Notable Quotables - 01/31/2005
Help Us Spoil Inauguration Day
For a possible Inauguration Day story on ABC News, we are trying to find out if there any military funerals for Iraq war casualties scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 20. If you know of a funeral and whether the family might be willing to talk to ABC News, please fill out the form below.
Announcement posted on the ABC News Web site on January 19 and captured by blogger John
Hinderaker.
In Rockport, Texas today, just about the time the President was speaking, there was a funeral for a young Marine reservist: 21-year-old Matthew Holloway was killed in Iraq last week by a roadside bomb. His brother told a local paper that as much as Matthew wanted to be home, he was very proud of what he was doing in Iraq.
ABCs Peter Jennings narrating over video of a flag-draped casket in a church,
World News Tonight, Jan. 20.
Scorning Bushs Lavish Inaugural
President Bushs second inauguration will cost tens of millions of dollars $40 million alone in private donations for the balls, parade and other invitation-only parties. With that kind of money, what could you buy?
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200 armored Humvees with the best armor for troops in Iraq.
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Vaccinations and preventive health care for 22 million children in regions devastated by the tsunami.
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A down payment on the nations deficit, which hit a record-breaking $412 billion last year....
The questions have come from Bush supporters and opponents: Do we need to spend this money on what seems so extravagant?
Reporter Will Lesters lead to a Jan. 13 AP dispatch.
On
World News Tonight/Sunday, President Bush prepares for his second inauguration. In a time of war and natural disaster, is it time for a lavish celebration?
ABCs Terry Moran on
World News Tonight, January 16.
Many have wondered whether, given the war and all of our security challenges right now, its appropriate to have a lavish and expensive inaugural celebration?
ABCs Claire Shipman to Laura Bush in a taped interview shown on the January 20
Good Morning America.
Do you think the balls and some of the excess are appropriate, or is it forgivable?
Peter Jennings to former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani on ABCs
Good Morning America, January 20.
Hypocritical Push for Freedom
PBSs Tavis Smiley: Its not what you say, it is what you do. And its one thing, just an hour or two ago to have a President talking about spreading democracy and freedom around the world, much less at a place called Freedom Plaza, named after one Martin Luther King Jr. And these pictures indicate very clearly that these people are having a very difficult time expressing themselves....I think people around the world, certainly around the country right now, are having a very difficult time juxtaposing the pictures that were seeing with the words we heard from the President earlier today, and this is that hypocrisy that
[Newsweeks] Fareed Zakaria spoke of earlier, that other people around the globe look at America and just cant quite understand.
Peter Jennings: Point noted.
Exchange at about 2:50pm EST January 20 during ABCs live coverage, over video of protesters blocked from the Inaugural Parade route by a tall metal fence.
Irate at Iraq-Ignoring Inaugural
Peter Jennings: George, one thing that struck me I think it struck you, as well there was not a single mention of the word Iraq in the Presidents address.
George Stephanopoulos: Not once in 2,000 words.
Exchange on ABCs
World News Tonight, January 20.
Wheres Our Tax Increase?
Dan Rather: Has there been any American President in a time of war who has asked for as little sacrifice as President Bush has done? Or is that a misreading of history?
Liberal historian Joseph Ellis: No, I think youre right, Dan. I think whats unusual about President Bush is that hes perhaps the only President that took us to war at the same time as he cut our taxes, and thats supposed to not be possible. And so its an unusual situation, and perhaps we should listen today to see if he does ask us for, for some sacrifice.
Exchange during CBSs live coverage at about 10:40am on January 20, an hour and 20 minutes before President Bush delivered his second Inaugural Address.
Democrats Reach Out, GOP Bites
>And Joe, as we talk about the second term, there is that deeply held suspicion by a lot of Democrats in Washington that when they do reach out they get bitten, they get hurt, they come away unsatisfied from the process.
NBCs Brian Williams to former Clinton press secretary Joe Lockhart during live coverage on January 20.
