Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Today at HLADC-SF: "SAVAGE ON A RAMPAGE" Against Immigrants, Liberals & Gays (Videos)

Discussing economic crisis and bailout plan, Savage said Rep. Frank "should be in the gallows for this"

MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA
Tue, Sep 30, 2008 4:24pm ET

Summary: Michael Savage said of Rep. Barney Frank's role in proposed federal financial bailout legislation: "Barney Frank should be in the gallows for this. Barney Frank should be in jail for doing this."

SAVAGE: Sure, maybe we need a bailout, but not this one, where they put in money for La Raza and ACORN. More money for illegal aliens. Are you crazy?

Savage linked San Francisco event to the "artistes" and "leather fetishists" of Weimar-era Germany, whom he blamed for Hitler's rise

MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Summary: Discussing the Folsom Street Fair, a leather-themed adult-entertainment event in San Francisco, Michael Savage declared: "This country today is far beyond the excesses of the Weimar Republic that led to Adolf Hitler. God forbid that should ever happen here. But the German people, who were not all Nazis prior to Hitler's arrival on the scene, were shocked by the degenerates of Berlin. They were sickened by the perverts, sickened by the artistes, they were sickened by the leather fetishists, they were sickened by the degeneracy, and they couldn't handle it."

Savage on "liberal social activism": "They imposed affirmative action on me and stole my very birthright simply because I was white"

MEDIA MATTERS FOR AMERICA
Monday, September 29, 2008

Summary: On his radio show, Michael Savage said, "I grew up with parents who went through the Depression. And I went through a sort of depression in my own life as a result of liberal social activism. They imposed affirmative action on me and stole my very birthright simply because I was white."


"Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets. "
Napoleon Bonaparte

http://hladc-sf.blogspot.com
http://elrinconcitodeaurora.blogspot.com/

We're all suspects under far-reaching new guidelines proposed by Attorney General Michael Mukasey


If implemented, new guidelines will allow the FBI to interview you, your friends and your family under a false pretext.

The FBI could recruit secret informants and have them infiltrate peaceful protest groups.

Investigations based on little more than race, ethnicity or religion would be allowed.

The worst part is that we have good reason to believe the FBI has been violating its internal guidelines all along.

Act now. Sign our petition to the Department of Justice Inspector General.

Dear ACLU Supporter,

Bush and Mukasey are at it again. They've announced dangerous new FBI guidelines that will severely jeopardize the personal privacy of innocent Americans. These regulations need no congressional approval and are terrifying.

Just how far can the FBI go without any factual basis for suspecting improper -- let alone illegal -- activity?

Under far-reaching new guidelines proposed by Attorney General Michael Mukasey, the answer is frightening. All the FBI has to do to put you or any American under prolonged physical surveillance is assert an "authorized purpose" such as detecting or preventing crime or protecting "national security."

Sound familiar?

It's the same Bush/Cheney/Gonzales/Mukasey "just trust us" policies that have been eroding our rights for the past eight years.

And like with Bush's government spying and torture programs, there's a belief that government officials can ignore the law. In fact, we have good reason to suspect that the FBI has been violating its own internal guidelines all along and is now pushing these new guidelines to cover up past wrongdoing.

That's why we need to demand an investigation now, before these outrageous guidelines are implemented. The Inspector General's office at the Department of Justice has proven to be an unbiased, internal watchdog that has consistently exposed wrongdoing. We need to urge the IG to do it again.

Act now. Sign our petition to the Department of Justice Inspector General. Urge an immediate investigation into whether the FBI has been engaging in out-of-control investigative activities.

These new guidelines would allow the FBI to interview you, your friends and your family under a false pretext. The FBI could recruit secret informants and have them infiltrate peaceful protest groups. And the FBI could initiate investigations based on little more than race, ethnicity or religion.

The FBI could also search commercial databases for personal details about your life with no real reason.

And all of this would be allowed without an ounce of evidence that you or anyone else has done anything wrong.

Act now. Sign our petition to the Department of Justice Inspector General.

The last thing we can afford is to let the FBI claim out-of-control investigative powers in the closing months of the Bush administration.

Please act today to help us challenge this dangerous plan to put your personal privacy at risk.

In defense of freedom,
Anthony D. Romero
Anthony D. Romero
Executive Director
ACLU

P.S. You can read the ACLU's letter to Glenn A. Fine, Inspector General at the U.S. Department of Justice, by going here.



© ACLU, 125 Broad Street, 18th Floor New York, NY 10004

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Who won tonight's debate? Polls Galore - Check them out

 
Interesting results, no contest so far, Obama is way ahead in the sites listed in this post, he is wining by large margins in all except in The Drudge Report one (RightWingNut Site)
Aurora
 
FREEP LIST FOR TONIGHT'S DEBATE 
Daily Kos 
by Kevinole
Fri Sep 26, 2008 at 05:50:57 PM PDT<

After every presidential debate news outlets all across America (and the world) post polls on their websites that ask "Who do you think won the debate?"

I'm posting this handy starter list of news sites that host these polls.

Your mission is twofold...

  1. Add to this list with local and national news sites that have polls (swing states especially!)
  1. At the end of the debate, visit as many of the sites listed here as you can and cast your vote for Barack Obama.

I hate to ask for recs, but it would be very helpful to keep this diary visible in order to collect more poll sites and to get maximum votes for Obama.

