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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2004 08:31:20 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: NBC's Curry Pushes Blinded Vet to Say He's 'Angry' Over
    No WMD

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
    11:30am EDT, Wednesday April 28, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 69)
 The 1,706th CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Nets Spotlight College Chief's Complaint About Cheney Speech
> Kerry Distracted from Jobs Issue by "Harsh Attacks" from Cheney
> NBC's Curry Pushes Blinded Vet to Say He's "Angry" Over No WMD
> Wash Post Reporter "Against the War Before, During and After It"
> Letterman's "Top Ten Chapter Titles in Bill Clinton's Memoirs"

    #### 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:
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For 2003: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive03.asp
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MRC's PayPal donation page, are at the end of this message.
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1) Highlighting upset at Cheney. ABC's Peter Jennings on Tuesday
night spotlighted how "the President of Westminster College in
Missouri has complained that Vice President Cheney used a visit
yesterday to attack Senator Kerry." MSNBC's Countdown with Keith
Olbermann featured an interview with the college chief, Fletcher
Lamkin, and NBC's Today in the morning had noted the complaint
while CBS's Hannah Storm cited the chiding and then worried to RNC
Chairman Ed Gillespie: "Now, is this scorched-earth campaign, is
there a point at which it goes too far, where it alienates
voters?"

2) As occurred Monday night, though John Kerry issued a personal
attack on President Bush about whether he served his National
Guard duty, on Tuesday morning Kerry was treated as the victim of
attacks from the Bush campaign team. CBS's Byron Pitts fretted on
the Early Show about how "for Senator John Kerry this was supposed
to be his week to talk about jobs as he launched a three state,
three day bus tour listening to blue collar workers," but "instead
he was forced to respond to harsh attacks from Vice President Dick
Cheney on Kerry's voting record on national security." NBC's Kelly
O'Donnell lamented that "as much as the Senator works to talk
about the economy, the Vietnam era follows closely behind." And
MSNBC's Keith Olbermann admired Kerry's "pretty good return" punch
at Bush.

3) NBC's Today devoted a moving and inspirational segment on
Tuesday to a U.S. Army Ranger who was blinded in Iraq, Sergeant
Jeremy Feldbusch, followed by a live interview with Feldbusch and
a veteran blinded during World War II. But NBC's Ann Curry
couldn't resist trying to get Feldbusch to denounce the war. She
asked him: "Are you angry that what you were on a mission to
protect America against, weapons of mass destruction, may never
have existed at the time you parachuted into Iraq." Feldbusch
stood by how the war was justified, but Curry was not dissuaded,
pressing: "Was all of that worth the price you have paid?" And:
"The price you will pay for the rest of your life?"

4) "I was against the war before, during and after it," Washington
Post military reporter Rick Atkinson, who has written a book about
his experiences as an embedded reporter in Iraq, told Editor &
Publisher magazine. He complained: "I have no mixed feelings about
the hundreds of dead soldiers -- it was a poor use of their lives.
I was certain last March that we as a nation had not done all we
could to make sure lives were not lost." Editor & Publisher's Greg
Mitchell related how Atkinson told him that "the casus belli for
the war, that Iraq posed an imminent threat to America, 'was
inflated and perhaps fraudulent.'"

5) Letterman's "Top Ten Chapter Titles in Bill Clinton's Memoirs."


    > 1) Highlighting upset at Cheney. ABC's Peter Jennings on
Tuesday night spotlighted how "the President of Westminster
College in Missouri has complained that Vice President Cheney used
a visit yesterday to attack Senator Kerry." MSNBC's Countdown with
Keith Olbermann featured an interview with the college chief,
Fletcher Lamkin, and NBC's Today in the morning had noted the
complaint while CBS's Hannah Storm cited the chiding and then
worried to RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie: "Now, is this scorched-earth
campaign, is there a point at which it goes too far, where it
alienates voters?"

    Interestingly, while Lamkin was disturbed by Dick Cheney using
a platform, at the college where Winston Churchill gave his "Iron
Curtain" speech, to criticize his opponent's policies, Lamkin
isn't shy about issuing effusive praise for a leading liberal
icon, Walter Cronkite. The college will honor him next week and a
press release on its Web site quotes Lamkin saluting Cronkite and
favorably comparing him to Churchill:
    "'Walter Cronkite is one of our nation's most admired and
trusted leaders, and a true treasure,' said Lamkin. 'Like Winston
Churchill, he is a cherished example of charismatic leadership and
unselfish service, and has an undying commitment to what is right
and good in the world.'"

