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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 05 Sep 2003 08:21:47 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Networks Ignore Unprecedented Use of Filibuster to
    Block Estrada

              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
    11:20am EDT, Friday September 5, 2003 (Vol. Eight; No. 164)
  The 1,570th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Networks Ignore Unprecedented Use of Filibuster to Block Estrada
> Rather Asks Sanchez to Name Media Inaccuracies in Iraq Coverage
> "Sympathy Soured as Bush Declared a Vague 'War on Terror'"
> ABC & NBC Feature White's Blasts at Bush, Ignore His Enron Ties
> Weekend TV: Limbaugh on FNC, Showtime Movie on Bush on 9/11
> Letterman's "Top Ten Arnold Schwarzenegger Debate Conditions"

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/welcome.asp
For 2002: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive02.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
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1) Democrats employed the unprecedented tactic of using a
filibuster threat in order to block President Bush's nomination of
Miguel Estrada to a DC federal appeals court slot, but you
wouldn't know that from the ABC, CBS and NBC stories on Thursday
night after Estrada withdrew his nomination which also failed to
point out how he had the support of the majority of Senators --
just not the 60 votes required for cloture. CNN's Aaron Brown and
Jonathan Karl, however, made both points.

2) Kudos to Dan Rather for asking Lieutenant General Ricardo
Sanchez, the commander of American forces in Iraq, to name "the
biggest mistake or inaccuracy that the press in general is making
about the situation here?" And he prompted Sanchez: "Give me one
example of a success that you think is being under-reported." The
questions came, however, only after Rather pursued the usual line
about whether the Iraq is becoming a "'quagmire' out of the
Vietnam era." Later, Rather gave air time to scarf-covered, U.S.
soldier-killing terrorists to denounce Americans.

3) As September 11th approached last year, Reuters ran a caption,
beneath a photo of Ground Zero, which declared that "human rights
around the world have been a casualty of the U.S. 'war on terror'
since September 11." Now this week, just days before another
September 11 anniversary, Reuters has distributed a photo caption
which argued: "The suicide hijack attacks on New York and
Washington in 2001 produced a remarkable outpouring of sympathy
for America, but sympathy soured as Bush declared a vague 'war on
terror' that he took to Afghanistan and then, far more
controversially, to Iraq."

4) ABC and NBC led off their morning show interview segments
Thursday with their newest oracle, former Army Secretary Tom
White, who has a new book denouncing the Bush military strategy in
Iraq. Last year they only cared about his ties to Enron, but on
Thursday neither network made any mention that White had been the
subject of heated congressional hearings (which they covered) last
July on White's background as a former Enron official who cashed
out millions of dollars in stock shortly before Enron's collapse.

5) Weekend TV viewing alert: Rush Limbaugh will be on Cal Thomas's
Saturday night FNC show and Showtime on Sunday night will premiere
its "docudrama" about President Bush and his top advisers in the
days after 9/11.

6) Letterman's "Top Ten Arnold Schwarzenegger Debate Conditions."


    > 1) Democrats employed the unprecedented tactic of using a
filibuster threat in order to block President Bush's nomination of
Miguel Estrada to a DC federal appeals court slot, but you
wouldn't know that from the ABC, CBS and NBC stories on Thursday
night after Estrada withdrew his nomination which also failed to
point out how he had the support of the majority of Senators --
just not the 60 votes required for cloture. CNN's Aaron Brown and
Jonathan Karl, however, made both points.

    While ABC's Peter Jennings did note how "the minority
Democrats in the Senate used the power of the filibuster to wear
him down," he didn't point out the unprecedented nature of the
tactic and ABC's Kate Snow proceeded to frame her story around how
"Estrada fell victim to an intensely partisan struggle" -- as if
both parties were equally culpable.

    The CBS Evening News held its coverage to a very brief item
read by anchor John Roberts.

    More on the ABC, NBC and CNN coverage on September 4:

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Jennings set up the story: "There
was another big moment today in the ideological war over who
should serve on the nation's courts. This round went to the
Democrats when the President's choice for the Washington, DC
circuit court, Miguel Estrada, withdrew his nomination. It was a
fight that lasted 28 months. The minority Democrats in the Senate
used the power of the filibuster to wear him down."

    Reporter Kate Snow ran soundbites from Senators on both sides
attacking the other before concluding: "Democrats say President
Bush could end the gridlock by choosing more moderate judges, but
Bush allies say it's Congress that needs to change the way it
treats judicial nominees."