You know our opponents are doing the same thing to spin the debate in McCain's favor.  We're just going to be a little more organized about it.

I'm creating this list a couple of hours before the debate, so if they don't take you directly to a poll (I'm assuming they'll be on the front page) or if they don't have a poll, I apologize in advance.  Corrections are welcome.

This is by no means intended to be a comprehensive list. PLEASE ADD TO IT!!!

AOL News
Atlanta Journal Constitution
Chicago Tribune
CNN
The Drudge Report
Michigan Live
MSNBC
Rocky Mountain News
Politico.com

UPDATE:  Okay folks, the polls are starting to show up.  As I said, the list I posted may or may not have polls.  The reason I posted the original list was to enlist everyone's help in finding the polls and putting them in this diary so we can all vote on them.  They were not guaranteed to contain polls.  Apparently, this was confusing some people, so I took all of them down unless they link directly to polls.  Check the sites for your local newspaper and television stations and let us all know about them and vote on the many polls that people are posting here.  Thanks very much for your support!

UPDATE #2:  Remember to tip your bartenders and waitresses who provide direct links to polls!

UPDATE #3:  We're doing a great job, folks!  I wasn't quite sure how to do this when I posted it.  A couple of people seemed kind of upset that I hadn't done all of the research for them and posted the links in a convenient spot.  That misses the point entirely.  What we've done is true grassroots organization.  We've tapped into the collective man/womanpower of Kossacks to influence people.  Some people don't think these silly polls are worth anything, but in my opinion they have a psychological impact on the opposition.

Keep finding the polls and keep voting!  Don't forget that you can also post comments to blogs and message boards.  Tomorrow write a letter to a newspaper.  Great job, everybody!


"Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets. "
Napoleon Bonaparte
 
http://hladc-sf.blogspot.com
http://elrinconcitodeaurora.blogspot.com/

McCain's bracelet jab let Obama land the knockout punch

Daily Kos

by Magnifico Fri Sep 26, 2008 at 09:53:24 PM PDT

The best moment in Friday's presidential debate, for me, was when John McCain brought up the bracelet he has been wearing during the campaign. McCain gave Barack Obama an opening and Obama came back with a knockout punch.

It was great that Obama had bracelet too, but what made the counter punch so devastating was what Barack did with the opening McCain's bracelet story provided.

But first, here is some background. McCain has been using the bracelet anecdote on the campaign trail repeatedly. Back in March, ABC News wrote about McCain and the bracelet.

Toward the end of almost every speech he gives or informal remarks he delivers at a town hall-style meeting, Sen. John McCain tells the same story.

If you watch him carefully, you can even tell when it's coming.

The Arizona senator will shoot his right arm forward in his suit sleeve, revealing a dark metallic band low on his wrist. It's probably an unconscious gesture. He doesn't hold up the bracelet. He doesn't look at it. But very soon he will tell the story. He has told it hundreds of times.

The Obama's debate prep team had him ready for McCain's bracelet jab. McCain's right jab was predictable and the 72-year-old "maverick" telegraphs when he his about to throw it.

Here's McCain in the debate:

And I'll tell you, I had a town hall meeting in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, and a woman stood up and she said, "Senator McCain, I want you to do me the honor of wearing a bracelet with my son's name on it."

He was 22 years old and he was killed in combat outside of Baghdad, Matthew Stanley, before Christmas last year. This was last August, a year ago. And I said, "I will -- I will wear his bracelet with honor."

And this was August, a year ago. And then she said, "But, Senator McCain, I want you to do everything -- promise me one thing, that you'll do everything in your power to make sure that my son's death was not in vain."

That means that that mission succeeds, just like those young people who re-enlisted in Baghdad, just like the mother I met at the airport the other day whose son was killed. And they all say to me that we don't want defeat.

A war that I was in, where we had an Army, that it wasn't through any fault of their own, but they were defeated. And I know how hard it is for that -- for an Army and a military to recover from that. And it did and we will win this one and we won't come home in defeat and dishonor and probably have to go back if we fail.

Here, McCain has precisely laid out why his thinking on Iraq is flawed and how he continues to pick at America's old wounds from the Vietnam war to score political points. McCain believes there is too much invested in Iraq and therefore the United States must stay in Iraq.

McCain's Vietnam loss aversion causes him to commit a sunk cost fallacy. So even though the case for war that was originally made has long since been disproven, for McCain the U.S. must continue on with the mistake. McCain is a gambler, so when he's losing it's double or nothing. He raises the stakes and digs himself, and the country, in deeper.

There is no surprise that Obama and his team were prepared for McCain's bracelet story, but what Obama was able to do with this opening must be commended. In the debate, Obama responded:

Jim, let me just make a point. I've got a bracelet, too, from Sergeant - from the mother of Sergeant Ryan David Jopeck, given to me in Green Bay. She asked me, can you please make sure another mother is not going through what I'm going through.

CNN transcript corrected using NY Times transcript.

Not only did Obama defuse McCain's bracelet story with a bracelet of his own given to him by the mother of a fallen solider, but unlike McCain, Obama has not used it repeatedly on the campaign trail to prop himself up. McCain has diluted his bracelet story with constant retelling, while Obama caught McCain by surprise, I think, with a bracelet story of his own.

