From:

http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Wednesday May 17, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 85)

"Mockery" of McCain's Reforms; Old Women Not Raped;
President Helps Prostitute

1) The CNN and FNC political shows picked up on how last year Gore
favored putting Social Security money into the stock market, but
the broadcast networks skipped the contradiction. Dan Rather
trumpeted how 87 percent give Clinton credit for the good economy.

2) Dan Rather lamented "a campaign finance law loophole that makes
a mockery of reforms advocated by the McCain campaign." Eric
Engberg complained the post-Watergate "regulatory structure is now
near collapse, thanks to clever exploitation of loopholes."

3) Bush's lead over Gore in a poll prompted Dan Rather to caution
that "polls this early in campaigns raise a lot of questions about
reliability," but CBS offered no such admonition in 1996 about a
poll showing Bill Clinton ahead of Bob Dole.

4) FNC's Brit Hume noticed the New York Times finally reported
Million Mom March organizer Donna Dees-Thomases is a CBS flak and
"sister-in-law of Hillary Clinton intimate...Susan Thomases," but
didn't mention her "contributions to Hillary's Senate campaign."

5) Post-menopausal women don't get raped, insisted Bonnie Erbe on
PBS's To the Contrary. She told National Review: "Women buying
guns for their self protection have gone completely bonkers."

6) NBC's drama, The West Wing, took a bizarre twist into very
tolerant social liberalism with "President Bartlet" promising to
help a prostitute gain admittance to the bar. Yet in the same
episode he fired an ambassador for having an affair.

7) Letterman's "Top Ten Ways NBC is Planning on Cutting Back."


    >>> Now online, the May 15 edition of Notable Quotables, the
MRC's bi-weekly compilation of the latest outrageous, sometimes
humorous, quotes in the liberal media. Among the quote headings:
"Play Time or Re-education Time?"; "World Yearns for Rule of
Reno"; "Future and Current Journalists Embrace Ignorance and
Apathy"; "Another Gumbel Gorbasm"; "Reno Should Have Acted
Sooner"; "Clift: Better Off in Havana, Really"; "Lashing Dr.
Laura"; "Jesse Helms = Fidel Castro" and "Socialist-Capitalist
Ideal in Cuba." Go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/nq/2000/nq20000515.html <<<


    > 1) The Bush campaign found video of Al Gore backing the idea
of Social Security money going into the stock market, showing Gore
had once trumpeted how "returns on equities" beat government
financial instruments. CNN's Inside Politics and FNC's Special
Report with Brit Hume both reported the contradiction with Gore's
Monday denouncement of Bush's private investment proposal, as well
as Al Gore's counter-point that a Bush adviser urged people to
take their money out of the stock market, but the broadcast
network evening shows skipped the disclosures as did CNN's prime
time hour of news, The World Today.

    ABC, CBS and NBC all led Tuesday with the Federal Reserve's
decision to raise its lending rate by half a point and only CBS
featured a campaign story, one tied to Fed Chairman's Alan
Greenspan's decision. CBS anchor Dan Rather introduced a story, on
how the fortunes of the presidential candidates are tied to
Greenspan, by announcing that a CBS poll found that 87 percent
give credit the Clinton administration for the booming economy.
John Roberts suggested that if he economy tanks, "Gore could use
it as ammunition to paint George Bush's proposals to privatize
Social Security and cut taxes as too risky."

    On the Gore contradiction front, CNN's Inside Politics and
FNC's Special Report with Brit Hume played this soundbite from
Gore at a January 27, 1999 White House conference on Social
Security: "During this whole national discussion, one of the
single most important salient facts that jumped out at everybody,
is that over any ten year period in American history, returns on
equities are just significantly higher than these other returns."

    FNC's Jim Angle relayed how Gore now says he learned from
former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin that there have been "quite
a number of periods" longer than ten years in which equities did
not outperform government securities.

    FNC and CNN also noted how Gore played "gotcha" with a tape of
Bush economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey. But only CNN actually
played a clip from CNN's Moneyline in December, during which
Lindsey said he feared a downturn and urged people to pull their
money out of the stock market.

    Dan Rather linked the Fed's interest rate hike to the
campaign, announcing on the May 16 CBS Evening News:
    "The record U.S. economic expansion is now in its 110th month,
and in a CBS News/New York Times poll, most Americans -- 87
percent -- say the Clinton administration deserves some of the
credit. Of course, credit could quickly change to blame if the
economy gives even a hint of beginning to go south."

    The on-screen graphic did not include the word "some." It
read: "Credit Clinton administration for the economy? Yes: 87
percent; No: 9 percent." Given the numbers I'd assume the question
did include the qualifier "some."

