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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2004 09:52:43 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: ABC Defends 'Kerry's Distinguished War Record,
    ' CBS Skips Topic

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
    12:50pm EDT, Thursday April 22, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 65)
 The 1,702nd CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> ABC Defends "Kerry's Distinguished War Record," CBS Skips Topic
> Stahl Regrets Not Trusting Saddam on WMD as She Did on al-Qaeda
> Greenspan Upbeat on Economy, CBS & NBC Note It, But ABC Downbeat
> Brokaw Reads Short Item on Corruption in UN's "Oil for Food"
> Dallas Morning News Urges Journalists to Admit Liberal Bias

    #### 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 2003: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive03.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC's PayPal donation page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040422.asp ####

1) A lot more skeptical of Bush than Kerry on Vietnam-era service.
Back on February 10 when the White House released George W. Bush's
National Guard records, the networks stressed how they only "raise
more questions." But with Kerry, the networks ignored for a week
questions raised last week in the Boston Globe about whether he
deserved one of his Purple Hearts, and then prompted by Kerry's
release of his records finally got to the story on Wednesday, but
were satisfied with the records despite the lack of documentation
for his first Purple Heart. "We'll take 'A Closer Look' tonight at
John Kerry's distinguished war record," ABC anchor Charles Gibson
promised Wednesday night in stating as fact a claim that is in
dispute. Gibson then shifted the burden to Kerry's critics: "His
opponents are trying hard to use it against him." CBS didn't even
consider Kerry newsworthy, but NBC and CNN ran stories.

2) Lesley Stahl regrets doubting the honesty of Saddam Hussein and
his minions on weapons of mass destruction, but not on having no
ties to al-Qaeda, she asserted in a Wednesday night address she
gave in Virginia Beach. Citing two 60 Minutes stories which cast
doubt on Iraq's claim to have gotten rid of weapons of mass
destruction, she described the pieces as "journalistic mistakes,"
according to a story in Thursday's Virginian-Pilot.

3) Dour ABC. CBS's Anthony Mason on Wednesday night relayed how
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan told a congressional
committee that "the economy is vigorous and robust" and NBC's Tom
Brokaw reported how Greenspan maintained "the economic recovery
now has good momentum and that employers will have no choice but
to hire more workers soon." But ABC anchor Charles Gibson led his
short item on a downbeat note: "At a congressional hearing today,
a caution about interest rates."

4) Update on coverage of corruption in the UN's "Oil for Food"
program with Iraq. As detailed in the April 21 CyberAlert, on
Tuesday night ABC's World News Tonight ran a full story on the
subject. Wednesday's Good Morning America, however, did not carry
the Brian Ross story or touch on the subject, CBS ignored it in
both the morning and evening on Wednesday, but NBC's Tom Brokaw
read a short item about it on Wednesday's NBC Nightly News.

5) An editorial in a major newspaper earlier this week contended
that "it's time that we in the Fourth Estate admit that liberal
media bias isn't a figment of Rush Limbaugh's imagination." Texas
Media Watch highlighted the editorial which appeared in Monday's
Dallas Morning News.


    > 1) A lot more skeptical of Bush than Kerry on Vietnam-era
service. Back on February 10, when the White House, in reaction to
Terry McAuliffe's uncorroborated claim that George W. Bush was
"AWOL" from the National Guard in the early 1970s, released his
military records, the networks stressed how they only "raise more
questions." But with Kerry, the networks ignored for a week
questions raised last week in the Boston Globe about whether he
deserved one of his Purple Hearts, and then prompted by Kerry's
release of his records finally got to the story on Wednesday, but
were satisfied with the records despite the lack of documentation
for his first Purple Heart.

    "We'll take 'A Closer Look' tonight at John Kerry's
distinguished war record," ABC anchor Charles Gibson promised
Wednesday night in stating as fact a claim that is in dispute.
Gibson then shifted the burden to Kerry's critics: "His opponents
are trying hard to use it against him."