But even more so, Obama devastated McCain's faulting sunk cost thinking. Using McCain's "flawgic" if and when a soldier dies in a war that should not have been started in the first place, more and more soldiers must be sacrificed to the mistake to, somehow, make it not a mistake. Once troops have been committed to a mistake it is too late to pull back and make adjustments. This is akin to George W. Bush perpetually saying 'We must stay the course in Iraq' between 2003-2006.

From the debate, here is how Obama continued after saying he too had a bracelet:

No U.S. soldier ever dies in vain because they're carrying out the missions of their commander in chief. And we honor all the service that they've provided. Our troops have performed brilliantly. The question is for the next president, are we making good judgments about how to keep America safe precisely because sending our military into battle is such an enormous step.

Bam! Obama lays a powerful left hook across McCain's nose. Obama's response here is a thing of beauty. "No U.S. soldier ever dies in vain because they're carrying out the missions of their commander in chief," Obama said. He squarely places the responsibility on Bush for every solider who has died in the wars Bush has waged as president.

Obama also defuses the idea that a soldier's life has been wasted in the line of duty by doing his or her duty. For Obama, the soldier's life is not wasted at the time of death. There is no reason to add more soldiers' deaths, to prove that the first soldier's life was not wasted. A soldier who dies in the line of duty is not a wasted life because a hopefully wise leader has made the decision to order the troops into harm's way.

This, I think, is where Obama goes for the knockout on McCain. "The question is for the next president, are we making good judgments about how to keep America safe precisely because sending our military into battle is such an enormous step," Obama said. If the president has poor judgement, such as is the case of Bush, then it is the president whose vanity throws away the lives of American soldiers.

It is the judgement of the commander in chief that is vital to this nation's security. When the commander in chief lacks wisdom, like Bush, then that leader will weaken America's security and waste our military. And just like Bush, McCain made the wrong decision to invade Iraq. So therefore, if any soldier did die in vain in Iraq, then it is Bush's and McCain's fault and sending more soldiers to their deaths does not change the vanity of the original poor decision.

Continuing, Obama underscored this point in the debate:

And the point that I originally made is that we took our eye off Afghanistan, we took our eye off the folks who perpetrated 9/11, they are still sending out videotapes and Senator McCain, nobody is talking about defeat in Iraq, but I have to say we are having enormous problems in Afghanistan because of that decision.

And it is not true you have consistently been concerned about what happened in Afghanistan. At one point, while you were focused on Iraq, you said well, we can "muddle through" Afghanistan. You don't muddle through the central front on terror and you don't muddle through going after bin Laden. You don't muddle through stamping out the Taliban.

I think that is something we have to take seriously. And when I'm president, I will.

McCain was knocked off his debate game. He never saw what hit him. After Obama landed the rhetorical blow, McCain went off dithering back to the Senate muttering about subcommittee assignments and shouting at the clouds.

Obama wasn't just presidential at that moment, he was this country's president. Obama proves he has the judgement and wisdom to lead our nation.

Cross-posted at Docudharma.


"Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets. "
Napoleon Bonaparte
 
http://hladc-sf.blogspot.com
http://elrinconcitodeaurora.blogspot.com/

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Sarah Palin's First Male Bimbo Eruption: National Enquirer Exposes McCain Veep's Alleged Affair.


Wed Sep 24, 2008 at 03:35:40 PM

palin666.jpg
Did Sarah cheat on Todd? So saith the National Enquirer...

During the Clinton years, they used to call them "bimbo eruptions." Now that the National Enquirer has finally published its tell-all tale of Sarah Palin's alleged affair with a former business partner of hubby Todd, I guess we'll have to start calling them "male bimbo eruptions," "mimbo eruptions," or maybe "stud eruptions," though that kinda sounds like a gay porn video. Not that I'd know anything about gay porn, of course.

Anyway, coming to a supermarket checkout line near you (if it hasn't landed there already) is the Enquirer's tawdry account of Palin's alleged relationship with one Brad Hanson, who, as Gawker points out, is a dead ringer for the supposedly cuckolded Todd. According to the Enquirer's sources, one of whom is named, Hanson was keeping the Wasilla Wackjob warm on those cold Alaskan nights while Todd was away on the North Slope drillin' oil. Did Palin and Hanson get their own form of global warmin' going on back in the '90s? Hey, that's how the NE tells it, and they claim to have polygraphs and sworn affidavits to back it up.

"Todd was away on business a lot and Sarah felt lonely," one insider told the Enquirer. "Brad was a good listener, and Sarah talked to him at length. Eventually, she real­ized she was falling in love with him."

Someone cue the syrupy soap opera music. Not that I really care if Palin was getting some stick action on the side, but aren't the Republitards supposed to be the party of family values and all that jazz? Plus if roles were reversed, and someone discovered that Obama fooled around on Michelle, it'd be all over right-wing talk radio. You know, like how wing-nuts such as Glenn Beck have gone after John Edwards over his affair with Rielle Hunter and the offspring that some allege is his, despite his assertions to the contrary.

Both Palin and Hanson have denied the illicit liaison, not unlike the way John McCain and DC lobbyist Vicki Iseman denied they did the horizontal mambo. Why all this hypocrisy over wanting a little extramarital love connection? Clinton denied many of his dalliances as well, and he made a damn fine Prez. Save for the fact that the Republicans impeached him over the one involving a stained blue dress. Hmm, does that mean if McCain's elected and Palin becomes VP that the Dems can depose her under oath and indict her if she happens to fib about her studmuffin addiction? Problem is, the Dems ain't that vindictive. If they were, they'd probably win more elections.

