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FOX peddles false reports...two cases of FOX News falsifying news reports

conjur

No Lifer
http://mediamatters.org/items/200412090002
Over the last two weeks, FOX News Channel has repeatedly -- and falsely -- reported that an elementary school in Cupertino, California, banned the Declaration of Independence because it mentioned God.

Between November 24 and December 7, the Cupertino case has been falsely reported on seven occasions on FOX News primetime programs, numerous times during FOX News daytime programming, as well as on FOX Broadcasting Network's FOX News Sunday. Hannity & Colmes planned a December 8 live broadcast from Cupertino; a promo for that show asserted that the Constitution and Declaration of Independence had been "banned" by a California school that is "erasing God." The November 29 edition of MSNBC's Scarborough Country falsely reported the story; CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNBC have not covered the story.

In fact, Stevens Creek Elementary School in Cupertino did not ban the Declaration of Independence. As the Cupertino Union School District stated in a November 30 news release, the Declaration is featured in the school's textbooks and is displayed in some school buildings. A December 8 editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle noted, "The Declaration of Independence is not banned from Stevens Creek Elementary School, or any classroom in Cupertino. Copies of the Declaration -- including the passages about the inalienable rights of all men 'endowed by their Creator' and the founders' 'reliance on the protection of divine providence' -- hang in classrooms. It appears in textbooks distributed throughout the district."

Even the lawsuit, which was brought forth on behalf of teacher Stephen Williams by the right-wing Alliance Defense Fund challenging the school's decision to prohibit the handouts, acknowledged that the school has not imposed an outright prohibition on the mention of God or the discussion of religious beliefs in the classroom. The lawsuit recognized that "other teachers are permitted to show films and distribute handouts containing references to God," and that Williams had been permitted to teach "lessons on the origins of religious holidays" during that school year and had provided handouts relating to religion in the past "without any problems." Despite that acknowledgement, an Alliance Defense Fund press release about the lawsuit was headlined "Declaration of Independence Banned from Classroom."

The notion that the school banned that document originated in an erroneous November 24 Reuters article headlined "Declaration of Independence Banned at Calif. School." But the school prohibited only supplemental handouts distributed by Williams to his students that selectively chose excerpts from the Declaration of Independence making reference to God -- along with other handouts that appeared to proselytize Christianity. A December 8 article in the San Francisco Chronicle noted that parents had complained to the school about Williams, stating that his teaching "crossed the line into evangelizing." In response, Stevens Creek Principal Patricia Vidmar began reviewing Wiiliams's lesson plans and supplemental handouts in advance.

The excerpts of the Declaration of Independence that Williams used as a supplemental handout (Exhibit C in the lawsuit ) all made reference to God. Among the other supplemental handouts, all of which related to the importance of Christian faith in U.S. history, was a proclamation by President George Bush for the National Day of Prayer (Exhibit A), coupled with a description of the event copied from the National Day of Prayer website: "The National Day of Prayer has great significance for us as a nation. It enables us to recall the way in which our founding fathers sought the wisdom of God when faced with critical decisions." Another handout entitled "What Great Leaders Have Said About the Bible" (Exhibit E) quoted only former American presidents' praise for the Bible, except for a final quote attributed to Jesus Christ. Williams also passed out several excerpts from the diary of former President John Adams (Exhibit H), one entry of which states: "The Christian religion is above all the religions that ever prevailed or existed in ancient or modern times, the religion of wisdom, virtue, equity and humanity."

Nonetheless, conservative media figures -- primarily on FOX News -- repeatedly distorted the Cupertino story. Williams was interviewed on the November 29 edition of FOX News' Hannity & Colmes along with Alliance Defense Fund attorney Jordan Lorence, but no guest appeared to defend the school. During that program, co-hosts Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes, as well as Williams and Lorence, falsely asserted that the school had banned the Declaration of Independence, without noting that only the handout including the excerpts chosen by Williams had been prohibited. Colmes revised his account of the story in subsequent editions of Hannity & Colmes.

Below is a summary of the pundits and programs presenting the false claim that Stevens Creek elementary school banned the Declaration of Independence because it mentions God:

Host Brit Hume, FOX News' Special Report with Brit Hume, November 24
Guest host and Big Story host John Gibson, FOX News' The O'Reilly Factor, November 26
Co-hosts Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes, FOX News' Hannity & Colmes, November 29
Guest host and MSNBC political analyst Monica Crowley, MSNBC's Scarborough Country, November 29
Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 3
Host Chris Wallace, FOX Broadcasting Company's FOX News Sunday, December 5
Host Bill O'Reilly and guest and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, The O'Reilly Factor, December 6
Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 6
Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 7
The Alliance Defense Fund was founded in 1993 by conservative religious leaders including Dr. James Dobson of Focus on the Family and D. James Kennedy of Coral Ridge Ministries.
Something tells me FOX will not be raked across the coals by the AM radio talking heads.

Wonder why?
 
There's more:


FOX's Baier claimed Duelfer report included "suspicions" that Saddam smuggled WMDs to Syria
http://mediamatters.org/items/200501130013
FOX News national security correspondent Bret Baier falsely claimed that the Iraq Survey Group's (ISG) report on the search for illicit weapons (WMDs) in Iraq articulated "suspicions that many weapons made their way into Syria before the war began." In fact, while Bush administration officials have hinted that they suspect Iraq smuggled banned weapons into Syria, the ISG's final report, commonly known as the Duelfer report, included no evidence to support this conjecture.

