From:
http://www.mediaresearch.org

Media Research Center CyberAlert
Monday May 15, 2000 (Vol. Five; No. 83)

Moms Vs. "Powerful" NRA; Why Not Total Gun Ban? SUVs the
"Meanest"

1) ABC's Cokie Roberts adopted the marcher's spin, announcing
their "call for sensible gun legislation." Rosie O'Donnell's
reasoning: "I will always support the Democrats and I love the
Democratic agenda about gun control. This is not about politics."

2) Sunday morning NBC's Soledad O'Brien repeatedly bemoaned how
it's "a bunch of mothers" up against the "very powerful and well-
funded" NRA. She insisted "the Million Mom Marcher's platform is
admittedly moderate," asking: "Do you think it's too moderate?"

3) Friday night ABC offered a balanced presentation on how women
feel about gun control, CBS delivered outright liberal-cause
advocacy and NBC landed somewhere in between in focusing mainly
on "three generations" of women attending the Million Mom March.

4) "GMA at the White House: Moms & Guns," offered minimal
opposition to the pro-gun control line. Of questions posed or
statements made by moms, 20 offered a pro-gun control point
versus just 8 with an anti-gun control point.

5) Bryant Gumbel lamented: "Why are you only focusing on
licensing and registration?...Why aren't you going for example
for a total ban?" Congress won't do anything about guns, though
"we all hope for the best."

6) Bush moved left on guns, but Today's Katie Couric still hit
him from the left: "So you think it's perfectly alright for
people to carry concealed weapons into churches across the
country?"

7) "In a rare moment of corporate candor," CBS's Bob Orr
trumpeted Friday night, Ford "admitted...SUVs are gas-guzzling
polluters and a threat to people in smaller cars." Orr dubbed
SUVs Ford's "meanest" vehicles. ABC, CNN and NBC also jumped on
the news.


    >>> "If It Isn't Big Government, It's Risky: Media Ridicule
Bush's Social Security Reform Plans, but Gore's Scheme Is Called
‘Conservative.'" The May 11 Media Reality Check is now online.
The report by Rich Noyes, Director of the MRC's Free Market
Project, begins: "Here's how journalists are aiding the effort to
undermine privatization: first, echo Vice President Al Gore's
‘risky scheme' spin; then appear balanced by hitting Gore on his
over-the-top rhetoric; and finally portray Gore's plan to hijack
the surplus to increase benefits as ‘conservative.'" To read the
rest, go to:

http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/reality/2000/Fax20000511.html
<<<


    > 1) The Sunday morning interview shows on ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox
and NBC all balanced Million Mom March (MMM) advocates with gun
rights defenders, though ABC's Cokie Roberts adopted the spin of
the pro-gun control marchers when she introduced MMM emcee Rosie
O'Donnell who soon betrayed the very political agenda shielded by
the image of stroller-pushing moms.

    ABC's This Week put Cokie Roberts on the Mall for its lead
interview with O'Donnell. Roberts set up the segment: "Here on
the Mall thousands of women are expected later this morning to
protest gun violence and call for sensible gun legislation."

    Of course, "sensible gun legislation" is not an objective
summary but the exact phrase used by MMM organizers.

    Roberts asked O'Donnell about the political agenda behind the
march: "You know there's been a good deal of criticism that this
is really a Clinton White House Democratic Party organized event.
Are you basically supporting the Democrats on this?"

    O'Donnell responded by admitting her partisan agenda while
still, with a straight face, trying to maintain the apolitical
aura for the march: "I personally, Rosie O'Donnell, have always
been a Democrat. I will always support the Democrats and I love
the Democratic agenda about gun control. This is not about
politics. We didn't ask the people standing here before us
whether or not they're Republican or Democrat. We asked if they
care about the fact four thousand children are shot dead every
year, that 30,000 Americans are killed when a bullet enters their
body...."

    Roberts soon exposed any pretense that the march did not have
a political agenda. Referring to former Democratic Senate staffer
and march organizer Donna Dees-Thomases, Roberts inquired: "Ms.
Thomases also said that once the march is over the gloves come
off politically. Is that's what's happening here, that this is
organizing a political event?"

    O'Donnell expressed her desire: "Well I hope that the Million
Mom March changes its status from a non-profit to a lobby
organization. I hope hat we can get the passion that is here
today and harness it and have an organization that will be
bigger, stronger, and more powerful than the NRA...."

    A few hours later while on stage during the rally, O'Donnell
shouted: "The NRA is buying votes with blood money!"

    Good to see we're all working to bring people together for
the benefit of the children.


