Notable Quotables - 05/27/2002
Bush "Knew" About 9/11 Plot
"We begin with the news from the White House that President Bush knew
that al Qaeda was planning to hijack a U.S. airliner and he knew it before
September the 11th."
-CNN's Judy Woodruff on NewsNight, May 15.
"On World News Tonight, the White House admits President Bush knew
before September that Osama bin Laden was plotting to hijack planes. Was there
enough information to make a difference?"
-Peter Jennings introducing World News Tonight, May 16.
"This is interesting news that we get now, and it may put the
President under a lot of heat today as the public learns that he knew, through
his daily CIA intelligence briefings, that bin Laden had potential terror
attack plans under way....It also calls into question what happened when Andy
Card, Andrew Card, the White House chief of staff, that morning went and
whispered in the President's ear, as the President was talking to a group of
school students in Florida. Was the President really surprised?"
-Charles Gibson's introduction and question to White House
correspondent Terry Moran on ABC's Good Morning America, May 16.
"Good morning. What did he know and when did he know it? The Bush
administration admits the President was warned in an intelligence briefing
last summer of the possibility that Osama bin Ladens terrorist network
might hijack American planes, raising more questions about whether the attacks
on America could have been prevented."
-NBC's Katie Couric introducing the May 16 Today.
Reality Check:
Host Gordon Peterson: "So The New York Times and The
Washington Post are all falling for a fake and bogus story. Is that what
youre saying?"
Newsweek's Evan Thomas: "That's exactly what I'm
saying....It's not the Times and the Post so much. It's all
of us. The media beast was so happy to have a scandal here, that we jumped up
and down and waved our arms and got all excited about it...."
NPR's Nina Totenberg: "Nobody in the political establishment
said, 'What did they know and when did they know it?' That was us in the
media."
Thomas: "It was us."
Totenberg: "It really was us."
-Exchange on the May 18 edition of Inside Washington.
Assigning Bush "Blame" for 9/11
"This is a big problem for the President. The luster is gone from him
as a war President and as a leader. His credibility, his priorities are in
question....What we learned this week is the President is not entirely
blameless."
-Newsweek's Eleanor Clift on the May 18 McLaughlin Group.
Eager for Another Watergate
"Every President seems to struggle through a credibility gap at some
stage, such as Richard Nixon with Watergate, Ronald Reagan with Iran-contra,
and Bill Clinton with the Whitewater affair. What did he know, and when did he
know it? Now it's George W. Bush's turn to answer Washingtons favorite
question."
-Kenneth T. Walsh and Kevin Whitelaw in the May 27 edition of U.S.
News & World Report.
Clintonite Now on "Lie" Patrol?
"They've been very careful with their words and I think, for the
most part, the White House has not lied here. They're right when they say
there was no specific threat as to time, place, location, all of that....[But]
in Ari Fleischer's briefing on Thursday, when they were first talking about
the memo, they kept saying this was mostly about foreign sources, mostly about
attacks that could occur overseas and then two days later we learn, well,
actually the paper was entitled 'Attacks in the United States.' Again,
they didn't lie, but there was a misimpression left."
-ABC's George Stephanopoulos on This Week, May 19.
Ruing Bush's Insults & Hard Line
White House correspondent Terry Moran: "The President today
took a hard rhetorical line on Fidel Castro, hurling insults at the Cuban
leader."
President George W. Bush: " a relic from another era who has
turned a beautiful island into a prison."
-ABC's World News Tonight, May 20.
Problem Is Embargo, Not Dictator
"Former President Jimmy Carter today became the first U.S. President
to visit Cuba since Fidel Castro took power in 1959. Mr. Carter's private
visit comes amid new debate over the U.S. trade embargo that has fueled a
bitter feud between the U.S. and Cuba for 40 years."
-ABC's Carole Simpson on the May 12 World News Tonight/Sunday.
