The 2009 P.U.-Litzer Awards

The 2009 P.U.-Litzer Awards

For 17 years our colleagues Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon
have worked with FAIR to present the P.U.-Litzers, a
year-end review of some of the stinkiest examples of
corporate media malfeasance, spin and just plain
outrageousness. 

Starting this year, FAIR has the somewhat dubious honor
of reviewing the nominees and selecting the winners. It's
a dirty job, but someone has to do it. So, without further
ado, we present the 2009 P.U.-Litzers. 


--The Remembering Reagan Award
WINNER: Joe Klein, Time

Time columnist Joe Klein (12/3/09), not altogether
impressed by Obama's announcement of a troop escalation
in Afghanistan, wrote that a president "must lead the
charge--passionately and, yes, with a touch of anger." 

He described the better way to do this: 

Ronald Reagan would have done it differently. He would
have told a story. It might not have been a true story,
but it would have had resonance. He might have found, or
created, a grieving spouse--a young investment banker
whose wife had died in the World Trade Center--who
enlisted immediately after the attacks...and then gave
his life, heroically, defending a school for girls in
Kandahar. Reagan would have inspired tears, outrage,
passion, a rush to recruiting centers across the nation. 


Ah, Reagan--now there was a president who could inspire
people to fight and die based on lies.


--The Cheney 2012 Award
WINNER: Jon Meacham, Newsweek

Newsweek editor Jon Meacham declared (12/7/09) that Dick
Cheney running for president in 2012 would be "good for
the Republicans and good for the country." He explained
that "Cheney is a man of conviction, has a record on
which he can be judged, and whatever the result, there
could be no ambiguity about the will of the people.... A
campaign would also give us an occasion that history
denied us in 2008: an opportunity to adjudicate the
George W. Bush years in a direct way."

To read the rest of the article, please click on the link
below.

http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3984

This article was published on Fairness & Accuracy In
Reporting's Website (http://www.fair.org).

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