    -- NBC Nightly News. Anchor Tom Brokaw introduced a story by
David Gregory which did not mention the filibuster or majority
support: "Back in Washington tonight, the bitter ending to a
struggle over one of President Bush's nominees for a key federal
judgship. Miguel Estrada withdrew his candidacy today after
Democrats blocked his nomination for months. Democrats said
Estrada's refusal to state his view on important issues, such as
abortion rights, made him unacceptable. Republicans said the
Democrats were playing a shameful game of race politics."

    -- CNN's NewsNight made both points after anchor Aaron Brown
scolded both parties as equally shameful: "Article II of the
Constitution gives the President the power to appoint judges with
the advice and consent of the Senate. Safe to say these days, at
least, reality differs. When Bill Clinton was the President,
Senate Republicans delayed action on dozens of his judicial
nominees. They always claim they did so for good and important
reasons. Turnabout is fair play, goes the old saying, and the
Democrats are now the ones invoking those good and important
reasons for refusing to confirm this President's appointments.
In the long run this sort of thing probably isn't very good for
the democracy. It certainly wasn't good for Miguel Estrada who,
after two years of waiting, withdrew his name for an important
Appeals Court seat today."

    Jonathan Karl pointed out how "Estrada had the support of more
than half the Senate, but with a rarely used procedural move
Democrats blocked his nomination from coming to a vote." Brown
drew him out: "Essentially what happens is the Democrats threaten
to filibuster and they have enough votes to keep it going?"
    Karl confirmed: "Exactly. There were more than 50 votes here
to confirm Miguel Estrada. If there was a straight up or down vote
he would have been confirmed, would have been confirmed a long
time ago but Democrats had enough votes to sustain a filibuster so
they never got a chance to have a full vote on this."

    The ABC, CBS and NBC evening shows have never shown any
interest in the tactics used to block Estrada's nomination. As a
Media Reality Check by the MRC's Tim Graham outlined in Match, to
that point neither ABC's World News Tonight or the CBS Evening
News had ever run a story on Estrada's plight and the NBC Nightly
News had aired just one story. For details, see:
http://www.mrc.org/realitycheck/2003/fax20030306.asp



    > 2) Kudos to Dan Rather for asking Lieutenant General Ricardo
Sanchez, the commander of American forces in Iraq, "What is, in
your judgment, the biggest mistake or inaccuracy that the press in
general is making about the situation here?" And he prompted
Sanchez: "Give me one example of a success that you think is being
under-reported."

    The questions came during excerpts from Rather's interview
with Sanchez, conducted in Baghdad where Rather is spending the
week, which was aired on Thursday's CBS Evening News. The
questions came only after Rather pursued the usual line about
whether the Iraq situation is a "tar baby" or "quick sand" or a
"'quagmire' out of the Vietnam era."

    Later, Rather gave air time to scarf-covered, U.S. soldier-
killing terrorists to denounce Americans. Rather set up that
segment: "In spite of what General Ricardo Sanchez told me, that
living conditions and security are improving rapidly in Iraq,
there are some Iraqis -- no one can say how many -- who remain
willing to use violence to end the U.S. occupation."

    Rather introduced the Sanchez interview on the September 4 CBS
Evening News, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "In a
press conference today, Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez,
commander of American forces in Iraq, echoed Rumsfeld's call for
more international troops only. In a CBS News interview later, I
asked him to clarify exactly what his position on troop
requirements is."

    Rather to Sanchez: "True, it may or may not be, is a belief
beginning to take traction that you're stretched too thin, that
you know it's politically incorrect to ask for more troops. I'm
gonna ask you directly, is that true?"

    Sanchez, of course, denied the suggestion and Rather then
inquired: "Is it still fair to describe it as a guerilla war?"

    Rather's next question: "A woman in South Carolina is quoted
today as saying, 'We've got a tar baby on our hands.' Others have
used the word 'quick sand' and 'quagmire' out of the Vietnam era.
I'm gonna give you an opportunity to respond to those very serious
concerns among Americans who support what you're doing here,
support our troops."
    Sanchez: "Well, I think America needs to be told very clearly
by, first of all, me as a military leader, and then by our press,
that we're not in a quagmire. The progress is unbelievable. We
just have to make sure that American, that the American public
realizes that and understands their sons and daughters are making
a tremendous contribution to the peace and stability and the
democratic future of Iraq."

