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1. Dour Gibson: Only Safe Place for Money is 'Under the Mattress' Hitting full panic mode on Tuesday night, ABC anchor Charles Gibson teased World News: "Markets are gyrating, inflation is rising, banks are closing. Consumer pessimism is at an all-time high." Actually, only one bank. Gibson explained "we are going to devote a large part of our broadcast tonight to the economy because the news each day seems unrelentingly bad." It certainly is on television news where Gibson brought aboard a group of three experts "to help us separate fact from fear," but they and Gibson spread fear as he put himself in the place of a viewer and wondered: "My house is falling apart, the real estate mortgage companies may be in trouble, and now I hear about possible bank failures. And the stock market is tanking. So how do I be thoughtful about what I do with my money?" An exasperated Gibson soon pleaded: "Tell me where people go now to make sure their money is safe. With stocks down, you think the safest place to do is in the bank, and now we're told that there could be a lot of bank failures. So where do you put your money that you know it's safe? Under the mattress?" 2. NYT: 'Clinton Played to Center, Not Left' in Picking Ginsburg As opposed to the divisive Bork and Thomas nominations, outgoing New York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda Greenhouse contended Monday, "President Clinton played to the center, not the left, in selecting Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer, nominations that were well received in the country and that were confirmed unanimously or nearly so." 3. CBS's Giles Yearns for New Yorker Cover w/ McCain's 'Trophy Wife' On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, left-wing comedian and CBS commentator Nancy Giles, upset over the Barack Obama New Yorker cover, remarked to co-host Harry Smith: "So is the New Yorker at some point going to do a similar wild interpretation of the rumors about John McCain or have him holding his wife as a trophy, stepping on his ex-wife?" Like MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell, who on Monday worried that the magazine cover was "too sophisticated" for the American public to understand, Giles similarly fretted: "But the thing about this particular cartoon is that I think for the people who really already believe that Barack Obama is Muslim...because of the fear that this country has, this will maybe reinforce that fear. They -- I don't think they'll see that as satire." When Smith described how the cartoon was meant to mock Obama's critics, Giles added: "I get that...but I think that there may be people who just look at the cover and see it for what it is." 4. Early Show's Rodriguez Hits McCain from the Left on Immigration On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, co-host Maggie Rodriguez aired her interview with John McCain that followed his Monday speech to the National Council of La Raza and teased the segment by asking: "Up next, Senator John McCain, a maverick or a flip-flopper to Latinos?" During the interview, Rodriguez, who hosted the liberal La Raza conference, pressed McCain from the left on his immigration stance: "You championed a comprehensive immigration reform bill. But now as the nominee you admit you wouldn't vote for it if it came up today. Why not?" After McCain explained that the legislation had failed twice due to lack of popular support, Rodriguez wondered: "The fact that it failed, does that tell you that the American people didn't want it or that your party didn't want it?" Rodriguez then followed up by quoting Obama campaign talking points: "Some political analysts say, and in fact, Senator Obama made the comments here yesterday, that when you became the nominee, when you could no longer risk alienating your conservative base, you started emphasizing border security over a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. What about that?" 5. RIP, Patricia 'Trish' Buckley Bozell, Member of the MRC Family The wider Media Research Center family suffered a loss over the weekend with the passing at age 81 of Patricia "Trish" Buckley Bozell, the mother of our founder and President, L. Brent Bozell III.
