CyberAlert -- 07/17/2002 -- Greenspan's Resistance to Regulation Skipped
Greenspan's Resistance to Regulation Skipped; Bush Like Those Fleeing Titanic Dressed as Women; CNN's Jackson Dissected "Thin Reporting"; Spann "Let Down" by Bush?; Adult Having Sex with Kid "Sweet" to All But Ashcroft? >>> CyberAlert rejected or as "bulk mail." As spam e-mail keeps growing ISPs are getting stricter about identifying, separating and sometimes blocking any mass distributions, including of newsletter mailing lists for things such as CyberAlert. I've noticed that Yahoo Mail, for instance, now usually puts CyberAlert into the "bulk mail" folder. If you have Yahoo, or if your ISP has similar options, in references you can have all your mail go into your "in box" or you can set up a "filter" to have all e-mail from a certain sender, such as "Media Research Center," delivered to your in box. If you don't see CyberAlert for a few days, be sure to check your "bulk mail" folder or whatever your ISP calls its similar category. You can always check the MRC Web site to see if you've missed any issues: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/cyberwelcome.asp <<< Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told a Senate Committee on Tuesday that there is no need to rush to pass new corporate regulatory schemes to prevent more corporate abuses since "corporate governance will be just fine for the next two years because everyone has been chastened." FNC's Brit Hume highlighted the observation which the broadcast networks ignored. Hume played this soundbite from Greenspan: "I'm merely saying to go slow in this area. There is not a need at this particular point to rush, because I will tell you, corporate governance will be just fine for the next two years because everyone has been chastened." During the panel segment on the July 16 Special Report with Brit Hume on FNC Hume suggested: "That's quite remarkable isn't it that he's saying that in near term, next couple of years, in fact until we have another big bull market with a lot of equity prices at such levels that they can be played around with in mergers and all that, we're not going to have this problem." Hume wondered: "He basically said that the corporate governance problem for now is solved. What do you think the chances are that any newspaper that you read, or that anyone else in Washington reads in great numbers, will have that as the headline tomorrow?" Not Wednesday's Washington Post, which didn't mention the point anywhere in its story. Hume had, however, at the top of his show: "Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress today that despite shaken investor trust and a wave of accounting scandals a economic turnaround is continuing. And while the Fed Chairman warned of a skittish market, he also warned Congress against rushing into passing new regulations." But that theme was absent from ABC, CBS and NBC as well as CNBC's The News with Brian Williams. And I didn't hear it on CNN Tuesday night, but I didn't see all of NewsNight. -- ABC's World News Tonight. Peter Jennings announced, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "In the other news today, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board talked to the Congress, and everyone on Wall Street was listening. Alan Greenspan told the Senate Banking Committee today the economy was on its way to a full recovery. And his remarks had a positive effect on the markets for a while. Here's ABC's Betsy Stark." Stark dealt with some of Greenspan's corporate governance thoughts, including how he favors tougher criminal penalties, but avoided his dislike for the rush to pass new regulations: -- CBS Evening News. Dan Rather opened the broadcast: "Good evening. President Bush couldn't do it. Today the chairman of the Federal Reserve tried, tried to calm nervous investors and stop the slide on Wall Street. Alan Greenspan, who once warned against 'irrational exuberance,' today was cheerleading -- cautious optimism. For a while, it appeared to work. After Greenspan spoke, the market stabilized. But then, investors pushed down the button again. The sell-off resumed and the Dow finished another triple digit loss day. CBS's Anthony Mason reports on Dr. Greenspan's house call to the Senate." -- NBC Nightly News. Tom Brokaw led the show: "Good evening. When Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan appeared before Congress today, it was a classic case of good news, bad news. Good news: The American economy is poised for a healthy rebound. The bad news, he said corporate scandals and world events, including terrorism, could weaken the recovery. Wall Street investors were betting on the bad news again today, driving the Dow down 166 points, the seventh consecutive losing day. Nasdaq lost more than seven points on the day. Besides the scandals, some big names in American business checked in today with discouraging news about earnings. We'll begin tonight once again with NBC's Anne Thompson at Nasdaq." Thompson ignored Greenspan's belief that new regulations are not needed and stressed how he favors tough criminal penalties: "Greenspan praised the Senate for voting last night to toughen penalties on unscrupulous corporate leaders. The House did the same today. Greenspan