As the article below indicates, NBC gave over 75 hours of time on the 
TV channels it controls to Live Earth.

In keeping with the spirit of the Fairness Doctrine, would anyone 
have any objection to just one broadcast of "The Great Global Warming 
Swindle"?


________________

Al Gore And NBC: Birds Of A Feather

July 10, 2007: 08:05 PM EST


Jul. 10, 2007 (Investor's Business Daily) -- 

Politics: Was what Al Gore called "the largest global entertainment 
event in all of human history" also the largest in-kind political 
contribution? And where's the Fairness Doctrine when you need it?

Considering that here in the U.S. the Peacock Network's three-hour 
Gore infomercial on global warming lost out in the ratings to "Cops" 
and "America's Funniest Home Videos," Gore's claim may be open to 
question. Live Earth, in fact, may have been America's funniest home 
video. Ever.

But thanks in large part to the 75 hours of free airtime that NBC 
gave Gore on its various stations, starting with NBC and including 
CNBC, Bravo, the Sundance channel, Universal HD and Telemundo, Gore 
may now be the 800-pound gorilla this political season.

Gore insists he's not running for president. Yet, as we have wondered 
before, why would a man who insists that global warming is the 
biggest threat to mankind, bigger than nuclear terror, not want 
control of the reins of a major world polluter and chief resister to 
Kyoto?

Dan Harrison, an NBC corporate senior vice president, called the Gore 
effort "an initiative we believe in" -- the "we" presumably including 
corporate parent General Electric. (NYSE:GE) Yet he insisted: "I 
don't think climate change is a political issue." 

>From the other side of his mouth, Harrison opined: "If it's a 
political issue, it's whether the political will exists to address 
that change. We know we need to do something, and this is a way to 
heighten awareness."

So he considers it NBC's mission to generate that political will in 
an election cycle in support of a man who once ran for president.

NBC and GE have other interests in hyping climate change. Let's not 
forget GE is the parent of NBC and stands to make a wad of cash from 
selling alternative energy products from wind turbines to solar 
panels to those compact fluorescent bulbs containing mercury. 

So when Gore prances on stage to demand we stop building coal-fired 
plants, that's music to GE's corporate ears. 

NBC's Ann Curry certainly thinks global warming is a political issue. 
During prime-time coverage, she almost got down on her knees to beg 
the jolly green giant to run for the White House.

Interviewing Gore from the site of the concert in New Jersey, Curry 
gushed:

"A lot of people want me to ask you tonight if you're running for 
president. And I know what you're answer is gonna be, believe me. I 
gotta ask you though. After fueling this grass-roots movement, if you 
become convinced that without you there will not be the political 
will in the White House to fight global warming to the level that is 
required, because the clock is ticking, would you answer the call? 
Would you answer the call, yes or no?"

Certainly Gore thinks global warming is a political issue, appearing 
earlier this year before Democrat-controlled House and Senate 
committees pleading for action. During his opening statement before 
the House, he famously said: "The planet has a fever. If your baby 
has a fever, you go to the doctor." 

After Gore's testimony, a better course of action would have been to 
ask for a second opinion.

When a conservative appears on talk radio, liberals cry for the 
Fairness Doctrine. Seventy-five free hours for Archbishop Gore's 
Church of Climate Change? Not a peep.



Newstex ID: IBD-0001-18042759

Originally published in the July 10, 2007 version of Investor's 
Business Daily.

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