Media Bias @ MindSay

   

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If Jim Schweizer and Ravager were around in 1945
 Ever wonder what President Bush has to put up with that none of his predecessors as wartime presidents did?

 

After the debacles of February and March at Iwo Jima, and now the ongoing quagmire on Okinawa, we are asked to accept recent losses that are reaching 20,000 dead brave American soldiers and yet another 50,000 wounded in these near criminally incompetent campaigns euphemistically dubbed “island hopping.”

Meanwhile, we are no closer to victory over Japan. Instead, we are hearing of secret plans of invasion of the Japanese mainland slated for 1946 or even 1947 that may well make Okinawa seem like a cake walk and cost us a million casualties and perhaps involve a half-century of occupation. The extent of the current Kamikaze threat, once written off as the work of a “bunch of dead-enders,” was totally unforeseen, even though such suicidal zealots are in the process of inflicting the worst casualties on the U.S. Navy in its entire history.
 
Worse still, our sources in the intelligence community speak of a billion-dollar boondoggle now underway in the American southwest. This improbable “super-weapon” (with the patently absurd name “Manhattan Project”—in the midst of a desert no less!) promises in one fell swoop to erase our mistakes and give us instant deliverance from our blunders—no concern, of course, for the thousands of innocents who would be vaporized if such a monstrous fantasy bomb were ever actually to work
 
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MzRjMGE2MGViZGE3NDcyMmZhYzY3MWJjOTc1OTc3YmQ=

 
 
   
 

More news you won't see on CNN
Just thought I'd do my part to get the word out on what's really going on over in Iraq.....
 
Airmen give Iraqi children cheer, supplies
Tech Sgt Mark Getsy
Fri Nov 18 05:00:15 GMT 2005

CAMP BUCCA, Iraq (AFPN) --

Coalition forces brought some much needed cheer to school children in Umm Qasr, when they conducted a humanitarian relief mission to the Iraqi town.

Airman from the 586th and 886th Expeditionary Security Forces squadrons here joined forces with their Army and British counterparts to delivered more than a thousand school supplies and toys Nov. 14.

The supplies included most of the things children need to successfully complete a school year: Pencils, pens, notebooks, rulers and scissors -- to name a few. Other donations included clothing, stuffed animals and soccer balls.

The smiling faces of school children -- who anxiously awaited the delivery -- met the convoy of approximately 40 coalition troops.

The troops interacted with the children, handing out candy and taking photos with them, while they safely stored the supplies town council building.

According to one of the event coordinators, Tech. Sgt. John Harper of the 586th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron, the idea for the project started in August.

Sergeant Harper took the idea and began calling his local church and police department in Brownwood, Texas, for donations.

“Once I contacted them, many of the church’s Sunday school classes and the police department started getting donations ready.” Sergeant Harper said. “I expected a few boxes -- but was very surprised when I received over 50.”

Sergeant Harper extended the invitation to the rest of the camp -- and the got a great response. He eventually received more than 300 boxes from different organizations throughout the United States.

For one Airman, it was the opportunity she hoped she would have a chance to take part in while deployed to Iraq.

“It feels good knowing I could give something back to these children,” said Senior Airman Jana Sautter, deployed from Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. “I usually do a lot of volunteering for children back home -- such as organizing Christmas parties. I wanted to do something here.”

Sergeant Harper hopes this will be one of many more humanitarian efforts.

“We want to change the image local people have of us,” said the guardsman from Goodfellow Air Force Base, Texas. “We wanted them to know we are not the terrible people they think we are -- and that we are here to help them.”

 
 
 

   
The Media

I hate the media.  I hate being told how to think.  I hate that every single article I read lately is a slap in the face to my  intelligence.  I want to hear the facts, nothing more and nothing less.  From there, I will decide where I stand.  I don't want some random journalist, or some massive media corporate conglomerate for that matter, to tell me which way my views should slant.  I'm so liberal I may as well be socialist, and yet I quite possibly hate reading articles with a liberal bias more than a conservative bias.  At least with a conservative bias I can argue with all points made, but a liberal slant is an insult to my intellect. It makes me think, "thanks guys, I could have came to that conclusion on my own without you ramming it down my throat." 

I don't think they even teach responsible journalism in journalism schools anymore.