saying a company's behavior often is a reflection of its CEO's character." Make it four for four. The July 16 CyberAlert highlighted how on Monday night ABC's Linda Douglass, CBS's Bob Orr and NBC's Tom Brokaw all worried about how the Senate-passed bills on corporate corruption would have to be reconciled in conference committee with the "weaker" provisions passed by the House. CNN's Aaron Brown did the same thing on Monday night, referring to the House's "weaker version," MRC analyst Ken Shepherd noticed. He also cited "the far weaker bill that passed the Republican-controlled House." On the July 15 NewsNight, Brown announced: For the ABC, CBS and NBC quotes from Monday night: http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20020716.asp#1 When President Bush speaks the markets go down, so "should he be quiet for a while?" That's how Early Show co-host Mark McEwen opened Tuesday's CBS program. Two days earlier on NBC's Today, former liberal political operative turned cable shoutmaster Chris Matthews analogized Bush to the men who snuck off the Titanic as it sank: "I think the President looks like he's in a lifeboat with the bad guys dressed up like women so they can sneak away." -- CBS can't find anyone to permanently replace Bryant Gumbel as co-host of its Early Show, so this week Mark McEwen, who usually handles the weather, is co-hosting with Jane Clayson. MRC analyst Brian Boyd noticed that this is how he opened the July 16 broadcast: "Last week the President spoke, the market went down. Yesterday, the President spoke, the market went down. Should he be quiet for a while?" Clayson demurred: "Well, there was certainly no immediate impact on the Street yesterday during his speech. We'll have more on the markets in just a few minutes." -- On Sunday's Today, Chris Matthews, host of MSNBC's Hardball which is part of that network's new all-liberal prime time line-up, equated President Bush with those who left others behind to die on the Titanic. On the July 14 Today, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd noticed, Matthews offered this take on how voters are perceiving Bush in the wake of the accounting scandals: On Tuesday's Inside Politics CNN's Brooks Jackson discredited the latest media report, this time one from AP, about President Bush and Harken Energy, noting it's typical of the "thin reporting" on the topic. He then launched into an exhaustive rundown of how the SEC long ago found there was no basis for the oft-repeated charges of wrongdoing by Bush over his 1990 stock sale.
The "lockup" letter Bush signed April 3, 1990, for his shares in Harken Energy Corp. is now being compared with the account his lawyers gave federal securities regulators who examined the stock sale as a possible insider trade.... The letter Bush signed promising to hold onto the stock was released by the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Freedom of Information Act. At the time he signed it, Harken was considering a public stock offering to raise money to solve a cash flow problem. "Dear George," said the April 2, 1990, letter from Harken secretary Larry Cummings. "As you are aware, Harken is contemplating a public common stock offering. "In connection with such offering, the underwriters have requested that Harken obtain consents for all directors, officers and other affiliates to agree to not sell... for a period of 180 days from the date our proposed public offering goes effective." Bush signed and returned the letter the next day. Bush's sale of his Harken stock for $848,560 has come in for renewed public scrutiny in recent weeks as he tries to restore investor confidence in the financial markets and calls for a crackdown on corporate wrongdoing. White House spokesman Dan Bartlett said Monday the lockout letter was "made irrelevant and obsolete" by the time Bush sold his stock in summer 1990 because the public stock offering it affected never went through. But a securities expert said the document calls into question his lawyers' account to the SEC. "Bush's signing of the April 2, 1990, lockup agreement undercuts his lawyers' explanation for the early sale of his Harken stock," said Houston attorney Thomas R. Ajamie, an expert in securities law whose firm is advising companies that did business with the failed energy giant Enron Corp. "If his accountant told him that he needed to sell stock to pay a debt obligation for his interest in the Texas Rangers, it does not make sense that he would subsequently sign an agreement promising not to sell his shares of Harkenstock for six months," Ajamie said. Harken scrapped the public stock offering a few weeks after Bush signed the letter because the company was plunged into a financial crisis when one of its bank lenders withdrew its support.... END of Excerpt To read the story in its entirety: On Monday night MSNBC jumped on the supposed revelation, MRC analyst Broad Wilmouth observed. During the 10pm EDT news update, Bob Kur announced: "New details out tonight about President Bush selling stock in an energy company back in 1990 when he was a director at the company. Documents from Harken Energy Corporation show Bush signed a letter that year promising not to sell his shares for six months but wound up selling them just