According to an October 6, 2004, Washington Post article:

The Bush administration has held out the possibility that illicit weapons and their components were secreted by [former Iraqi dictator Saddam] Hussein across the border into Syria. This may still be true, but [Charles] Duelfer's team did not find any proof to support this notion, the [U.S.] official [briefed on the report prior to its release to the public] said. "They have no evidence of this," the official said. "It's an unresolved issue." Syria denies it aided the hiding of illicit materials.

On the January 12 edition of FOX News' Special Report with Brit Hume, Baier reported:

Officials are also confirming that Charles Duelfer, the man who headed up the search for weapons of mass destruction, is back in the U.S. They say he will be adding some additional information to the interim report.

But basically, the September report will be the final conclusion, and that is that no stockpiles were found; Saddam had the ability to start up some of these programs quickly; and that there are still suspicions that many weapons made their way into Syria before the war began.

Baier's false claim echoes conservative pundits' frequent and equally baseless speculations. New York Times columnist William Safire wrote on December 22, 2004: "When and if we discover hidden supplies of germ weapons in Iraq or Syria, and as future confessions reveal the extent of connections between Al Qaeda and Saddam, the legion of war critics will forthrightly admit their certitude was misplaced."

FOX News host Sean Hannity has repeatedly asserted that Iraqi officials smuggled weapons to Syria. For example, on the November 21, 2004, edition of Hannity & Colmes, he and Washington Times national security reporter Bill Gertz agreed this was a "likely scenario":

HANNITY: I have never bought into this belief that we didn't find the WMDs, that they never existed, that we were wrong, that the president misled, that Congress misled. Because we know he had them. We know he was working on them. We spoke to the people. Isn't the more likely scenario, in this eight-month arduous build-up to the war, Saddam saw the handwriting on the wall, moved those weapons, probably to some place like Syria or thereabouts? Isn't that the more likely scenario?

GERTZ: Yes, yes. And there is intelligence to that effect, and they are working to try and confirm that.
FAUX News...they need to go ahead and change their name to fit their "news"
 
Hmm...did they falsify or create documents like mapes and rather? if not, don't expect the same treatment, it's not the same behavior.
 
Originally posted by: Gravity
Hmm...did they falsify or create documents like mapes and rather? if not, don't expect the same treatment, it's not the same behavior.
From the 2nd post about the false claim about the WMDs seems to be just as bad to me. Making false statements over the air? You're defending that?
 
So...they took a Reuters story and ran with it and it was later proven false. Fire people at Fox and Reuters?

The school released a statement Nov 30 proving it was false so....These people must be fired.
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 3
# Host Chris Wallace, FOX Broadcasting Company's FOX News Sunday, December 5
# Host Bill O'Reilly and guest and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, The O'Reilly Factor, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 7
 
Originally posted by: maddogchen
So...they took a Reuters story and ran with it and it was later proven false. Fire people at Fox and Reuters?

The school released a statement Nov 30 proving it was false so....These people must be fired.
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 3
# Host Chris Wallace, FOX Broadcasting Company's FOX News Sunday, December 5
# Host Bill O'Reilly and guest and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, The O'Reilly Factor, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 7
FOX took it the extra step on Nov. 24 by claiming it was because of word God was included.

They also falsified a story re:the Duelfer report.
 
Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: maddogchen
So...they took a Reuters story and ran with it and it was later proven false. Fire people at Fox and Reuters?

The school released a statement Nov 30 proving it was false so....These people must be fired.
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 3
# Host Chris Wallace, FOX Broadcasting Company's FOX News Sunday, December 5
# Host Bill O'Reilly and guest and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, The O'Reilly Factor, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 6
# Hannity, Hannity & Colmes, December 7
FOX took it the extra step on Nov. 24 by claiming it was because of word God was included.

They also falsified a story re:the Duelfer report.

oh, whoops missed that part.

 
While this is a lesser story due to the timing of the CBS story, it's still worth noting....but people that rely on Fox News, sadly, will never understand that they are pretty much only hearing one side of the story on most issues that have any political impact whatsoever.
 
they won't fire O'Reilly for molesting himself, they have Geraldo as a reporter. they won't fire anybody for anything, even if they reveal troop positions
 
FOX took it the extra step on Nov. 24 by claiming it was because of word God was included.

Yup, remember, this is the kind of 'much needed objectivity' Rupert Murdoch feels is missing from mainstream media.
 
Originally posted by: Gravity
Hmm...did they falsify or create documents like mapes and rather? if not, don't expect the same treatment, it's not the same behavior.
Mapes created those documents!? Damn...
 
Well when Hannity did his show from cupertino showcasing this story they invited the school board to send a representative to give their side and they declined. Seems to me if it was absolutely a fabrication they would have had someone there to clarify the facts yet they didn't. That leads me to suspect that there is a certain degree of truth to the reports. That said it in no way compares to the fabrication and publicizing of known forged documents like in the ABC case.
 
Originally posted by: NesuD
Well when Hannity did his show from cupertino showcasing this story they invited the school board to send a representative to give their side and they declined. Seems to me if it was absolutely a fabrication they would have had someone there to clarify the facts yet they didn't. That leads me to suspect that there is a certain degree of truth to the reports. That said it in no way compares to the fabrication and publicizing of known forged documents like in the ABC case.

Forged documents that everyone involved, except the white house, agreed where factually accurate.
 
I heard that they didn't have the original documents and CBS based their decision on a copy. Hence the results.

Duno how accurate that is tho.
 
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