There are a few legitimate issues raised by the NE's gossip-mongering. For one, Sarah "Peyton Place" Palin has allowed family intrigue and folks' personal relationships to influence her decision making as governor in the land of glaciers and sockeye salmon. The Wall Street Journal recently reported on how a Palin aide's affair with the wife of a Palin pal likely led to the aide's firing. And then there's the Troopergate mess, where Palin is alleged to have had Alaska public safety director Walter Monegan sacked because he wouldn't fire her redneck ex-brother-in-law from his position as a state trooper.

Finally, the Republicans have been all over Barack Obama's personal life like red ants on a wet Jolly Rancher. Case in point, the new conservative Bible, Jerome Corsi's book The Obama Nation, a pack of scurrilous prevarications and truth-twistings that are untwisted in the Obama campaign report Unfit for Publication. Obama's life is an open book. So tell me why Palin's shouldn't be? Especially if we're talking about facts, which the National Enquirer insists it's doing.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

AGAIN!!! Another attack in Shenandoah follows beating death of Mexican immigrant

SOURCE: Cynthia I

SOURCE philly.com :http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/28495034.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOURCE:
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: La Voz de Aztlan <News.Subscribers@aztlan.net>
Date: Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 11:18 AM
Subject: Another attack in Shenandoah follows beating death of Mexican immigrant
To: La Voz de Aztlan Subscribers <News.Subscribers@aztlan.net>



LA VOZ DE AZTLAN
Los Angeles, Alta California
September 17. 2008

Another attack in Shenandoah follows
beating death of Mexican immigrant

A vicious assault in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania of a 21 year old Mexican man
by the name of Javier Alcala Jr. on Friday comes just two months after the
brutal racially motivated murder of Mexican immigrant Luis Ramirez.

Both MALDEF and LULAC have requested the FBI and the US Department of
Justice to investigate the case to determine if this new assault is a racially
motivated hate crime.

Javier Alcala Jr., claims that three skinheads beat him on the head with a
metal object, bound and blindfolded him with duct tape and then proceeded
to torture him. He says that they used a "drill" and a "torch" to terrorize him.
Alcala adds that he was then beaten to unconsciousness and dumped
in a street. He was taken to Saint Catherine Medical Center and the police
notified.

Javier Alcala suffered a head injury, damaged teeth, bruises and an arm
injury. According to Shenandoah Mayor Tom O'Neill, police have interviewed
the victim twice, including once at a hospital. The immigration status of Alcala
is unknown but the mayor said the police had difficulty interviewing the victim
because he was extremely frightened.

Attorney Gladys Limon of MALDEF said the organization was made aware
of the assault on Javier Alcala after a community member called Saturday.
After speaking with the person who called MALDEF, Ms. Limon said she
called the Department of Justice and the FBI. Ms. Limon said she also
spoke with the victim by telephone on Saturday.

Department of Justice spokeswoman Jamie Hais said Tuesday that the
Criminal Section of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division is opening
an investigation into the Friday incident. FBI spokeswoman Jerri Williams
said that an FBI agent from the Allentown Resident Agency is also reviewing
the attack.

Ms. Limon said, "We have not received any information as of yet that indicates
that this was racially motivated." Ms. Limon added, "What we do know is that
this was a serious crime against a young Mexican man in Shenandoah and
it requires an immediate and full investigation."

LULAC National Executive Director Brent Wilkes said the group is also looking
at the incident because of the rising number of hate crimes against immigrants
in the U.S. "Our concern is that the anti-immigrant rhetoric that's been pretty
visible in media and in policy discussions is starting to embolden people to
take the next step in terms of getting violent with immigrants, or people who they
perceive to be immigrants, which primarily means Latinos and their communities,
" Wilkes said.

http://www.aztlan.net/another_attack_in_shenandoah.htm

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Related La Voz de Aztlan reports:

Racist Whites kill another undocumented Mexican immigrant
http://www.aztlan.net/shenandoah_anti-mexican_hate_crime.html

Witness to beating death of Mexican immigrant by Whites interviewed
http://www.aztlan.net/arielle_garcia_interview.htm

Charges finally filed in the hate killing of Mexican immigrant
http://www.aztlan.net/charges_in_hate_killing.htm

Arab-American Severely Beaten by Islamophobics in California
http://www.aztlan.net/arab_american_beaten.htm


* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
La Voz de Aztlan
Website http:/www.aztlan.net
Contact:
http://www.aztlan.net/contactlavozdeaztlan.html
Join Project Amigos
http://www.aztlan.net/project_amigos.htm

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

2nd ANNUAL PROTEST AGAINST MICHAEL SAVAGE/ANTI-HATE SPEECH

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 

CLEAR CHANNEL REVISITED AFTER A YEAR OF REFUSING TO MEET WITH THE COMMUNITY- UNREPENTANT MICHAEL SAVAGE CONTINUES TO SPEW HATE!

2nd ANNUAL PROTEST - ANTI-HATE SPEECH & DISINFORMATION DEMONSTRATION!