    In the subsequent story, Dan Harris spent less time on
questions about Kerry's war time service than on gushing over his
record. The entirety of Harris on questions about Kerry's record:
"Some conservatives and fellow veterans have asked questions about
the seriousness of the injuries for which Kerry received his first
purple heart." But Harris soon effused: "One wonders why the
campaign didn't release" the records "long ago. They show an
officer who got glowing reviews from superiors. Quote, 'Kerry's
calmness, professionalism and great personal courage under fire
were in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States
Naval Service.'..."

    In contrast, on the February 10 World News Tonight, Terry
Moran insisted the records Bush released "do not prove" his
service "and no witnesses have ever come forward to say they saw
Mr. Bush performing military service in Alabama."

    Moran challenged the White House's case: "The White House
insists this matter is now closed. But given those gaps in the
record, given the absence of any witnesses who could fill in those
gaps and corroborate the President's recollection, and, Peter,
given the fact that it is a campaign season, as you note, and
there are plenty of Democrats who are only too happy to stoke
this, the issue is not going to go away."

    Back to Wednesday of this week, CNN and NBC aired stories, but
not the CBS Evening News which continued to ignore the subject.
(On February 10, Dan Rather asserted: "The White House did release
some of what it called newly discovered documents today. But as
CBS's John Roberts reports, it did not put the issue to rest.")

    (On Thursday morning, the three broadcast network morning
shows all ran stories on the release of the Kerry records, but not
any guest interview segments as they did for the media-fueled Bush
controversy.)

    Excerpts from the Wednesday night, April 21, stories on NBC
and CNN, followed by a full rundown of ABC's piece:

    -- NBC Nightly News. Kelly O'Donnell began with how Kerry was
greeted in Louisiana, earlier in the day, by veterans and hsi
campaign plans to have veterans at every campaign stop from now
on. She then noted how the tactic began as the "campaign comes
under criticism for its sluggish pace releasing Kerry's military
records as promised Sunday on Meet the Press."

    Since the records were not put out on Monday, the Bush
campaign "pounced" and that "fueled some critics who question the
circumstances of one of Kerry's three Purple Hearts, awarded for
battle injury. A third such honor allowed him to leave Vietnam."

    O'Donnell explained: "Tonight, posted on Kerry's Web site, 150
pages of Navy records. Documents that support two Purple Hearts,
showing Kerry was hit by shrapnel in February 1969 and again in
March 1969. But the same paperwork does not appear for an earlier
honor. The campaign says it only has a medic's 'treatment record'
from December 1968, indicating Kerry was injured by shrapnel. The
Web site does show documents for Kerry's bronze and silver stars."

    She then moved on to new TV ads produced by both campaigns.


    -- CNN's NewsNight ran a story on Tuesday night, when just
some of Kerry's records were up on his Web site, looked at the
subject again on American Morning and did a second report for
Wednesday's NewsNight in which Kelly Wallace explained that the
Kerry campaign says the records "put to rest" questions about his
service.

    "But," she cautioned, "regarding his first Purple Heart,
Kerry's military records don't specify his injuries or how he was
wounded. One of his former commanding officers told the Boston
Globe, he had questioned whether Kerry's boat had taken enemy
fire. The campaign showed CNN what it called a 'sick call
treatment record' from Kerry's personal files, describing a
shrapnel wound to his left arm."

     Wallace added: "The documents are filled with praise. One
superior saying, 'in combat' Kerry 'was unsurpassed.'..."


    -- ABC's World News Tonight. As noted above, anchor Charles
Gibson plugged the upcoming segment: "We'll take 'A Closer Look'
tonight at John Kerry's distinguished war record. His opponents
are trying hard to use it against him."

    Gibson introduced the subsequent story, as taken down by MRC
analyst Brad Wilmouth: "In the presidential race today, Senator
John Kerry launched a huge new advertising campaign. Many voters
still do not know much about the likely Democratic nominee. The
new ads are meant to fill in the blanks by introducing him and
outlining his policies. Kerry also released military records today
detailing his service during the Vietnam War. That service is a
source of pride for Kerry, but it also has become the subject of
controversy. Here's ABC's Dan Harris with tonight's 'Closer
Look.'"

