OUR ENEMY THE MEDIA
By Don Feder
November 1, 2008
Based on her interview with Sen. Joe Biden,
we may assume that WFTV, Orlando Anchor Barbara West: 1. Did not graduate from
a school of communications, 2. Will never receive an award from the Society of
Professional Journalists, 3. Is unlikely to be employed by The New York Times in the foreseeable future, and 4. Will soon be
working with Joe the Plumber, installing bathroom fixtures.
Silly rabbit -- Didn’t West know that tough questions are
reserved for Republicans?
Yet, there she was asking old leaden-tongued Joe how his
running mate’s spread-the-wealth platform differed from standard Marxist redistributionism (from each according to his abilities,
etc.) The vice-presidential candidate was reduced to sputtering “Are you
kidding?” and “I don’t know who’s writing your questions.”
I’m surprised the Delaware Senator didn’t remind West that
when a TV reporter posed impertinent queries to President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt in 1929, FDR penned an article
for “People” magazine reminding his fellow Americans to “ask not what your
country can do for you.”
As all good journalists knoweth,
you’re only supposed to ask embarrassing questions of Republicans. As a media minion, your curiosity should be
confined to Sarah Palin’s wardrobe, her daughter’s
pregnancy and Cindy McCain’s past addiction to prescription painkillers.
West’s grilling of Biden (the
campaign retaliated by canceling a later interview with his wife) was so
extraordinary for the mainstream media as to constitute a freak occurrence –
like a snowstorm in July or a British MP plagiarizing one of Biden’s speeches.
Media bias in past presidential campaigns (going back to
1964) is nothing next to the way the drive-bys managed, manipulated and mangled
coverage of the McCain-Obama race.
MSNBC’s Chris Matthews epitomized media worship of the messiah,
when he confessed that while listening to Obama, “I
felt this thrill going down my leg.” Matthews’ colleagues probably feel more like
the prom queen when the star quarterback’s hand is reaching up her leg.
The media doesn’t even try to disguise its school-girl
crush. According to a survey by the
At this stage of the 2004 campaign, the public said the
media favored Kerry over Bush by 50% to 22% (comparable to 2000, when 47% of
those surveyed said the press liked Gore, versus 23% who said reporters leaned
toward Bush).
The public’s perception is confirmed by a Project for
Excellence in Journalism study, which looked at coverage of McCain and Obama in the six weeks following the nominating
conventions. It found that while 57% of stories about the GOP nominee were
negative and 14% positive, Obama’s
positives/negatives were 36%/35%. In other words, there was four
times as much negative coverage of McCain as of Obama.
If the news media is a criminal conspiracy, The New York Times is its Vito Corleone. The Gray Lady set the tone for the rest of the
press – which sounds a lot like The Dixie Chicks humming “The Internationale.”
You probably didn’t know that besides editing the editorial
pages of The Times, Andrew Rosenthal
is also a stand-up comic. Performing live at the Association of National
Advertisers annual conference, Rosenthal observed that The
For sheer hypocrisy, this is hard to beat. In the real world, The New York Times is to objectivity what Jack the Ripper was to
women’s rights.
After seeing their candidate bludgeoned in its news pages
for months, on September 22, the McCain campaign charged that The New York Times is “150%” behind Barack Obama. Said
McCain spokesman Steve Schmidt: “Whatever The
New York Times once was (in the
middle of the 19th century?), it is not today by any standard a
journalistic organization. It is a pro-Obama
advocacy organization that every day attacks the McCain campaign, attacks
Senator McCain, attacks Governor Palin and excuses Obama.”
This is a revelation on par with: Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has issues with
In late July, Rosenthal’s paragon of objectivity ran an
opinion piece by Obama (“My Plan for
From the moment McCain announced his choice of Alaska
Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate, The Times attack machine went into
hyper-drive. A division of investigative reporters was deployed to
Every aspect of the lady’s personal life has been subjected
to media scrutiny.
On
September 2, The Times ran a
convention story (“Palin’s Daughter’s Pregnancy
Interrupts G.O.P. Convention Script”) worthy of The National Inquirer. Her daughter,
From there, it was a dizzying descent into tabloid hell. The Times breathlessly informed readers
that the Palins eloped on Aug. 29, 1988, and that their
first child, Track, was born eight months later.
The
article hit rock-bottom, when it reported “some claimed that Ms. Palin had not actually given birth to Trig (her youngest son), but that
In
his speech to The Association of National Advertisers, Rosenthal compared the
wild rumors and preposterous theories flying around the Internet with impeccable
reporting at The New York Times. But
the paper is willing to repeat the most outlandish cyber speculation, if it
suits its purposes.
Rosenthal’s
rag was also fascinated with Palin’s wardrobe. The
Republican National Committee is reported to have spent $150,000 to outfit her
in a manner befitting a vice-presidential candidate.
An
October 23 New York Times story
mentioned unnamed Republicans expressing “consternation” at the Palin “shopping spree” and wondering if this would
“compromise her standing as Senator McCain’s chief emissary to working-class
voters.”
Naturally,
there was no speculation on how Obama could campaign
as a middle-class hero attired in $1,500-suits. At least Palin
didn’t get her duds compliments of Tony Rezko.
But
most Times coverage of Palin focused on her alleged lack of experience, corny
rhetoric and the contention that she just wasn’t vice-presidential material.
