Reporters Pay for Iraq
"Disaster" |
"The war in Iraq has basically turned out to be a disaster, and journalists
have paid for it, paid for the privilege of witnessing and reporting
that....By any indicator, Iraq is a black hole....Whether you take the number
of journalists killed or wounded, whether you take the number of American
soldiers killed or wounded, whether you take the number of Iraqi soldiers
killed and wounded, contractors, people working there, it just gets worse and
worse."
- CNN's Christiane Amanpour on Larry King Live, January 30,
discussing the bomb attack that wounded ABC co-anchor Bob Woodruff and
cameraman Doug Vogt.
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Press Corps: Bush Is a Loser |
Host Chris
Matthews: "Reporters who hang around the White House, like you do, every
day of your lives, is there a sense in the group that this guy's a winner or
a loser? Just as a politician?"
NBC White House correspondent David Gregory: "Oh, I think the
overriding sense in the press corps is that, that he's losing."
- Exchange on the syndicated Chris Matthews Show, February 5.
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TV's Sour Patch Kids |
"Elizabeth, the
country is just in a sour mood."
- George Stephanopoulos telling ABC anchor Elizabeth Vargas about the
latest polls, World News Tonight, Jan. 31.CNN's Paula Zahn: "What are
you looking for tonight in this speech [Bush's State of the Union address]?"
CNN's Jeff Greenfield: "Whether the President can connect with a
populace that is in a sour, pessimistic mood."
- Exchange on CNN's The Situation Room, January 31.
"I think what we're going to see tonight from the President is a pep
talk, in a sense, a presidential pep talk where he believes that the country
has, the mood has turned sour - sour on the war, sour on the economy, sour
on the government's response to Katrina."
- Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace during the Fox broadcast
network's State of the Union coverage, Jan. 31.
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All Nastiness = Bush's Fault |
"He [President
Bush] tries to unite but, of course, a lot of Democrats feel this has not
been a uniting President. They have gone down that road before, trying to
work with the President and, of course, the old expression is, 'Fool me
once, shame on you. Fool me more than once, fool me twice or ten times,
shame on me.'"
- ABC's Charles Gibson during live coverage before President Bush's State
of the Union address, January 31.Co-anchor Elizabeth Vargas: "He
reached out many, many times to the Democrats....The question, of course,
being whether or not Democrats will be able to embrace and accept the olive
branch...."
Co-anchor Charles Gibson: "You wonder if he had done this four years
ago, five years ago, if indeed there might have been greater comity in the
city of Washington, greater cooperation in the city than there has been so
far through the Bush presidency."
- During ABC's live coverage, January 31.
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Need Socialism, Not "Tinkering" |
"We spend about twice as much per person on health care in this country as
any other industrialized country. Yet we have 45 million [un]insured, and we
rank 37th in life expectancies, 41st in infant mortality. We've got a mess
on our hands, and all of the politicians, Bush, talk about is a little bit
of tinkering here on the edges. We need to say we've got a fundamental
problem. We have to change the system."
- ABC's Dr. Tim Johnson during live coverage following the President's
State of the Union address, January 31.
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The Troops Love General Hillary |
"Look at what
she's just done recently - she took some PAC money from her own political
action committee and gave it to Bob Casey in Pennsylvania, who is an
anti-choice nominee in the Democratic race there....She's certainly moved
herself over to the middle by getting on the Armed Services Committee, going
to Iraq, going to Afghanistan and showing real credentials on military
issues and you saw some of her votes on the war. She's very highly regarded
by the rank and file military for what she has done in support of the
troops."
- NBC's Andrea Mitchell discussing Senator Hillary Clinton's political
posturing, MSNBC's Hardball, February 6.
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...And Real Wars Mean Tax Hikes |
Brian Williams: "The President is known to be very frustrated at what
he sees as a large part of the population in the country, and in that
chamber tonight, that doesn't seem to agree with his message that this is a
nation at war. He's expressed frustration over and over on that."
Meet the Press host Tim Russert: "He has. Critics have
responded by saying, 'Well, if that's the case, Mr. President, ask people
for sacrifice.' Democrats have pointed out it's the first war we've been
involved in where the President hasn't raised the revenues or the taxes in
order to pay for it. The deficits have gotten bigger."
- NBC's live coverage of the State of the Union, Jan. 31.
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Reagan's "Lunatic" Conservatism |
"[Ronald Reagan]
was a product of the conservative revival of the 1950s and 60s, a revival
that was driven by a combination of free-market enthusiasm and anti-tax
fervor, superpatriotism and anti-Communism, religious revivalism and, to be
frank, wild-eyed lunacy, and he possessed a rare gift for rendering
conservative ideas into emotion-laden rhetoric. Even as a senior citizen in
the White House, Reagan was a sucker for far-out conservative ideas: from
the 'space lasers' that were being championed in Human Events (which
his aides tried to prevent him from reading) to Arthur Laffer's supply-side
economics."
- Adrian Wooldridge, The Economist's Washington, D.C. bureau
chief, in a January 29 New York Times book review of Richard Reeves'
new biography of Ronald Reagan.
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CBS's "House Conservative" |
"I spent a lot of
time with Richard Nixon, and he, I think he really genuinely liked me and,
and was serious about wanting me to come aboard [as press secretary]. And,
of course, I voted for him....I was a Nixon man, yeah. You know, we of the
liberal media, which you hear all the time, no. I was the house conservative
at CBS News for a while."
- Longtime 60 Minutes correspondent Mike Wallace on CNBC's Tim
Russert, January 14.
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PUBLISHER: L. Brent Bozell III EDITORS: Brent H. Baker, Rich Noyes, Tim Graham MEDIA ANALYSTS: Geoffrey Dickens, Brian Boyd, Brad
Wilmouth, Megan McCormack, Mike Rule, Scott Whitlock RESEARCH ASSOCIATE: Michelle
Humphrey CIRCULATION MANAGER: Jennifer Bookwalter |
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