    Harris began: "Arriving in New Orleans today, John Kerry, as
often happens, was greeted by a group of veterans. Kerry's record
as a decorated Vietnam Navy lieutenant is at the core of his
candidacy."
    Clip of ad: "For 35 years, John Kerry's fought for his
country."
    Harris: "You see it in his ads, at his campaign events, and
occasionally hear it in his rhetorical jabs."
    John Kerry, on outdoor stage on April 16: "I'm tired of Karl
Rove and Dick Cheney and a bunch of people who went out of their
way to avoid their chance to serve when they had the chance. I
went. I'm not going to listen to them talk to me about patriotism
and-"
    Harris: "But Kerry's opponents are increasingly working to
turn this strength into a liability. Some conservatives and fellow
veterans have asked questions about the seriousness of the
injuries for which Kerry received his first purple heart. On a
Sunday TV show, Kerry promised to release all his military records
to refute that charge."
    Kerry, on Meet the Pres: "People can come and see them at the
headquarters and take a look at them."
    Harris: "When he didn't do so immediately, the Republicans
pounced."
    Ed Gillespie, RNC Chairman, on Tuesday: "When President Bush
committed to release all his military records on the same program,
he kept his word. John Kerry should do the same."

    With a picture of Kerry in uniform on the right side of the
screen and on the left text changing with a big picture of Bronze
Star, Harris asserted: "Now, Kerry is releasing hundreds of pages
of documents. But one wonders why the campaign didn't release them
long ago. They show an officer who got glowing reviews from
superiors. Quote, 'Kerry's calmness, professionalism and great
personal courage under fire were in keeping with the highest
traditions of the United States Naval Service.' Kerry earned a
Bronze Star for saving a Green Beret knocked overboard in a river
during a firefight. Quote, 'His arm bleeding and in pain and with
disregard for his personal safety, he pulled the man aboard.' When
Kerry was honorably discharged, his superior wrote, 'The
detachment of this officer will be a definite loss to the
service.'
    "A Kerry campaign spokesman today conceded that running as a
Vietnam veteran is complicated. 'But,' he said, 'if the Bush
campaign wants to compare military records, we welcome that.' Dan
Harris, ABC News, New Orleans."

    For the records posted on the Kerry campaign Web site:
http://www.johnkerry.com/communities/veterans/service.html

    "Kerry faces questions over Purple Heart," announced the
headline over the April 14 Boston Globe story by Michael Kranish
which generated some cable attention at the time, but none from
the broadcast networks. An excerpt from the top:

WASHINGTON -- John F. Kerry's tour of duty in Vietnam,
distinguished by Silver and Bronze stars and the close-range
killing of an enemy fighter, is highlighted in his campaign ads
and cheered on the trail. Even the campaign of President Bush, who
did not see combat, hasn't tried to make an issue of his
opponent's service record.

But as the presidential campaign heats up, some Vietnam veterans
are using the Internet and talk radio to question the Democratic
candidate's military record. They complain that Kerry's three
Purple Hearts were for minor wounds and that he left Vietnam more
than six months ahead of schedule under regulations permitting
thrice-wounded soldiers to depart early.

A review by the Globe of Kerry's war record in preparation for a
forthcoming book, "John F. Kerry: The Complete Biography," found
that the young Navy officer acted heroically under fire, in one
case saving the life of an Army lieutenant. But the examination
also found that Kerry's commanding officer at the time questioned
Kerry's first Purple Heart, which he earned for a wound received
just two weeks after arriving in Vietnam.

"He had a little scratch on his forearm, and he was holding a
piece of shrapnel," recalled Kerry's commanding officer,
Lieutenant Commander Grant Hibbard. "People in the office were
saying, `I don't think we got any fire,' and there is a guy
holding a little piece of shrapnel in his palm." Hibbard said he
couldn't be certain whether Kerry actually came under fire on Dec.
2, 1968, the date in question and that is why he said he asked
Kerry questions about the matter.

But Kerry persisted and, to his own "chagrin," Hibbard said, he
dropped the matter. "I do remember some questions, some
correspondence about it," Hibbard said. "I finally said, `OK, if
that's what happened . . . do whatever you want.' After that, I
don't know what happened. Obviously, he got it, I don't know how."

