Stolen Honor: Sinclair Under Fire 323
worm eater writes "The Sinclair Broadcasting Group, in its latest politically charged move, has announced that it will air a 90-minute anti-Kerry documentary a week before the election. The video, 'Stolen Honor: Wounds That Never Heal,' was funded by a group of Pennsylvania POWs that has merged with the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Sinclair, which is the largest TV broadcasting group in the nation, has 62 affiliates, many in swing states. It made news in April by refusing to let any of its affiliates air an edition of Nightline in which Ted Koppel read the names of US soldiers who had died in Iraq, saying the broadcast was politically motivated. Predictably, liberal blogs are fighting back."
Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
That's not hypocritical. It's called bullying.
Let's call a spade a spade.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Interesting)
A. This is not a "news story". It is a 90 minute Swift boat smear commercial for Bush, uninterrupted by other commercials, being presented under the guise of news.
B. The right to a free press is restricted to those with printing presses. Sinclair does not own the public airwaves it will use to broadcast this garbage. Any right-wing media conglomerate is free to express its opinions under First Amendment protection, using cable, a web site, or a bullhorn- once its broadcast license has been revoked in accordance with the law. Broadcasting an infomercial for the president on public airwaves is a blatant violation of McCain-Feingold. Amazingly, the FCC under Michael Powell shows no interest in enforcing the law in this case.
C. There is a conflict of interest here. One of Sinclair's wholly owned subsidiaries (Jadoo Power Systems) has just been awarded a contract to develop power systems for the US Special Operations Command. [prnewswire.com] The other major investor in Jadoo is Contango Capital Management, located in Houston TX, whose Managing Partner is John Berger [contangocapital.com] who used to manage energy trading books for Enron Corporation and who also served as an advisor to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in 2002 and 2003. This stinks to high heaven.
D. In case you didn't think he was an asshat, the CEO of Sinclair made the following statement on CNN this morning [cnn.com]:
So press coverage of car bombs and unemployment statistics is equivalent to unfair free campaign commercials for Kerry. And the rest of the press are "Holocaust deniers" for denying partisan political hacks a forum from which they can make baseless thirty-year-old accusations on the eve of a close election.
This from the same media conglomerate that back in April suppressed Nightline's reading of the names of soldiers killed in Iraq because it was "contrary to the public interest." Riiiight.
Who ever said the media had a liberal bias? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who ever said the media had a liberal bias? (Score:3, Insightful)
You haven't got it straight yet.
Lots of stations would love to air Fahrenheit 9/11. Instant ratings! For example, I did not see it in the theaters, and would not waste my money renting it, but would probably watch at least some of it if it was on broadcast TV. I'm sure I'm not the only one.
Unfortunately for Moore's political agenda (but fortunately for his pocketbook), he chose a distributer which wants to make a profit, so they are not
Re:Who ever said the media had a liberal bias? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, you know, it could have implied that any suppression of speech for political gain would not be tolerated.
If you want to talk about hypocrisy, then here's some details [cnn.com] about when Sinclair Broadcasting tried to stop the broadcasting of Iraq fatalities because it was "unpatriotic" (the word used in the article). Compare it with today's story about Sinclair leveraging their stations to air the anti-Kerry piece to as many people as possible so close to the national elections. It's a little tougher to explain why that's not hypocritical, don't you think? They couldn't POSSIBLY be politically motivated right?
=Smidge=
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
2.) Is political speech on network television illegal? I hadn't heard it.
3.) You, the public, have leased your public airwaves to the networks through your duly elected representatives and their appointed officials. You forgot to include riders preventing partisan political speech when you did that, so you don't have much room to complain now.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Weak semantics..
I am not implying that political speech on network television is illegal. I was merely refuting the point the parent had made asking the difference between F9/11 and Stolen Honor.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Informative)
Why is it important that Sinclair Broadcasting be urged in all lawful ways that can be imagined to reconsider its decision to broadcast on its television stations the anti-Kerry "documentary"?
Because in a large, pluralistic information society democracy will not work unless electronic media distribute reasonably accurate information and also competing opinions about political candidates to the entire population. Certainly, for the overwhelming number of voters this year, controlling impressions of the candidates for President are obtained from television.
In all countries, candidates for public office governments aspire to have favorable information and a chorus of favorable opinion disseminated through mass media to the citizenry. In a democracy, on the eve of a quadrennial election, the incumbent government plainly has a motive to encourage the media to report positively on its record but also negatively on the rival. But its role instead is to make sure that broadcast television promote democracy by conveying reasonably accurate reflections of where the candidates stand and what they are like.