WHEN: Tuesday September 23, 2008

TIME: 4PM-6PM

PLACE: CLEAR CHANNE, 340 TOWNSEND

SAN FRANCISCO CA.(between 4th&5th St. next to Caltrain Station)

As hate speech spirals, a local group of community activists are organizing a demonstration in San Francisco against shock jock Michael Savage. The group, Hispanic / Latino Anti-Defamation Coalition SF and allied Community Organizations, plan to rally in front of the building which houses radio station KNEW-AM where Savage transmits his nationally-syndicated program.

On his program, Savage call for troops on the street "to protect us from the scourge of illegal immigrants who are running rampant across America, killing our police for sport, raping, murdering like a scythe across America while the liberal psychos are telling us they come here to work." Or that autism is a "fraud, a racket, that in 99 percent of cases is a brat who hasn't been told to cut their act out" and to stop being 'morons', he also tells fasting immigrant students "to starve to death, then we won't have a problem."

These kind of statements incite people who are already angry and resentful, as when Jim David Adkisson entered the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, opened fire with a 12-gauge shotgun, killed two people and wounded six during the presentation of a children's musical. In his car, police found a four-page letter where he expressed his hatred of the "liberal movement', and wrote he targeted the church "because of its liberal teachings" and his belief that "all liberals should be killed" because they were "ruining the country." Inside Adkisson's home, officers found "Liberalism is a Mental Disorder" by radio talk show host Michael Savage.

Shock jocks insist their rants are not hurting anyone and that they are not inciting hate attacks. Meanwhile disenfranchised groups continue to be targeted. Another instance was the senseless savage beating that resulted in the death of Luis Eduardo Ramirez Zavala by a group of four young white males in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania on July 12, 2008. Luis E. Ramirez was a hard-working father of small children and a decent member of the community. His killers ranted racial comments against Mexicans while cowardly beating him; as reported by eyewitnesses.

For too long the Hispanic/Latino, and other minority communities in the Bay Area have suffered Clear Channel/the Savage Nation/Michael Savage and his attacks. His insulting, degrading, sophomoric tirades are racist and divisive to a dangerous level. His rhetoric, has resulted in erroneous definitions of whom we are as Hispanic/ Latinos and he contributes to stereotypes which we have for a long time tried to defuse.

We, the Hispanic/Latino community in the Bay Area hold CLEAR CHANNEL/The Savage Nation/Michael Savage and other shock-jocks like him and their Media Channel Broadcasters directly responsible for the increase in crimes against Hispanic US Citizens, Latinos, Immigrants, other groups and individuals; and for destroying and terrorizing our communities through their hateful ON-AIR XENOPHOBIC, HENCE, UN-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA! " .

As in Last year's Protest, the Peninsula Contingent will be boarding CalTrain's "Hispanic Dignity Train" From San Jose to San Francisco as it stops in each local station to join us in front of 340 Townsend St.

Contacts info:

San Francisco: (650)-740-1910 -- (415)-368-8406

SF Peninsula: (650)-324-4082 -- (650)-992-1680

Hispanic / Latinos Anti-Defamation Coalition SF http://hladc-sf.blogspot.com/

 
 

Monday, September 15, 2008

McCain Ad Lies About Immigration Reform in Spanish Ad

Editor's Note: Senator John McCain is now running a Spanish language ad which apparently lies about Senator Barack Obama's support for comprehensive immigration reform, reports NAM Contributor Henry Fernandez.

WASHINGTON -- Senator John McCain is now running a Spanish language ad which apparently lies about Senator Barack Obama's support for comprehensive immigration reform. McCain's ad argues that Obama tried to kill reform. Why might we believe this is a lie? Because just two years ago, McCain thanked Obama for his support of comprehensive immigration reform.

Congressional Record, May 25, 2006, Senator McCain: "I also thank Senators Brownback and Lieberman, Graham and Salazar, Martinez, Obama, and DeWine for their shared commitment to this issue, in working to ensure this [comprehensive immigration] bill moves successfully intact through the legislative process."

Close McCain ally Senator Mel Martinez, R-Fla., also praised Obama in a letter dated June 28, 2007:

"Thank you for your support of the Immigration Reform Bill. While it failed, your backing of this important legislation meant a lot to me personally. I know that standing firm in the face of extreme pressure has not been easy, and again, I thank you."

Yet just two years later, Senator McCain appears to have forgotten his praise for Senator Obama's steadfast support of immigration reform.

September 12 2008, McCain Spanish language ad (translated by McCain-Palin 2008):

[Announcer:] Obama and his Congressional allies say they are on the side of immigrants. But are they? The press reports that their efforts were 'poison pills' that made immigration reform fail.

The result: No guest worker program. No path to citizenship. No secure borders. No reform.

Is that being on our side? Obama and his Congressional allies ready to block immigration reform, but not ready to lead.

JOHN MCCAIN: I'm John McCain and I approve this message.

So why the memory lapse? And why only in Spanish language ads?

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: immigration reform, mccain, obama

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"Mommy, will there ever be a tomorrow? Every morning, when I wake up, it's today again."
Family Circus Cartoon; asked while Mom is tucking son in bed.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Rove advances falsehoods about Obama's "lipstick" remark

-- Sun, Sep 14, 2008 5:46pm ET
-- Summary: Karl Rove falsely asserted that Sen. Barack Obama's statement that "you can put lipstick on a pig, but it's still a pig" "was a deliberate slap at Governor [Sarah] Palin." In fact, Obama did not mention or refer to Palin in the comments immediately preceding his "lipstick" comment. Rove also falsely asserted, "The only time this word has intruded in recent months in the campaign was in her [Palin's] you know, self-deprecating remark at the convention"; in fact, McCain himself used the phrase "putting lipstick on a pig" in a public appearance on May 2.