Kerry declined to talk to the Globe about the issue during the
preparation of the Kerry biography. But his press secretary,
Michael Meehan, noted that the Navy concluded that Kerry deserved
the Purple Heart....

    END of Excerpt

    For the Globe story in full:
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/president/kerry/articles/2004/
04/14/kerry_faces_questions_over_purple_heart/


    Previous CyberAlert items about coverage of Bush and the
"AWOL" charge:

    -- February 5 CyberAlert. "New questions have arisen about
President Bush's military service record," Dan Rather declared on
Wednesday's CBS Evening News, although the "questions" are not
"new" since they were raised and dismissed in 1999 and 2000. CBS
and NBC on Wednesday night picked up on DNC Chairman Terry
McAuliffe's unsubstantiated "AWOL" charge, and how the John Kerry
campaign is fueling the allegations, but ignored how in 1992 Kerry
himself took to the Senate floor to denounce those critical of
Bill Clinton's efforts to avoid military service during the
Vietnam era. Matching a theme of many cable news channel segments
this week, both networks portrayed the attacks on Bush's personal
military record of 30 years ago as a legitimate retort to
questions about Kerry's professional policy positions on national
security issues. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040205.asp#2

    -- February 11 CyberAlert. The White House on Tuesday released
pay records which disproved the unsubstantiated allegation of DNC
Chairman Terry McAuliffe that President George W. Bush was AWOL
from his Air National Guard duties for a year in 1972-73. But
instead of rebuking McAuliffe and other liberals for such
scurrilous tactics, on Tuesday night the networks avoided
castigating McAuliffe and moved the goal posts on the subject as
they assumed Bush is guilty until the White House proves him
innocent by accounting for his activities for every week 30-plus
years ago. ABC, CBS and NBC all led with the subject and stressed
the lack of eyewitnesses to Bush's 1972-'73 activities. "The issue
is not going to go away," ABC's Terry Moran insisted in a self-
fulfilling promise as CBS's Dan Rather declared that the White
House effort "did not put the issue to rest." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040211.asp#1

    -- February 11 CyberAlert. Tuesday's White House press
briefing was quite contentious, with the press corps pounding away
at Press Secretary Scott McClellan for nearly 30 straight minutes
over their dissatisfaction with the 1972-'73 pay records proving
George W. Bush's service in the Air National Guard. The reporters
demanded proof of what Bush did every month and eyewitnesses to
it. CBS's John Roberts snapped at one point: "I asked a simple
question. How about a simple answer?" And when McClellan pointed
out how he'd already answered a question, NBC's David Gregory shot
back: "I'll ask it until we maybe get something." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040211.asp#2

    -- February 12 CyberAlert. The media obsession with advancing
the liberal Democratic campaign quest, to make President Bush's
National Guard record an issue, continued on Wednesday morning.
Instead of castigating those leveling unsubstantiated "AWOL"
charges, and demanding that the accusers provide proof, the
network morning shows presumed Bush is guilty until proven
innocent. With "Was He AWOL?" plastered on screen over video of
present day Bush next to a black-and-white still shot of Bush in
uniform during his National Guard days, ABC's Charles Gibson
asserted: "President Bush still in the hot seat after releasing
his military records. Was he AWOL as his critics charge?" And
showing no self-awareness of how it is the media which are making
it a story, Gibson claimed: "The questions about the President's
National Guard service just won't stop." CBS and NBC delivered
similar takes. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040212.asp#3

    February 16 CyberAlert, four items:
    # On Sunday's Face the Nation, at the start of a segment on
President Bush's National Guard duty, CBS's Bob Schieffer said he
was "surprised, frankly," that the Guard story "has gone on as
long as it has." As if he had no control over the subject matters
addressed on his own show. But neither Schieffer, nor his guests
on the topic, Time's Karen Tumulty and Boston Globe reporter
Walter Robinson, went so far as Meet the Press panelist Roger
Simon of U.S. News who remarked that, as opposed to Bush taking
the nation to war, "nobody died when Bill Clinton lied."