To that end, since television was invented, Congress and its delegated agency, the Federal Communications Commision, together have passed laws and regulations to ensure that broadcast television stations provide reasonably accurate, balanced, and fair coverage of major Presidential and Congressional candidates. These obligations are reflected in specific provisions relating to rights to buy advertising time, bans against the gift of advertising time, rights to reply to opponents, and various other specific means of accomplishing the goal of balance and fairness. The various rules are part of a tradition well known to broadcasters an honored by almost all of them. This tradition is embodied in the commitment of the broadcasters to show the conventions and the debates.
Part of this tradition is that broadcasters do not show propaganda for any candidate, no matter how much a station owner may personally favor one or dislike the other. Broadcasters understand that they have a special and conditional role in public discourse. They received their licenses from the public -- licenses to use airwaves that, for instance, cellular companies bought in auctions -- for free, and one condition is the obligation to help us hold a fair and free election. The Supreme Court has routinely upheld this "public interest" obligation. Virtually all broadcasters understand and honor it.
Sinclair has a different idea, and a wrong one in my view. If Sinclair wants to disseminate propaganda, it should buy a printing press, or create a web site. These other media have no conditions on their publication of points of view. This is the law, and it should be honored. In fact, if the FCC had any sense of its responsibility as a steward of fair elections its chairman now would express exactly what I am writing to you here.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
They are absolutely public airwaves, and they ALL have the right to show/say whatever they want on them, and you have the right not to watch/listen
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Interesting)
There is, as far as I'm aware, no move from the left to try to pull Limbaugh off the air through the law or political lobbying. Radio is open enough that the major restrictions imposed on TV do not really apply. Indeed
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:4, Informative)
F/911 was a film produced for cinemas. You know, the kind you have to actively seek out and pay for!
Stolen Honor is an extended ad for the Swift Boat liars that all of the major networks ran away from. So, Sinclair, is using the public airwaves (which they don't own) to broadcast a nakedly partisan *smear* for the Bush campaign.
The two are entirely different. If you can't see that, well, then you are an idiot.
Again, you had to actively seek out and pay for F/911. OTHO, Sinclair is illegally making use of *public* airwaves to broadcast a Bush campaign smear.
They should be sued by their shareholders for such a stupid move.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Insightful)
You really honestly think Fahrenheit 911 being released in theaters where you have to pay between $6-$11 (nationally) to see it as the same as a normal television channel airing a "news item" with no commericials on PUBLIC AIRWAVES?
Are you crazy? Are you blind? How are they at all the same.
What IS hypocritical, is that the republicans shut down a movie about the Reagan family (The Reagans, supposed to air on CBS) because they felt it was unfair/politically motivated. AND IT WASN'T EVEN ABOUT A CURRENT CANDIDATE!!!!!
You want to talk about hypocritical....
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
Cool! You mean some media conglomerate has ordered its affiliates to run Fahrenheit 9/11 a week before the election? When is it on?
To clarify: Moore has said he'd like to have F-9/11 available for release before the election, perhaps on Pay-Per-View, but that's not the same as Sinclair ordering affiliates to run a program. No one is going to make me buy any of Moore's films, or pay to allow others to watch it, but the airwaves belong to all of us. When a television
Getting it straight (Score:3)
It's not hypocritical. People who see F9/11 are voluntarily paying $10 per movie ticket / $15+ per DVD to watch it. Plus, they have to make the decision to go out to the local cinema/video store to view/obtain it. Much more time-consuming that simply flipping on your television.
There would only be hypocrisy if F9/11 was being broadcast for free on television. But that's not the case.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Insightful)
The difference here, as has been said, is that F9/11 was a pay-to-see thing; this anti-Kerry smear is going to be aired for free on public airwaves. I fail to see any hypocrisy here on the part of the left.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:3, Interesting)
That's not even remotely true. If it was, "60 Minutes" would have to follow up just about every show with a one-hour attack on Democrats.
The so-called "fairness doctrine" (which is no longer rigidly enforced anyway) only applies of you spend broadcast time tellin
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:3, Insightful)
I've been similarly convinced in the opposite direction. Perhaps it's just because the media will sensationalise anything, and extremes are sensational. So, some stories will be emphasising the left wing (and the right-wingers will notice and complain, while the left-wingers won't even notice the bias because the left-coloured sh
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:damn liberal media bias! (Score:2)
Re:damn liberal media bias! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:damn liberal media bias! (Score:2, Insightful)
2. MTV and VH1 vs. one country music singer?
3. You named 4 actors, 3 of which don't act anymore and one is dead. How about these:
Altman, Robert; Anderson, Gillian; Asner, Ed; Baldwin, Alex; Basinger, Kim; Begley, Ed, Jr; Belafonte, Harry; Browne, Jackson; Carroll, Diahann; CCH Pounder; Cheadle, Don; Clayburgh, Jill; Clooney, George; Coyote, Peter; Crouse, Lindsay; Crowe, Sheryl; Cusak, Joan;
They deny it (Score:5, Informative)
Since they're basically slashdotted, this is on their front page:
We welcome your comments regarding the upcoming special news event featuring the topic of Americans held as prisoners of war in Vietnam. The program has not been videotaped and the exact format of this unscripted event has not been finalized. Characterizations regarding the content are premature and are based on ill-informed sources.