    John Roberts began the subsequent piece: "Gore's political
future could well rest on whether Greenspan slows economic growth
or stalls it." Roberts talked to Ross Baker of Rutgers, who argued
Bush wants downturn, before Roberts reviewed Greenspan's history.
In the New Yorker recently, Roberts pointed out, Gerald Ford
blamed Greenspan, who was with the Council of Economic Advisers in
the mid-70s, for hurting his campaign by refusing to support a tax
cut. President Bush, Roberts recalled, blamed Greenspan for not
lowering interest rates enough.

    Roberts concluded by helpfully suggesting: "If the economy
does slow down Gore could use it as ammunition to paint George
Bush's proposals to privatize Social Security and cut taxes as too
risky. And because his proposals rely in part on a robust economy
Bush must walk a fine line between planting seeds of doubt in the
economy and prophecizing doom."


    > 2) It's a "campaign finance law loophole that makes a
mockery of reforms advocated by the McCain campaign," bemoaned CBS
anchor Dan Rather. Apparently spurred by a Monday Washington Post
story headlined, "Flood of Secret Money Erodes Election Limits,"
Tuesday's CBS Evening News looked at the same subject: The rise of
section 527 political groups which can produce issue ads but don't
have to disclose their donors.

    Instead of portraying them as the natural outgrowth of an
outdated regulatory scheme that never indexed contribution limits
for inflation, thus leaving campaigns short of adequate funding,
CBS's Eric Engberg focused on a Republican-linked group as he
complained about the return of "secret funds" to politics "thanks
to clever exploitation of loopholes by political operators."

    Rather set up Engberg's piece: "Tonight CBS is reporting to
you in depth on a campaign finance law loophole that makes a
mockery of reforms advocated by the McCain campaign, let alone
laws passed in the wake of the Nixon Watergate crimes. CBS's Eric
Engberg reports tonight from the Watergate for this 'Follow The
Dollar' investigation."

    Standing across the street from the Watergate complex on
Virginia Ave. NW, Engberg began, as transcribed by MRC analyst
Brad Wilmouth:
    "It was here at the Watergate building 28 years ago where the
country learned just how dangerous secret money in politics had
gotten. Much of the dirty business discovered in Watergate had
been financed by secret funds, and the public demanded a cleanup.
The key was creation of a Federal Election Commission, set up by
Congress to prevent the kind of abuses uncovered by Watergate. The
commission would enforce laws limiting the size of contributions
and requiring the names of givers be made public. The rules also
covered non-party groups working for or against a candidate. That
regulatory structure is now near collapse, thanks to clever
exploitation of loopholes by political operators. The Republican
Majority Issues Committee has been in business a few months. It
plans to pump $25 million into close House races to keep the GOP
majority. In charge, Karl Gallant, longtime aide to Congressman
Tom DeLay. DeLay will help raise that money."
    Karl Gallant: "We're going to identify, educate conservative
voters and motivate them to turn out."
    Engberg: "Gallant is operating under section 527 of the tax
code. The IRS has in recent years given such groups wide political
leeway. They can organize, buy advertising, denounce or praise a
candidate. They don't even have to register with the Federal
Election Commission. Contributors can give without limit and in
secret. It's all legal as long as the group doesn't coordinate its
actions with candidates or parties.
    Engberg to Gallant: "Do you really expect people to believe
that you're not gonna be coordinating any of this with Tom DeLay?"
    Gallant: "I will not be coordinating my activities with Tom
DeLay."
    Engberg then gave a few seconds to a liberal group: "And it's
not just the conservatives who are going secret. The Sierra Club
is using a 527 group to slam Republicans."
    Carl Pope of the Sierra Club: "We've got some donors who want
privacy, and as long as everybody else's donors have privacy,
we're gonna give it to them. But we actually think it should all
be disclosed."
    Engberg concluded, ruefully: "Tomorrow Senator Joseph
Lieberman will begin a drive to get Congress to close the 527
loophole. Its chances are considered slim. The fact is that many
politicians like doing campaign fundraising pre-Watergate style."

    How awful to desire freedom from archaic regulations that
hinder campaigns and free speech.


    > 3) Bush's lead over Gore in a poll prompted Dan Rather to
caution that "polls this early in campaigns raise a lot of
questions about reliability," but CBS offered no such admonition
in 1996 about a poll showing Bill Clinton ahead of Bob Dole.