    Rather then arrived at an unusual interest for journalists,
good news in Iraq: "What is, in your judgment, the biggest mistake
or inaccuracy that the press in general is making about the
situation here?"
    Sanchez: "I'll be very candid with you. It's the fact that the
press does not focus at all on the successes of our great American
soldiers and sailors, airmen and marines that are operating here
in this country."
    Rather: "Give me one example of a success that you think is
being under-reported."
    Sanchez: "Sir, I could give you a hundred." [laughs]
    Rather: "I'm asking for one."
    Sanchez: "Let me, let me, the Najaf bombing that just occurred
at the Ali Mosque. This was a success in that the Iraqi security
forces handled the aftermath of that bombing on their own. That
message is not in America. Independent elections were being
conducted at the village level to provincial level. That's not
being reported."

    I hope the next time Sanchez is asked that question he can
come up with a more convincing response.

    Several minutes later on the program Rather returned with an
"exclusive" platform for some terrorists who are killing Sanchez's
men. Rather asserted: "In spite of what General Ricardo Sanchez
told me, that living conditions and security are improving rapidly
in Iraq, there are some Iraqis -- no one can say how many -- who
remain willing to use violence to end the U.S. occupation. What
you're going to see and hear next is disturbing, even infuriating,
but perhaps important. It's a look at men who say they have
attacked Americans. There's no way to confirm their claims, but
certainly they appear willing to kill and to die to get Americans
out of here. These are the eyes of hatred -- of men who say they
will do anything it takes to kill Americans and drive them out of
Iraq."

    CBS then played a tape narrated by Rather over video of
several men with their heads completely obscured by scarfs.

    Unidentified man, through translator: "We must launch a jihad
against the Americans. We have to drive them out."
    Rather: "They call themselves 'Islamic Free Iraq' and brandish
their weapons to show their determination. But these men say they
are neither Islamic fundamentalists nor Saddam loyalists. They say
they hated Saddam as they now hate the U.S."
    Unidentified man: "America is doing exactly what Saddam did to
this country. Saddam and his family looted and destroyed.
Americans are doing the same thing."
    Rather: "They say they are simply ordinary Iraqis, men with
wives and children, determined to fight the American occupation.
They took responsibility for attacks against Americans, such as
this, but wouldn't say which ones or how many."
    Unidentified man: "We hit their vehicle and set it on fire and
injured two of them, and I think one of them was killed. We will
continue to kill them."
    Rather: "It is impossible to say exactly who these men were,
but they were clearly not dirt-poor zealots. Pictures that we shot
with a hidden camera revealed men living in a middle class
neighborhood in comfortable homes with their wives and children."
    Unidentified man: "When the Americans came, we thought we will
be happier, more comfortable. But we found nothing of the kind, so
we live under the same conditions as we did under Saddam. There's
looting, no security, and we are hungry."
    Rather: "Theirs is a familiar refrain among many on the
streets of Baghdad. The difference is that these men say they are
willing to back up their complaints with violence."
    Unidentified man: "We choose the place, and whenever we see
them we attack them."
    Rather: "The group we met on two occasions was small, although
they claim to be part of a web of loosely affiliated groups
totaling hundreds of members, all with the same common enemy. The
pictures for this report were shot by long-time French
photojournalist Laura Hine. As a measure of how ruthless these
people are, they told her that if she had lied to them and it
turned out she was an American, they would track here down and
kill her."

    For CBS's online version of the story, with pictures of the
terrorists:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/09/04/eveningnews/main571660.shtml



    > 3) As September 11th approached last year, Reuters ran a
caption, beneath a photo of Ground Zero, which declared that
"human rights around the world have been a casualty of the U.S.
'war on terror' since September 11." Now this week, just days
before anther September 11 anniversary, Reuters has distributed a
photo caption which argued: "The suicide hijack attacks on New
York and Washington in 2001 produced a remarkable outpouring of
sympathy for America, but sympathy soured as Bush declared a vague
'war on terror' that he took to Afghanistan and then, far more
controversially, to Iraq."

    On September 3, 2002, over a picture of Ground Zero taken in
March, a Reuters caption posted by Yahoo read: "Recovery and
debris removal work continues at the site of the World Trade
Center known as 'ground zero' in New York, March 25, 2002. Human
rights around the world have been a casualty of the U.S. 'war on
terror' since September 11. REUTERS/Peter Morgan."

    For more on that and a matching accompanying news story, refer
back to the September 10, 2002 CyberAlert:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020910.asp#5

    This week, in his "Best of the Web" e-mail for
OpinionJournal.com (http://www.opinionjournal.com/best), James
Taranto highlighted another loaded Reuters caption.