    > 2) Sunday morning on Today and MSNBC Soledad O'Brien
repeatedly bemoaned how it's "a bunch of mothers" up against the
"very powerful and well-funded" NRA. During MSNBC's two hours of
live Million Mom March (MMM) coverage from 10am to 12pm ET she
also wondered if their agenda was "too moderate"?

    O'Brien co-hosted Today live from the White House and the
show opened with an interview with Hillary Clinton. O'Brien's
first question: "When we talk about this issue, on one side you
have the NRA, which is obviously a very powerful and well-funded
group, on the other side essentially you're talking about a bunch
of mothers. Realistically speaking, can they ever be able to
yield the same power as a powerful lobby?"

    She did later at least ask Hillary about the claim by the
Second Amendment Sisters that guns are needed by parents to
protect kids, and David Bloom talked with Armed Informed Mothers
march organizer Kim Watson, but MMM proponents got a lot more
time. Today ran two taped pieces profiling MMM attendees and
O'Brien conducted an interview with an MMM organizer from
Michigan.

    C-SPAN broadcast the entirety of the MMM and counter gun
rights rally. Neither CNN or FNC offered any extended coverage of
the MMM, but MSNBC went live with interviews about it from 10am
to noon ET before returning to the usual Sunday schedule of
repeats of re-runs, including approximately the 175th repeat of
the Time & Again about roller coasters.

    While MSNBC did mix in a little bit about the views of those
attending the Armed Informed Mothers rally, the two hours mostly
promoted the MMM cause, a point illustrated by looking at how
O'Brien approached two guests: One a celebrity and the other a
politician.

    Here are all three of the questions she posed at 10:14am to
singer Melissa Manchester:

    -- "Tell me a little bit about what inspired you to take part
in this march."

    -- "Do you think that moms, even 150,000 moms, or even more
if the numbers bear that out, are going to be able to have the
same kind of political and frankly financial clout a group like
the NRA are able to have?"

    -- "We know that this morning you're performing a song which
you call A Mother's Prayer, and you wrote that song just after
the shootings at Columbine High School. Tell me about what
motivated you to pen that song?"


    Three minutes later Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen
Kennedy Townsend, a Democrat, sat down next to O'Brien. Her first
question:

    "We were speaking with the songwriter Melissa Manchester
about the power that mothers can have. Do you think realistically
when you consider, and you know probably better than most people,
the financial power that the NRA has, 150,000 moms pushing
strollers with their kids. Can they wield the same kind of
political clout, realistically?"

    She later queried: "The Million Mom Marcher's platform is
admittedly moderate. Do you think it's too moderate, that it
doesn't go far enough? They will be the first to say we don't
want to come into your home and remove your guns, we want
sensible gun laws."

    As for how much "power" the moms in strollers have up against
the big, bad NRA, at the end of the rally Rosie O'Donnell listed
some of the corporate sponsors of the event: Dannon Yogurt,
FileMaker Pro software, IVillage.com, Monster.com, Oprah
Winfrey's Oxygen Media, Pax TV and Virgin Atlantic Airways. They
aren't hurting for financial support, but how do you add up the
value of glowing media coverage, something the NRA could never
get?


    > 3) Friday night the three broadcast networks took different
approaches to the Million Mom March -- from balance on ABC to
outright liberal-cause advocacy on CBS, with NBC somewhere in
between.

    For ABC's World News Tonight, Michelle Norris traveled to
Carroll County, Maryland to pass along the views of two women:
one planning to participate in the Million Mom March and one
planning to attend the Second Amendment Sisters rally.

    CBS didn't bother with such balance. As Dan Rather introduced
a May 12 CBS Evening News story: "Women and their families will
push for gun safety in what they call the Million Mom March.
CBS's Thalia Assuras tells us how personal, preventable tragedy
drove one mother into joining up."

    Assuras profiled a New York City family which lost an
11-year-old when a "next-door neighbor and friend pulled the
trigger of an illegal handgun found in the house." Assuras
elaborated: The incident compelled Cathy Murphy to take action,
and brought her out of her back yard to the front lines of gun
control advocacy. She helped push through New York City's
Christopher's Law; buy a gun, buy a safety lock at the same time.
And this weekend, she'll be marching in the Million Mom March."

    Cathy Murphy: "I didn't want anybody to feel the pain that we
feel every day."

    Assuras missed an opportunity to spell out the political
activist past of the march organizer: "Donna Dees-Thomases has
heard Cathy Murphy's story and countless others like it. Last
year's day-care center shooting in California drove her to
organize the march."

