the farce that is "information" delivered to you and i, fresh brown and steaming, from the white house. i do find it more than a little amazing, however, that the white house--following the tradition of propaganda as information developed under reagan--has not been held to account for the way in which it operates until now. why did it take a satellitle feed of rehearsal to bring up the fact of the matter concerning how rove operates, how the white house operates? none of this information about staging, rehearsing etc. and their correlates of distortion etc. is new...this particular feed is, but the pattern it shows in action is as old as this administration. why have the networks played along with it?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 10-14-2005 at 10:42 AM.. |
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#17 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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Staged events are a proven political tool, this was not the first and it won't be the last by democrat or republican.
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#18 (permalink) | |
Junkie
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I think that many people's feelings about the left's hatred of Bush stem from the fact that they didn't see the same condemnation of similar acts when Clintion was in power. So in essence, they aren't protesting about the actions of the president, they are protesting about the actions of the president they didn't vote for. So it's ok if their guy does it, but if someone else's guy does there will be hell to pay. And honestly, the vitriol of many Dems/liberals toward Bush is what made me support him more. I used to think of Bush as an inept puppet, elected on name recognition and conning the public. But seeing so many people who I tend to disagree with ideologically hate him so much started making me think that maybe there's something more to him. Point being I think the Dems would be more convincing if they didn't attempt to pick apart every little thing so much in the Bush admin., especially after what they let slide in the Clinton admin.Then when they made an outcry about something truly serious, it wouldn't be quite so easily dismissed as yet another Dem attack. And there wouldn't be the big stink of hypocrisy about so many of their actions. |
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#19 (permalink) |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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well alan, i think both sides of the craptastic two party system can play that came ad infinitum. intersting quasi-machiavellan thing you've got going. enemies of my enemies are my friends kind of thing. i don't think you can really count on there being much more to bush, just because you don't like democrats. personally, i find most ardent clinton supporters to be a little nauseating, but it certainly doesn't make me think " damn, bush must be a lot better than i thought"
to the original thread intention: it's pretty crappy that they tried to sell a scripted / rehearsed event as a spontaneous sparring with the troops, but really who is fooled here? i mean, 1. no president is going to have some unscripted *televised* chat with random troops. "how's it going in iraq, boys?" "well mr. president, it sucks ass. it's hot and people are constantly shooting at me. i'm not poly-sci major, but it looks like all shit might break loose tomorrow, no matter how many sand bags we lay down for cover. fuck, i just want to fuck my wife a few more times before i die. is that so much to ask for?" i mean, it's not going to happen. 2. of course there's going to be some level of coaching. i despise bush, but i'd probably be a little nervous talking with the pres on live tv. my problem isn't with the event, per say , but with the way it was apparently billed. but the fact that national level politicians are duplicitous is no surprise; i believe it's systemic of our political system. but that's anther story.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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#20 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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you might actually consider that people oppose geroge w bush because of his policies and not on account of some tit-for-tat rooted in how the right treated clinton (which was appalling--and nothing from "the left" directed at bush comes close to it)...people can oppose george w bush on completely rational grounds---the topics are obvious, the divisions are as well. i am not sure what function it serves for the lumpenright to pretend that the dynamics that animate their particular, kinda strange political movement(s) are paralleled by anything outside the right, or to reduce criticisms of bush to questions of "hatred"----cultivating that particular emotion is a conservative trick, something that is again, not paralleled by any space outside the right (at least not in its centralized. highly co-ordinated fashion).
well..actually it is pretty obvious why lumpenconservatives would prefer to pretend that opposition to bush works exlcusively on psychological grounds--it functions as an obvious way to dismiss all criticisms of this administration... it is kinda curious to see this being trotted out in the context of a thread about the bushsquad screwing up a triumph of the will-like event, but maybe this kind of thing really concerns the lumpenconservatives and this is how they express anxiety. it's hard to know.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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#21 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Remove the opium pipes, masses, and try to pay attention.
-- Millions of Iraqis vote on the future of their country TOMORROW, October 15, 2005. And why are they able to do this, and not instead be horrendously melted into puddles of toxic flesh by anthrax-spewing helicopters? Because of the vision of one man: George Walker Bush, 43rd President of the United States of America. "DEMOCRACY -- One Dictatorship At A Time" |
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#23 (permalink) |
Sky Piercer
Location: Ireland
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That Bush reads from a script doesn't exactly surprise me.
