- Nov 22, 2008
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This is embarrassing for NPR, and sad for the rest of us. What was caught on tape was something we already know but want to ignore or overlook as if it does not exist, that is, until, it smacks us on the face. I am regular NPR listener and I believe they significantly improved after the Juan Williams incident. I believed that they have mended themselves and all is OK now... but OMG this is shocking...
To be fair to the story...
Quotes from articles
Links:
NPR - Audio
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The top fundraiser for NPR has resigned after a videotape became public showing him openly disparaging conservative groups during what he thought was a fundraising meeting. The video was recorded secretly during a lunch Ron Schiller had with two people who claimed to be eager to contribute to public radio.
To be fair to the story...
Schiller informed NPR he was resigning from his position before the video was shot, NPR spokeswoman Dana Davis Rehm said Tuesday. He was expected to depart in May, but has now been placed on administrative leave.
The heavily edited video shows Schiller and another NPR executive, Betsy Liley, meeting at a pricey restaurant in Washington's Georgetown neighborhood with two men claiming to be part of a Muslim organization. The men offer NPR a $5 million donation. NPR said Tuesday it was "repeatedly pressured" to accept a $5 million check, which the organization "repeatedly refused."
Quotes from articles
"The current Republican Party is not really the Republican Party. It's been hijacked by this group that is ... not just Islamophobic but, really, xenophobic," Schiller said in the video, referring to the tea party movement. "They believe in sort of white, middle America, gun-toting — it's scary. They're seriously racist, racist people."
Schiller had made the comments to a hidden camera during his interaction with O'Keefev, when he called the tea party movement that propelled Republicans to huge congressional gains in the midterm elections "scary" and "seriously racist," The Christian Science Monitor reports.
"I mean, basically they ... believe in sort of white, middle-America, gun-toting. I mean, it's scary. They're seriously racist, racist people," he said, adding that NPR would do better without federal funding.
Links:
NPR - Audio
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