Monday, October 10, 2011

ABC Enters Full Cheerleading Mode for Leftist Protests '



ABC Enters Full Cheerleading Mode for Leftist Protests 'Growing in Size and Diversity'
By: Brent Baker
Monday, October 10, 2011 9:29 AM EDT


ABC stepped up its promotion Sunday night on behalf of the far-left protesters, which they failed to label, making a special effort to explain and frame their grievances – a service they never provided to the Tea Party. “Tonight, the anger spreads,” anchor David Muir hailed in teasingWorld News on Sunday night. “Those Wall Street protests now going global. This evening here, we learn about the lives behind the protesters here in this country, showing up in cities coast to coast.”

Muir pointed viewers to a sign he liked: “Look at the images coming in tonight, spelling out the anger. This sign in New York, ‘The rich get bailed out, the poor get sold out.’” He relayed ABC’s goal, “We ask a simple question: What’s happened in the lives of the Americans who’ve joined these protests. What was it that set them off?” 

In the lead story, reporter Cecilia Vega championed: “The anger is in Las Vegas, the protests are huge in Houston. The frustration is in Portland. The outrage has spread all the way to Anchorage, Alaska. This is a group of protesters that is certainly growing in size and diversity.”

She stressed how in Manhattan she saw “a number of people come out who’ve never been here before, from senior citizens to people with their children.” Vega showcased soundbites from a man with a kids and an Iraq war veteran.

Following Vega’s piece, Muir guided her to agree the protesters really do have an understandable agenda: “So many people have said that this movement has lacked a central message, but it seems to be turning a corner. We’re hearing more and more people echo one another.”

Vega agreed, describing the agenda in the most innocuous way: “Yeah, as you said, entering the fourth week now. And it really is. There’s a central message here. It’s the economy. It’s a frustration with the economy, it’s a frustration with the lack of accountability and the inequality in the economy, as you heard so many different voices in our story.”

Afterward, ABC News political director Rick Klein insisted: “For Republicans, it is a little awkward for them to be criticizing the Occupy Wall Street gatherings when they cheered the populism of the Tea Party a few months ago.”

NBC didn’t lead with the protests on Sunday night, but still aired a full story. Anchor Lester Holt touted their relevance:
What began with a small disorganized protest on Wall Street here in lower Manhattan has now entered its fourth week, swelling to nationwide demonstrations against what protesters call corporate greed. The grassroots campaign is gaining steam through the use of social media and lawmakers in Washington and on the campaign trail are starting to weigh in.
In the subsequent NBC Nightly News story, reporter Ron Mott maintained “these protests have been largely peaceful and their messages of economic inequality, social injustice and peace over war are beginning to take root in the nation’s political debate.”

From Friday night: "NBC: Occupy Wall Street Like an ‘Arab Spring,’ is ‘Drawing Historical Comparisons"

From the top of the Sunday, October 9 World News on ABC:
 
DAVID MUIR: Good evening. It is great to have you with us this Sunday night. As we come on the air here, protesters are now beginning their fourth week of protesting right here in New York. South of here on Wall Street. But with a huge difference: this occupy Wall Street movement is multiplying not only in cities across this country, but now around the world. Look at the images coming in tonight, spelling out the anger. This sign in New York, “The rich get bailed out, the poor get sold out.” In Cincinnati today, this image, as 500 people rallied there. And overseas this evening from Dublin, demonstrators gathering along Ireland's Wall Street, just outside the central bank there.

And so tonight here we ask a simple question: What's happened in the lives of the Americans who’ve joined these protests. What was it that set them off? We begin here with ABC's Cecilia Vega.

CECILIA VEGA: The anger is in Las Vegas, the protests are huge in Houston. The frustration is in Portland. The outrage has spread all the way to Anchorage, Alaska. This is a group of protesters that is certainly growing in size and diversity. It definitely tends to be on the younger side, a number of college students who say they're not going anywhere soon. But on a Sunday after, we’re also seeing a number of people come out who’ve never been here before, from senior citizens to people with their children. Like Tom Eck and his kids. He’s been camping out for two days, one of his sons for two weeks. They came close to losing their home last year.

TOM ECK: It's hard to get -- afford food sometimes. I almost lost my house last year and I know a lot of people thathave lost their house.

VEGA: And Will Hopkins, a 30-year-old veteran of the Iraq war.

WILL TOMPKINS: This is a group of people who are upset about the way business is being done and with good reason.

VEGA: Protests continue today in the nation's capital. One day after marchers, including some anti-war groups, stormed the National Air and Space Museum. Guards pepper sprayed the crow and shut the museum down for the day. The camping and marching near Wall Street goes on and the people, some of them familiar faces, keep showing up.

What’s it going to take for this to stop, for guys to go home and go back to their lives and to walk away from all these marches?

MAN: Well, I hope that we continue to make the country better.

MUIR: And Cecilia Vega joins us here at the desk in New York. So many people have said that this movement has lacked a central message, but it seems to be turning a corner. We're hearing more and more people echo one another.

VEGA: Yeah, as you said, entering the fourth week now. And it really is. There's a central message here. It's the economy. It's a frustration with the economy, it's a frustration with the lack of accountability and the inequality in the economy, as you heard so many different voices in our story. So many people are bringing their personal stories to this, these marches, whether it's a lack of a job or the fact that they’re facing a foreclosure.

56% of GOP Voters Like Cain’s ‘9-9-9’ Tax Reform Plan

56% of GOP Voters Like Cain’s ‘9-9-9’ Tax Reform Plan

California allows illegal aliens to steal your child's future ...


October 10, 2011

Al Sharpton claim that Herman Cain is not “authentically black.”