    Unlike Churchill, however, Cronkite blamed the victims of
terror, arguing on the September 9, 2002 Larry King Live on CNN:
"I think very definitely that foreign policy could have caused
what has happened [last September 11]....It certainly should be
apparent now -- it should be, for goodness sakes understood now,
but it is not -- that the problem is this great division between
the rich and the poor in the world. We represent the rich....Most
of these other nations of Africa, Asia and South America and
Central America are very, very poor....This is a revolution in
effect around the world. A revolution is in place today. We are
suffering from a revolution of the poor and have-nots against the
rich and haves and that's us."

    For the press release about Cronkite being awarded the
"Winston Churchill Medal for Leadership and Service," see:
http://www.westminster-mo.edu/News/press_releases.asp?Node_ID=129&News_ID=1394

    For a picture of Lamkin:
http://www.westminster-mo.edu/presidents_office/index.asp

    On Tuesday's World News Tonight, Jennings featured Lamkin's
complaint: "In our 'Campaign Notebook' today, the President of
Westminster College in Missouri has complained that Vice President
Cheney used a visit yesterday to attack Senator Kerry. President
Fletcher Lamkin sent a campus-wide e-mail saying he was 'surprised
and disappointed that Mr. Cheney chose to step off the high
ground,' as he put it, 'and resort to Kerry-bashing for a large
portion of his speech.' Senator Kerry has now been offered equal
time and is going to speak at Westminster on Friday."

    On screen as Jennings talked ABC showed the text of Lamkin's
quote: "I must admit that I was surprised and disappointed that
Mr. Cheney chose to step off the high ground and resort to
Kerry-bashing for a large portion of his speech."

    Earlier, on Tuesday's Today, MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens
noticed, news reader Natalie Morales announced: "The President of
Westminster College in Missouri says he's disappointed that Cheney
used a speech at the school Monday to attack John Kerry on
national security. Cheney accused Kerry of being soft on security
issues. For his part Kerry campaigns today in Ohio. He's focusing
on jobs. Kerry accuses the President of letting down U.S. workers
by failing to enforce trade agreements that bar unfair foreign
competition."

    Over on CBS's The Early Show, MRC analyst Brian Boyd observed,
Hannah Storm interviewed RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie and DNC
Chairman Terry McAuliffe. She asked Gillespie:
    "Well, yesterday the President at Westminster College where
Dick Cheney gave his speech yesterday, he sent out a note, Mr.
Gillespie, to the faculty and the students and he chastised the
Vice President for Kerry bashing. Now, is this scorched-earth
campaign, is there a point at which it goes too far, where it
alienates voters?"

    Gillespie replied: "Look Hannah, I'm sorry I just don't see
this as a scorched-earth campaign to point out that John Kerry
opposed the Gulf War in 1991; he says he's an anti-war candidate
today; he said it would be irresponsible to oppose funding for the
troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, for them to have funding for body
armor and up-armoring the Humvee vehicles there and then voted
against it after saying it would be irresponsible to do so. These
are facts, this is what elections are about. People need to know
where candidates are on the issues of the day. National security
is one of the most important issues of the day..."

    For the April 26 AP story, "College Leader 'Disappointed' by
Cheney," see:
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040427/ap_on_el_pr/cheney_westminster_2

    For the April 27 Washington Post article, "College Host Chides
Cheney," which noted that "Cheney drew frequent applause and a
standing ovation mid-speech," see:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45130-2004Apr26.html

    For the text of Cheney's remarks at the college in Fulton:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/04/20040426-8.html



    > 2) As occurred Monday night, though John Kerry issued a
personal attack on President Bush about whether he served his
National Guard duty, on Tuesday morning John Kerry was treated as
the victim of attacks from the Bush campaign team. CBS's Byron
Pitts fretted on the Early Show about how "for Senator John Kerry
this was supposed to be his week to talk about jobs as he launched
a three state, three day bus tour listening to blue collar
workers," but "instead he was forced to respond to harsh attacks
from Vice President Dick Cheney on Kerry's voting record on
national security." NBC's Kelly O'Donnell lamented that "as much
as the Senator works to talk about the economy, the Vietnam era
follows closely behind."