    As recounted in the May 16 CyberAlert, on the May 15 CBS
Evening News Dan Rather announced: "A CBS News/New York Times poll
came out tonight suggesting Bush's lead over Al Gore may have
grown since April. Polls this early in campaigns raise a lot of
questions about reliability, but our poll does indicate a possible
shift in Bush's favor among white male voters, a block that
usually helps Republicans."

    Rich Noyes, Director of the MRC's Free Market Project, did a
little investigation and found a contrast, in CBS's trust in
polls, from almost exactly four years earlier. The May 16, 1996
CBS Evening News aired a piece by Phil Jones on Bob Dole's first
day of campaigning after he resigned from the Senate. Jones
concluded by relaying, without any admonitory notes, the downbeat
poll news for Dole:
    "According to a new CBS News poll, 60 percent of those
interviewed agreed with Dole's decision to resign from the Senate
and spend full time campaigning for President. It's going to take
full time. Among registered voters in the poll, Dole trails
President Clinton by 15 points."


    > 4) If Brit Hume ever loses his FNC job he can become a media
analyst for the MRC -- for a lot less pay. On Monday's Special
Report with Brit Hume he picked up on some media bias:
    "The New York Times has finally noted that Donna Dees-
Thomases, the supposedly average mom who organized the Million Mom
March, is a public relations specialist for CBS and sister-in-law
of Hillary Clinton intimate and political adviser, Susan Thomases.
No mention in the Times or the Washington Post though of Mrs.
Thomases's contributions to Hillary's Senate campaign and her
previous work on Capitol Hill for two Democratic Senators."

    Indeed, in the May 15 New York Times story on the march,
reporter Robin Toner passed along:
    "The Million Mom March was the brainchild of Donna Rees-
Thomases, a part-time publicist for CBS, the sister-in-law of
Susan Thomases, a close friend of Hillary Clinton, and a New
Jersey mother who said her maternal instincts kicked in after the
shooting last August at a Jewish community center in Los Angeles."

    Last Thursday, May 11, Hume filled in Thomases's resume: "More
information you haven't heard from the rest of the media on Donna
Dees-Thomases, organizer of that women's march for gun control
here this weekend. NBC News says she's quote, �a mother who's
never been politically active,' but, in fact, she once worked for
retired Louisiana Democratic Senators Russell Long and Bennett
Johnston. And the Media Research Center says she's been giving to
Hillary Clinton's Senate campaign since last year."

    For more about Dees-Thomases's background, as documented in
the May 11 CyberAlert, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000511.html#5

    And, for Thomases's claims of political naivete, go to the May
12 Media Reality Check:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/reality/2000/Fax20000512.html


    > 5) On the PBS public-affairs show To the Contrary over the
weekend, host Bonnie Erbe told panelist Linda Chavez that a woman
of her age doesn't need to worry about being raped. So National
Review's John J. Miller and Ramesh Ponnuru revealed in their
Washington Bulletin e-mail on Monday.

    To the Contrary bills itself as "a discussion of issues from a
variety of women's perspectives," though Erbe's comment is one
sure to have had generated condemnation on the show if uttered by
a man. Her comment came at the very end of a discussion about gun
control and the Million Mom March with the conservative Linda
Chavez, a Virginia resident who disclosed that a month ago she
bought a gun at a gun show.

    Here's the transcript of the relevant portion of the show as
provided by National Review, with some slight corrections and
added words I got off the MRC's taped copy of the program:

    Linda Chavez, Center for Equal Opportunity: "If you're someone
like me, who lives out in a rural area -- if someone breaks into
my house and wants to murder or rape me or steal all of my
property, it'll take half an hour for a policeman to get to me."
    DC Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton jumped and a brief back and
forth ensued about how Chavez has dogs who will alert her to an
intruder.
    Chavez continued: "Thousands of lives are saved by people
being able to protect themselves."
    Norton: "And there are more suicides and more accidents
because there was a gun in the home than they'll ever be lives
saved because somebody happened to get the jump on a burglar."
    Bonnie Erbe: "And if you look at the statistics, I would bet
that you have a greater chance of being struck by lightning,
Linda, than living where you live, and at your age, being raped.
Sorry."

    Before anyone could react, Erbe moved the discussion to a new
topic: The New York Senate race.

    NR's Miller and Ponnuru learned that Erbe stands by her
assessment of rape risk and thinks women who buy guns are
"bonkers." They reported in their May 15 e-mail:
    "Contacted on Monday, Erbe refused to back down. �A woman
living in a rural area and at a post-menopausal age statistically
is not likely to be a rape target,' she said. �Women buying guns
for their self protection have gone completely bonkers.' Asked if
she knew Chavez's age, Erbe replied, �Somewhere over 55 and
somewhere under 60.' Chavez is 52. Cari W. Stein, the executive
producer of To the Contrary, said, �Bonnie certainly is not
insensitive to sexual assault. Her commitment to women's issues
should be apparent from the program.'"