    # The White House's Friday afternoon release of additional
records about President Bush's National Guard years didn't quiet
the media which simply found more "unanswered questions" and
complained about the late Friday timing. NBC's John Seigenthaler
asserted: "Some political observers wonder whether the release of
these new documents could raise more questions about the
President's credibility." ABC's Geoff Morrell maintained that the
document release "does not answer the fundamental question that
has been dogging Mr. Bush: Did he report for duty in the Alabama
National Guard between May and October 1972?" Peter Jennings
whined to Terry Moran: "Terry, I have to note first that it comes
very late on a Friday evening." CNN's Suzanne Malveaux recalled:
"Document dumps like this one, of course, were so common in the
Clinton administration..."

    # CNN's Bill Schneider on Friday night awarded Democrats for
their hounding of President Bush on AWOL charges, trumpeting how
"the Democrats now have standing to play the military card and
make it the 'Political Play of the Week.'" Schneider argued: "The
issue may work this time not just because the Democrats have a war
hero but because the Republicans have a war, an increasingly
unpopular war and a President with a growing credibility problem
coming out of that war."

    # On Friday morning, as they had done on Thursday night,
network stories and interview segments continued to feature book
author James Moore and former Texas National Guard Lt. Colonel
Bill Burkett, without bothering to note how Moore's book has a
definite anti-Bush agenda on the Iraq war, how a Friday Boston
Globe story undermined Burkett's claim that he witnessed efforts
to "cleanse" Bush's National Guard records and how Burkett is a
member of a left-wing group, Veterans for Peace, and last year
wrote a disgruntled screed blaming George W. Bush for his health
problems.

    For those four CyberAlert articles:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040216.asp

    Still left unexplored by the media, how on Sunday's Meet the
Press Kerry conceded he was inaccurate in claiming that U.S.
troops in Vietnam regularly committed "atrocities," though he
stood by the claim that certain atrocities and inhumane practices
were carried out.

    On the April 18 Meet the Press, Tim Russert played a clip from
Kerry's April 18, 1971 appearance on the show. Kerry had asserted:
"There are all kinds of atrocities and I would have to say that,
yes, yes, I committed the same kind of atrocities as thousands of
other soldiers have committed in that I took part in shootings in
free-fire zones. I conducted harassment and interdiction fire. I
used 50-caliber machine guns which we were granted and ordered to
use, which were our only weapon against people. I took part in
search-and-destroy missions, in the burning of villages. All of
this is contrary to the laws of warfare. All of this is contrary
to the Geneva Conventions and all of this ordered as a matter of
written established policy by the government of the United States
from the top down. And I believe that the men who designed these,
the men who designed the free-fire zone, the men who ordered us,
the men who signed off the air raid strike areas, I think these
men, by the letter of the law, the same letter of the law that
tried Lieutenant Calley, are war criminals."

    Back live, Russert challenged Kerry: "You committed
atrocities?"
    Kerry: "I thought a lot, for a long time, about that period of
time, the things we said, and I think the word is a bad word. I
think it's an inappropriate word. I mean, if you wanted to ask me
have you ever made mistakes in your life, sure. I think some of
the language that I used was a language that reflected an anger.
It was honest, but it was in anger, it was a little bit
excessive."
    Russert: "You used the word 'war criminals.'"
    Kerry: "Well, let me just finish. Let me must finish. It was,
I think, a reflection of the kind of times we found ourselves in
and I don't like it when I hear it today. I don't like it, but I
want you to notice that at the end, I wasn't talking about the
soldiers and the soldiers' blame, and my great regret is, I hope
no soldier, I mean, I think some soldiers were angry at me for
that, and I understand that and I regret that, because I love
them. But the words were honest but on the other hand, they were a
little bit over the top. And I think that there were breaches of
the Geneva Conventions. There were policies in place that were not
acceptable according to the laws of warfare, and everybody knows
that. I mean, books have chronicled that, so I'm not going to walk
away from that. But I wish I had found a way to say it in a less
abrasive way."
    Russert: "But Senator, when you testified before the Senate,
you talked about some of the hearings you had observed at the
winter soldiers meeting and you said that people had personally
raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, taped wires from portable
telephones to human genitals and on and on. A lot of those stories
have been discredited, and in hindsight was your testimony-"
    Kerry: "Actually, a lot of them have been documented."
    Russert: "So you stand by that?"
    Kerry: "A lot of those stories have been documented. Have some
been discredited? Sure, they have, Tim. The problem is that's not
where the focus should have been. And, you know, when you're angry
about something and you're young, you know, you're perfectly
capable of not, I mean, if I had the kind of experience and time
behind me that I have today, I'd have framed some of that
differently. Needless to say, I'm proud that I stood up. I don't
want anybody to think twice about it. I'm proud that I took the
position that I took to oppose it. I think we saved lives, and I'm
proud that I stood up at a time when it was important to stand up,
but I'm not going to quibble, you know, 35 years later that I
might not have phrased things more artfully at times."

