"Liberal Media" My ASS, Part II

ImTyping

Banned
Aug 6, 2001
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Don't tell me this is old news when you right wing lunatics want to talk about PENISGATE all over again!!!

For those of you not smart enough to read an entire article, I will provide some pertinent quotes:

(Concerning how the press handled Gore)

<< The hostility was evident throughout the campaign as the press, in a series of questionable endeavors, worked overtime to portray Gore as a fake. For instance, after combing through twenty years' worth of public statements, the Boston Globe last year ran a typical, and contemptuous, 3,000-word expos? exploring the vice president's propensity to exaggerate. Or, as the paper tsk-tsked, "Gore has regularly promoted himself, and skewered his opponents, with embroidered, misleading and occasionally false statements." No doubt uncharted territory for a major American politician.

After all that research, what did the Globe's Walter Robinson and Michael Crowley find to be among Gore's most egregious exaggerations? "Starting in 1994, Gore has added two years to his journalistic experience, upping the figure from the five years he once claimed to seven." This may seem to be the very definition of trivial - "gotcha" journalism carried to its absurd extreme. But it's also wrong.

By biographers' accounts, Gore spent two years in the Army as a reporter, or "information specialist," and five years working for The Tennessean. That's seven years. The number has never changed. Asked about the discrepancy, Robinson now argues that Gore spent only nineteen months in the Army and that his five years at The Tennessean were interrupted by two years in law school, when he worked part-time at the paper. "It was another example of Gore sort of rounding things up to his advantage, trying to make it into something bigger," says Robinson.
>>

In other words, a 5 month gap in his employment record is portrayed as a huge lie. Bushlite cannot account for 20 years of his life when he was stoned out of his mind, yet you hypocrites don't want to talk about that.



Concerning the press misquoting Gore and then not retracting their mistakes:

<< It's no surprise that GOP operatives would willfully misinterpret a statement from a Democratic presidential candidate. What's amazing is that the press went along with it so uncritically. Was it accurate? The press didn't care, as virtually every major media outlet in the country followed the Republican lead and reported over and over again Gore's claim to have invented the Internet. >>



Despite the fact that Gore did NOT say he invented the internet (that quote is taken out of context), Newt Gingrich and the person who actually helped invent the internet both gave props to Al Gore's involvement in the beginnings of the project.



<< Often, the GOP didn't even have to prompt the press to create Gore exaggerations - reporters did it all on their own. During a September campaign stop, Gore recalled to a crowd of union workers that his mother used to sing him to sleep at night using "Look for the Union Label" as a lullaby. The press started digging and discovered the story was a fraud and "must be labeled untrue," as USA Today's political columnist Walter Shapiro reported. The TV jingle was written in 1975, when Gore was twenty-seven years old. The story was quickly picked up by cable TV's talkers and print columnists as another "bizarre fabrication."

The only problem was that Gore told the tale as a joke, confirmed by the video of the event, which showed the audience of Teamsters laughing at the mention of the so-called "lullaby." A week later, an editorial in USA Today addressed the issue and actually sided with Gore: "A review of the videotape gives plausibility to that explanation."
>>


In other words, it was almost as if the press was trying to help Bushlite by taking what he said out of context and then calling him a liar.

Even when Gore points out something that was wrong to begin with, the media portrayed him as a liar:



<< For instance, the candidate was ridiculed endlessly after the infamous Love Story flap. Actually, what Gore mentioned to two reporters in an offhand comment was that, according to an old Tennessean article,Love Story author Segal had made that claim. After Gore's quip, Segal corrected the record by saying that The Tennessean had gotten it wrong, and that both Gore and his Harvard roommate, actor Tommy Lee Jones, had served as models for Love Story's male protagonist, but that Segal did not base any character on Tipper.

Simple, right? Three years later, Newsweek still could not figure it out. Busy documenting embellishments weeks before Election Day, the magazine's Bill Turque wrote that the vice president "was not the basis for the Oliver Barrett character in Love Story." That sentence continues, ". . . author Erich Segal says Barrett was a combination of Gore and his Harvard pal Tommy Lee Jones." So why, then, was Gore belittled for his association with Love Story? Turque concedes the sentence "could have been more artfully worded" but insists "it is not fundamentally contradictory."
>>



The utter myopia of the press can be summed up in this paragraph:



<< (Washington Post reporter)Connolly dismisses the criticism (of her misquoting and then trashing Gore). "I was very tough on Al Gore," she says, "the same way I was tough on George W. Bush when I covered him briefly" during the campaign. Tough? Traveling for just a few days with the Bush campaign, Connolly wrote that the candidate "evoked memories of another governor-turned-president: Ronald Reagan." The young Republican candidate, with "just a bit of swagger for the party faithful," was a "cheerful patriot" with a "sunny disposition" who "jauntily plays to the cameras and crowds." Compare that to a single dispatch from the Gore trail, in which Connolly derided the vice president as "boring" and "programmed to the point of seeming robotic" and mocked his "rarely seen human side." >>



In other words, calling Gore a liar is equivalent toughness to comparing Bushlite to Ronald Reagan. She was right about one thing...I bet Bushlite is about as smart as Ronnie is right now.