    Erbe, now a columnist for Scripps-Howard, is the former legal
affairs correspondent for the Mutual/NBC Radio Network. While
still in that job, she took this stab at conservatives on the
August 16, 1996 To the Contrary, just after the Republican
convention:
    "TV viewers saw a well-orchestrated image of a moderated
Republican Party, portraying itself as pro-woman, pro-minorities,
and pro-tolerance. This is in sharp contrast to the delegates on
the floor, sixty percent of whom self-identified as conservative
Christians."

    In a June 1997 column, she complained: "What liberals can't
understand is why can't Republicans be honest about their
discomfort with the advancement of women and minorities...The
ideological pulse of the party, the Conservative Action Team, is
backing its own candidate for the Republican Conference's vice
chair. And nary a woman was ever in the running. The message from
the crowd is clear: only anti-abortion, right-wing males need
apply."

    And remember, it was on Erbe's To the Contrary that a panelist
wished Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas would die. On the
November 4, 1994 edition, then-USA Today columnist and Pacifica
Radio talk show host Julianne Malveaux, spewed: "The man is on the
Court. You know, I hope his wife feeds him lots of eggs and butter
and he dies early like many black men do, of heart disease. Well,
that's how I feel. He is an absolutely reprehensible person."

    To see a clip of Malveaux's wish, via RealPlayer, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/nq/dishonor1999/dishonor_videos.html#7

    For more about To the Contrary, which is produced by Maryland
Public Television, go to: http://www.pbs.org/ttc/

    Washington area viewers with a lot of free time can watch the
show four times each weekend: Saturdays at 12pm on WETA-TV;
Sundays at 10:30am on WMPT-TV; and Fridays at 7:30pm and Sundays
at 5:30pm on WHUT-TV.

    +++ Watch Erbe make her comment on To the Contrary about how
older women have more to fear from lightning than rape. Wednesday
morning MRC Webmaster Andy Szul will post a RealPlayer clip in the
posted version of this CyberAlert item. After 11am ET, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000517.html#5


    > 6) The journey left of NBC's drama, The West Wing, took a
bizarre twist into very tolerant social liberalism last Wednesday
night with "President Bartlet," played by Martin Sheen, offering
to order the Attorney General to help a prostitute, who just
earned a law degree, gain admittance to the bar.

    After she's photographed by a newspaper with one of his aides,
instead of angrily rebuking the aide, Bartlet stands by him and
tells him to apologize to her for the White House for the
intrusion on her life and suggests she sue the newspaper for
invading her privacy. The scene ends with this serious comment
from Bartlet: "It's nice when we can do something for prostitutes
once in a while, isn't it?"

    Here's the background: At the beginning of the season "Deputy
Communications Director Sam Seaborn," the George Stephanopoulos
character played by Rob Lowe, "inadvertently" goes on a date with
a woman, "Laurie," he learns is a prostitute. He continued to date
her, providing subplots all season long about him trying to keep
her profession secret.

    Fast forward to the May 10 episode of the 9pm ET/PT, 8pm CT/MT
series: An evil staffer for a Republican Senator opposed to
campaign finance reform has learned of the relationship. Fearful
of blackmail, "Communications Director Toby Ziegler" bars Seaborn
from attending Laurie's graduation from The George Washington
University Law School. (As a GWU undergrad alum myself this was a
proud moment.)

    Instead, Laurie's waitress friend arranges for Sam and Laurie
to meet afterward at her home. Talking to Laurie on the sidewalk
outside the waitress's very swank Georgetown-like home, Sam gives
Laurie his gift, a briefcase. As they embrace, photos are taken
and a car speeds off.