CNN Touts Castro's "Successes"
"There are a lot of stories about the struggles Cuban people face
here. Stories about the lack of things, the lack of cars, the lack of human
rights, the lack of certain foods. But if you go asking Cubans, and even if
you look at statistics from international groups, you'll find there are some
areas where Cubans have made successes.
"According to a United Nations study, Cuba's regular schools rank at
the top in Latin America. Old mansions were converted to classrooms. Under
pictures of gun-toting revolutionaries, children are taught Cuban history
along with computer skills, English and all the basics. For a developing
nation, the literacy rate is exceptional, at 96 percent according to the
UN."
-CNN's Kate Snow, Live From Havana, May 13.
...Like Free Health Care for All
"Another success Cubans point to: health care. Beginning in
neighborhoods like this one, inside a house or an apartment building, you'll
find a community family doctor. In this doctor's case, he serves 550
patients. Other doctors serve up to 800 people, but the bottom line is every
Cuban has a primary care physician.
"Doctors get to know their patients and even make house calls. They
emphasize prevention and follow up. Again, according to the UN, 96 percent of
one-year-olds are immunized. Life expectancy is just one year less than the
States at 76. Cuba may not have the nicest facilities or equipment, medicine
is sometimes in short supply, but everyone has access and the concept of
paying is completely foreign."
-Snow in the same story.
Freedom Can Wait
"The day after Jimmy Carter's speech, no one in Havana's fruit
market is demanding free elections. Carter told Cubans they have the right to
change the Castro government....But at the market, Rolando Toledo is more
interested in Carter's call to end the 40-year-old trade embargo....Most
Cubans want better relations with the U.S. but don't see Carter's speech
as a watershed event. For them, economic change is more urgent than political
freedom."
-Andrea Mitchell on the May 15 NBC Nightly News.
Only the Government's Opinion?
"In North Carolina two men went on trial for smuggling cigarettes to
allegedly help the group Hezbollah in Lebanon, which the government calls a
terrorist organization. Their lawyer says it will be extremely hard to find an
impartial jury."
-ABC's Peter Jennings, May 20 World News Tonight.
Objectivity, ABC-Style
"A Republican fundraising pitch is luring contributors by offering
White House photographs of President Bush taken aboard Air Force One as
thousands of people lay trapped in the rubble of the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon on Sept. 11."
-Lead of Marc J. Ambinder's ABCNews.coms May 14 story about
Democratic charges that Republicans were misusing an official photo of Bush.
Ordinary Fundraising = Clintons
"In Washington tonight, President Bush and company are about to break
a record for raising campaign cash at a single gathering - the same
President Bush who made fundraising in the Clinton White House a major
campaign issue."
-Tom Brokaw on the May 14 NBC Nightly News.
True Caring = More Spending
"President Bush wants to campaign for the next six months as a
champion of education, but he has a problem: He has proposed a budget that
cuts, freezes and eliminates scores of school programs....White House figures
show Bush's education budget is 2.8 percent higher than the current one,
barely keeping pace with inflation. At the same time, states are facing
deficits and schools are trying to juggle record enrollments, crumbling
buildings, and rising numbers of pupils who have disabilities and difficulty
speaking English. The proposal represents the smallest increase in education
funds in seven years."
-Reporter Mike Allen in a May 9 Washington Post story.
Endorsing George's Objectivity
"If theres ever been a guy who's come out of an administration,
who has made a cleaner break, and proved himself as a journalist than George
Stephanopoulos, I don't know who it is."
-Peter Jennings in a radio interview with Bill O'Reilly shown May 15
on FNC's The O'Reilly Factor.
Rather's Rather Ridiculous Rant
"Its an obscene comparison, and I'm not sure I like it, but there
was a time, in South Africa, where people would put flaming tires around
peoples necks if they dissented. And in some ways, the fear is that you'll
be necklaced here, you'll have the flaming tire of lack of patriotism put
around your neck. Now it's that fear that keeps journalists from asking the
toughest of the tough questions and to continue to bore in on the tough
questions so often. And again, I'm humbled to say, I do not except myself
from this criticism."
-Dan Rather on the BBC's Newsnight program, May 16.