CyberAlert -- 08/02/2001 -- Bush "Too Close to Big Oil"
Bush "Too Close to Big Oil"; Hudson Dredging Approved; France's 35 Hour Work Week Applauded; Maher: Blame Starr If Condit Killed Levy 1 ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas teased at the top of World News Tonight: "The $34 billion dollars in tax breaks for the energy industry tucked away in President Bush's energy plan. Is it good policy or political payback?" Linda Douglass soon stressed how "environmental groups say less than one-fifth of the tax breaks are aimed at conservation. That worries moderate Republicans, who fear their party is increasingly perceived as anti-environment." NBC's Lisa Myers noted the $34 billion in
tax breaks for industry, but concentrated her NBC Nightly News story on
the specifics of the plan and how support from organized labor for oil
drilling in Alaska had helped improve chances for the Bush proposal. She
concluded, however, with an admonition: Over on the August 1 World News Tonight,
fill-in anchor Elizabeth Vargas emphasized the bill's
"controversial" provisions: Douglass began, as transcribed by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Good evening. Well, there may be some debate about the magnitude of the energy crisis, but House members do want their constituents to know they are concerned, so they are voting for a multi-billion dollar plan, the President's plan to produce more energy. House members had to make their way past lobbyists on all sides of high the stakes energy debate. The energy industry stands to gain roughly $34 billion in tax breaks from the House bill." Following a soundbite from GOP Whip Tom DeLay,
Douglass cautioned: "Included, nearly $6 billion in tax credits and
subsidies for coal, $13 billion in tax breaks for oil and gas, $2 billion
for nuclear power." While the networks have shown their displeasure at Bush administration decisions on the environment which liberals opposed, on Wednesday night ABC and CBS approvingly reported the EPA decision to force GE to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to remove PCBs from the bottom of the Hudson River. Only GE-owned NBC mentioned how GE dumped the PCBs in the river legally or that many local officials oppose the clean-up plan. World News Tonight anchor Elizabeth Vargas
uncritically announced on ABC: "The Environmental Protection Agency
has decided to go ahead with one of the biggest environmental clean up
operations in U.S. history and the General Electric company will have to
pay for it." After explaining how the PCBs were generated from GE plants which manufactured electrical equipment and how GE maintained that the residue is safest left buried in the silt at the bottom of the river, Potter applauded the EPA's activism: "But while the Bush administration has been criticized for other environmental rulings, the EPA stood its ground here." Substitute CBS Evening News anchor Scott Pelley read this short item which he began by contrasting this newest ruling with recent Bush decisions to suspend Clinton rules: "The Bush administration has rolled back or altered many Clinton era decisions on the environment. But a half billion dollar plan to clean pollution in New York's Hudson River is going ahead. It's the largest environmental dredging project in U.S. history, requiring General Electric to pay for dredging of 40 miles of riverbed where a GE plant discharged more than a million pounds of PCBs." Over on the NBC Nightly News, summer anchor Brian Williams highlighted a fact skipped by ABC and CBS about the legality of the original dumping: "Tonight a widely-awaited decision has been made by the Bush administration's EPA. General Electric, the parent company of this network, will apparently be forced to dredge the Hudson River for PCBs that it dumped, by permit, legally, many years ago. For the government, it is a huge reversal. For the company, a huge disappointment." Reporter Pete Williams proceeded to note not only how environmental groups praised EPA Administrator Christie Whitman, but that the local U.S. Congressman, John Sweeney, opposed the decision as disruptive and potentially more dangerous than just leaving the riverbed alone. Dan Rather may have been off, but on Wednesday night fill-in anchor Scott Pelley continued to reflect CBS's excitement about passage of a Patients' Bill of Rights with the right to sue HMOs. While both ABC and NBC reported on the very late afternoon deal worked out between President Bush and Congressman Charlie Norwood (R-GA), they stuck to the outline of the agreement and lacked the cheerleading enthusiasm expressed by CBS. Pelley opened the August 1 CBS Evening News: "The pace and the pulse are picking up fast tonight on the Patients' Bill of Rights. A deal between President Bush and Congress is not done -- there have been no votes yet -- but a late White House meeting today put in place all of the pieces for a plan that includes many of the most controversial provisions among Americans. The compromise is said to include a right to sue your HMO." Bob Schieffer started his report from Capitol Hill: "Well Scott, it couldn't have been more dramatic. The President came into the White House briefing room and at his side was Congressman Charlie Norwood, who is the author of a Patients' Bill of Rights that the President has said that he would veto because it did give patients the right to sue their HMOs. Well, the President said, they had worked out their differences...." Schieffer must have an awfully dull life if nothing is "more dramatic" for him than the President walking into the press room with a Congressman. The Today show team has found its socialist utopia in France. "How does this sound to you?" Katie Couric teased on Wednesday's Today: "Shorter working hours, longer holidays and no pay cuts?" The French, Couric insisted, "are making it work." By forced government mandate on large companies, viewers soon learned as reporter Keith Miller raved about the "miracle" success of "a government-mandated 35-hour work week." An impressed Miller applauded the French system: "With more free time workers are rested, productivity is up" as "60 percent of those on the job say their lives have improved" and, Miller highlighted, American women working in France now "have time for lunch and a life." After Miller's one-sided report, which MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed did not include a single negative thought about the French government mandates, Couric gushed: "So great that young mother being able to come home at three everyday and spend that time with her child. Isn't that nice? The French, they've got it right, don't they?" Couric set up the August 1 fawning over the