    The night before, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann admired the Kerry
retort in which he resorted to personally demanding that Bush
prove he fulfilled his National Guard service. The MRC's Brad
Wilmouth caught this remark from Olbermann, to Newsweek's Howard
Fineman, on the April 26 Countdown:
    "Of course, there has to be a danger in the White House
response to this to do too much with it. The 1970, '73, '74 era is
kind of a black hole for them, too. Kerry said in response
tonight, 'All of this is coming from a President who can't even
prove that he showed up for duty with the National Guard.' That's,
I mean, that is a, perhaps not a serve that goes right past your
opponent, but it's a pretty good return."

    The April 27 CyberAlert recounted: John Kerry appeared on
Monday's Good Morning America on ABC to respond to evidence he's
contradicted himself on throwing away his war medals, but instead
of making Kerry's credibility the focus of the day's news, ABC and
the other networks painted Kerry's post-Vietnam War actions as an
unfair burden and/or Kerry as a victim of unfair attacks from pro-
Bush political operatives. Peter Jennings framed the story around
Kerry's "dilemma: After brave and honorable service in Vietnam, a
post-war record that dogs him." CBS's Dan Rather portrayed the
Bush team as the aggressor: "The Bush-Cheney re-election campaign
launched another attack today on Democratic challenger..." NBC's
Kelly O'Donnell ignored ABC's role as she blamed "political
digging" and claimed questions about the "credibility" of both
candidates had been "renewed." CNN anchor Aaron Brown framed the
news through a prism hostile to Bush as he recited a litany of
supposed Bush-Cheney failures as he implied disgust at how they
still had the chutzpah to criticize Kerry. See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040427.asp#1

    On the April 27 Early Show on CBS, Byron Pitts checked in:
"It's been a war of words over national security. The Vice
President attacked Senator Kerry's record and Kerry fought back.
For Senator John Kerry this was supposed to be his week to talk
about jobs as he launched a three state, three day bus tour
listening to blue collar workers in a mill in Pennsylvania,
visiting a local hot dog stand."
    Kerry at the hot dog stand: "Cheeseburger, cheeseburger,
cheeseburger."
    Woman: "Cheeseburger -- oh jeez."
    Kerry: "No Pepsi, Coke, Coke."
    Pitts: "But instead he was forced to respond to harsh attacks
from Vice President Dick Cheney on Kerry's voting record on
national security."
    Cheney on Monday at Westminster College: "It is irresponsible
to vote against vital support for the United States military."
    Pitts: "Cheney's speech signaled the start of a new $10
million ad campaign."
    Bush ad: "John Kerry has repeatedly opposed weapons vital to
winning the war on terror."
    Kerry to Pitts: "That's the most bogus thing I've ever heard
in my life. I have voted for the largest defense budgets in the
history of our country."
    Pitts: "Meantime, Democrats launched their own ad campaign."
    Ad: "This election is about character. It's between John Kerry
who left no man behind and George Bush who simply left."
    Pitts: "Kerry believes his record in Vietnam as well as on
national security are his strengths. If Republicans pick that
fight he says, they've picked the wrong one."
    Kerry: "I'm not going to listen to the likes of Dick Cheney or
anybody else question my willingness to defend my nation when I've
already done it. So their plan is just attack, attack, attack and
try to destroy people. Well, they picked the wrong person. I'm
going to talk about the issues that matter to Americans and if
they want to spend their time off in this other gobble-de-gook
that's fine. But you know what? The President owes America an
explanation of whether or not he showed up for duty in Alabama."
    Pitts concluded: "This morning Senator Kerry will talk with
supporters here in Youngstown, Ohio, before heading to Cleveland
to talk about jobs. Kerry would like to turn the focus on the
nearly three million jobs lost in America since President Bush
took office."

    As if the media haven't made that point for him many times.