    Over a composite photo of a man with a "Not in My Name" tattoo
on his face with a rad slash through a missile image and a U.S.
flag-bearing woman crying, the September 2 Reuters caption read,
as posted by Yahoo:
    "Changed views of the United States two years after the
September 11 horrors may haunt Washington's quest for help in
grappling with the bloody aftermath of the Iraq invasion. The
suicide hijack attacks on New York and Washington in 2001 produced
a remarkable outpouring of sympathy for America, but sympathy
soured as Bush declared a vague 'war on terror' that he took to
Afghanistan and then, far more controversially, to Iraq. In this
composite photo, a woman cries as the Star Spangled Banner in
played in central London on Sept. 13, 2001 (L), while a protester
rallies against the U.S. backed war in Iraq (R) in this March,
2003 file photo. REUTERS/Kieran Doherty, Peter Macdiarmid."

    See:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&u=/030902/170/551wl.html&e=12



    > 4) ABC and NBC led off their morning show interview segments
Thursday with their newest oracle, former Army Secretary Tom
White, who has a new book denouncing the Bush military strategy in
Iraq. Last year they only cared about his ties to Enron, but on
Thursday neither network made any mention that White has been the
subject of heated congressional hearings (which they covered) last
July on White's background as a former Enron official who cashed
out millions of dollars in stock shortly before Enron's collapse.

    [Tim Graham, the MRC's Director of Media Analysis, submitted
this item for CyberAlert.]

    On ABC's Good Morning America, co-host Charles Gibson opened,
as transcribed by MRC analyst Jessica Anderson:
    "Up front this morning, former Army Secretary Thomas White is
taking on the White House for making a mess in Iraq. It's all in a
new book that is sending some shock waves through the White House
and the Pentagon, and he joined us from Houston, Texas. General,
you certainly don't mince words in talking about the
administration's Iraq policy, and you say that policy 'threatens
to turn a major military victory into a potential humanitarian,
political and economic disaster.' What specific mistakes did the
administration make?" All of Gibson's questions were rough on the
Bush team, including: "Is it your feeling, then, that the lack of
planning or poor planning is now costing lives?"

    Over on NBC's Today, here's how Matt Lauer began the September
4 segment:
    "On Close Up this morning security and reconstruction in Iraq.
The Bush administration is now asking the UN for support and a new
internal Pentagon report says the planning for post-war Iraq was
insufficient. Thomas White was the Secretary of the Army during
the height of the conflict. He's since resigned from that post and
written a book called Reconstructing Eden, that takes the
administration to task for what he calls, 'a totally inadequate
post-war plan.' Secretary White, good morning to you. This new
report from the Joint Chiefs of Staff comes out and basically it
says the problems we're seeing in Iraq today are a result of poor
planning going into the war. Senior military officials have told
NBC's Jim Miklaszewski that about nine months were spent planning
the war. 28 days were spent planning the peace. You were Secretary
of the Army during that time, does that sound about right to you?"

    A quick Nexis search shows White's role in Enron came up seven
times on NBC last year, four times on ABC. On May 24, 2002, 20/20
aired a large piece on money troubles that featured White. Barbara
Walters introduced it: "You could have huge money troubles, like
the Enron executives, and yet continue to live in the grandest
style. And that's enough to make John Stossel say ‘Give Me a
Break!'"

    Stossel reported: "Thomas White, now Secretary of the Army,
would get to keep this house. I don't know what it's worth, but
the land alone cost $6 million." Stossel later added: "None of the
Enron executives has said he plans to file for bankruptcy, and
Thomas White hasn't even been officially accused of doing anything
wrong. But it's curious that White and Ken Lay sold their homes in
Colorado, but kept their homes in  Texas and Florida...The Enron
executives deny breaking laws, but the final insult is that even
if they did break laws, by declaring bankruptcy, they'd still get
to keep their big homes."

    On July 18 last year, White testified before the Senate
Commerce Committee, and ABC and NBC each covered the hearing that
night. Both reports hyped questioning where White couldn't say how
many millions he made from Enron. "White reportedly made $50
million at Enron," estimated ABC's Linda Douglass. "Public records
show he made at least $31 million," reported NBC's Lisa Myers.

    Myers also did a story for Today before the hearing. She
concluded: "Politically today is lose-lose for the White House.
Even if White holds his own, having Enron and the Bush
administration in the same sentence will not help the President
persuade investors he's the one to clean up the corporate mess."

    It appears the networks are still interesting in constructing
political "lose-lose" scenarios for this Republican White House.



    > 5) Weekend TV viewing alert: Rush Limbaugh will be on Cal
Thomas's Saturday night FNC show and Showtime on Sunday night will
premiere its "docudrama" about President Bush in the days after
9/11.