    For the full transcript of the show, as posted by MSNBC.com:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4772030/



    > 2) Lesley Stahl regrets doubting the honesty of Saddam
Hussein and his minions on weapons of mass destruction, but not on
having no ties to al-Qaeda, she asserted in a Wednesday night
address she gave in Virginia Beach. Citing two 60 Minutes stories
which cast doubt on Iraq's claim to have gotten rid of weapons of
mass destruction, she described the pieces as "journalistic
mistakes," according to a story in Thursday's Virginian-Pilot
highlighted by Romenesko
(http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45).

    "Reporter regrets Iraq stories," read the headline over the
April 22 story by reporter Kate Wiltrout about Stahl's comments to
the Virginia Beach Forum, co-sponsored by the Jewish Community
Center Forum. An excerpt:

Lesley Stahl has had her share of journalistic triumphs in the 14
years she has traveled the world interviewing newsmakers for "60
Minutes."

But Wednesday night, the CBS news correspondent and "60 Minutes"
co-editor also talked about work she's less proud of: two pre-Iraq
war reports casting doubt on Saddam Hussein's claim to have rid
Iraq of its weapons of mass destruction.

"I look on those two stories as mistakes, journalistic mistakes,"
Stahl told a crowd of about 1,000 gathered in the Princess Anne
High School auditorium. "I made them, and I regret it."

Stahl described a trip to Iraq in October 2001, where she
interviewed Iraqi officials, military leaders and scientists. They
told her that Saddam had no ties to Osama bin Laden, that their
secular Muslim country was just as much his enemy as the United
States.

Stahl said she believed that.

They also told her that the country had gotten rid of its weapons
of mass destruction -- the continued possession of such weapons
was later cited by President Bush as justification for a
pre-emptive war.

Stahl didn't buy the Iraqis' claims. Her instincts, she said, told
her they were lying. "I didn't believe anything the Iraqis were
telling me about weapons of mass destruction," Stahl said. "Nobody
believed their denials."...

George W. Bush reminds her of an earlier occupant of the White
House. "I'm hearing echoes, not of his father's presidency, but of
Ronald Reagan's," Stahl said.

Both convinced the nation they were "staying the course" even as
they changed their positions, she said, citing Reagan's six tax
hikes despite a pledge not to and now Bush's emphasis that the
U.N. help out in Iraq.

Stahl said come November, Bush might be haunted by last year's
appearance in a flight suit on an aircraft carrier, when he
declared the end of major combat in Iraq. But it's way too soon to
predict who will win the election, Stahl said....

Stahl fended off a question about for whom she would vote for
president.

"You do know that news reporters have their opinions surgically
removed," Stahl said. "I don't go there."

    END of Excerpt

    I'll assume that last line was sarcastic.

    For the article in full:
http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=69322&ran=122315



    > 3) Dour ABC. CBS's Anthony Mason on Wednesday night relayed
how Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan told a
congressional committee that "the economy is vigorous and robust"
and NBC's Tom Brokaw reported how Greenspan maintained "the
economic recovery now has good momentum and that employers will
have no choice but to hire more workers soon." But ABC anchor
Charles Gibson led his short item on a downbeat note: "At a
congressional hearing today, a caution about interest rates."