    Over on NBC's Today, Kelly O'Donnell began: "The campaign
message on the side of the Kerry bus is in giant letters today:
'Jobs.' But as much as the Senator works to talk about the economy
the Vietnam era follows closely behind. John Kerry sampled the
goods at a well known Pennsylvania hot dog shop."
    John Kerry: "Thank you for coming out here to join me in
marking the beginning of the end of the Bush administration."
    O'Donnell: "But he also appears more hungry for a political
fight."
    Kerry: "Now when they start questioning what I did or didn't
do 35 years ago or said, on a personal level I'm gonna fight
back."
    O'Donnell: "Republicans claim Kerry has been inconsistent in
comments made over the years about his post-Vietnam protest. The
controversial tossing of combat decorations. Kerry says he kept
his medals but discarded the ribbons. Would you make them
available to sort of show people-"
    Kerry: "No, absolutely not! They're private and I have no
reason to do that whatsoever."
    O'Donnell: "While Kerry himself now challenges the President
to disclose more about his military service."
    Kerry: "If George Bush wants to ask me questions about that
through his surrogates he owes America an explanation of whether
or not he showed up for duty in the National Guard. Prove it!"
    O'Donnell: "And from Vice President Dick Cheney questions
about Kerry's positions on Iraq and the war on terror."
    Dick Cheney in Monday's speech: "And the Senator from
Massachusetts has given us ample grounds to doubt the judgment and
attitude he brings to bear on vital issues of national security."
    O'Donnell concluded: "For the Kerry campaign this is a four-
state bus tour. We started in West Virginia, then on here to Ohio,
Pennsylvania and then Michigan. All heavy manufacturing states
that have lost jobs, the key word of the day, and all battleground
states to be sure."



    > 3) NBC's Today devoted a moving and inspirational segment on
Tuesday to a U.S. Army Ranger who was blinded in Iraq, Sergeant
Jeremy Feldbusch, followed by a live interview with Feldbusch and
a veteran blinded during World War II. But NBC's Ann Curry
couldn't resist trying to get Feldbusch to denounce the war. She
asked him: "Are you angry that what you were on a mission to
protect America against, weapons of mass destruction, may never
have existed at the time you parachuted into Iraq." Feldbusch
stood by how the war was justified, but Curry was not dissuaded,
pressing: "Was all of that worth the price you have paid?" And:
"The price you will pay for the rest of your life?"

    MRC analyst Geoff Dickens caught the exchange which took place
during a lengthy taped piece aired during the 9am hour on the
April 27 show, in which Curry traveled to Blairsville,
Pennsylvania to chronicle Feldbusch's efforts to adapt to a new
life as a blind 24-year-old man. During the first days of the war
he was hit in the head with shrapnel.

    As the two sat in what looked like a living room of a house,
Curry pressed him: "Are you angry that what you were on a mission
to protect America against, weapons of mass destruction, may never
have existed at the time you parachuted into Iraq."
    Feldbusch: "We have gotten rid of Saddam Hussein in the Middle
East. We have taken him out of central control of the Middle East
and we're putting, trying to place a democracy in the center of
the Middle East."
    Curry: "Was all of that worth the price you have paid?"
    Feldbusch: "Yes."
    Curry: "The price you will pay for the rest of your life?"
    Feldbusch: "If I would have died while I was over there that
would've been worth everything that I've done."
    Curry: "That commitment and caring brought him back recently
to the hospital where his life was saved to say thank you and to
cheer up the troops. Many waiting for reconstructive surgery...."

    Following Curry's piece, live in studio, Matt Lauer talked
with Feldbusch and WWII vet Tom Broderick who was blinded during
that war. (NBC Nightly News ended Tuesday night with a story about
the two.)

    Via a Google search I learned that Feldbusch is a popular war
victim with anti-war groups. Mother Jones magazine, for instance,
showcased him, but they do provide a good photo:
http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2004/03/03_100-5.html

    For Pittsburgh Tribune Review article about him with a photo:
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/middleeastreports/prine/s_136564.html

    On Tuesday night Feldbusch was to be honored in New York City
by the American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial. Their Web
site: http://www.dvlmf.org/



    > 4) "I was against the war before, during and after it,"
Washington Post military reporter Rick Atkinson, who has written a
book about his experiences as an embedded reporter in Iraq, told
Editor & Publisher magazine. He complained: "I have no mixed
feelings about the hundreds of dead soldiers -- it was a poor use
of their lives. I was certain last March that we as a nation had
not done all we could to make sure lives were not lost."

    Editor & Publisher's Greg Mitchell related how Atkinson told
him that "the casus belli for the war, that Iraq posed an imminent
threat to America, 'was inflated and perhaps fraudulent.'"