    Donna Dees-Thomases, founder, Million Mom March: "Look what
the Mothers Against Drunk Driving did. They banned the
irresponsible use of alcohol. That's all. We're trying to do the
same thing with guns."

    Next, Rather asked Bob Schieffer to explain why the NRA wins
too often: "However many mothers and families march for gun
control on Sunday, few expect the sheer weight of their numbers
to change many minds, or votes, in the Congress. Let's get the
real deal on why now from CBS News chief Washington correspondent
Bob Schieffer."

    Schieffer's analysis, in full: "Dan, this moms' march is
going to bring enormous pressure on Congress, but to understand
why it will be so hard to change the gun laws and just how fierce
the pro-gun forces can be, listen to this. Longtime Utah Senator
Orrin Hatch, the Chairman of the Conference Committee, where some
modest gun control measures are currently buried, is about as
conservative as they get, and has sided with the gun people for
as long as I can remember. Yet Hatch was booed at Utah's
Republican Convention last weekend, and gun forces came within a
few votes of denying him the party's endorsement as its Senate
candidate because they felt Hatch, a four-term Senator who has
never even had a primary opponent, had somehow gone soft on guns.
That little bit of reality tells you why Hatch is reluctant to
even let Congress vote on the gun measures, and why it will be so
hard to turn this Congress around on guns."

    Gee, you'd think a real reporter would tell viewers what
Hatch has done to upset gun rights supporters instead of passing
along banal generalities.

    (Saturday's CBS Evening News featured an admiring look at
three women from Dunblane, Scotland, who successfully lobbied for
a ban on handguns in Britain after a school shooting there.)

    Friday's NBC Nightly News dedicated the In Depth segment to
"three generations" in a family attending the Million Mom March.
Tom Brokaw set up the story: "The Million Mom March on Mother's
Day, a national protest against gun violence. This grassroots
movement has been spurred on by a rash of shootings involving
children. The most recent figures show that in one year more than
32,000 people were killed by guns, more than 4,000 of them
children. But will any of this make any difference?"

    Lisa Myers started her piece: "Three generations, one family.
Today Tanya Days, her mother and daughter prepare for their first
march ever on Sunday. They'll wear this tribute [button with
picture] to Tanya's brother, BJ, accidently killed at age 15 by
another teenager with a handgun....The three women among a
150,000 demonstrators expected here, thousands more at at least
60 rallies across the country. Many are political newcomers,
propelled by personal tragedy, fear or frustration. They cite a
sobering statistic, 12 children a day killed by gun violence.
Their solution? Mandatory gun safety locks, registration of
handguns, licensing of gun owners. Donna Dees-Thomases, a mom and
television publicist, dreams up the march after this scene at a
Jewish day care center hit too close to home."

    Donna Dees-Thomases: "And I'm not opposed to anybody who
needs, eel they need a handgun for protection, but they just
should be willing to submit to a safety course, a background
check, a fingerprint and a photo ID."


    For a reality check on Thomases's real background as a
Democratic Senate staffer and Hillary campaign donor, go to:


http://www.mediaresearch.org/news/cyberalert/2000/cyb20000511.html#5

     As for NBC's insistence, along with the other networks, of
repeating the 12 "children" per day and 4,000 a year killed by
guns numbers, as noted in the April 17 CyberAlert the NRA
discredited a similar numerical claim: "To reach the fraudulent
‘13 children' figure (alternately and even more dishonestly
expressed by some ‘gun control' advocates as ‘5,000 per year' or
‘one every 90 seconds'), the President and those with the same
agenda count anyone under the age of 20 as a ‘child.' The reason
is simple: There are relatively few firearm-related deaths among
children, but a much greater number among juveniles and young
adults ages 15-19. Add both age groups together, call that total
‘children,' and the number of deaths among ‘children' is
dishonestly increased 569%...."

    To read this NRA report, go to:

http://www.nraila.org/research/20000303-Safety-004.shtml

    Back to the Myers story, she at least broached the political
issue: "The march also under fire because what began as a
non-partisan grassroots movement is now closely associated with
the Clinton White House. The President appears with marchers
today and goads Republicans in Congress who oppose many gun
measures."

    After noting how George Bush announced a safety lock giveaway
program and that "the National Rifle Association challenges the
moms to match the NRA's pledge of $ 1 million to teach gun safety
in schools," Myers gave a few seconds to a woman not enamored by
the Million Mom March: "Gun owner Sherry LeGate (sp?) will
participate in a counter march on Sunday. The message? Gun
safety, yes. Gun control, no."