French system, which aired during the 8am half hour: In a taped piece from Paris, Miller enthused over video of a street-side band playing next to a sidewalk restaurant: "Break out the band, bring on the drinks. The French are calling it a miracle. A government-mandated 35 hour work week is changing the French way of life. Two years ago in an effort to create more jobs the government imposed a shorter work week on large companies, forcing them to hire more workers to maintain production. Even the people playing characters at EuroDisney cut down on their time spent in costume. American economists said it would never work." After a clip of Polly Platt, identified on screen as a "French culture expert," saying no U.S. company has left France over the law, Miller continued: "Economists warned shortening working hours without reducing salaries would discourage foreign investment, ruin competitiveness and raise taxes. None of that has happened. Instead, the unemployment rate dropped to its lowest level in 18 years." From what high level to what lower but still high level Miller did not say. Viewers then heard from Charlotte Thorne of something identified on screen as "The Industrial Society." She boasted about how the new law puts value in ensuring that workers are respected. Miller moved on to relay some happy anecdotes: "Benedict Refaie [SP a guess] is in the mood to sing. The 28-year-old mother is working only 32 hours a week for a French electrical company. She can get off work at three everyday or work just four days a week. Or spend more time on vacation." The woman spouted on about how "it's wonderful" as she now has "time to do things" and she gets five weeks off in the summer. Miller listed all the wonderful benefits of
working less: "With more free time workers are rested, productivity
is up and what makes it work is flexibility. Employers and employees agree
on when it is most efficient to take time off. 60 percent of those on the
job say their lives have improved. These American women, all working in
France, have time for lunch and a life." (Bet they voted absentee for Al Gore) Miller asked the woman around a table:
"Do you think then it's just the American culture of succeeding and
striving? I mean there are some very good values behind all of that." (Just stay in France and don't lecture us) Miller concluded by endorsing an expansion of the system: "Next year the 35 hour work week will be extended here to smaller businesses. France could become a nation devoted to leisure. A classic case of the French having their cake and eating it too. For Today, Keith Miller, NBC News, Paris." Back on the Today set couch, Couric let out a
loud and approving sigh as news reader Ann Curry suggested: "We
should take our show to France and do it from France. What do you think
guys?" From NBC's reporting Lauer couldn't have come to "understand" anything about high taxes or any other downside to France's socialist system. Can you think of any industrial or information sector product or field in which France leads the world? If Gary Condit is responsible for getting rid of Chandra Levy, Ken Starr deserves some of the "guilt." So reasoned Bill Maher, host of ABC's Politically Incorrect, last Friday night on CNN's Larry King Live. In a comment MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth came across on Wednesday, on the July 27 CNN show Maher argued that "if it turns out that this beautiful young girl is gone, I think, and he [Condit] is responsible in some way, you have to look to Ken Starr for a little bit of guilt" because, thanks to Starr, a criminal case is now made out of affairs so, Maher claimed in referring to a politician's lover, "it's almost like you have to get rid of them." Maher contended: "I think that's what Gary Condit was going through his mind, is, you know, I can't get caught with someone. If she's coming to me and saying she's pregnant..." Here's the exchange in full on the July 27 Larry King Live. Maher was quite serious in tone and was not just telling a bad joke: Maher: "But the other thing I wanted to
say is, I do think, if it turns out that this beautiful young girl is
gone, I think, and he [Condit] is responsible in some way, you have to
look to Ken Starr for a little bit of guilt." Just when you thought liberals had run out of things for which to blame Ken Starr. So much for encouraging personal responsibility and avoiding "mean-spirited" personal attacks for which media liberals regularly castigate conservatives. -- Brent Baker >>>
Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon contributions
which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-deductible
donation. Use the secure donations page set up for CyberAlert
readers and subscribers: >>>To subscribe to CyberAlert, send a
blank e-mail to:
mrccyberalert-subscribe >>>You can learn what has been posted each day on the MRC's Web site by subscribing to the "MRC Web Site News" distributed every weekday afternoon. To subscribe, send a blank e-mail to: cybercomment@mrc.org. Or, go to: http://www.mrc.org/newsletters.<<< |