Another thing I hate about the media-they're fickle.  Take protesting, for example.  There have been a ton of protests since the start of the Iraq war.  And i'm a wannabe hippie and a subscriber to move-on.org, so I know, I get a personal update in my email box everytime a protest is organized.  Tons and tons of protests.  Did you hear about any of them in mainstream media?  No, not until this media circus surrounding Cindy Sheehan.  My theory on why she's getting so much coverage that other protests have lacked-The media serves the American public what they want to hear.  Back when support for the Iraq war was high, of course no one wanted to read about people protesting such a noble cause.   Now that support has fallen dramatically, America will finally rally behind someone like Cindy Sheehan.  And mainstream media will be the first to jump on this bandwagon. 

I hate how the media is used for entertainment purposes.  Its so sensationalized.  When I read about casualties in Iraq and elsewhere, I want to know the facts.  I want to know where, when, who, what, and how.  I don't want to hear some some self righteous journalist blabber on for an hour about why. Thats for me to decide, based on where when who what and how.  I also don't want to know the gritty details.  Granted, I think the horrors of war should be something that the American public should be aware of, but don't sensationalize it. Please don't turn it into something that sounds more like a hollywood movie or a video game. Just the facts, please. 

I've wanted to be a journalist for as long as I can remember, but I don't think its the right career choice for me anymore.  Yellow journalism seems to be the name of the game in modern journalism, and thats not a game i'm willing to play. 


 
 
   
 

Spin, spin.

Quick, Your time is almost up
Make all forget that they're the moth
Edging in towards the flame
Burning to obscurity

Still and transfixed
The electric sheep but dreaming up your fate
We judge you from the card castle
Comfort of America

-Incubus-

Perhaps the card castle begins to crumble, with the paper tiger being revealed for what it is. I'm going to let Cenk Uygur speak for me right now:

I simply cannot see how anyone can argue against a media bias anymore. Let’s look at three examples of how the media covered President Bill Clinton and how they have covered President Bush. If at the end of this exercise, you still don’t believe that the mainstream media is 100% biased against liberals, then you can no longer make any claim to be a rational person.

Three “scandals” that the media covered 24/7 during the Bill Clinton presidency:

1. Whitewater. This was an obscure land deal in Arkansas from decades ago. The President never made any money off of the deal, there were never any actions on his part that could even vaguely be characterized as illegal. And after a $64 million investigation by a prosecutor absolutely determined to get the President, the conclusion was that the President had not done anything wrong.

2. Travelgate. How were employees at the travel office treated during the Clinton presidency? Were they fired because of a secret agenda by Hillary Clinton? The travel office. The travel office. Quite the controversy. The nation hasn’t quite recovered since.

3. Monica Lewinsky. Did the President lie about having a sexual affair with a White House intern? It turned out, after endless coverage for what seemed like decades, they nailed him. He had in fact received oral sex in the Oval Office. And this affected our foreign policy and domestic policy, how? In fact, the only effect it had was when the Republicans claimed Bill Clinton was trying to distract from the scandal by bombing foreign targets. Do you remember who he was bombing? Yes, al-Qaeda. How dare he?

Now, three stories from President Bush’s tenure that the media hasn’t found worthy of comprehensive coverage yet:

1. Jeff Gannon. This was a man who was a gay, male prostitute posing as a reporter. He was allowed into the White House by the administration under an alias to manipulate press conferences. Anyone who says this story wouldn’t have been covered for two straight years on every cable news station if it was the Clinton White House, doesn’t live on the same planet as I do.

When you come back from the planet Uranus, please tell me how this story wouldn’t have been interesting to the American people or relevant as part of the overall effort of the administration to manipulate the press.

Was it not salacious enough to capture the imagination of the American public? Did it not fit into a pattern of propaganda that the Bush administration was caught using by paying off “journalists” and commentators like Armstrong Williams?

2. Downing Street Memos. Imagine for a second if Fox News Channel had secret memos that indicated that President Clinton had started an illegal war based on fixed intelligence. The British government was not convinced Clinton’s war -- say in Kosovo -- was legal, whether he had any post-war plans and whether it was based on a personal grudge instead of an actual threat to the country. And imagine if in that war we had lost thousands of American lives and tens of thousands of American soldiers had been maimed and wounded.

