CyberAlert -- 09/09/2002 -- Jennings "Raised with Anti-Americanism in My Blood"
Jennings "Raised with Anti-Americanism in My Blood"; Founder's "One Great Failure Was Race"; Hypocrisy on Iraq Ignored; Lauer Hostile to Arming Pilots; Germond: Liberals Are "Politically Correct Jerks" 1 "When you're a kid, a Canadian kid, what is your view of the United States? Are you like peeking over the border or is it not a factor?" Letterman asked: "When you're a kid growing up do you kind of ignore an envy the United States or is there no envy about the United States, is there a curiosity about the United States?" Politically liberal America, that is.
2 On the September 6 Late Show, Jennings relayed: "One of our programs is about race. We've two programs on tomorrow, two prime time hours. One done in Gary, Indiana. The Founding Fathers kicked race, they missed it, they blew it. It was their, it was their great omission and so our hour about race reflects that." Indeed, his introduction to the hour of
In Search of America aired at 10pm EDT/PDT, 9pm CDT/MDT on Saturday night, which looked at the history of Gary, Indiana over the past 40 years, matched what he told Letterman: As if eliminating slavery 75 or 80 years earlier would have prevented the departure of U.S. Steel and the rise of crime which destroyed Gary in the 1970s. And Jennings' supposition failed to address how the Founding Fathers were ahead of their time in setting up a system which gave the nation the ability to correct shortcomings so that the United States is well ahead of any other multiple race nation on the rights of all races.
3 During a story on the September 6 NBC Nightly News, after a soundbite of British Prime Minister Tony Blair expressing support for Bush's Iraq policy, Brown asserted:
4 On the September 6 Inside Politics from New York City, Woodruff asked Hillary Clinton: Hillary Clinton replied: "Well, I think the war on terror has a lot of targets, and from my perspective, we have to pursue those who would use weapons of terror against us, no matter who they are or where they are. Clearly, we have a lot of work still to do in rooting out and eliminating the al Qaeda network, but the president is going to make his case to the Congress and to not only America but the world as to why he believes that Saddam Hussein is also a very significant target in this war on terror. And we are all going to be listening. The real goal, I think, all of us share is that we do everything necessary to defend our country, to defend Americans and defend freedom-loving people throughout the world, and we have got, unfortunately, some committed, dangerous adversaries, more than one out there." Woodruff followed up: "But it sounded as if your husband was saying the president's priorities are not correct, that Osama bin Laden should be first before Saddam." Clinton still avoided answering: "Well, I think that that's a question a number of members of Congress and people generally raise..." In a piece in this week's Weekly Standard, Stephen Hayes recounted how in 1998 Democrats, starting with President Clinton, were gung-ho for the action against Hussein they are now criticizing President Bush for pursuing. An excerpt from the story by Hayes in the September 16 Weekly Standard: The President mulls a strike against Iraq, which he calls an "outlaw nation" in league with an "unholy axis of terrorists, drug traffickers and organized international criminals." The talk among world leaders, however, focuses on diplomacy. France, Russia, China, and most Arab nations oppose military action. The Saudis balk at giving us overflight rights. U.N. secretary general Kofi Annan prepares a last-ditch attempt to convince Saddam Hussein to abide by the U.N. resolutions he agreed to at the end of the Gulf War. Administration rhetoric could hardly be stronger. The president asks the nation to consider this question: What if Saddam Hussein "fails to comply, and we fail to act, or we take some ambiguous third route which gives him yet more opportunities to develop his program of weapons of mass destruction and continue to press for the release of the sanctions and continue to ignore the solemn commitments that he made? Well, he will conclude that the international community has lost its will. He will then conclude that he can go right on and do more to rebuild an arsenal of devastating destruction." The president's warnings are firm. "If we fail to respond today, Saddam and all those who would follow in his footsteps will be emboldened tomorrow." The stakes, he says, could not be higher. "Some day, some way, I guarantee you, he'll use the arsenal." These are the words not of President George W. Bush in September 2002 but of President Bill Clinton on February 18, 1998. Clinton was speaking at the Pentagon, after the Joint Chiefs and other top national security advisers had briefed him on U.S. military readiness. The televised speech followed a month-long build-up of U.S. troops and equipment in the Persian Gulf. And it won applause from leading Democrats on Capitol Hill. But just five days later, Kofi Annan struck yet another "deal" with the Iraqi dictator -- which once more gave U.N. inspectors permission to inspect -- and Saddam won again. Of course, much has changed since President Clinton gave that speech. The