From:

http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Thursday May 18, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 86)

Bill & Hillary: "Together...Emotionally"; Elian Photo Spiked;
Helen's Liberal Legacy

1) EPA regulation night. All the networks either led with or ran
stories on the EPA's plan to reduce diesel-fuel pollution because
it causes cancer and a warning that Dioxin is more dangerous than
thought, but none questioned the accuracy of the EPA's science.

2) "Together again, Bill and Hillary Clinton, the picture of
harmony" Tom Brokaw trumpeted over video of Hillary accepting the
Senate nomination in Albany. Andrea Mitchell compliantly relayed
how they have "banded together...politically and emotionally."

3) Last week all the networks showcased photos of a happy Elian
playing with friends and his father, but on Wednesday only FNC
showed viewers a new picture of Elian, at Wye, decked out in the
garb of the Pioneers, Cuba's communist youth indoctrination group.

4) Helen Thomas "was always fair and never intimidated," insisted
Tom Brokaw. She actually left a legacy of liberalism, once
arguing: "I don't know what a liberal bias is. Do you mean do we
care about the poor, the sick, and the maimed?"

5) An MSNBC segment on a Tennessee focus group's assessment of Al
Gore included a man's blast at "liberal media bias."

6) Letterman's "Top Ten Hillary Clinton Campaign Slogans."

7) Fox News Channel now viewable in the CyberAlert overnight
newsroom...and in your home too if you live in Fairfax County.


Correction: Missing quote marks. Item #5 in the May 17 CyberAlert
began: "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." The first sentence should
have been in quote marks.


    > 1) EPA night on the networks on Wednesday evening. The
agency's announcement of a proposal to reduce pollution from
diesel-fueled trucks topped ABC's World News Tonight and earned
full stories on CNN's The World Today, MSNBC's The News with Brian
Williams and the NBC Nightly News. All focused almost exclusively
on the EPA's points, allowing only a token soundbite from the
refinery industry about increased costs, but never airing any
soundbite from an expert questioning the science behind the plan.

    ABC followed up with a second story dedicated entirely to dire
warnings from the NRDC, though reporter Brian Rooney acknowledged:
"In truth, no one has drawn a direct link between diesel fumes and
the health of any one patient."

    CBS ran a brief item on the diesel fuel as well as a full
story on another EPA report claiming Dioxin is a "human
carcinogen" which poses ten times the health threat than thought.
Dioxin also got full stories, without any doubters, on CNN and
NBC.

    On another subject, Bob Schieffer delivered a "Real Deal"
report on the CBS Evening News about the China trade deal:
"Politics always makes strange bedfellows, but the China trade
bill has created a whole dormitory of unlikely roommates." After
noting how George Bush and Bill Clinton favor the deal but House
Minority Leader Dick Gephardt opposes it, Schieffer rued: "Which
leaves the President's arch-enemy, Republican Tom DeLay, who is
for it, as the President's key ally."

    Back to the EPA stories, the May 17 World News Tonight led
with the EPA's plan to cut sulfur in diesel fuel by 2006 and
reduce tailpipe emissions by 95 percent in order to eliminate
particles which "may be linked to cancer and asthma." ABC's Lisa
Stark concluded: "It's still open for public comment, but by year-
end the EPA will issue new stringent standards for vehicles that
some say have long been given a free ride."

    Up next, reporter Brian Rooney highlighted how California
grocery chains are warning neighbors near their warehouses that
diesel exhaust causes cancer. Focusing on a Natural Resources
Defense Council study, Rooney ran multiple soundbites from the
NRDC's Gail Ruderman Feuer, who claimed: "In this region of
Southern California a local agency found that more than 70 percent
of the risk of cancer in our air comes just from diesel exhaust."
    Rooney then concluded by undercutting the entire premise of
his story: "In truth, no one has drawn a direct link between
diesel fumes and the health of any one patient. But the state
believes that the dangers of diesel fumes have generally been
established and the people who live near distributions centers
like this deserve a warning."