Trouble viewing clip? Download: QuickTime

On Fox News Sunday, Fox News contributor and political analyst Karl Rove falsely asserted that Sen. Barack Obama's statement that "you can put lipstick on a pig, but it's still a pig" "was a deliberate slap at Governor [Sarah] Palin." In fact, Obama did not mention or refer to Palin in the comments immediately preceding his "lipstick" comment. Rove then falsely asserted, "The only time this word has intruded in recent months in the campaign was in her [Palin's] you know, self-deprecating remark at the convention." In fact, McCain himself used the word "lipstick" -- and, indeed the phrase "putting lipstick on a pig" -- in a public appearance on May 2. At a town hall meeting in Denver, McCain said "All I can say is that, yes, in 1993, we rejected the then-Clinton universal health care proposal. It was rejected by the American people. I don't like to use this term, but the latest proposal I see is putting lipstick on a pig, as we used to -- as we used to say."

Asked by host Chris Wallace on the September 14 broadcast of Fox News Sunday after playing a clip of Obama's September 9 comments, "[D]o you have any problem with what McCain is doing -- for instance saying, which a lot of people thought was kind of made up, that Obama was smearing Palin?" Rove responded: "Well, first of all, I do think that the lipstick remark was an inappropriate and maybe it was unconscious, but it was a deliberate slap at Governor Palin. The only time this word has intruded in recent months in the campaign was in her, you know, self-deprecating remark at the convention. For her to use the lipstick remark less than two weeks after she used it struck me as too much of a coincidence not to have been a deliberate attack."

But, as Media Matters for America has noted, Obama was not speaking about Palin when he made the "lipstick remark." Rather, his preceding comments consisted of what he described as a "list" of Sen. John McCain's policies that Obama said were no different from President Bush's. Obama said:

Let's just list this for a second. John McCain says he's about change, too. Except -- and so I guess his whole angle is, "Watch out, George Bush, except for economic policy, health-care policy, tax policy, education policy, foreign policy, and Karl Rove-style politics. We're really gonna shake things up in Washington." That's not change. That's just calling some -- the same thing, something different. But you know, you can -- you know, you can put lipstick on a pig; it's still a pig.

From the September 14 edition of Fox Broadcasting Co.'s Fox News Sunday:

WALLACE: You say Obama shouldn't attack McCain, but I want to play a clip for you this week of Obama ridiculing McCain's claim that he is the agent of change. Take a look.

OBAMA [video clip]: John McCain says he's about change too, and so I guess his whole angle is watch out, George Bush, except for economic policy, health care policy, tax policy, education policy, foreign policy and Karl Rove-style politics, we're really going to shake things up in Washington.

WALLACE: When Obama and his camp talks about Karl Rove-style politics, they mention things like the McCain effort this week to make a big deal about lipstick on a pig and to say that Obama was smearing Palin. They say it's diversionary tactics. First of all, are you complimented or insulted by the reference to "Karl Rove-style politics," and secondly, do you have any problem with what the McCain people are doing?

ROVE: Look, I demand a royalty. Every time they mention my name -- when John Kerry stood up at the Democratic convention, used my name four times -- I ought to get a small royalty. Maybe 25 cents per mention, a buck per mention. Please, it's my name. Stop using it without my permission.

WALLACE: I think you're a public figure. But in any case, do you have any problem with what McCain is doing -- for instance saying, which a lot of people thought was kind of made up, that Obama was smearing Palin?

ROVE: Well, first of all, I do think that the lipstick remark was an inappropriate and maybe it was unconscious, but it was a deliberate slap at Governor Palin. The only time this word has intruded in recent months in the campaign was in her, you know, self-deprecating remark at the convention. For her to use the lipstick remark less than two weeks after she used it struck me as too much of a coincidence not to have been a deliberate attack.

—J.K.F.

Friday, September 12, 2008

The Weekly Update from Media Matters for America

The Weekly Update from Media Matters for America

Privileging the lie

Earlier this week, The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder wrote that there was "[n]o blowback" against the McCain campaign for its repeated false claims about Sarah Palin's role in stopping the Bridge to Nowhere. Ambinder explained:

[T]he electorate doesn't seem to penalize campaigns for deliberately distorting the record of their candidate and their opponent. It's probably an artifact of twenty years' worth of campaign advertisements and has something to do with the way consumers process news.

Ambinder is completely wrong. First, the electorate does penalize campaigns for deliberate distortions ... sometimes.

This isn't conjecture. We need only look back at 2000 to see a campaign in which the electorate seemed to penalize a candidate for distortions.

Exit polls showed that, by a large margin, a plurality of voters identified the candidates' honesty and trustworthiness as the quality most important to them in deciding how to vote. Of the voters who thought honesty was the most important quality, 80 percent voted for George W. Bush; only 15 percent voted for Al Gore.

A whopping 74 percent thought "Gore would say anything to get elected," compared to 58 percent who thought the same about Bush. Sixty percent thought Gore attacked Bush "unfairly," while only 49 percent thought Bush attacked Gore unfairly.

In an election that came down to a handful of votes, the perception of Gore as less honest than Bush and more willing to say anything to get elected may well have been determinative.