October 09, 2011

Obama to protesters: Do as I say, not as I do


CURL: Obama to protesters: Do as I say, not as I do

Text Size: +-

FOLLOW US ON
facebookFACEBOOK
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
The first American generation to live a life of luxury, with scads of idle time to while away lounging and thinking, often half-stoned, was mine.
Born in the 1950s and ‘60s, the generation has known none of the hardships of their parents, born during the Great Depression and living through World War II. And they are literally light years from their grandparents - my grandfather used to tell stories about life before electricity, of outhouses in the Chicago winter, and how, out of work, he sold “four-in-hand” clip-on neckties for a penny on the street to young men looking for work.
His generation - the Lost Generation - produced the Greatest Generation, which in turn produced the Silent Generation. A 1951 Time magazine cover story defined that last group: “Youth today is waiting for the hand of fate to fall on its shoulders, meanwhile working fairly hard and saying almost nothing. The most startling fact about the younger generation is its silence. With some rare exceptions, youth is nowhere near the rostrum. By comparison with the Flaming Youth of their fathers and mothers, today’s younger generation is a still-small flame. It does not issue manifestos, make speeches or carry posters. It has been called the ‘Silent Generation.’”
That generation produced the baby boomers, from 1946 to 1964. Some 75 million postwar babies were born in that period, marked by rapid expansion of the middle class. The new generation lived in an idyllic time, a Norman Rockwell America, free from want, from war. And unlike their parents, they went off to college, the first generation to flock to the institutions of higher learning.
There, in the turbulent 1960s, they took issue with society, rejected traditional values, social mores. They were, relative to all other generations before them, the healthiest and wealthiest Americans ever. And yet they despised the America they lived in. As the U.S. fell into another war, this time in Vietnam, the idle college students took to the streets in anti-war protests and staged sit-ins at their universities. They were mad at The Man - more precisely, the military-industrial complex - that was sending them to war for greed.
The baby boomers produced an even softer offspring: Generation X. Author John Ulrich wrote that this generation turned away from politics and world affairs, defining them as “a group of young people, seemingly without identity, who face an uncertain, ill-defined (and perhaps hostile) future.” Despite the end of the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the invention of cable TV, the home computer and the Internet (not to mention video games), the MTV generation wanted everything - now - for free. With no understanding of the world in which their grandparents grew up, they believed they were owed success as a birthright.
Which brings us to today’s youth, Generation Y. Authors William Straussand Neil Howe say this generation is the “Fourth Turning,” which will question the very structure of society and seek to redefine it. They perceive the banks and “big business” as the devil and government as the good (which explains how in their America, nearly half the population lives in a household that receives money from the federal government).
It is this generation, aka the iGeneration, that today sits on Wall Street. And here are some of their demands: A single-payer health care system in which “private insurers must be banned from the health care market.” A guaranteed living wage income regardless of employment. Free college education. One trillion dollars in infrastructure spending now. Oh, and $1 trillion in “ecological restoration.”
But the very best is Demand Eleven: “Immediate across-the-board debt forgiveness for all. Debt forgiveness of sovereign debt, commercial loans, home mortgages, home equity loans, credit card debt, student loans and personal loans now! All debt must be stricken.”
Their spiritual leader is, of course, President Obama. He is incensed with how much money he makes and very much wishes he could give more of it to the government. “We should ask people like me to give up tax breaks that we don’t need and werent even asking for,” he is fond of saying.
But that was last week, before Mr. Obama headed off to the golf course (free round, of course) with his personal chef. After 18 holes, he flew in his personal helicopter to his presidential retreat, a 120-acre compound tucked away in Maryland’s Catoctin Mountains. There, he’ll enjoy a weekend of tennis, bowling, horseshoes, basketball, fly fishing, swimming, archery, skeet shooting and hiking, whatever his heart desires.
And the throng protesting on Wall Street is just fine with that. It’s The Man they have a problem with.
• Joseph Curl covered the White House and politics for a decade for The Washington Times. He can be reached at jcurl@washingtontimes.com.

Issa blasts administration over ATF, Solyndra affairs


Issa blasts administration over ATF, Solyndra affairs

** FILE ** Rep. Darrell Issa, California Republican, is chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. (Jeremy Lock/Special to The Washington Times)** FILE ** Rep. Darrell Issa, California Republican, is chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. (Jeremy Lock/Special to The Washington Times)

Text Size: +-

FOLLOW US ON
facebookFACEBOOK
Two scandals that have rocked the Obama administration are “causing Americans to lose confidence in their government,” Rep. Darrell Issa, California Republican, said on “Fox News Sunday.”
Mr. Issa, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, plans to issue new subpoenas this week in relation to the “Fast and Furious” gun-running operation, a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives program that used straw buyers to purchase firearms that then were supplied to Mexican drug cartels.
Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. testified in May that he had learned of “Fast and Furious” only weeks before, but recently released internal memos seem to tell a different story.
“We want to know what did they know and when did they know it. At what level did the authorization really come?” Mr. Issa said. “People at the top [of the Justice Department] were well briefed.”
He said he does not share President Obama’s “full confidence” in Mr.Holder, who late last week took aim at his Republican critics for using “irresponsible and inflammatory rhetoric” in questioning his leadership and continued to try to distance himself from the ill-fated operation.
In addition to “Fast and Furious,” Mr. Issa said, the administration also must answer questions regarding Solyndra, the bankrupt solar power company that received more than $500 million in federal loan money only to go belly up and leave taxpayers holding the bag.
“Solyndra is a story of political interference,” he said, adding that theadministration was so committed to furthering the renewable energy industry that it ignored the company’s financial problems and sought to invest even more taxpayer money despite the looming bankruptcy.

Featured Post

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....