    The CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News led with the
indictments in Birmingham, Alabama of two men for the 1963 bombing
of the 16th Street Baptist Church. CBS followed up with a piece
from Cynthia Bowers on how the Chicago city council passed a
resolution urging the U.S. Congress to give reparations to
descendants of slaves. On Dioxin, Dan Rather tagged it "a ticking
toxic time bomb in the U.S. food chain, a cancer risk, especially
for children."

    NBC's Robert Hager handled the diesel fuel story, concluding:
"Costly, but if it works, finally ridding the air of those noxious
odors and ugly black clouds that plague streets and highways." Dan
Lothian provided a full story on the EPA's claims about the risk
of cancer from Dioxin. His expert in soundbites: Lois Gibbs,
author of a book titled Dying from Dioxin.


    > 2) Forget hard-edged media skepticism. Bill and Hillary
smile at each other and wave -- and NBC News swoons. "Together
again, Bill and Hillary Clinton, the picture of harmony," heralded
Tom Brokaw Wednesday evening over video of the two as she accepted
New York's Democratic Party Senate nomination Tuesday night in
Albany.

    Andrea Mitchell, without irony, asserted that Hillary accepted
the nomination with "her loyal husband at her side." Mitchell soon
compliantly passed along how "friends say he is his wife's best
advisor." She also relayed how friends say "that this couple has
banded together once again, politically and emotionally. It's her
turn, the President believes, and he's helping with every
decision...knowing if she wins, it could be one of the most
historic parts of his legacy." Oh joy.

    After Mitchell's piece aired on MSNBC's The News with Brian
Williams, the host of the same wondered if Hillary's race will
"truly resonate across the United States?"

    Brokaw set up the May 17 story, as transcribed by MRC analyst
Brad Wilmouth: "NBC News �In Depth' tonight. Together again, Bill
and Hillary Clinton, the picture of harmony last night as the
First Lady was officially nominated to run for the U.S. Senate
from New York. Bill and Hillary first met back in their law school
days at Yale. They were married in 1975. That marriage appeared to
be close to coming apart after the Lewinsky scandal, but last
night, as Hillary took center stage, the President was there as
well. NBC's Andrea Mitchell on the re-invention, once again, of
the Clintons, In Depth."
    Mitchell celebrated: "Hillary Clinton nominated by acclimation
at the top of her game, her loyal husband at her side."
    Hillary Clinton, at the podium: "I am delighted that the
President is here this evening, and I am so grateful, I am so
grateful for his support. I would not be standing here tonight
were it not for Bill, and were it not for all he has done for me."
    Mitchell: "The same Bill Clinton who was impeached after
scandalizing the nation and his wife? How did they go from this
[two walking side-by-side sternly], less than two year ago, to
this? [two on stage in Albany smiling]"

    Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin supplied the answer: "It does
suggest that she sees him as a great resource now, and I suspect
we'll see a lot more of him during this campaign for her."
    Mitchell passed along amazement from sycophants: "Even long-
time political associates concede it is an amazing story of
political re-invention. The ultimate power couple. The first First
Lady to run for office and the President who cancels two
Washington fundraisers at the last minute to be with her."
    Bill Clinton, on the podium in Albany: "I said I've been with
you folks a long time. If you'll let me go hear my wife give a
speech, I'll do any event you want anywhere in America at any time
forever in the future."
    Mitchell gushed: "In fact, the President jokes in this White
House video about Hillary's career taking off while he's left
behind [clip of spoof video of Bill Clinton, bag lunch in hand,
chasing after Hillary's car, saying she forgot her lunch]. But
behind the scenes, friends say he is his wife's best advisor."
    Dee Dee Myers: "Not only is he great as the candidate, he is a
great political strategist. He understands the dynamics of a
race."
    Mitchell: "Still associates say the Clintons debated until the
last moment whether he should show up for her nomination worrying
he would overshadow her...And when people ask where is the outrage
over the Clinton revival?"
    Sally Quinn, Washington Post: "People are saying, they're
looking at Bill Clinton, they're saying he's gone, he's history,
stick a fork in him, he's done. It doesn't matter anymore. Nobody
cares."

    Quinn certainly reflects the attitude of political reporters.