Massachusetts Senator John Kerry has been invited to participate. You can urge him to appear by calling his Washington, D.C. campaign headquarters at
(202) 712-3000.
if you would like to make further comments on this matter, you may do so at:
comments@sbgi.net
Re:They deny it (Score:2, Insightful)
That is, until the Sinclair VP repeated the Republican party line saying that if Kerry can't sit down and face this group of Vietnam veterans, ho
Re:They deny it (Score:3, Interesting)
Contact the Advertisers who support Sinclair (Score:5, Informative)
List of Advertisers [boycottsbg.com]
Furthermore, just in case you don't think your phone call will do anything, see a little morale-booster [dailykos.com] from Kos.
Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:5, Insightful)
If your are pro-Kerry, but it wouldn't bother you to see a hatchet job on Bush at the same time by the same basic people, then you really have no grounds to complain.
Flip-side, if you are Pro-Bush, but would not want to see a hatchet job on Kerry at the same time, then you should not support this.
Personally, since I sort of fall into the latter category (I'm not 100% for Bush, but Kerry has completely failed to convince me he is better in the ways I personally care about; this is disclosure, not a request to be "corrected", OK?), my personal opinion is that this is an inappropriate action to take, and I don't care what side does it. If it was run earlier, I don't think I'd care, and there have certainly been hatchet jobs on both sides meeting this criteria, but the closer you get to the election, the more important it is for large entities to shut the hell up and leave the final voting as a matter between the candidates and the voters.
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
Crud, that should read "hatchet job on Bush" both times. Went too far with the logical negations.
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:3, Funny)
Once again, we get the violence vs sex disconnect in the States; If you're President, you can get a hatchet job, but you can't get a blow job.
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
Do you want this to go back-to-back with Fahrenheit 9/11? That's the correct comparison. Actually, if Sinclair was willing to air BOTH, I think they'd get some credit for balance. But of course they aren't interested in that.
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
You haven't been paying much attention to his defenses all over the place I guess. When added to anonymization, your credibility approaches zero.
As for the "offer" to "respond on air"--yeah, I'm going to speak for what, maybe 10 minutes, after a 90 minute asassinatin of my character, and be able to accomplish what? I suppose if they'd let him submit F911 as his "response", maybe that'd add some balance. :-)
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
That said, I do find it interesting that although F9/11 scored over $100M in the box office, is doing very well on DVD, and MM stated several times that he'd like to see his movie on TV before the elections, that no TV station seems to be taking him up on the offer. Anybody else wonder why the liberal media isn't all over this?
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:2)
This is America. Protecting political expression is what the First Amendment is for. Otherwise, why have it?
Re:Remember, the standard for judging is... (Score:5, Funny)
Here's a list of those stations:
<ul></ul>
POWs? (Score:5, Insightful)
POWs like John McCain? Scarred veterans like Max Cleland? Maybe the veteran William Laws Calley? For shame!
Maybe a drunk, AWOL frat boy high on coke and Air National Guard issue oxygen could help us set the record straight here? I hear he got kidnapped by Delta Kappa Phi once and forced to drink a whole keg of Bud, I guess that makes him not only a POW, but subject of cruel and unusual punishment as well. Talk about stolen honor...
Re:POWs? (Score:3, Informative)
There were many more people in the Hanoi Hilton than John McCain, and many of them have repeatedly told stories of how the North Vietnamese played tapes of John Kerry's senate testimony to break their wills.
You named three people. The vets putting this documentary together number over a hundred and many of them were POWs in the Hanoi Hilto
Re:POWs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Let people think? I don't think he can force people to think, but this is what he's said himself:
Doesn't this violate the equal time rule? (Score:4, Informative)
a Federal Communications Commission rule that requires equal air time for all major candidates competing for political office. It was preceded by the fairness doctrine, abolished in 1987, which required radio and television broadcasters to air contrasting views on controversial public issues.
Re:Doesn't this violate the equal time rule? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sinclair is claiming (or is purported to want to claim) that this is "news", and therefore exempt from the "equal time" legislation.