In
an October 3 story on the vice-presidential debate, The Times termed Palin’s performance “unusual theater,” while stressing her
use of phrases like “a heck of a lot.”
The
governor was said to rely on a “steady grin, folksy manner and carefully
scripted talking points.” In other words, she’s a hick, a rube, a Republican Stepford Wife who can’t function without 3x5 cards. You may
recall another politician whose intelligence the media questioned because of
his use of index cards. He was the president who won the Cold War and gave us
the longest peacetime prosperity in our history.
A Times editorial, which ran the same day,
charged that after “a series of stumbling interviews that raised serious doubts
even among conservatives (again, unnamed)
about her ability to serve as vice president,” Palin
“never really got beyond talking points in 90 minutes, mostly repeating clichés
and tired attack lines and energetically refusing to answer far too many
questions.” For The New York Times,
anything not heard recently at a
Compare
the foregoing to The Times carefully
crafted coverage of Biden, whose gaffes are either buried with the TV listings
or totally ignored.
Discussing
the current financial crisis, Biden reminded us that
in 1929, President Roosevelt (who didn’t become president until 1933) went on
television (which wasn’t widely used until the late 1940s) to explain the Great
Depression to the American people.
Speaking
to
At a
September 9 rally in
Then
there was Biden’s prediction, at a
Other
than Fox News, the networks refused to air the remarks. The day after the
event, The Times mentioned it briefly
in the 11th. paragraph of a page A-18 story
headlined “Obama Briefly Leaving Trail to See Ill
Grandmother.”
If Palin had said McCain is so old and feeble that his
election would have our adversaries circling like vultures – it would have
appeared in The New York Times above
the page-1 fold.
The Palin Treatment wasn’t confined to coverage of the
In an
October 18 profile, The Times just had
to mention Cindy McCain’s past addiction to prescription pain-killers – a story
which was old news a decade ago.
The
article noted that the McCains are apart much of the
time -- he in D.C., she in their
The
how-low-can-they-sink moment came when it was revealed that one of the
reporters who wrote the piece tried to contact a friend of the McCains’ 16-year-old daughter, through her Face Book page,
to ask what she knew about Cindy as a mother.
Even
Joe The Plumber got The Times once-over with a blowtorch. An October 17 story (“Real Deal on ‘Joe the
Plumber’ Reveals New Slant”) sought to debunk the GOP icon.
Joe
doesn’t have a plumber’s license (gasp!), owes back taxes and is a registered
Republican, the story disclosed. And his name isn’t even Joe,
it’s Samuel J. Wurzelbacher (who, FYI, owes less than
$1,200 in back taxes.) For The Times
to attack so minor a figure shows that the Democrats don’t have to spin the
news; the media does it for them.
All
that was missing was an expose of the McCains’ dog:
He benefited from the financial crisis. He voted with George Bush 96% of the
time. His name isn’t Fido; it’s Floyd, and he isn’t
even an Irish Setter. He’s really a Golden Retriever.
The
only time the paper mentioned Obama’s friendship with
1960s terrorist William Ayers was to rationalize the relationship or to attack
the McCain campaign for raising the issue.
An
October 11 story said Ayers “worked with him (Obama) on a school project and a
charitable board and gave a house party when Mr. Obama
was running for the U.S. Senate.” This
is like saying that Monica Lewinsky was a White House intern who shared certain
interests with then-President
The Times
didn’t think it was relevant to mention that Ayers and his comrades carried out
more than 30 bombings, including the Capitol Building and the Pentagon; that Ayers’
current goal is to “teach against oppression” embodied in “America’s history of
evil and racism, thereby forcing social transformation;” that Ayers chose Obama to serve as chairman of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge
-- a group they used to fund radical causes like ACORN; and that the duo served
together on the board of the Woods Fund of Chicago – another milch cow for the radical left.
The New York Times used its editorials to blast McCain and Palin
for talking about Ayers (“one of the most appalling campaigns we can remember” the
paper wailed.) In so doing, the Republican ticket has moved beyond mere
“distortions” of Obama’s record “into the dark
territory of race-baiting and xenophobia,” The
Times screeched.
Given
that Ayers is white and native-born, this isn’t an easy case to make. But The
Times doesn’t have to actually prove a charge, just make it.
A
few more things about which The New York
Times and the rest of the establishment media displayed a stunning lack of
curiosity include:
·
Why Obama sat in a pew of
·
Obama’s relationship with Louis Farrakhan. Wright and Father
Michael Pfleger (another friend of Obama) are tight with
·
Obama’s connection to the leftist ACORN (voter-fraud-r-us)
·
Michelle Obama’s embrace of “black power” as a student at
·
The details of Barack’s drug addiction – what substances did he use
besides cocaine? When did his addiction end? Was he using drugs as an
·
Obama’s foray into Kenyan politics in support of an avowed
Marxist who ran for president.
·
Obama’s missing birth certificate, which is said to prove he
was born in
·
Why Mr.
Compassion hasn’t done anything for his Kenyan half-brother, who’s living in
poverty, or his best friend from prep school days, who just got out of prison?
Of
course, the media’s interest in any of the above would presuppose that they
actually wanted to report the news, instead of advancing their ideological
agenda by pushing the candidate they adore.
One
of the defining moments of the 1964 Republican National Convention, which
nominated Barry Goldwater at the
A version of this article originally ran on
GrassTopsUSA.com