CyberAlert -- 12/10/2001 -- Bush Learned from Enron?
Bush Learned from Enron? "Confrontation" on Civil Rights Panel Caused by Bush; CNN's Familiar Slogan: "We Report, You Decide" Clinton in 2004? Is Newsweek's Eleanor Clift anticipating another run for the presidency Bill Clinton? Or a successful first attempt by Hillary Clinton? Clift's response on McLaughlin Group over the weekend to where John Walker, the U.S. citizen who joined and fought for the Taliban, will be in ten years: "Not in prison, and I hope he is reformed and returned to society, maybe pardoned by a future President." Al Hunt sarcastically suggested Enron CEO Kenneth Lay "may have shared" with President Bush his strategy to stiff "the lowest and average-paid workers" while taking care "of its fat cats." For his "Outrage of the Week" on
CNN's Capital Gang on Saturday night Hunt, the Executive Washington
Editor of the Wall Street Journal, declared: Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Johnson, who in October quoted National Public Radio's foreign editor, Loren Jenkins, as saying he would report the presence of a U.S. commando unit in Pakistan, defended himself in a column last week against the NPR ombudsman's charge that he had "sucker punched" Jenkins. But Johnson also expressed regret for having provided ammunition to the "far right," lamenting: "I'm not thrilled at having inadvertently supplied ammunition for what I continue to believe is a canard of the right: that 'NPR' is simply East Coast elitist code for 'SDS.'" An excerpt from Johnson's December 7 column which was highlighted by Jim Romenesko's MediaNews (http://www.poynter.org/medianews/), titled: "A Confession of a skeptic: In context, I was just doing my job Steve Johnson." Short of Michael Jackson's confidences, I can't imagine a stranger place in which to be. I've become a sort of favorite of the far right and the scourge of National Public Radio. An article I wrote, including quotes from an NPR editor about trying to "smoke out" American troops near Afghanistan, has become part of the conservative repertoire. It's been cited by Rush Limbaugh and others in attempting to prove that the press, and those hippie holdovers at NPR, are unrepentant flag burners. NPR, meanwhile, has indeed been liberal, at least in terms of impugning me. The organization's representatives have said that I took out of context or, "sucker punched" the veteran NPR senior foreign editor Loren Jenkins.... I got into this situation -- instructive in a time of heightened sensitivity to the media's balance of patriotism and professionalism -- simply by doing my job. My article on war reporting in the Tribune's Oct. 12 Tempo section included these lines about Jenkins: "...He says his marching orders to the troops are to try to find where the Americans are. "'The game of reporting is to smoke 'em out,' he says. Asked whether his team would report the presence of an American commando unit it found in, say, a northern Pakistan village, he doesn't exhibit any of the hesitation of some of his news-business colleagues, who stress that they try to factor security issues into their coverage decisions. "'You report it,' Jenkins says. 'I don't represent the government. I represent history, information, what happened.'" Obviously, it was a potentially incendiary quote. But I was not, contrary to insinuations later made by NPR ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin, out to get Jenkins. Dvorkin's November piece on the matter (at www.npr.org/), which just came to my attention, says my article "sucker punched" the editor while it "purported to be" about war coverage -- as if all that other info were merely covering fire for an attempt to assassinate NPR.... I'm not thrilled at having inadvertently supplied ammunition for what I continue to believe is a canard of the right: that "NPR" is simply East Coast elitist code for "SDS." To my mind, for all its great work the public radio service is most clearly -- and, too often, blandly -- MOR, middle of the road. Jenkins may have been blustering to me. He may have believed what he was saying in the abstract. Being the hardline independent, no matter the cost in popularity, is certainly a standard journalistic posture. But tested in the field, the larger truth echoes NPR news vice president Bruce Drake's early November public statement on the matter: that nothing in NPR's distinguished war reporting suggests that Jenkins' opinions represent the official policy. NPR cannot state publicly what I believe is also truth: that a news organization needs a variety of opinions, even some radical ones. END of Excerpt To read the entirety of Johnson's column, go
to: For Johnson's original column of October 12,
go to: For NPR Ombudsman Dvorkin's criticism of