So, why did Gore get "blowback" from voters for (supposedly) being dishonest -- and why isn't John McCain facing similar blowback?

Because there is a clear difference in the way the media have portrayed the two candidates.

A dominant theme of campaign coverage in 2000 -- perhaps the dominant theme -- was that Al Gore was a liar, a serial exaggerator, and a vicious, power-hungry candidate willing to say and do anything to get elected. (The evidence to support this theme was largely fabricated -- and not merely by the Republicans, but by the news media, particularly The New York Times and The Washington Post.)

Jane Hall explained in the September/October 2000 issue of Columbia Journalism Review:

The underlying message of all of these stories was clear: Al Gore is a lying politician who will do anything to get elected -- a theme happily echoed by the Bush-Cheney campaign.

Gore's motives are frequently questioned, frequently framed in the most negative light -- even in the lead of straight-news stories from some of the most respected and influential news organizations.

[...]

A new study by the Pew Research Center and the Project for Excellence in Journalism underscores this. Examining 2,400 newspaper, TV, and Internet stories in five different weeks between February and June, researchers found that a whopping 76 percent of the coverage included one of two themes: that Gore lies and exaggerates or is marred by scandal.

[...]

The substance of what Gore has been saying in speeches around the country often has been wrapped in reporters' cynical language that effectively casts doubt about his motives before he even opens his mouth.

The frame of the news reports about Gore's (not really) false claims was Al Gore is a liar, he exaggerates, he'll say anything to win. Is it any wonder voters tended to think Al Gore would say anything to win? Is it any wonder voters who put a great deal of value on honesty chose Bush?

The frame of most news reports about false claims made by McCain (and Palin and their staff) is very different. The frame isn't John McCain is lying again; it is John McCain said something; how will Barack Obama respond? Some of those news reports get around to mentioning that McCain's claim isn't true -- but those passing mentions hardly matter. They aren't the dominant theme of the report, so they don't stick in the minds of readers and viewers.

Here's an example: Yesterday, The Washington Post ran an article about McCain's attacks on Obama, including his false charge that Obama's use of the phrase "lipstick on a pig" was a sexist reference to Sarah Palin. Paragraphs 1, 5, 6, and 7 contained the allegation in various forms. Paragraphs 9 and 10 were about McCain allies saying the attacks were working. Paragraph 11 finally brought the first indication that the attack wasn't true.

Constructing the article that way privileges the false claim. Readers have it drummed into their heads, over and over again, before they finally see a fleeting suggestion that it isn't true.

So how else could the Post have constructed that article? Well, the article could have begun not with an unchallenged recitation of McCain's false claim, but with a very different frame: "John McCain launched another dishonest attack on Barack Obama, the latest in a long line of claims that have been debunked and denounced by neutral observers as false, misleading, and in some cases, lies." It could have gone on to detail the growing body of evidence that McCain is running a dishonest campaign and to note that McCain risks being seen as a serial liar who will say anything to get elected.

Sound judgmental? Maybe. But it's quite consistent with coverage of Al Gore in 2000 -- coverage about things he said that were not actually false.

Besides, news organizations make judgments all the time. The Washington Post made the judgment that the best way to report the story would be to repeat the false allegation in four separate paragraphs before finally, 11 paragraphs into the story, giving some indication that it was false. That's supposed to be better, or more appropriate, or more ethical than making the judgment that the most important thing about McCain's attack was that it was false? Please. That's absurd. That doesn't reflect any principle or standard of good journalism, it just reflects the media's steadfast belief that John McCain is a straight-talker, no matter how much he says things that aren't true -- and their fearful refusal to risk the wrath of Mark Salter and the army of Republican operatives who will attack them for "bias" if they don't frame the story in a way favorable to their candidate.

And that's just what happened this week. Journalists who knew McCain's "lipstick on a pig" charge was pure bunk framed their reports about it as though it might be true -- and as though the important thing was not one campaign lying about the other, but whether the lies would be effective. The Washington Post article described above is but one example of many. Here's another -- a small one, but illustrative of the media's approach to McCain's false charges. MSNBC.com ran an online poll asking if "Sen. Barack Obama went too far with his 'lipstick on a pig' remark." Readers were offered just three choices:

  • Yes, he has crossed the line this time.
  • No, this is just part of the rough-and-tumble of political campaigning.
  • I don't know.

The poll was about Obama's conduct, rather than McCain's conduct in launching a false attack. It privileged McCain's false claim, rather than punishing it. And it didn't even give people an option that reflected the truth: There was nothing "rough-and-tumble" about Obama's comments; John McCain was dishonestly attacking him.

On Wednesday, MSNBC anchor Tamron Hall offered viewers another poll: "Do you think Obama's lipstick comments were aimed at Palin?" Since Obama's comments obviously were not aimed at Palin, you might think they would have instead run a poll asking, "Do you think John McCain is lying about Barack Obama?" But no: They kept their focus on Obama's conduct.

And that's what happened for much of the week. Journalists who knew McCain's charge did not have merit pretended that was an open question; television segments and newspaper articles were devoted to the question of whether Obama had made a sexist comment, rather than whether McCain was lying.