    Mitchell finally, sort of, broached in one clause a negative,
but still failed to suggest the possibility it's all a big act,
that Bill and Hillary are just acting the way polls show the
public wants them to be. Mitchell concluded:
    "Critics may call it a power trip, but the bottom line,
friends say, is that this couple has banded together once again,
politically and emotionally. It's her turn, the President
believes, and he's helping with every decision -- message,
polling, campaign events. Showing up if it helps, knowing if she
wins, it could be one of the most historic parts of his legacy."

    While probably still under the spell of Mitchell's piece,
after it ran on his MSNBC show anchor Brian Williams wondered:
"Will Hillary Rodham Clinton's race truly resonate across the
United States?"
    Doris Kearns Goodwin answered: "I'm not so sure. I mean I
think that it will, mainly because the newspapers and the
television will make it resonate...."

    NBC sure is trying. And that's about the first sensible thing
Goodwin has said in any of her frequent NBC/MSNBC appearances.


    > 3) Happy, playful Elian with his father showcased by the
networks, but Elian decked out in communist garb not considered
newsworthy by any network but FNC.

    Last Wednesday, May 10, all the network evening programs
showed new photos of Elian playing catch, carousing with his
playmates and laughing with his father. Exactly a week later the
Miami Herald showcased a photo of Elian, at the Wye River
Plantation, decked out in the uniform of the Pioneers, the
communist youth indoctrination group in Cuba. In the photo,
displayed alongside the Web-posted Herald story plugged by the
Drudge Report, Elian is wearing a blue neckerchief with a white
shirt which is emblazoned with the image of Jose Marti.

    But not a word about how Elian was wearing communist garb
while still in the United States aired, nor was the photo shown,
on the ABC, CBS or NBC Wednesday morning shows. Wednesday night
ABC, CBS and NBC still refused to show viewers the photo, as did
CNN and MSNBC. ABC actually ran an item about Miami asking the
federal government for compensation for Elian costs, but still
didn't put up the photo. CBS, MSNBC and NBC did have time for
stories on the unveiling in Chicago of "Sue," a full-size dinosaur
skeleton. MSNBC's The News with Brian Williams devoted two
segments to replaying a Dateline story about the dangers of
unregulated roller coasters.

    Only FNC's May 17 Special Report with Brit Hume let non-Miami
Herald readers see the photo. Hume explained over the color
picture:
    "Elian Gonzalez's Miami relatives think there is now evidence
that the brainwashing that they feared awaited the six-year-old
back in Cuba has already begun. They're upset about this new photo
showing Elian wearing the blue kerchief, emblem of the so-called
Pioneers, which is Cuba's youth communist league. Miami Cubans
told the Miami Herald the league is an instrument of Castro's
indoctrination and that parents who do not enroll their children
are ostracized and denied promotions."

    +++ See the network-suppressed photo as shown by FNC. Thursday
morning MRC Webmaster Andy Szul will post a shot of it as taken
from Hume's story.

    Later, in the roundtable, Fred Barnes suggested: "If there
were a comparable thing that, if there were some Cuban-American
thing or anti-Castro thing that his relatives in Miami had put
around him and that he was wearing, the American press corps would
have been in high dungeon."

    To be fair to the other networks, I should note that not even
FNC's own general interest news show, the 7pm ET Fox Report, which
began ten minutes after Barnes made his comment, showed the Elian
photo.

    ABC worried about what Elian cost Miami. On World News Tonight
Peter Jennings announced: "In Florida today, Miami-Dade County and
the Miami police department have asked the federal government for
$5 million to make up money they spent putting extra police on the
street while Elian Gonzalez was staying with his Miami relatives.
They also want the government to pay for street cleaning. They're
not likely to get it."

    For more on the photo, one of five newly released pictures,
and reaction to them, here's an excerpt from the May 17 Miami
Herald story by Marika Lynch and Frances Robles:

The latest pictures of Elian Gonzalez showed the boy studying at
the Wye Plantation and playing an instrument typical in Caribbean
bands. But what angered Cuban Americans on Tuesday was the
neckerchief the boy wore -- the uniform for the Pioneers, the
youth communist league.

Modeled after groups in the former Soviet Union, the Pioneers
instill communist ideals through songs, schedule weekend trips to
help with harvests in the  countryside, and instruct children to
repeat the group allegiance �Pioneers for communism, we will be
like Che [Guevara].'

