Lies, Lies Everywhere!
“Everything’s been built on lies. Everything! I mean, the entire pre-text for war.”
— Former
60 Minutes correspondent Meredith Vieira, now a co-host of ABC’s The
View, June 17.
Handover Timed to Moore Movie
Andrea Mitchell: “Howard, [what was] the strategy behind this surprise handover?”
Newsweek’s Howard Fineman: “Well, they wanted to get ahead of the insurgents, they wanted to get ahead of the American network anchors and they wanted to stay ahead of Michael Moore, the director of 9/11, Fahrenheit 9/11 who’s stoking resentment about the war.”
— Exchange on MSNBC’s
Hardball, June 28.
Sovereign Iraq = Fall of Saigon
“Does anybody fear that in Iraq, where symbolism is so important...that the nature of the handover today, just the behind-the-doors kind of thing and the immediate exit of Ambassador Bremer today, might look a little like the helicopters taking off out of Vietnam in 1975?”
— MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann to
Washington Post reporter Robin Wright on Countdown, June 28. Wright said no.
Scolded for Connecting the Dots
“In Washington today the Attorney General said that al-Qaeda has been planning to blow up a shopping mall in Ohio....Over the last three years Mr. Ashcroft has made several dramatic announcements about terrorist plots in the U.S., and it is hard to verify them because the evidence is held in such secrecy.”
— Peter Jennings on the June 14
World News Tonight.
Economy Is Booming, But...
NBC’s Carl Quintanilla: “They’re calling it the middle class blues....the feeling that happy days aren’t quite here yet...”
Woman: “I’ve never been in a, like, depression, but I think this is pretty close to it.”
Quintanilla: “The numbers, of course, say different. A million new jobs added since February, gas prices back below $2, the cheapest in a month. Enough to give comfort to some....But overall, the price of life in America is up from last year. Everything from hospital visits to tuition. Last month alone, milk prices made their single biggest jump since World War II.”
— Report aired on NBC’s
Today, June 16.
Celebrating “Very Candid” Clinton
“It was very candid, there’s no question about it, a lot of personal revelation there.”
— ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, a former Clinton White House aide, discussing Bill Clinton’s new book on the June 21
Good Morning America.
“True confessions. A candid President Clinton talks about his political accomplishments and personal demons.”
— NBC’s Katie Couric opening the June 21
Today.
“Many people have remarked how open and candid you’ve been in the book.”
— Katie Couric interviewing Clinton on
Today, June 23.
Most Reporters Probably Agree
“I’m a big supporter of President Clinton. And if there wasn’t such a thing as the Constitution, I’d vote for him a third time.”
— Former NBC News reporter Star Jones, now a co-host of ABC’s
The View, at a June 21 party promoting Bill Clinton’s book, as quoted in the June 22
USA Today.
Joe’s Campaign to Puff Up Clinton
“My feeling is that in the end on all this stuff he’s [Clinton] more sinned against than sinner.”
—
Time’s Joe Klein on NBC’s Meet the Press, June 20.
“In retrospect, it is clear that there was no substance to the Whitewater allegations and the other White House scandalettes...except, of course, Lewinsky. It seems clear that Starr conducted an unseemly and irresponsible investigation filled with ‘abuses of power,’ as Clinton contends, illegal leaks to the press and barely legal coercive tactics against prospective witnesses. And it also seems clear that the press was way too credulous about Starr’s allegations and didn’t pay nearly enough attention to his methods.”
— Klein in the June 28 edition of
Time.
“One of the other things that Clinton told us was that he would have fired Louis Freeh as FBI Director if it hadn’t been for the media and for the fact that we would have associated that firing with the investigation of the Lewinsky scandal. Now, that is incredibly damning because from what I can understand, the FBI was entirely incompetent, not doing anything in terms of counter-terrorism over those years. And so in some ways, you could say that we might have had a better shot at rolling up those al-Qaeda cells if Bill Clinton had been free to fire Freeh.”
— Klein on NBC’s
Meet the Press, June 20.
Pitts Agrees with Teresa’s Fable
Byron Pitts: “Teresa Heinz Kerry....only recently started using Senator Kerry’s last name and was prompted more by anger than ambition to change her party affiliation.”
Teresa Heinz Kerry: “I was very upset at the way the party dealt with Max Cleland of Georgia.”
Pitts: “Cleland’s the Democratic Senator who lost re-election in a bitter campaign when Republicans attacked his patriotism.”
Heinz Kerry: “I thought it was disgusting.”
Pitts: “A man who lost three limbs in Vietnam.”
Heinz Kerry: “Three limbs and all I could think was, ‘Does the Republican Party need a fourth limb to make a person a hero?’ And this coming from people who have not served. I was really offended by that. Unscrupulous and disgusting.”
— From a June 15
CBS Evening News profile of Democratic candidate John Kerry’s wife. In 2002, the GOP ran commercials critical of Cleland’s votes, not his “patriotism.”
Cap’n Dan, the Book Review Man
“I read the book
[My Life by Bill Clinton] completely. And I think it compares very favorably with Ulysses S. Grant’s gold standard of presidential autobiographies.”
— Dan Rather on CNN’s
Larry King Live, June 18.
vs.
“While Dan Rather, who interviewed Mr. Clinton for
60 Minutes, has already compared the book to the memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant, arguably the most richly satisfying autobiography by an American President, My Life has little of that classic’s unsparing candor or historical perspective. Instead, it devolves into a hodgepodge of jottings: part policy primer, part 12-step confessional, part stump speech and part presidential archive, all, it seems, hurriedly written and even more hurriedly edited.”
—
New York Times book reviewer Michiko Kakutani in a June 20 front-page critique of
My Life.
Both Into Oil & Domination
“They [President Bush and Saddam Hussein] are very different people serving very different purposes. They both have very equally narrow views about how to solve problems and it is all about power, the struggle for oil and the struggle for world domination, and at the end of the day, are they that different?...I don’t want to equate George Bush with Saddam Hussein. I believe that George Bush and Saddam Hussein are both behaving in an irresponsible manner, so in that respect, they’re alike.”
— Madonna (the singer who now calls herself “Esther”) in an interview shown on ABC’s
20/20, June 18.