situation has gotten worse. Ten months after Saddam accepted Annan's offer, he kicked U.N. weapons inspectors out of Iraq for good. We complained. Then we bombed a little. Then we stopped bombing. Later, we stepped up our enforcement of the no-fly zones. A year after the inspectors were banished, the U.N. created a new, toothless inspection regime. The new inspectors inspected nothing. If Saddam Hussein was a major threat in February 1998, when President Clinton prepared this country for war and U.N. inspectors were still inside Iraq, it stands to reason that in the absence of those inspectors monitoring his weapons build-up, Saddam is an even greater threat today. But not, apparently, if you're Tom Daschle. The Senate majority leader and his fellow congressional Democrats have spent months criticizing the Bush administration for its failure to make the "public case" for military intervention in Iraq. Now that the Bush administration has begun to do so, many of these same Democrats are rushing to erect additional obstacles. "What has changed in recent months or years" to justify confronting Saddam, Daschle asked last Wednesday after meeting with President Bush. Dick Gephardt wants to know what a democratic Iraq would look like.... Matters looked different in 1998, when Democrats were working with a president of their own party. Daschle not only supported military action against Iraq, he campaigned vigorously for a congressional resolution to formalize his support. Other current critics of President Bush -- including Kerry, Graham, Patrick Leahy, Christopher Dodd, and Republican Chuck Hagel -- co-sponsored the broad 1998 resolution: Congress "urges the president to take all necessary and appropriate actions to respond to the threat posed by Iraq's refusal to end its weapons of mass destruction programs." Daschle said the 1998 resolution would "send as clear a message as possible that we are going to force, one way or another, diplomatically or militarily, Iraq to comply with international law." And he vigorously defended President Clinton's inclination to use military force in Iraq. Summing up the Clinton administration's argument, Daschle said, "'Look, we have exhausted virtually our diplomatic effort to get the Iraqis to comply with their own agreements and with international law. Given that, what other option is there but to force them to do so?' That's what they're saying. This is the key question. And the answer is we don't have another option. We have got to force them to comply, and we are doing so militarily." John Kerry was equally hawkish: "If there is not unfettered, unrestricted, unlimited access per the U.N. resolution for inspections, and UNSCOM cannot in our judgment appropriately perform its functions, then we obviously reserve the rights to press that case internationally and to do what we need to do as a nation in order to be able to enforce those rights," Kerry said back on February 23, 1998.... END of Excerpt For the story in its entirety, with a lengthy excerpt from Clinton's 1998 speech, go to: On Sunday's Meet the Press when Tim Russert asked Vice President Cheney about Bill Clinton's latest comments, Cheney responded by reading what Clinton said in 1998. Now that Hayes and the Weekly Standard have reminded journalists of how what those opposed to Bush's Iraq policy now had advocated just four years ago, will reporters inform their readers and watchers of the hypocrisy? After all, Bush's supposed hypocrisy in getting a corporate loan 14 years ago, when he currently supports a bill to outlaw them, was the hook for a lot of stories just a couple of months ago.
5 The questions, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd observed, came during a Friday morning discussion with Lott and Daschle as well as the House Speaker and House Minority Leader, all in New York City for the ceremonial congressional session. Lauer's questions on guns in the cockpit: -- To Daschle: "The Senate yesterday overwhelmingly approved a bill to allow pilots to carry guns in cockpits. Before the vote, you said you were nervous about it, Senator Lott. Senator Daschle, you said this bill needs more work. Both of you ended up voting for it. Why the overwhelming support, Senator Daschle." -- To Lott: "It doesn't seem like all that long ago when most people thought this was a pretty terrible idea, are you still nervous about it, Senator?" -- To Daschle: "The House obviously approved this earlier. The airlines are vehemently opposed to this, they say we're spending billions of dollars, Congressman Gephardt, to keep guns off of aircraft and now here we're going to introduce weapons to airplanes. Are you at all worried that this could come back to haunt Congress?"
6 Germond's blast at liberal came after NPR reporter Nina Totenberg expressed fear of pilots having guns. Asked, during a discussion of airline security, if she favored the idea of arming pilots, she responded: "No, I do not because I figure at some point he will shoot an air marshal or an air marshal will shoot him and I'll go down." Germond then interjected: "The problem, quite simply is, is that my liberal friends are such a bunch soft-headed, politically correct jerks they won't allow you to profile. We have to." Might I dare say it takes one to know one? -- Brent Baker
|