    -- Rush Limbaugh is scheduled to be a guest on FNC's After
Hours with Cal Thomas at 11pm EDT on Saturday night, September 6.
The half-hour show airs only once, so for non-EDT people, that
will be 10pm CDT, 9pm MDT and 8pm PDT.

    The Web page for After Hours with Cal Thomas:
http://www.foxnews.com/afterhours/index.html

    -- On Sunday night, September 7, Showtime will premiere DC 9-
11: Time of Crisis, what I understand will be a "docudrama" with a
sympathetic take on President Bush and his top aides in the days
after September 11, 2001. So, expect some derisive reviews in
newspapers on Saturday and Sunday.

    It stars, as George W. Bush, Timothy Bottoms, the same guy who
played Bush in the mocking Comedy Central sit-com, That's My Bush.

    The Showtime Web site page for the movie promises:
    "Timothy Bottoms stars as President George W. Bush in this
docudrama that traces the nine days after the terrorist attacks on
America of September 11, 2001, a week and a half that challenged
the government to devise a strategy for pursuing the perpetrators
while tending to the wounds of a shattered nation. David Fonteno,
Penny Johnson Jerald, Mary Gordon Murray, Lawrence Pressman, Scott
Alan Smith and George Takei costar in this riveting original from
writer Lionel Chetwynd (Varian's War) and producer Robert Halmi
Sr. (The Lion in Winter)."

    Nice to see George Takei, "Sulu" I believe from the Star Trek
TV series, getting another gig -- playing Norm Mineta.

    An excerpt from a press release with more details:

....DC 9/11: TIME OF CRISIS stars an ensemble cast, including:
Timothy Bottoms as President George W. Bush, John Cunningham as
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, David Fonteno as Secretary
of State Colin Powell, Gregory Itzin as Attorney General John
Ashcroft, Penny Johnson Jerald as National Security Advisor
Condoleezza Rice, Stephen Macht as Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz, Mary Gordon Murray as First Lady Laura Bush,
Lawrence Pressman as Vice President Dick Cheney, Scott Alan Smith
as White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer and George Takei as
U.S. Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta.

The film is executive produced by Robert Halmi, Sr., produced by
Lionel Chetwynd and co-produced by John Vasey. Chetwynd also wrote
the film. DC 9/11: TIME OF CRISIS, a Lionel Chetwynd production,
is directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith.

DC 9/11: TIME OF CRISIS takes an inside look at the Bush
Administration, beginning on the day of the attacks. The film
follows the President on board Air Force One, at the White House
and during his journey to Ground Zero. It culminates with Bush's
now-famous national address nine days later.

The film recounts the tragic events from the moment Bush hears the
news of the attacks to significant briefings with advisors, as
well as the President's addresses to the nation from Barksdale Air
Force Base and the White House. Chronicling national security
meetings, which piece together evidence linking Osama bin Laden
and the Al Qaeda network, the film uncovers how Bush and his staff
dealt with the volatile situation. In addition, DC 9/11: TIME OF
CRISIS illustrates the Administration's strategy for responding
both to the terrorists and the American people. Eschewing their
own feelings and healing process, the President and his team
instead tended to the needs of a wounded country.

    END of Excerpt

    Showtime lists these show times, all both EDT and PDT airings:

    - Showtime East 09/07/03 8:00 PM
    - Showtime Too East 09/08/03 9:30 PM
    - Showtime Showcase East 09/10/03 5:30 PM
    - Showtime Showcase East 09/10/03 5:05 AM
    - Showtime East 09/11/03 9:00 PM

    For Showtime's page on the "docudrama" with a link to a page
of pictures of all of the characters (the actress playing
Condoleezza Rice was made up to look remarkably like her, complete
with properly placed freckles):
http://www.sho.com/movies/movies_product.cfm?titleid=119354



    > 6) From the September 4 Late Show with David Letterman, the
"Top Ten Arnold Schwarzenegger Debate Conditions." Late Show home
page: http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/

10. Questions may be answered in English, German, or a combination
of both

9. Long breaks to allow screenwriters to craft candidates'
responses

8. Debate ends when gasoline truck plows through wall and Arnold
gets everyone out just before the whole place blows up

7. Candidates may use their time to show 90-second clip from
"Terminator"

6. No tricky words like "budget" or "Sacramento"

5. Attire -- bathing suit and baby oil

4. Candidate receives standard 30-million dollar fee, plus 10
percent of box office gross

3. Moderator -- Lou Ferrigno

2. No questions that can't be answered "I'll be back"

1. Arnold must win


-- Brent Baker


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