    The White House Press Secretary learns the waitress friend set
up Laurie for $50,000 and the "London Daily Mirror" is about the
publish the photo. This leads Toby and Sam to come clean with the
President in this scene, transcribed by MRC intern Michael
Ferguson, which starts as all three walk into the Oval Office from
outside:

    President Josiah Bartlet: "You never paid this girl to have
sex?"
    Sam: "No sir."
    Toby: "They didn't have that kind of a relationship, sir.
Except once, and that time he didn't know what was happening."
    Bartlet: "Well, that makes two of us."
    Toby: "Mr. President, Sam has always been completely above
board about his relationship with Laurie, he-"
    Bartlet: "Laurie's the girl?"
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Toby: "He told us about it right after his first contact with
her nine months ago. The fact that she was putting herself through
law school under circumstances that were less than good has to
mean something, as does the fact that Sam's word is
unimpeachable."
    Bartlet: "Toby, are you in here sticking up for Sam?"
    Toby: "I know, it's strange, sir. But I'm feeling a certain
big brotherly connection right now. You know, obviously I'd like
that feeling to go away as soon as possible. But for the moment I
think there's no danger in the White House standing by Sam and
aggressively going after the people who set him up."
    Bartlet: "Sam, you're going to spend the morning in the White
House counsel's office finding out if you broke any laws."
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Bartlet: "You should also call the girl. What's her name?"
    Sam and Toby simultaneously: "Laurie."
    Bartlet: "You should call her and tell her the White House
deeply regrets the phenomenal inconvenience she's about to
experience."
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Bartlet: "You might also want to point out to her that she
probably has a cause of action against the paper."
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Bartlet: "You should tell her that if she passes her bar exam,
the U.S. Attorney General will personally see to it that she's
admitted to the bar."
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Bartlet: "Tell her the President of the United States says
congratulations on getting her degree."
    Sam: "Yes sir."
    Bartlet: "That's all."
    Sam: "Thank you, Mr. President."
    Bartlet to Toby: "It's nice when we can do something for
prostitutes once in a while, isn't it?"
    Toby: "Yes sir."

    +++ View this scene via RealPlayer. Wednesday morning MRC
Webmaster Andy Szul will post it on the MRC home page. After 11am
ET go to http://www.mrg.org or directly to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000517.html#6

    The May 10 episode also continued President Bartlet's quest
for a ban on soft money, a pursuit which led him, in the same
episode in which he excused prostitution, to fire an ambassador
for having an affair. In order to get enough votes on the FEC for
a ban on soft money, Bartlet names an uncooperative current
commissioner as the new ambassador to Micronesia. To make that an
open spot he bumps the current ambassador to the island nation up
to ambassador to Paraguay. And the present envoy to Paraguay gets
bumped up to Bulgaria, a slot Bartlet opens by firing the current
ambassador because he's having an affair with the daughter of the
Prime Minister.

    So, having an affair is condemned. But carrying on a
relationship with a prostitute is not and the prostitute is
treated as a struggling victim who must be helped.

    I guess The West Wing really is inspired by the Clinton White
House -- half the time.

    Tonight's (May 17) episode is the season finale. For those in
the Washington area who read about the cast filming in Rosslyn a
few weeks ago some sort of an attack on a motorcade, this is the
episode which will use that footage. I'm betting on an attack on
Bartlet's college-age daughter by white supremacists upset by her
dating a black guy.

    For a rundown on the May 3 episode and links to previous
CyberAlert items on The West Wing, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000510.html#5


    > 7) Prompted, I would guess, by NBC's decision to cough up
$750,000 per episode for the six stars of Friends, from the May 15
Late Show with David Letterman: The "Top Ten Ways NBC is Planning
on Cutting Back." Copyright 2000 by World Wide Pants, Inc.

10. Stop paying for entire news division -- let Tom Brokaw make
stuff up
9. "Law and Order" -- same amount of Law, 30% less Order
8. Instead of videotape, Olympic coverage all Polaroids
7. Al Roker must downgrade from Doppler 4000 to Doppler 3950
6. Only sending Jerry Seinfeld 5 BMWs a day begging him to come
back
5. Instead of real bodies, "E.R." doctors huddle over board game
"Operation"
4. Goodbye NBA -- hello live coverage of old chicks playing
Canasta
3. New game show: "Who Wants To Watch ABC's 'Who Wants To Be A
Millionaire?'"
2. "Dateline" now only on 43 times a week
1. From now on, NBC equals Nothing But Commercials

    And from the Late Show Web page, some of the "also rans" that
didn't make the final cut because Letterman's writers produce
"more brilliant jokes than can fit in a Top Ten List."

--  All "Where In the World Is Matt Lauer?" destinations must be
within reach of the studio camera cable
--  In "The West Wing," highly-paid actor portraying the President
will be replaced by Gerald Ford
--  Tom Brokaw's back-breaking hour-a-day work schedule reduced
dramatically
--  In addition to the "Nightly News," Tom Brokaw must now play
"Phoebe" on "Friends"
--  Once a week, "NBC Nightly News" will be a rerun


    From comedy to a related reality: NBC actually plans to re-run
NBC Nightly News later each weeknight on Pax-TV. -- Brent Baker


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================

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