But this is not a new development. It has been going on for weeks, if not longer. On August 1, I noted that despite a lengthy list of news organizations and independent organizations that had debunked false claims by McCain and his campaign, the media were repeating the claims over and over:

All week, McCain's attacks have been driving news coverage. Those same news organizations that have declared McCain's charges false have given them an extraordinary amount of attention, repeating them over and over. They have adopted the premises of the McCain attacks even as they acknowledge the attacks are based on false claims. The media narrative of the week has not been, as you might expect, that John McCain's apparent dishonesty may hurt him with voters. Instead, the media's basic approach has been to debunk McCain's attacks once, then run a dozen stories about how the attacks are sticking, how the "emerging narrative" will hurt Obama.

But attacks don't just stick and narratives don't just emerge. The only reason that the topic of the week was whether Obama is presumptuous instead of whether McCain is a liar who will do anything to get elected is that the news media decided to make Obama's purported flaws the topic of the week -- even after debunking the charges upon which the characterization is based. It's as though the news media -- so concerned about lies (that weren't really lies) in 2000 -- have suddenly decided that it doesn't matter that the McCain campaign is launching false attack after false attack. That it's the kind of thing you note once, then adopt the premise of the attack.

Here's how the National Journal's John Mercurio described the dynamic currently at play:

John McCain's campaign recently declared that the sky is red, with green and yellow polka dots. Armed with binders full of research and a New York Times op-ed, Barack Obama angrily jabbed his finger at the sky and countered that it is blue. McCain's campaign accused Obama of anti-skyism. Cable TV talkers spent the next 48 hours debating the color of the sky and Obama's anti-skyist tendencies.

Remember: Al Gore said one time, "During my time in Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet" -- and the media ran wild, belittling him for falsely claiming to have invented the Internet (he didn't; he correctly noted that he played a key role in fighting for funding for its development, an accomplishment acknowledged by even Newt Gingrich). They belittled him as a liar and an exaggerator throughout the campaign based on that comment -- and they've done it for years ever since.

By comparison, Think Progress has been keeping track of how often McCain, Palin, and their campaign's surrogates falsely claim that Palin stopped the Bridge to Nowhere, and they had found 27 such claims through Wednesday.

Al Gore made his Internet comment one time -- a comment that wasn't even false -- and was relentlessly ridiculed as a liar by the media.

Just imagine what would have happened if he had said it 27 times. Imagine how the media would have reacted if he kept exaggerating his accomplishments the same way even after having been called on it.

And yet even this week, amid widespread media recognition that McCain and his campaign aren't telling the truth about themselves or their opponent, you can still turn on CNN and see journalists dutifully referring to McCain riding the "Straight Talk Express." And over on MSNBC, viewers saw Chris Matthews insist that John McCain would not personally engage in the false attacks his campaign was leveling. Ridiculous: First, McCain is responsible for what his campaign does -- particularly when the "something" in question consists of a multi-day offensive involving a surrogate operation and an advertisement. Second, McCain himself made the false claim that Obama had engaged in a personal attack with his "lipstick on a pig" comment. But that's the way the media treat McCain: Even when they know his claims are false, they refer to "straight talk" and insist that he wouldn't throw "slime" (Matthews' word) like that.

Defending his statement that there isn't voter backlash against McCain's false claims, Marc Ambinder wrote:

And, of course, though the press has pointed out the Bridge to Nowhere exagerration ever since it was uncovered, it must somehow be the press's fault that John McCain is enjoying a post-convention something-or-other because Americans don't realize that he's a lying liar, or whatever.

Well, yes, it is the press's fault, in large part.

First, Ambinder overstated the extent to which the media had pointed out McCain/Palin's Bridge to Nowhere falsehood, as Media Matters illustrated this week. It isn't enough to debunk a false claim some of the times that you report it. The media must do so every time they report the claim.

Second, the way in which falsehoods are debunked is crucial. When a candidate makes a false claim, reporters can respond one of three ways:

  • They can ignore it, on the basis that a false claim is unworthy of attention.
  • They can adopt the false claim as the basis of their report, as they did with this week's stories about whether or not Barack Obama had made a sexist comment about Sarah Palin.
  • They can produce a report centered on the fact that the candidate is saying something that is untrue. If it is the latest of many falsehoods, they can indicate that. If the candidate is telling more and larger falsehoods than the opposition, they can make that clear. In short, they can make the lack of credibility of the person making the false claim the theme of their coverage.

The first option privileges the lie by allowing a candidate to run around saying things that are not true -- but at least it does not help spread the lie further.

The second option -- even if it includes mention of the fact that the claim is false -- privileges the lie a great deal by helping the candidate spread the false claims. At the end of the day, what most people take away from this week's media coverage of the lipstick flap is likely that there is some controversy around whether Barack Obama made a sexist comment about Sarah Palin. That's a clear advantage to McCain -- and thus the media's handling of the episode has rewarded his falsehood.

The third option punishes the falsehood. If you think the media's job is to bring their readers and viewers the truth, this is obviously the best of the three options.

This is where some will say "but then reporters will be taking sides."

And there is some truth to that: They'll be taking the truth's side.

Reporters "take sides" with everything they do. Everything they do involves a choice, involves a decision that X is more important than Y. When they report a lie five times before reporting the fact that it is false, they are taking the lie's side.

The question isn't whether reporters should "take sides" -- they can't possibly avoid taking sides.

The only question is whether they will side with truth or with fiction.

Disinformation Roundup for Sep 10, 11 & 12 - From Media Matters Reports

Friday, September 12, 2008
 
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Wednesday, September 10, 2008