Hopefully the next time around, you will see a Democratic candidate that kicks reporters in the nutz first, then Bushlite second.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
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"Did bad press cost Al Gore the election last year? It's naive to think Gore's chronically caustic coverage didn't cause him to lose votes during a historically close election. Looking back, Gore's handlers accept responsibility for mistakes they made during the campaign.
When will journalists do the same? "



Looks like the above quote shows the above "journalists" bias.



 

ImTyping

Banned
Aug 6, 2001
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<< Bush was a drug addict for 20 years? Did not know that...but now I do. >>



Do a little research before you come back with sarcastic comments. And no, I will not provide you with convenient links. Do the work yourself, or keep your eyes closed. Your choice.
 

Siva

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2001
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Don't mind ImTyping, the networks rejected him when he tried out to be a political pundit on one of those god awful Sunday morning shows, now he has nothing better to do than post this. I'm sorry, there's posting to prove a point or start a discussion, and then there's posting to get a reaction. This thread just begs for a reaction.

I'd rather both sides stop whining, if the media is so biased don't watch the news, or read the paper. They don't need your support like you don't need their opinions.
 

PistachioByAzul

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
5,132
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The media isn't "liberal-biased" as much as it is dumb and sensational, which happens to go along well with the campaigning tactics of so-called liberals (Democrats)
 

Cyberian

Diamond Member
Jun 17, 2000
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< ... right wing lunatics ... >

<For those of you not smart enough to read an entire article, I will provide some pertinent quotes:>


Well, with a friendly greeting like that who could not want want to read your link and agree with you?
 

kamiam

Banned
Dec 12, 1999
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<< Don't mind ImTyping, the networks rejected him when he tried out to be a political pundit on one of those god awful Sunday morning shows, now he has nothing better to do than post this. I'm sorry, there's posting to prove a point or start a discussion, and then there's posting to get a reaction. This thread just begs for a reaction.

I'd rather both sides stop whining, if the media is so biased don't watch the news, or read the paper. They don't need your support like you don't need their opinions.
>>



Siva I believe you just described a "flamebaiting troll":Q:cool:;)
 

BigNeko

Senior member
Jun 16, 2001
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This stuff happens all over. Get the book "What's news in India" to see what happens elsewhere.
Want unbiased reporting? I believe the Christian Science Monitor is still regarded as the most unbiased of periodicals.
 

Rogue

Banned
Jan 28, 2000
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You know, maybe we would have been better off with that robot of a man during this whole war in Afghanistan. He could have controlled the UAVs and Tomahawk missles with mind control and lied to the Taliban so badly that even Osama would have killed himself to find the truth. Yeah, that's it! :D
 

Lankin

Senior member
Nov 4, 2001
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There were times the media got it wrong, but times when Gore was caught in a out right fib. Gore told alot of fibs during the election, most of them had to do with medication *wink*, and yes there are about four to five stories he made up dealing with medication, told one or two of them during a debate as well...


 

linuxboy

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
2,577
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I don't quite follow. How is "your ass" a part of "liberal media"? And as for part II, do you mean to say that BOTH cheeks are involved?

Cheers ! :)
 

Fastball

Banned
Apr 11, 2001
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Gore's an idiot, just like the vast majority of his supporters.

I just thank God that G.W. is running the show now. I couldn't sleep at night if we had a Democrat in office right now.
 

Tominator

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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ImTyping

..another pathetic cryin in your hands Liberal ....:(

Gore had a habit of stretching the truth and the press got tired of folks like Matt Drudge running with the stories. Afterall, they were true! All the inuendos about Bush do not lend well to your case either.

Gore was a slum lord.....:D
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
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Engin9r hit the nail on the head. The press is generally just happy to run with any story that will sell or increase ratings. In most cases, those stories happen to coinside with a liberal agenda, but that's not always the case.

For example, the press loves to jump all over stories like Columbine, and show the evil of guns etc, and bring on all these 'experts' to tell us we need more gun laws. Dry statistics and real evidence to the contrary doesn't sell, so it seems like the press has a liberal agenda.

Furthermore, no matter how you try to turn things, if most of the major news anchors are liberals (Jennings, Brokaw, Rather etc), it certainly shows in the way they speak or conduct interviews -- even if they tried to conceal it. When Rather interviews a republican, you can literally hear the contempt in his voice, regardless of his 'professionalism'.