two months later. Regulators looking into possible insider trading, now comparing that letter with the President's lawyer's account of the sale." To set up a July 16 Inside Politics segment, anchor Judy Woodruff picked up on the AP's take, asking reporter Brooks Jackson: "What about this Associated Press story today, that the President signed a paper while he was on the board of directors at Harken Energy -- this is a little over a decade ago -- that he would not sell his stock. What's the significance of this?" Jackson dismissed the relevance of what the AP trumpeted as meaningful: "Well what the AP story says is this raises new questions because Bush turned around and sold it two-and-a-half months later, not six months later. But if you read that story carefully, it's kind of typical of some of the thin reporting that we've had on this. Bush signed that letter as part of a deal in which Harken Energy Corporation was going to sell stock to the public. Investors want assurances that people who own big blocks of stock aren't going to just turn around, dump them on the market and drive the price down. But Harken canceled that deal, and so the letter became irrelevant. End of story." But not, as you noticed above, for AP. Woodruff moved on: "All right. Let me ask you also, Brooks, about these allegations that the Securities and Exchange Commission back at that time gave Bush, at some point along the way, a clean bill of health -- said that they didn't see any conflict here." Jackson proceeded to run through how the SEC long ago found no basis for the charges now being made against Bush: "You know, we've been dealing with this for a long time now. Let's check the basic facts first. These have not been in question for a decade: Jackson outlined why: "First off, they concluded Bush didn't know the big loss was coming at the time he made the sale. Nobody in management did. He sold the stock eight days before the quarter in question ended, and almost two months before the quarterly loss was announced. Jackson soon elaborated on other SEC findings: "You have you to prove more than just one thing. And one of the things that has been reported in a funny way here is that the stock price went down. Well, the SEC looked at a minute-by-minute analysis of the stock price on the day that the earnings announcement came out. And contrary to the way it's often reported, the news really didn't affect the stock price. It opened it $3 a share that day. And normally this kind of news, if it's important, makes the stock tank within minutes. Woodruff prompted Jackson once more: "And Brooks, this is all there is to know from the SEC back then, right?" Jackson snuck in one more item: "Well, there's one more thing. They had to prove that he had criminal intent. And since he -- to make a case -- and since he consulted Harken's lawyers, they concluded they couldn't prove that either." Jackson's reporting of the basic facts doesn't look that hard to do, but it has escaped his colleagues who seem to be more interested in creating a scandal out of nothing than in stressing anything that would undermine their nefarious premises, so Jackson and CNN deserve kudos for going against the media mind set. Nice way to put it. CBS News reporter Mark Strassmann to Mike Spann's father in the wake of the plea deal for John Walker Lindh: "Has your son been let down by his Commander-in-Chief?" In the midst of a July 15 CBS Evening News story from Alabama on how Spann's parents are not pleased by the deal with Lindh in which the Taliban volunteer will get 20 years, Strassmann tied in President Bush: "President Bush approved Lindh's plea bargain. He was in Birmingham today, just 70 miles from Winfield, Alabama, Mike Spann's home town, where today Spann's father wishes he could speak with the President. Has your son been let down by his Commander-in-Chief?" A movie about a 15-year-old boy having sex with a 40-year-old woman is "sweet" to all but John Ashcroft? Check out this exchange on Tuesday's Today about the new movie, Tadpole, between Matt Lauer and actress Sigourney Weaver which MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens brought to my attention: Lauer: "Well let me go back because you say it's just so sweet. Let's, let's break this down. We have a 50-year-old women sleeping with a 15-year-old-" That prompted Lauer to laugh. The Hollywood.com synopsis for Tadpole (This is online at:
http://www.hollywood.com/movies/detail/movie/419906): In addition to Weaver, the film stars Aaron Stanford as the 15-year-old (though he is older in real life), John Ritter and Bebe Neuwirth, who is probably best known as "Lilith," "Frasier Crane's" wife/ex-wife on Cheers and Frasier. I believe she plays the friend who has sex with the kid. For a look at the movie's poster, which shows Neuwirth with her lips to the boy's ear, check out Miramax's Web page for its film: http://www.miramax.com/tadpole/index.html I'm quite confident many more than just Ashcroft will not consider the movie "sweet." > Scheduled to appear on tonight's Tonight Show with Jay Leno on NBC, that's Wednesday, July 17: George Stephanopoulos, ABC News analyst, reporter and soon-to-be solo host of This Week. -- Brent Baker
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