Yeah, Fox News Channel would have probably just let that go. It just probably would have been a dead issue that the Republicans would have had trouble getting the press to pay attention to. Who believes that? Even the most rabid conservative couldn’t possibly believe that scandal wouldn’t be front page news every day in the Clinton presidency.

3. The Karl Rove Leak. Close your eyes for a second (okay, open them back up so you can continue to read) and imagine if President Clinton’s top political advisor had just admitted that he had revealed the identity of a covert CIA operative. His main defense was that he indicated exactly who she was but didn’t give her name. Yeah, the press would have probably just accepted that answer and moved on. I’m sure Fox News Channel (and quickly copied by all of the other channels) wouldn’t have had headlines that screamed “Clinton Advisor -- Traitor” or “Treason at the White House.”

They probably wouldn’t have pointed out that Valerie Plame was moved out of the field one other time – when the CIA was worried that Aldrich Ames had revealed her identity. The Aldrich Ames analogy wouldn’t have been used, they wouldn’t have discussed how the CIA believes this is the worst crime against national intelligence or how George H. W. Bush said in 1999 this is an act a “traitor” to the United States would commit.

Yeah, they probably would have been very careful to tread lightly on such a sensitive issue.

The media absolutely savaged Bill Clinton at every turn, for what now appears to be laughably innocuous matters. They even made a scandal out of his haircuts for God’s sake. Now, they can’t seem to gather up the courage to challenge this administration on the most egregious crimes, transgressions and salacious scandals.

A haircut at the airport is a big story when it comes to President Clinton but torture at Bagram Air Base is barely covered for President Bush.

What Hillary Clinton did with the travel office is worthy of a non-stop national scandal, but what Karl Rove did to a covert CIA operative isn’t enough to make headlines?

A complicated land deal in Arkansas is interesting enough to be covered for years, but a male prostitute infiltrating the White House as a journalist wouldn’t interest the American public?

Lying about a sexual affair is of paramount importance to the nation worthy of an impeachment, but lying about why we invaded a country that did not attack us and did not pose a threat to us is no big deal?

Well, you’d just have to be plain old biased to believe all of that.

 
 
 

   
Liberal Propoganda?
Sometimes people's blogs really piss me off.

Is shampoorunoff's latest blog inaccurate?  No, not at all, but the complaints thrown around that the liberal media whallowed about Haliburton as a way to get Kerry elected really annoy me.

Now, this has nothing to do with whether I preferred Bush or Kerry, this is just something that really frustrated me during the campaigning for this presidency.

The fact is, Kerry was a war hero at Vietnam.  That is a fact.  He owns medals to prove it.

Some of you will reply to this blog saying things like, "Nuh uh, he didn't really earn those medals.  He shot himself to get them.  He did this.  He did that.  It was all a lie."

It is the very fact that I would get responses like that that pisses me off.  How is it that people started questioning his loyalty and service to our country?  

The conservative media is brilliant.  The republicans are brilliant.  They somehow turned being a war hero into a negative.

If I was in Bush's campaign, I would have tried my damndest to make sure the war was never, ever, ever mentioned.  Why?  Because my candidate ducked out of it.  "My guy is going to look like a coward compared to Kerry," is what I would have thought.

And yet the republicans didn't do that.  They embraced the fact that Bush was getting drunk while Kerry was saving lives.  They spun it.

"Well, actually, he didn't really earn that third medal."  

Are you kidding me?  We are really debating whether he earned his third medal while his opponent was never even there?  And wait a minute, the public is buying into this?  They are actually starting to hate Kerry because of it?

What is wrong with the public?  Are you that moronic?  The other guy never even went to war!  Does it really matter if Kerry only earned two medals instead of three?  

Again, I am not saying who I voted for.  I am not claiming Kerry would have been a good president.

But Kerry is a war hero who ended up having to defend his time in Vietnam, while Bush never had to explain why he wasn't even there.

That is an example of the conservative media, and no one ever talks about their power.  No one mentions their influence.  Instead you bitch about how people like John Stewart sway the public toward a liberal bias.

Um, hello, a republican is in office.  Obviously the liberal media isn't doing so well at swaying public opinion.    
 
 
   
 

 
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