    Romenesko ( http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45 ) on
Tuesday posted a link to the E&P article in its May 1 edition,
"Atkinson Offers an Inside Look at War: Why did the 'Washington
Post' reporter/author/military scholar risk his life covering a
conflict he opposed from the start?" An excerpt:

When Rick Atkinson learned that he'd won the 2003 Pultizer Prize
for history for his book An Army at Dawn, he was in Iraq covering
the 101st Airborne's push towards Baghdad for The Washington Post.
A year later, at Pulitzer time, he was back in Washington and his
acclaimed book about his embedded experience in Iraq, In the
Company of Soldiers, was climbing the bestseller charts. One thing
had not changed: He still opposed the war he had covered with such
distinction....

When I interviewed Atkinson recently, I knew how he felt about the
war today but not a lot about his doubts while he was traveling
with the troops through the heat and dust storms last spring,
"embracing the suck," as the grunts put it. His book concentrates
on observing [101st Airborne commander Maj. Gen. David] Petraeus
and his division up close without commenting at great length about
the run-up to the war or Atkinson's political views at the time.

In the postwar epilogue, however, he speaks frankly. Petraeus and
his soldiers had performed well, taking relatively few casualties,
and showing both restraint and courage in battle. But they "were
better than the cause they served." It was "vital not to conflate
the warriors with the war." The casus belli for the war, that Iraq
posed an imminent threat to America, "was inflated and perhaps
fraudulent." And if "the war's predicate was phony, it cheapened
the sacrifices of the dead and living alike."

So I asked Atkinson, who has captured so well the glory-filled
allied struggle in World War II, whether he felt the new book was
somewhat hollow, documenting the wrong war in the wrong place at
the wrong time. Did he have mixed feelings about his own effort?

"There's nothing mixed about it at all," he fired back. "I was
against the war before, during and after it. I have no mixed
feelings about the hundreds of dead soldiers -- it was a poor use
of their lives. I was certain last March that we as a nation had
not done all we could to make sure lives were not lost, but I'm
dogmatic about it now."...

Now, as a scholar of World War II, the lesson he draws is "that if
you're going to fight a global war, whether it's against the Axis
in the 1940s or against terrorism today, nothing is more vital
than nurturing a powerful, righteous coalition." Failing to do
this has placed a tragically unfair burden on our military. "They
took down a country the size of California in three weeks," he
pointed out, "but there was not much thought devoted to the
question of what happens next. It's astonishing how little thought
was given." And he cited Machiavelli's warning, "War begins where
you will, but they do not end where you please."...

    END of Excerpt

    For Mitchell's article in full:
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/columns/pressingissues_dis
play.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000496306

    For Amazon's page on Atkinson's new book on the Iraq war, "In
the Company of Soldiers: A Chronicle of Combat," see:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0805075615/qid=1083114857/s
r=2-1/ref=sr_2_1/103-1965077-6868649

    For the Washington Post's collection of Atkinson's war
coverage, with a picture of him in the field:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/nation/nationalsecurity/abroa
d/iraq/field/atkinsonrick/



    > 5) From the April 27 Late Show with David Letterman,
prompted by the announcement that former President Clinton's book
will be released in late June, the "Top Ten Chapter Titles in Bill
Clinton's Memoirs." Late Show home page:
http://www.cbs.com/latenight/lateshow/

10. "I'm Writing This Chapter Naked"

9. "I Pray Hillary Doesn't Read Pages 6, 18, 41-49, 76 And
Everything Past 200"

8. "Protecting The Constitution: How To Get Gravy Stains Out Of
The Parchment"

7. "A Few Of My Favorite Subpoenas"

6. "From Gennifer to Paula to Monica: Why It Pays To Keep Lowering
Your Standards"

5. "1995-1998: The Extra-Pasty Years"

4. "Kneel To The Chief"

3. "What's The Deal With That Moron You Guys Replaced Me With?"

2. "NAFTA -- Bringing America Into... Ah Screw That, Who Wants To
Read Some More About Bubba Gettin' Down?"

1. "The Night I Accidentally Slept With Hillary"


    They all sound plausible to me.


    # Scheduled to appear tonight, Wednesday, on Comedy Central's
Daily Show with Jon Stewart: Fareed Zakaria, Editor of Newsweek
International and a regular on ABC's This Week with George
Stephanopoulos.


-- Brent Baker


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