He should have ended the piece by saying "Journalism is DEAD".


************************************************************************
Right Wing Mike

http://www.cafepress.com/rightwingmike

Bigfoot Hates Obama

http://www.cafepress.com/rightwingmike/5690856

I Wish Hillary had married OJ

http://www.cafepress.com/rightwingmike/4236924


--- On Wed, 9/3/08, Bob Calco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> From: Bob Calco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: [OT] A shameful week for the press
> To: "'ProFox Email List'" <[email protected]>
> Date: Wednesday, September 3, 2008, 4:28 PM
> http://tinyurl.com/5bw6bt
> 
> - - -
> I have always tended to think that conservative complaints
> about the media
> are a little exaggerated. There are occasionally obvious
> instances of bias
> and clear examples of a double standard, but most reporters
> don't want to
> fall into those and some conservatives are surely too
> sensitive to them. But
> this week has changed my view. I have never seen, and I
> admit that I could
> never have imagined, such shameful, out-of-control,
> frenzied, angry,
> condescending, and pathetic journalistic malpractice. The
> ignorant assault
> on Palin's accomplishments and experience, the
> breathless careless airing of
> deranged rumors about her private life, the staggeringly
> indecent
> mistreatment of her teenage daughter in a difficult time,
> the ill-informed
> piling on about the vetting process, the self-intensifying
> circle of tisking
> nodding heads utterly detached from a straightforward
> political event, have
> been amazing and eye-opening.
> 
> The reigning emotion of it all has been anger-anger at
> being surprised,
> anger at being denied the spectacle of a Republican
> circular firing squad,
> anger that a conservative pro-life Republican could also be
> a woman and
> might represent the aspirations of other women, anger at
> being handed a
> person they did not know and who did not know them, anger
> that this upstart
> thinks she can ruin their coronation party. And the anger
> was fed by, and
> was indicative of, a profound elitism-a sense that we were
> dealing with some
> redneck moron from a state with no decent restaurants. The
> Republican
> candidate for president chose as his running mate a young,
> charismatic,
> female Republican governor-probably the most popular
> governor in the
> country-whose attitude and resume ring precisely of
> McCain's kind of
> politics, and who has been on most people's short-list
> since he won the
> nomination, and the press treats it as a symptom of some
> terrible and
> reckless madness.
> 
> Part of the fault was surely with the McCain campaign's
> own press strategy.
> They kept the secret a little too well to begin with (in
> part surely because
> the idea that it might leak out in advance was declared to
> be disrespectful
> of the Democrats' convention), so reporters were
> thoroughly surprised. And
> after revealing the pick, they chose not to have Palin do a
> round of press
> interviews right away, making some reporters so angry and
> hungry they began
> to eat the furniture. As Palin could no-doubt inform
> McCain's press team,
> you should never surprise or anger a wild beast.
> 
> But inadequate animal husbandry cannot finally be blamed
> for the shocking
> stampede we have been witness to this week. The spectacle
> reveals a deep rot
> at the heart of the political press, and has been among the
> most shameful
> chapters in the history of modern American journalism. Not
> everyone has
> joined in, of course, but essentially all of the important
> institutions of
> our political press have played their part in one way or
> another. We can
> only hope those involved have begun to come to their
> senses, and that they
> recognize the magnitude of their failure this week. That
> doesn't mean they
> should go easy on Palin: it makes sense to look into her
> past (as it would
> make sense to look into Obama's past at some point
> before November too), and
> she certainly needs to prove herself tonight and beyond, as
> any vice
> presidential candidate has to. But the treatment she has
> received is not
> what just any VP candidate would get, and the attitude and
> assumptions
> underlying this week's amazing assault raise very
> troubling questions about
> the cream of the crop of political reporters. They have
> shown themselves to
> be too insulated and too solipsistic to help the public
> better understand
> our politics, and too self-important to report on events as
> they happen.
> This is far more than media bias. Let us hope it is a
> passing episode.
> - - -
> 
> By contrast to current coverage, note this article
> mentioning Palin *very*
> positively in Oct 2007:
> 
> http://www.newsweek.com/id/42534?tid=relatedcl
> 
> - - -
> In Alaska, Palin is challenging the dominant, sometimes
> corrupting, role of
> oil companies in the state's political culture.
> "The public has put a lot of
> faith in us," says Palin during a meeting with
> lawmakers in her downtown
> Anchorage office, where-as if to drive the point home-the
> giant letters on
> the side of the ConocoPhillips skyscraper fill an entire
> wall of windows.
> "They're saying, 'Here's your shot, clean
> it up'." For Palin, that has meant
> tackling the cozy relationship between the state's
> political elite and the
> energy industry that provides 85 percent of Alaska's
> tax revenues-and
> distancing herself from fellow Republicans, including the
> state's senior
> U.S. senator, Ted Stevens, whose home was recently searched
> by FBI agents
> looking for evidence in an ongoing corruption
> investigation. (Stevens has
> denied any wrongdoing.) But even as she tackles Big
> Oil's power, Palin has
> transformed her own family's connections to the
> industry into a political
> advantage. Her husband, Todd, is a longtime employee of BP,
> but, as Palin
> points out, the "First Dude" is a blue-collar
> "sloper," a fieldworker on the
> North Slope, a cherished occupation in the state.
> "He's not in London making
> the decisions whether to build a gas line."
> 
> In an interview with NEWSWEEK, Palin said it's time for
> Alaska to "grow up"
> and end its reliance on pork-barrel spending. Shortly after
> taking office,
> Palin canceled funding for the "Bridge to
> Nowhere," a $330 million project
> that Stevens helped champion in Congress. The bridge, which
> would have
> linked the town of Ketchikan to an island airport, had come
> to symbolize
> Alaska's dependence on federal handouts. Rather than
> relying on such
> largesse, says Palin, she wants to prove Alaska can pay its
> own way,
> developing its huge energy wealth in ways that are
> "politically and
> environmentally clean."
> 
> ...
> 
> Although she has been in office less than a year, Palin,
> too, earns high
> marks from lawmakers on the other side of the aisle. During
> a debate earlier
> this year over a natural-gas bill, State Senate Minority
> Leader Beth
> Kerttula was astounded when she and another Democrat went
> to see the new
> governor to lay out their objections. "Not only did we
> get right in to see
> her," says Kerttula, "but she asked us back
> twice-we saw her three times in
> 10 hours, until we came up with a solution." Next week
> in Juneau, Alaska
> lawmakers will meet to overhaul the state's system for
> taxing oil
> companies-a task Palin says was tainted last year by an
> oil-industry
> lobbyist who pleaded guilty to bribing lawmakers. Kerttula
> doesn't expect to
> agree with the freshman governor on every step of the
> complex undertaking.
> But the minority leader looks forward to exploiting one
> backroom advantage
> she's long waited for. "I finally get to go to the
> restroom and talk
> business with the governor," she says. "The guys
> have been doing this for
> centuries." And who says that's not progress?
> - - -
> 
> THIS is change we can believe in.
> 
> - Bob
> 
> 
> 
> 
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