Kerrys Problem: Ignorant Voters
At a gas station in Asher [Oklahoma], we spoke to Joyce Smith, an immaculate woman in a bright red suit with her hair neatly done under a scarf....She smiled when we asked about her vote. Well, you know, real Bible-believing Christians are in a minority in this country, she answered, so I was a little concerned that Kerry could win. I am so thankful that he didnt. See, I believe if our President has good morals, our country will be blessed....
She was too polite to say, in so many words, that she felt John Kerry was a man of bad morals. Instead, she put it this way: When Kerry said he was for abortion and one-sex marriages, I just couldnt see our country being led by someone like that. Later, I double-checked what Kerry had said on those subjects. During his campaign, he opposed same-sex marriage and said that abortion was a private matter. But Joyce Smith heard it the way she heard it, and voted the way she voted.
Reporter David Von Drehle in a January 16
Washington Post Magazine article on the views of Bush voters.
Liberal Projects Need Money, Too
Pentagon officials tell us that tomorrow the Bush administration is going to ask Congress tomorrow for about $80 billion more in emergency funding for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now added to the $25 billion already spent in emergency funding this fiscal year, that brings the total to $105 billion. By comparison, thats 13 times the budget for the entire Environmental Protection Agency.
NBCs Jim Miklaszewski on the Jan. 24
Nightly News.
Rather Biased? How Silly!
Ex-CBS reporter Phil Jones: Ive known Dan Rather for almost 40 years. The Dan Rather I know, believe me, had the President of the United States been a Democrat, he would still have pushed to go forward with that story. And for all these people out there who want to attack Dan as being this partisan Democrat...this is not an exhibit.
PBSs Terence Smith, who worked at CBS News from 1985 to 1998: I second that.
CNNs
Reliable Sources, January 16.
This was the case of a producer [Mary Mapes], as has been cited earlier, who was passionate about her story. She would have done the same story about John Kerry. It was a good story....I do not believe it was a function of political bias.
Linda Mason, the newly-appointed Vice President for Standards and Special Projects at CBS News, on CNNs
Reliable Sources, January 16.
Even Ex-News Chief Sees Bias
Personally, I have a great affection for CBS News....But I stopped watching it some time ago. The unremitting liberal orientation finally became too much for me. I still check in, but less and less frequently. I increasingly drift to NBC News and Fox and MSNBC.
Former CBS News President Van Gordon Sauter in an op-ed published January 13 in the
Los Angeles Times.
Liberated Reporters Know Best
Joe Scarborough: Is there a liberal bias in the media or is the bias towards getting the story first and getting the highest ratings, therefore, making the most money?
Former ABC
20/20 anchor Hugh Downs: Well, I think the latter, by far. And, of course, when the word liberal came to be a pejorative word, you began to wonder, you have to say that the press doesnt want to be thought of as merely liberal. But people tend to be more liberated in their thought when they are closer to events and know a little more about what the background of whats happening. So, I suppose, in that respect, there is a liberal, if you want to call it a bias. The press is a little more in touch with whats happening.
MSNBCs
Scarborough Country, January 10.
No Oil, No U.S. Troops
Through his courage, his contacts, bribery, shrewd bluffs and nerve, this hotel manager saved more than one thousand women, children and men. While the genocidal slaughter raged, Europe and America did nothing. They sent no help. They couldnt be bothered about this human butchery. I guess Rwanda had no oil.
NBC critic Gene Shalit on the January 21
Today, reviewing Hotel Rwanda, a movie about the 1994 genocide that resulted in 800,000 deaths.
The Unelectable George W. Bush
Joe Scarborough: Since George Bush got into public life, hes been underestimated by his opponents....Is that a part of an act that this guy does to lull Democrats into under-estimating him, or do Democrats just put up really, really bad candidates against this guy every four years?
Comic/liberal radio host Janeane Garofalo: Well, I dont recognize that as a valid question. First of all, George W. Bush is a bad candidate. George W. Bush is unelectable, in my opinion. And secondly-
Scarborough: Well, why does he keep winning?
Garofalo: I dont know, voter fraud? A failed mainstream media that fails to inform the electorate about what their government is doing? Ignorance? Apathy? I dont know.
MSNBCs
Scarborough Country, January 20.