What is terribly amusing is that he can't even do that right (re-watch it and notice that at times he throws the soldiers at times by asking the wrong question at the wrong time/to the wrong person)
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#25 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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roach I think you're going to have a tough time making a solid point that it's only the right that spews "hatred" of the other side. I mean, I hate to say it, but you're a decent example at times yourself. Your very vocabulary is tailored to show fundamental disdain of the administration with all the "bushspeak" and "reichenreichen" crap all the time. I think it's safe to say that when you invoke Godwin on a regular basis, there's some hatred there, in as far as I understand the terminology and the play of semantics on it. You can argue its justified if you like, but to deny that it's there might be a little disengenous.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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#26 (permalink) | |
whosoever
Location: New England
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For God so loved creation, that God sent God's only Son that whosoever believed should not perish, but have everlasting life. -John 3:16 |
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#27 (permalink) | |
Gentlemen Farmer
Location: Middle of nowhere, Jersey
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-b-
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It's alot easier to ask for forgiveness then it is to ask for permission. |
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#28 (permalink) | |
Winner
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This just shows how desperate the Bush administration is getting. They couldn't even manage to do it without playing the 9-11 card. And the Iraqi guy telling President Bush "I like you" was so funny you didn't even need Jon Stewart to laugh about it. |
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#29 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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pigglet: i admit that i have a healthy contempt for conservative ideology and find its way of deploying under bush to be a kind of fascism-lite. but to impute anything on the order of hatred to me or anyone else is nothing more or less than an act of projection on your part.
the playing field, if you like, is not symetrical--so far as i am concerned, for conservatives not to accept responsibility for the centrality of negative affect to their politics is disengenuous. as is the pretense, particular to the right, that somehow or another these features of their politics are reactions to modes and/or forces that are inflicted upon them from the outside. but this is a curious place for this kind of discussion, dont you think? the thread is about the errant satellite feed and its consequences--a moment of self-demolition of the white house's particular brand of consensus-hallucination. dont you find it interesting that there are so many dissociative remarks from conservative folk in this, of all threads? i find it kind of funny. at any rate, i have other things to do so will check out with this---i have no problem with having and maintaining an attitude of contempt for conservative politics. but i do not hate anyone. it is not worth the energy to hate people. it is not something i indulge. sorry.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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#31 (permalink) | ||||
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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in any event, i guarrantee you that if you inspect any portion or social subgroup of our population, and select their most ardent hardliners, you'll find some hatred. i mean, if you don't feel you fit the bill, how about jaenine garafollo (sp?). I don't think she'd even try to protest the fact that she hates rush. ask her. i'll bet she'll admit it with glee. i wish she wasn't so whiny when she argued, because i think she's pretty funny and kind of hot - but i guess that's a different thing altogether. Quote:
in any event, don't get wrong - i didn't mean to attack you, but only use some of your posting style as an example in the "rightwing hate speech" stuff that I think you may have brought in with this : Quote:
regardless - none of this detracts from the fact that this is certainly business as usual in the big politics game. i'm just not surprised by it any more. i think it's going to take serious change in our government to knock this crap out, even for a temporary period of time between corrupt regimes.
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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#32 (permalink) | |
pigglet pigglet
Location: Locash
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/tomorrow is going to be so aybabtu it's not even funny. good weekend all
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You don't love me, you just love my piggy style |
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#33 (permalink) |
can't help but laugh
Location: dar al-harb
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this dialogue between the President and soldiers was most certainly "staged" in a way... but that doesn't make the whole thing false.
from what i've read, the pentagon official (or whoever the handler was from stateside) was giving them tips about how to present themselves w/out appearing nervous and making sure each knew what types of questions would be handled by which specific soldiers. this approach is quite common among military presentations... a SME (subject matter expert) will be designated from a group of potential speakers for a specific subject. if questions about said subject arise... it's much better not to have a less-informed (but more vocal) person jump in w/a response. the SME will say his piece first and others will add to it as necessary. this is better for the speakers (the SME won't have to cut the legs out from under anyone by contradiction) and the listener (a cohesive answer from the most knowledgeable). i come from a daily observance of this protocol, watching the pentagon coach from this perspective didn't raise many alarm flags. let's face it people, this televised photo op was less staged than every Presidential debate last year. it's a curious thing to see the behind-the-scenes pieces of the whole political machine, but they're always there. partisans making political hay out of this are either 1) incredibly naive to this think has any significance or 2) purposefully blinding themselves to the realities of political posturing across the board.