    LeGate: "Licensing and registration is not going to stop
what's happening right now."


    > 4) ABC's Good Morning America delivered the Million Mom
March organizers and President Clinton an early Mother's Day gift
on Friday with two hours live from the White House. "GMA at the
White House: Moms & Guns," offered minimal opposition to the pro-
gun control party line. Of 28 questions posed or statements made
by the mothers, and one kid, to President Clinton and amongst
themselves after Clinton left, by MRC analyst Jessica Anderson's
count, 20 made a pro-gun control point versus just 8 with an
anti- gun control point, for a ratio greater than 2-to-1.

    The May 12 show opened with co-host Charles Gibson
interviewing President Clinton in the Oval Office. His first
question: "It was a year ago, Mr. President, that we were here
with you with the students talking about gun violence, and you
talked to me then about the hopes that you had for new gun
control legislation. It hasn't happened. What went wrong?"

    Gibson bemoaned the lack of progress: "I've got here a pile
of all the gun legislation that's been proposed in the past year
since we were here before. None of it has passed. By my count, we
have more states rejecting new gun control legislation than have
passed it. We have 15 states that have passed prohibitions on
cities suing gun manufacturers. That hardly seems like progress."

    Gibson did challenge Clinton directly at one point: "Don't
you, to some extent, make the NRA's case when you say that,
though? You know, they say enforce existing laws. We're not doing
enough of enforcing existing laws, and yet you've got murder down
25 percent since '93, gun crime down 35 percent since '92,
violent crime overall down 27 percent. That's done with a good
economy, better policing, and not necessarily such stronger gun
controls laws."

    At about 7:15am the show moved to the Roosevelt Room where
Clinton heard ten pro-gun control versus four anti-gun control
comments, including a heated exchange with the NRA's Susan
Howard.  The segment began with a demand from Linda Halpin, who
didn't seem to appreciate how politics works and illustrated how
many of the moms put emotion ahead of rational policy discussion:

     "My son was killed last Mother's Day. He was shot in the
head and, of course, was pronounced brain dead. When he lie in
the hospital room, I promised him I would do something about it.
So I'll speak on behalf of my son Lewis. Mr. President, it's been
so long that so many of these laws are being held up, and I
understand that they're being held up in Congress. I understand
that they've been sitting there and in my heart, I feel that if
something had been done, maybe a year ago today my son may have
been alive. I need to know from you, Mr. President, I need to
know and I need an answer today, what are you gonna do about this
in your remaining days in office? I don't want to know what has
been done or what could be done. I want to know what you're going
to do for my son Lewis."


    > 5) The Early Show on Friday didn't bother with any views
contrary to the Million Mom March line. Co-host Bryant Gumbel, as
transcribed by MRC analyst Brian Boyd, asserted: "In Washington,
DC this Sunday thousands of women are expected to converge on
Washington for what's being called the Million Mom March and to
call for sensible gun control. Just around nine months ago it was
the story of an attack on children in LA in August of '99 that
spurred Donna Dees-Thomases into action. The shooting of two
adults and three children at a Jewish community center shook her
enough to try to do something."

    Up first from the Mall, Gumbel talked via satellite to Gail
Powers, whose son, Nathan, "witnessed that shooting at the LA
community center." He tossed a series of softballs to the march's
California coordinator: "I'm told you were never an activist
before, what spurred you to action this time?" And: "Those who
will be marching on Sunday, who are they? I mean besides being
mothers, what do they have in common, what's the unifying theme
here?"

    After Powers explained how they want licensing and
registration, Gumbel scolded her: "Why are you only focusing on
licensing and registration, why aren't you going for more than
that, why aren't you going, for example, for a total ban?"

    Next, Gumbel interviewed a woman whose daughter was killed in
the Dunblane, Scotland shooting. He wanted to know: "Following
the tragedy in your country, you were able to get a total ban on
all handguns. How'd you do it?"

    Going back to Powers, Gumbel announced his "hope" for what
will happen: "Ms. Powers, this Congress has so far seemed
somewhat unwilling to do anything about guns. Realistically,
realistically, I mean we all hope for the best, but
realistically, do you think Sunday's march is going to make a
difference?"


    > 6) Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush moved
left Friday hen he announced that as Governor of Texas he would
push to provide state-paid gun locks for "free" to anyone in
Texas who wants one. In one decision he moved away from
conservatism in two ways -- adopting a gun control group's
assumptions about trigger locks while simultaneously creating
another government giveaway program for an item people can easily
buy for themselves, but instead of hitting Bush from the right on
guns, Friday morning Today's Katie Couric still pressed him from
the left.