Johnson's October 12 column, go to: The Chairwoman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights refuses to seat a new member appointed by President Bush, bizarrely claiming the term of a sitting commissioner has not expired when under any normal reading of the law it has. Yet both the New York Times and Washington Post last week put the burden for escalating the problem onto the Bush administration. New York Times reporter Katharine Q. Seelye began a December 6 story: "The White House set up a confrontation with the United States Civil Rights Commission today, declaring a vacancy on the commission and appointing its own candidate even though the commission chairwoman said a vacancy did not exist." For the entire article, go to: In the Washington Post the next day, Hanna Rosin led her December 7 story: "White House officials provoked a confrontation with the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights by suddenly swearing in President Bush's new appointee late last night over adamant objections from the commission's chairwoman." For the Post story in full, go to: The Washington Times on Thursday offered a more accurate description of the dispute. An excerpt from the December 6 front page story by Bill Sammon and Steve Miller: The chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has refused to accept President Bush's nominee to the commission and has warned the White House that it will need federal marshals to seat the new member. Chairman Mary Frances Berry told White House Counsel Al Gonzales that she would defy the president by refusing to swear in his nominee, Peter Kirsanow, a Cleveland lawyer and former chairman of the Center for New Black Leadership, Mr. Gonzales said. Mr. Bush nominated Mr. Kirsanow to replace Victoria Wilson, who was appointed by President Clinton on Jan. 13, 2000, to fill an unexpired, six-year term that ended Nov. 29. Miss Wilson has hired an attorney to defend her seat on the panel and plans to attend today's meeting as a commission member. The seat is key because if it goes to Mr. Kirsanow, the eight commissioners will be split 4-4 along party lines. The deadlock would end the outright authority Miss Berry enjoyed since 1992, when Democrats became the majority on a board created in 1957 with a bipartisan charter. Miss Berry threw down the gauntlet during a heated phone conversation on Tuesday with Mr. Gonzales, the president's government attorney. "You informed me that you do not consider yourself to be bound by opinions of the Department of Justice," Mr. Gonzales said yesterday in a letter to Miss Berry. "Nor do you intend to abide by them or to follow the directives of the president in this matter." Miss Berry vowed she "will refuse to administer the oath of office to the president's appointee," Mr. Gonzales said. He advised Miss Berry that any federal official authorized to administer oaths could swear in Mr. Kirsanow. "Finally, you stated that, even if Ms. Wilson's successor has been lawfully appointed and has taken the oath of office, you will refuse to allow him to be seated at the commission's next meeting," Mr. Gonzales wrote. "You went so far as to state that it would require the presence of federal marshals to seat him. "I respectfully urge you to abandon this confrontational and legally untenable position," he said. Mr. Gonzales warned Miss Berry that "any actions blocking" Mr. Kirsanow from taking his seat "would, in my opinion, violate the law." END of Excerpt For the rest of the story, go to: National Review's John J. Miller &
Ramesh Ponnuru first reported Berry's move in the December 4 Washington
Bulletin e-mail: For more from the NR story, go to: Two CNN anchors late last week decided to "borrow" FNC's "We report, you decide" slogan, MRC analyst Ken Shepherd observed. Wrapping up CNN's NewsNight on Thursday night, anchor Aaron Brown asserted: "We report, you decide. You guys are wonderful, and it was fun here today. We'll see you tomorrow at 10:00." The next morning, anchor Paula Zahn prompted two guests: "So the bottom line is we report-" She then paused and her two guests said in unison: "They decide." One of the guests, New York Daily News columnist Michael Kramer, joked about Zahn who left FNC a few months ago: "You can take the woman out of Fox, but you can't take Fox out of the woman." Brown ended the December 6 NewsNight by
discussing a poll being conducted on the Atlanta Constitution Web site
about CNN's sexiest anchor: "Finally tonight, further proof if any
were needed that this program will beat any good idea to death --
actually, any bad idea, for that matter. Last night, you may recall, I
mentioned the online poll being done by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
web site which asked readers to vote for the sexiest CNN anchor. Friday, on Mornings with Paula Zahn, she
brought aboard Michael Kramer of the New York Daily News, formerly with
Time magazine, and Rich Lowry, Editor of National Review, to review the
news of the day. She raised Bernard Goldberg's new book, Bias, and after
Lowry observed that the problem is that inside the mainstream media
liberal views are not seen as liberal but as just normal, Kramer
maintained: FNC should consider suing for breach of intellectual property rights. Or maybe they could just get CNN to pay them a fee each time CNN uses their phrase. -- Brent Baker
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