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If you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves. ~ Winston Churchill |
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#34 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Chicago
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I think we can all agree that both parties regularly engage in staged media events in the hopes of making them seem spontaneous. My beef is not with them for doing this. My beef is almost always with the media and how they handle situations like this.
The media readily acknowledges that they have known all along how the Bush administration constantly micromanages all press events to prevent any impromptu moments that might catch the president off balance. Bush has been in office almost 5 years now. Why, then, is the media all of a sudden all over this story? Because the media is spineless. The media waits until his numbers are low enough, then come out and say, "yeah, he's been doing this all along, we've just never said anything about it." They've been willing pawns to this administration all along and were so terrified of being labelled biased or losing access that they took it up the arse whenever possible in order to get "leads" or interviews or whatever bone the white house threw at them. Instead of doing their jobs of holding our elected officials accountable for their statements and actions, they wagged their tails and and rubbed up against the legs of this administration. Now, they feel they've been cheated by having this satellite feed broadcast and at first they acted shocked - Shocked! - that such an event took place. Emboldened by Bush's slipping numbers, suddenly they find a few vertebrae and do a mediocre impression of the free press. Had the press done their jobs since day one instead of feeding at the teat of the Rove Machine, we might not be in the huge mess we now find ourselves. I don't blame the Bush administration so much for doing what they've been doing because they've been getting away with it long enough to think they'd get away with it for the duration of their stay. I blame the media for acting like fawning fans for five years.
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"I can normally tell how intelligent a man is by how stupid he thinks I am" - Cormac McCarthy, All The Pretty Horses |
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#35 (permalink) | ||||
Tone.
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2) Anthrax doesn't melt people. Please try to get at least ONE fact per post right. 3) It's not our place to force countries to hold elections. It's not our right either. Quote:
Quite frankly, you haven't had to go into the house of a woman who just found out her kid got blown up by a roadside bomb and interview her. I have. Far too many times. There are times when war is worth it, and those times are when it is necessary to defend your country from an attacking enemy. Iraq didn't attack us, they were only our enemies because we decided to make them so, and this war was NOT a necessity. And if you really look at the faces of these incredibly young men (closer to boys really) that we're forcing into Iraq and you realise that they're being made to fight, be maimed, and die, all because of a fake quest for weapons of mass destruction (sorry, but that crap about bringing democracy isn't going to distract anyone with intelligence from the fact that this was NOT the original reason given), if you REALLY look at who's suffering because of our 43rd president, you'll be forced to disagree with him too. |
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#36 (permalink) | |
Devoted
Donor
Location: New England
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Here's the quote that set the media off:
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I can't read your signature. Sorry. |
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#37 (permalink) | |
Tone.
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Pretty much right on the nose. I agree, the media's dropped the ball bigtime, and I'm a member of the media (unfortunately not slated to cover the whitehouse). But there are signs that at least some in the media are learning their lessons. They've been questioning the administration much harder this year than in any previous Bush year. Naturally the republicans view this as media bias, since any story that doesn't make them out to be gods in the flesh is clearly biased against them, but hopefully this time the head honchos in the media won't listen. FWIW, they dropped the ball during Clinton's presidency too - and the republicans were happy to help them. Instead of concentrating on that idiotic sex scandal which didn't mean anything as far as how the country was being run, the media should have concentrated on bin Laden's growing animosity toward the US. After all, he bombed the WTC during Clinton's presidency too, not to mention the Cole, and Clinton put his hands over his eyes and hoped the problem would go away. The press should have held him accountable for that and asked him why he wasn't doing squat about terrorism then, but they were too busy getting titilated by presidential liasons. Last edited by shakran; 10-15-2005 at 06:24 AM.. |
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#39 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Chicago
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I agree with you wholeheartedly, here, shakran. It seems that many reporters are too nervous to ever actually hold officials' feet to the fire. It isn't until their poll numbers drop that the tough questions start getting asked. I remember that before Bush was elected, he was often drilled by reporters who didn't take him seriously as a national candidate. Once he was elected, however, the drilling ceased. Now that his numbers are down, the hard questioning starts again. It's the timidness by the media in the face of our government that allows them to get away with as much as they do, I believe.
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"I can normally tell how intelligent a man is by how stupid he thinks I am" - Cormac McCarthy, All The Pretty Horses |
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