Membership is expected for Cuban children, who join in the first
grade and wear the Pioneers uniform to school. Parents of students
who refuse to enroll are ostracized, labeled
counterrevolutionaries and denied promotions at work, said Jaime
Suchlicki, director of  the University of Miami's Institute for
Cuban and  Cuban-American Studies. Pioneer members also are
instructed to tell on their parents if they make statements
against the revolution.

The pictures, released in the Cuban daily Granma, confirmed the
worst fears of many Cuban exiles, who believed the boy will be
brainwashed by the Cuban government as long as he is with his
father.

"Is Elian in Cuba?" a confused Gladys Chong asked, when her
husband, Ramon, burst through the door of their Southwest
Miami-Dade home with the news of the images.

"No," Ramon Chong, a security guard who came to the United States
four years ago, told her. "It seems communism has penetrated the
United States."....

The images also troubled Dr. Marta Molina, a psychologist who in
her 20-year career in Cuba said she treated 500 children with
problems she said stemmed from communist indoctrination. "The
oppression has already started," Molina said.

The Pioneer uniform is part of a strategy to ensure the boy's
return, she said, by convincing Elian that he wants to return to
Cuba so he will tell the courts as much....

The pictures, five in all, did not have captions explaining when
they were taken. One showed an indoor classroom scene, with Elian
sitting in the front row, wearing the blue Pioneer scarf and a
white T-shirt with a picture of Cuban patriot Jose Marti. Wearing
the same outfit, he was seen reading at a desk and being
supervised by a woman, who presumably was his teacher, Agueda
Fleitas. In another close-up, Elian was apparently in a music
class playing claves, hardwood sticks that provide a beat for
Caribbean music....

    END Excerpt

    To read the entire story, go to:
http://www.herald.com/content/archive/news/rafters99/docs2/060611.htm


    > 4) "Helen was always fair and never intimidated," declared
Tom Brokaw in a May 16 NBC Nightly News tribute to UPI White House
reporter Helen Thomas. But as the MRC's Tim Graham demonstrated in
browsing through the MRC's quote archive, she left of legacy of
liberalism. (Thomas quit this week after decades at the White
House because News World Communications, affiliated with the
Unification Church, bought UPI.)

    For instance, on C-SPAN's Journalists' Roundtable back on
December 31, 1993, she argued reporters are liberal because they
care: "A liberal bias? I don't know what a liberal bias is. Do you
mean do we care about the poor, the sick, and the maimed? Do we
care whether people are being shot every day on the streets of
America? If that's liberal, so be it. I think it's everything
that's good in life, that we do care. And also for the solutions,
we seek solutions and we do think that we are all responsible for
what happens in this country."

    Here's the text of the rest of the May 17 Media Reality Check
fax report compiled by Tim, titled, "Helen Thomas, Legendary
Liberal: Long-Time UPI White House Correspondent Quits Rather Than
Work for Conservative Owners."

Long-time UPI White House reporter Helen Thomas quit yesterday, a
day after the wire service was sold to News World Communications,
the owners of the Washington Times, affiliated with the
Unification Church. Thomas didn't say she was looking for a new
gig because UPI was now owned by conservatives.

But UPI International Editor Lee Michael Katz also resigned,
telling The New York Times "I cannot work for the new owners." He
was not surprised Thomas joined him: "Look at the timing of this,
and Helen's devotion." A look at a few quotes shows Thomas's
devotion to liberalism. At a Milwaukee lunch in March, she
announced George W. Bush and John McCain "are about as far right
as you could get without dropping off the edge."

-- Ronald Reagan. On December 30, 1988 Thomas recalled the Reagan
era on the CBS show Nightwatch: "I think there's a question mark
on the domestic policy: I think he left an uncaring society...a
government that was not as concerned."

In the July 1993 Good Housekeeping, Thomas elaborated: "All of us
who covered the Reagans agreed that President Reagan was
personable and charming. But I'm not so certain he was nice. It's
hard for me to think of anyone as nice when I hear him say �The
homeless are homeless because they want to be homeless.' To my
mind, a President should care about all people, and he didn't,
which is why I will always feel Reagan lacked soul."