is 'Under the Mattress' Hitting full panic mode on Tuesday night, ABC anchor Charles Gibson teased World News: "Markets are gyrating, inflation is rising, banks are closing. Consumer pessimism is at an all-time high." Actually, only one bank. Gibson explained "we are going to devote a large part of our broadcast tonight to the economy because the news each day seems unrelentingly bad." It certainly is on television news where Gibson brought aboard a group of three experts "to help us separate fact from fear," but they and Gibson spread fear as he put himself in the place of a viewer and wondered: "My house is falling apart, the real estate mortgage companies may be in trouble, and now I hear about possible bank failures. And the stock market is tanking. So how do I be thoughtful about what I do with my money?" An exasperated Gibson soon pleaded: "Tell me where people go now to make sure their money is safe. With stocks down, you think the safest place to do is in the bank, and now we're told that there could be a lot of bank failures. So where do you put your money that you know it's safe? Under the mattress?" [This item, by the MRC's Brent Baker, was posted Tuesday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] After one guest had declared "we've got serious problems," the second insisted "if things don't turn around, we don't have that many policy arrows left in our quiver" and Mellody Hobson of Aerial Investments maintained "it's very, very hard for individual people to see through this pain right now," Hobson herself pointed out the obvious which the segment helped fuel: "Pessimism prevails in this market, from the newspapers to the headlines to the television." That led Gibson to observe "you think a lot of the fundamentals of the economy are sound. So how much of this is fear? And how much of this is fact?" Nonetheless, after that brief sojourn into realizing the media-fed fear, Gibson forwarded his put your money under a mattress suggestion. The NBC Nightly News was comparatively rational, but CBS's Katie Couric was nearly as panicked as Gibson. With "financial FEARS" on screen, Couric led the July 15 CBS Evening News: "Good evening, everyone. President Bush tried today to reassure the country about the economy. He said it is growing, if slowly. It's a tough sell as the bad economic news just keeps coming. In fact, a CBS News/New York Times poll finds two out of three Americans [67 percent] believe the economy is getting worse. The latest bad news? Inflation, the worst in decades. Retail sales, Americans are cutting way back. And so is General Motors. Then there's that upsetting scene we've been witnessing, Americans lining up to pull their money out of a failed bank." Yes, one single bank. The MRC's Brad Wilmouth corrected the closed-captioning against the video to provide this transcript of the roundtable on ABC's World News for Tuesday, July 15:
CHARLES GIBSON: Because of all the fear that seems to exist, this afternoon we brought together a group of experts to help us separate fact from fear. Our experts, Anne Mathias. She's a senior vice president at Stanford Group. She's an expert in pension issues. Louis Alexander is the chief economist at CITI, and Mellody Hobson is the President of Aerial Investments. So let me start with a general question. How much trouble are we in? How long are we going to be in trouble? Is it grave? Is it moderate? What? Lou?
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in Picking Ginsburg As opposed to the divisive Bork and Thomas nominations, outgoing New York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda Greenhouse contended Monday, "President Clinton played to the center, not the left, in selecting Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer, nominations that were well received in the country and that were confirmed unanimously or nearly so." Greenhouse is retiring after almost 30 years covering the Supreme Court for the Times, and is taking questions from readers this week at nytimes.com. One insight: Greenhouse will apparently go into retirement thinking that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an ACLU lawyer and chief litigator for its Women's Rights Project, is a centrist jurist. [This item, by Clay Waters, was posted Tuesday on the MRC's TimesWatch site: www.timeswatch.org ] Here's how Greenhouse answered a question on how the ideology of Supreme Court justices shift once they're draped in the robes of the highest court in the land, and whether that makes Senate confirmation hearings obsolete: It's hard to generalize about the confirmation process. Each Supreme Court nomination/confirmation has its own dynamic, depending on which seat is being filled, what the relationship is between the President and the Senate, how the President chooses to use the nomination power, and what issues are most salient in the country at the time. Nominations get in trouble when the President tries to use them to push beyond the boundaries of the existing political consensus. That was the Bork nomination problem. It was also the first Bush administration's problem with the Clarence Thomas nomination -- which of course succeeded, unlike the Bork nomination, but succeeded only barely and after a rough fight. By contrast, President Clinton played to the center, not the left, in selecting Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer, nominations