    ABC, CBS and NBC all ran short items Wednesday night about
what Greenspan told the Joint Economic Committee:

    -- CBS Evening News. Anthony Mason to Dan Rather: "Dan, the
economy is vigorous and robust. That's what Alan Greenspan told
Congress today. Fed watchers say the Chairman is gently getting us
ready for a rate hike. The betting is it may come as early as
August. Mortgage rates have already begun moving north..."

    -- NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw: "The Chairman of the
Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, said today that the economic
recovery now has good momentum and that employers will have no
choice but to hire more workers soon. He also signaled that
interest rates will have to rise at some point, although he did
not say when."

    -- ABC's World News Tonight. Anchor Charles Gibson emphasized
the negative: "At a congressional hearing today, a caution about
interest rates. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the
days of historically low interest rates are coming to an end. He
said the economy is improving and that interest rates must rise at
some point to keep inflation at bay."



    > 4) Update on coverage of corruption in the UN's "Oil for
Food" program with Iraq. As detailed in the April 21 CyberAlert,
on Tuesday night ABC's World News Tonight ran a full story on the
subject. Wednesday's Good Morning America, however, did not carry
the Brian Ross story or touch on the subject and CBS ignored it in
both the morning and evening on Wednesday.

    NBC's Tom Brokaw, however, read a short item about it on
Wednesday's NBC Nightly News:
    "The United Nation's Security Council today unanimously
approved an investigation into allegations that UN officials
accepted bribes and kickbacks in Iraq's Oil for Food program. The
program, which ended last November after seven years, had been put
in place to use $46 billion of Iraqi export earnings for
humanitarian operations in Iraq while Saddam was in power. Former
Federal reserve Chairman Paul Volcker will head up that UN
investigation."

    CNN's Paula Zahn Now, I also noticed, did a segment on
Wednesday night.

    The April 21 CyberAlert recounted how Tuesday's World News
Tonight explored an issue largely ignored by the broadcast media
and barely touched in print, though FNC has devoted some attention
to it: UN corruption in its "Food for Oil" program with Iraq in
which Saddam Hussein allegedly kept much of the money for himself
instead of using it to buy food for his people. With congressional
hearings upcoming, this may soon get some widespread attention,
but ABC's Brian Ross was first out of the box on it on a broadcast
network as he reported how "U.S. and European intelligence sources
tell ABC News that at least three senior UN officials are
suspected of taking multi-million dollar bribes from the Saddam
Hussein regime to overlook the theft." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040421.asp#2



    > 5) An editorial in a major newspaper earlier this week
contended that "it's time that we in the Fourth Estate admit that
liberal media bias isn't a figment of Rush Limbaugh's
imagination." Texas Media Watch highlighted the editorial which
appeared in Monday's Dallas Morning News.

    An excerpt from the April 19 editorial, "Unvarnished Truth?:
Perception of bias undermines media":

A recent survey by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center for the
People and the Press finds that the public believes the news media
are politically biased. So what else is new? Several things,
actually, all of which bode ill for both journalism and democracy.

When the Pew Center did the same survey in 1987, a solid majority
believed that election coverage was free of bias. Today, only 38
percent do -- including the usually high number of conservative
skeptics but now, notably, more liberals than ever. Fewer
Americans of whatever political stripe trust the media to give
them political news straight....

It's time that we in the Fourth Estate admit that liberal media
bias isn't a figment of Rush Limbaugh's imagination. Studies by
the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Kaiser Family
Foundation and the Knight Foundation have shown that, on average,
journalists are much more politically and culturally liberal and
secular than their readers.

Given such a wide disparity in worldview, it's unsurprising that
readers and viewers -- that is to say, customers -- find our
products to be a less reliable guide to political and cultural
reality than we do. We must do a better job of providing balanced
coverage and analysis....

    END of Excerpt

    For the editorial in full:
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/editorials/
stories/041904dnedimediabias.79a9.html

    The home page for Texas Media Watch:
http://texasmediawatch.com/index.htm

    For a rundown of several surveys on what political views the
public sees in the media, check this section of the MRC's "Media
Bias Basics" page:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/biasbasics/welcome.asp#public


    # Janeane Garofalo is scheduled to appear tonight, Thursday,
on NBC's Tonight Show with Jay Leno.


-- Brent Baker


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