-- Jimmy Carter. In the same interview, Thomas stated: "In Plains,
I saw Jimmy Carter as he really is � a nice, decent man....in
terms of compassionate contribution to society, he certainly has
proven to be our best past President."

-- The Kennedys. Thomas discussed the death of JFK Jr. on CNN's
Reliable Sources last July 18: "Everything that happened to the
First Family, they added a certain glamour everybody could tie
into in some way. And I think that's what happened. We think of
the family. We think of all of the tragedies and the glamour and
the mischief and so forth all wrapped up into one, but mostly
hope."

-- Bill Clinton. Tom Brokaw declared, "Helen was always fair and
never intimidated." But Thomas avoided asking about Juanita
Broaddrick's rape charges in a press briefing the day The Wall
Street Journal broke the story on February 19, 1999. Instead
she asked Clinton what was learned "from your 13 month ordeal?"

She did pose a vague Broaddrick question days later. Then on March
5, 1999, she asked about Kosovo, and hit Clinton from the left:
"My other question is how can you justify chipping away at the ABM
treaty which helped keep the peace during the Cold War and pour
billions and billions into a Star Wars defense against the
possibility that starving North Korea may fire a missile at us?"

On October 14, 1999, she rued the defeat of a nuclear test-ban
treaty: "Mr. President, hasn't the treaty rejection really wiped
out our moral authority to ask other nations around the world to
stop testing? And was there -- do you think there was a personal
element in the Republican [vote], a personal vendetta against
you?"

    END Reprint


    > 5) Sign this guy up as the CyberAlert Tennessee
correspondent. The May 16 News with Brian Williams on MSNBC
featured a lengthy segment showing Republican pollster Frank Luntz
questioning a focus group in Tennessee about their views of Al and
Tipper Gore.

    Somehow MSNBC failed to edit out this comment, from a man
named Tom, which MRC analyst Paul Smith caught: "I hear the
criticism all the time that George Bush is not from Texas. Well,
George Bush is a lot more from Texas than Al Gore ever thought
about being from Tennessee. And that's when this liberal media
bias seems to come in and they'll harp on something like that with
a Republican and they never bring it up, or these exaggerations.
Had Dan Quayle said the same things that Al Gore has said, like
inventing the Internet, you would have never heard the end of it
and he would have been tarred and feathered every night day in and
day out."

    Couldn't have said it better.


    > 6) From the May 17 Late Show with David Letterman, the "Top
Ten Hillary Clinton Campaign Slogans." Copyright 2000 by Worldwide
Pants, Inc.

10. "Because No Clinton Has Ever Disgraced The Office Of Senator"
9. "I'll Try Not To Misplace Or Shred Important Legislation"
8. "Endorsed By The CBS Jesus"
7. "If You Slept With My Husband, The Least You Can Do Is Vote For
Me"
6. "I've Loved Every One Of The 17 Days I've Spent Here In New
York"
5. "Of The Two Insane Power-Hungry Candidates, I'm Better At
Pretending To Be Nice"
4. "Vote For Me Or I'll Have Bill Poison Your Water Supply"
3. "Never Indicted...Knock On Wood!"
2. "I Can Run New York -- Hell, I Ran The Whole Country"
1. "Wait'll You See The Scandals I'm Planning!"

    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."

-- "I Can Deal With Political Weasels -- Hell, I Married One"
-- "Let's Nuke Jersey!"
-- "As You Can See By My Marriage, I'll Let You Do Whatever The
Hell You Want"
-- "Fighting For Jobs, Education, and Whatever Else You Need To
Pretend To Care About These Days"
-- "Indictment-Free Since '93"


    > 7) Since a disproportionate share of CyberAlert readers live
in the Washington, DC area I thought I'd alert readers to a
significant addition to the Fox News Channel distribution: The
275,000 customers of Cox Communications cable in Fairfax County,
Virginia, the overnight home base of the CyberAlert newsroom. FNC
is now on channel 28, but will move to channel 6 on June 1, a lot
lower position than MSNBC, which is way up on channel 104.


=================================================================
             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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