that were well received in the country and that were confirmed unanimously or nearly so. So it's really up to the President to decide at the outset how to play it. END of Excerpt The Q & A posted July 14: www.nytimes.com Republicans didn't go after Ginsburg or Breyer with anything resembling the viciousness the left employed again Reagan's failed nominee Robert Bork or Bush Sr.'s successful one, Clarence Thomas, but Greenhouse missed those details. The Times has often denied Ginsburg's liberalism from the start, as demonstrated by this headline from June 27, 1993 after her nomination by President Clinton: "Balanced Jurist at Home in the Middle." In her coverage, Greenhouse sometimes referred to Ginsburg's liberalism, albeit as relatively liberal compared to the rest of a "conservative"-dominated Supreme Court, calling Ginsburg one of the Court's "more liberal members" or "most liberal members" or "increasingly marginalized liberals." For much more on bias in the New York Times, check in regularly with the MRC's TimesWatch site: www.timeswatch.org
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w/ McCain's 'Trophy Wife' On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, left-wing comedian and CBS commentator Nancy Giles, upset over the Barack Obama New Yorker cover, remarked to co-host Harry Smith: "So is the New Yorker at some point going to do a similar wild interpretation of the rumors about John McCain or have him holding his wife as a trophy, stepping on his ex-wife?" Like MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell, who on Monday worried that the magazine cover was "too sophisticated" for the American public to understand, Giles similarly fretted: "But the thing about this particular cartoon is that I think for the people who really already believe that Barack Obama is Muslim...because of the fear that this country has, this will maybe reinforce that fear. They -- I don't think they'll see that as satire." When Smith described how the cartoon was meant to mock Obama's critics, Giles added: "I get that...but I think that there may be people who just look at the cover and see it for what it is." [This item, by the MRC's Kyle Drennen, was posted Tuesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] For Andrea Mitchell seeing Americans as too dumb to understand cartoon, check the July 15 CyberAlert: www.mediaresearch.org For his part, Smith actually defended the New Yorker and suggested the Obama campaign was overeacting: "Why's everybody going crazy about this?...Front page story in the New York Times this morning is people are trying to figure out what's funny about this campaign and so far nothing has been funny about Obama. Is Obama off-limits?...what we're returning to the age of absolute political correctness?" Giles made some suggestions on how the New Yorker could have improved the cartoon: "Or maybe I read this on a blog, as a thought bubble of like the right wingers, like 'ooh, this is our fantasy, that he really is that.' Or of the Obamas watching, seeing that image on TV while they're eating apple pie and there really this all-American family, It might have just straightened it out a little bit. You know?" Here is the full transcript of the July 16 segment:
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the Left on Immigration On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, co-host Maggie Rodriguez aired her interview with John McCain that followed his Monday speech to the National Council of La Raza and teased the segment by asking: "Up next, Senator John McCain, a maverick or a flip-flopper to Latinos?" During the interview, Rodriguez, who hosted the liberal La Raza conference, pressed McCain from the left on his immigration stance: "You championed a comprehensive immigration reform bill. But now as the nominee you admit you wouldn't vote for it if it came up today. Why not?" After McCain explained that the legislation had failed twice due to lack of popular support, Rodriguez wondered: "The fact that it failed, does that tell you that the American people didn't want it or that your party didn't want it?" Rodriguez then followed up by quoting Obama campaign talking points: "Some political analysts say, and in fact, Senator Obama made the comments here yesterday, that when you became the nominee, when you could no longer risk alienating your conservative base, you started emphasizing border security over a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. What about that?" [This item, by the MRC's Kyle Drennen, was posted Tuesday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Read about Rodriguez touting her role as emcee for the La Raza conference. See the July 14 CyberAlert: www.mediaresearch.org When McCain later suggested that: "Americans want the confidence that we'll have secure borders. And then I believe the overwhelming majority of them will support a humane and compassionate approach to temporary worker program and to a comprehensive immigration reform." Rodriguez responded: "But securing the border could take years. What if it never happens? When will you get to comprehensive immigration reform?" That comment led to this exchange in which an incredulous Rodriguez could not seem to accept that the United States would actually be capable of securing its own borders:
MCCAIN: Oh, we are moving forward right now with securing our borders. Rodriguez ended the segment by confessing that immigration was not the only issue on the minds of Hispanic voters: "While immigration is an important issue, especially symbolically and emotionally for Latinos, it is not the most important. In a new CBS News/New York Times poll out this morning, 45% of Hispanics see the economy as the country's most important problem, 18% say the war in Iraq, and just 3% say immigration." Rodriguez began the interview by asking McCain about the depiction of Obama on the cover of the New Yorker: "Have you seen the cover of the New Yorker?...Your feeling, is satire acceptable?" On the economy, Rodriguez asked about a bailout plan for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and wondered: "How much blame should the Bush Administration take for that?" Here is the full transcript of the July 16 segment:
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Member of the MRC Family The wider Media Research Center family suffered a loss over the weekend with the passing at age 81 of Patricia "Trish" Buckley Bozell, the mother of our founder and President, L. Brent Bozell III. I met and talked with her several times since the MRC's founding and found her delightful, with an upbeat attitude and always excited to help me and others with the editing of a book project or offering advice on the best way to construct sentences to make our intended points clear. She sometimes fretted that she had fallen behind a promised deadline and worried about how it might impact us -- when we were the beneficiaries of her editing wisdom. Her life earned a picture and plug, on the front of the Tuesday Washington Post "Metro" section, for her obituary. For "Patricia Buckley Bozell, 81; Activist Founded a Catholic Opinion Journal," by Adam Bernstein, go to: www.washingtonpost.com
National Review Online has posted a "symposium" of several tributes to her. Here are two of them I found the most meaningful: Trish Bozell was one of the liveliest and warmest women I have ever known. Her smile could warm up the coldest room. She was working in tandem with her brother when I joined NR in 1957, and continued to do so for several years. She was a highly competent writer and editor, and I know that Bill relied on her heavily. They were extremely close, and almost laughably alike in many ways. When family responsibilities finally forced her to step down, we were all desolate. Thereafter I watched as she managed the growth of her ten childrenâ€"all of whom matured into political carbon copies of herself, her brother Bill, and the other siblings in that wonderful family. If I had to single out one characteristic of her personality, I think it would be her conviviality. Any group of people seemed to become almost automatically more vivacious when Trish joined it. It is touching, but not surprising, that she followed Bill so soon after his death. They were, and all their lives remained, a team. My condolences go to her family and her many friends. May she find in Heaven the welcome she deserves.
....When I found out she was dying I wrote her to say just what I thought about her, and she wrote back: "Okay, so I love you too -- from the very first when we peered around the Madison Hotel searching each other out for our first meeting. Nothing came of the book (which is too bad, I think) but what did emerge overpowers anything else -- my love for you. Which endures. And will continue to endure. I told Bill when he said a few days before his death that he was dying that I wouldn't be far behind. And Voila! Bill never was one for patience." Boy, did he ever love her, and vice versa. And why not? Especially as both had an impish gene. This from Bill's Miles Gone By, recounting the Buckley children at play, horsing around at a horse show, with the high and mighty: Some of the horse shows were also social occasions, calling for elaborate picnics and forms of fraternization. Every year in Rhinebeck, New York, a few miles north of Hyde Park, the box alongside my father's was occupied by the president of the United States, who played the country squire at least once every season at the Duchess County Horse Show. I remember the afternoon when Trish won the blue ribbon. Protocol requires the winner to ride around the ring to receive the plaudits of the spectators. When she rode by the president's box, FDR applauded lustily, whereupon Trish abruptly turned her pigtailed head to one side. A moment later, blue ribbon and riding crop in one hand, she came buoyantly to the family box. "Why didn't you nod to the president?" my father whispered to her. "I thought you didn't like him!" Trish's face was pained with surprise. It's not everyone who can claim to have flipped a pigtail at FDR. As for pained looks of surprise, surely there was no cause for that when she received her Eternal Reward this weekend. If anyone deserved V.I.P access, it's Trish. Well, holy and impish and lovely lady, wonderful mother and grandmother and wife and sibling and friend, good bye. Your newfound happiness swamps any sadness we might have. And if you don't mind, given your proximity to The Ear, keep putting in a good word for us as you have been these many years. For the entire set of tributes: article.nationalreview.com
-- Brent Baker ![]()
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