    After asking about how the giveaway program would work and
how it would be paid for, Couric challenged Bush's gun record:
"The goal of this march, meanwhile, is to focus the public's
attention on what's being called common sense gun control
measures. You signed an amendment in 1997 which allowed licensed
gun owners to carry concealed handguns into churches and even
amusement parks unless posted otherwise. Isn't this exactly the
kind of thing that these moms are marching against?"

    Bush maintained Texas is safer for the concealed carry law,
prompting Couric to retort: "So you think it's perfectly alright
for people to carry concealed weapons into churches across the
country?"

    Bush explained how that provision was added at the request of
preachers who wanted to carry a gun inside their homes on church
grounds.


    > 7) All the networks Friday night enthusiastically jumped on
the Ford Motor Company statement that SUVs pose a danger to those
in smaller cars and pollute too much. CBS's Bob Orr concluded by
calling SUVs "its meanest but most popular vehicles." CBS
followed up with a second story on the same subject on Saturday
night. The Friday night stories on ABC, CBS and NBC all followed
the same formula: Lay out what Ford said without challenge and
feature a comment from Dan Becker of the Sierra Club. NBC's
Robert Hager had two liberals argue over the motivation behind
Ford's announcement.

    -- ABC anchor Peter Jennings introduced the May 12 World News
Tonight story: "The Ford Motor Company has made a surprising
admission about the vehicles that make the company so much money.
It says that sport utility vehicles cause serious safety problems
and are environmentally unfriendly. In and of itself, the
information is not a great revelation. It's that the company said
so. And publicly."

    Barry Serafin began his story: "As sports utility vehicles
have soared in popularity, it has not been surprising to hear the
government and environmentalists warn that they are gas guzzlers,
that they pollute more than cars, and that they are dangerous.
SUV's are three times as likely as cars to kill the other driver
in a crash. And the death rate for occupants of an SUV is just as
high as cars. But what was surprising was to hear the same
concerns expressed by Ford, since sport utility vehicles account
for most of its profits. The admissions came in a corporate
report issued at the company's shareholders meeting. The report
even quoted the Sierra Club declaring, ‘the gas-guzzling SUV is a
rolling monument to environmental destruction.'"

    -- Setting up Bob Orr's CBS Evening News piece, Dan Rather
announced: "The huge, and hugely popular, sport utility vehicle
so common on US highways, the SUVs, are also popular targets for
critics. They waste fuel, pollute the air; they're just too big.
So say the critics. Now the Ford Motor Company, which makes tons
of money selling SUVs, says it's all true."

    Orr asserted: "In a rare moment of corporate candor, Ford
Motor Company admitted what industry critics and consumers have
long known: sport utility vehicles, SUVs, are gas-guzzling
polluters and a threat to people in smaller cars." Orr soon
relayed: "After Ford's concession, environmentalists now want
action."

    Orr concluded by urging Ford to take a particular course of
action: "Safety improvements will also be a challenge. Cars are
no match for larger, heavier sport utility vehicles. For the
moment, Ford has scored a public relations coup, winning praise
from some of its harshest critics, but now the automaker has to
follow through on a vague promise to make its meanest but most
popular vehicles nicer."

    -- On the NBC Nightly News Tom Brokaw declared: "In Detroit,
a surprise admission tonight from the Ford Motor Company about
sports utility vehicles, SUVs. Every year fully one fifth of all
passenger vehicles now sold in this country are SUVs. Ford is now
conceding there are real problems with its most profitable
product."

    Reporter Robert Hager offered two competing explanations for
Ford's statement, both from left-wing groups: "Why would Ford
call attention to these problems? Or the oil company BP Amoco
admit, two years ago, its products pollute. Or Shell commit to
work for human rights abroad? A corporate group called Business
for Social Responsibility says it's enlightened company
leadership."

    Rebecca Calahan Klein, Business for Social Responsibility:
"They are looking more broadly at their entire social
responsibility and how it gets reflected in their daily decision
making."
    Hager: "But some others note that despite the popularity of
SUVs, three million sold last year, sales have leveled off while
the criticism's grown. And auto safety advocate Clarence Ditlow
attributes a darker motive."

    Clarence Ditlow: "The gun industry has been sued. The tobacco
industry has been sued. Sport utility vehicles are next, and what
they're trying to do is to say we're corporate citizens and we're
going to get ahead of the lawsuits."


    It's a battle in the media for which product they consider
most worthy of scorn: gun or SUVs. -- Brent Baker



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   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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