If the courts rule that they have to offer equal time to Kerry supporters, I'll bet they back off.
Babylon 5 (Score:2, Funny)
Did anyone else read the headline and think the same thing?
Re:Babylon 5 (Score:2, Funny)
> Did anyone else read the headline and think the same thing?
does anyone need further proof that the war on drugs is a failure?
A little dose of reality, here... (Score:5, Insightful)
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
Now, if Kerry were to use his position as a senator to enact punitive bitch-slap legislation that was aimed at Sinclair, then yes; there's a clear violation. However, as it stands, what we have here is a media conglomerate throwing its corporate weight around to promote a particular political viewpoint. Period.
So much for the "Liberal Media" meme.
Re:A little dose of reality, here... (Score:4, Insightful)
There are many who think that corporations should lose their rights as "citizens" and, failing that, that perhaps the "corporate veil" should be removed from the owners.
Corporation: all the rights and none of the responsibilities.
Oh, and of course, IANAL.
Re:A little dose of reality, here... (Score:2)
Human beings have the right to free speech.
Humans also have the constitutional right to free association.
Therefore it follows that humans who have associated themselves have the same rights of free speech collectively that they do as individuals.
Therefore they have the right to throw their corporate weight around to promote a particular political viewpoint. Period.
The invention of the corporation as an individual entity (an idea which I am against) has little or
Re:A little dose of reality, here... (Score:2)
So no newspapers either? (Score:3, Insightful)
I like this quote from one of the web pages [stopsinclair.org]:
Sure, be outraged, but you can't do anything about it. T
Re:A little dose of reality, here... (Score:2)
While I tend to agree with you that businesses should not be treated as people, the wording of the 1st Amendment does not protect the freedom of speech of people only. It merely says "the freedom of speech", which could apply to individuals or businesses.
Of course, that disregards 200 years of court opinion which ha
Letter from former FCC chair re: Sinclair (Score:5, Informative)
Excerpts from "Stolen Honor" (Score:4, Informative)
Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:5, Insightful)
read the names of US soldiers who had died in Iraq, saying the broadcast was politically motivated.
Reading the names of the fallen used to be considered an act of honoring the memory of the soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice.
Honorable and truthful activities should be carried out regardless of whether some political faction or other thinks they can make hay from it.
It's yet another symptom of our society where perception trumps substance. What matters is how something is perceived - not what it actually is.
Re:Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:2)
Reading the names of the fallen used to be considered an act of honoring the memory of the soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice
Not necessarily. If you read the names off under the implied heading "These are the men George W. Bush killed:" (which is what this is) then it is neither honorable nor an act of respect. It's a deceitful attempt to use their sacrifices to assert something (ie. the war in Iraq was "the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time") that the soldiers, (let's be honest) i
Re:Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:2)
We have a volunteer army. Every soldier in Iraq signed up of his or her own volition. They aren't children.
I would say anyone old enough to decide to put themselves in the position of killing or being killed aren't children. At all.
And they shouldn't be treated as such.
Any laws on the books requiring an age of majority of 21, for example, but allow an age of 18 for this most responsible of all decisions, should be striken.
Re:Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:2)
You're the guy who posts those old, outdated, essays on how liberal the media is. Well here is a prime example of what you, and your cut-and-past essay, got wrong.
Broadcast TV:
The Sinclair family owns 62 television stations throughout the United States. They are the largest holders of such media, and they are going to play an anti-Kerry movie that has already been debunked as a Republican propoganda piece full of lies. They have absolutely no intention of fulfilling the "equal time" requirement.
N
Re:Indirection of Mediated Reality (Score:2)
You're the guy who posts those old, outdated, essays on how liberal the media is.
Actually, the essay I posted was written this summer as a rebuttal to a video my class watched in my political science class at Virginia Tech. My e-mail is anprNOSPAMice2@vt.edu (remove NOSPAM). Feel free to e-mail me if you have any doubts. My essay and the information therein are neither old nor outdated.
Well Grym, I'm sure you're saying to yourself: BUT that has nothing to do with the reporters!? Of course it does!
My log of phone calls to Sinclair advertisers (Score:5, Informative)
political pawns (Score:3, Insightful)
The sad thing is that Bush is far more likely to generate the next generation of hurt, confused, and angry veterans. Bush doesn't know first hand what happens to US soldiers in battle and he doesn't seem to care much either (except for photo ops). Kerry may have many flaws, and he may not have seen the worst of Vietnam when he was serving there, but he has actually seen some of the horrors of war and is far more likely to avoid getting US soldiers into trouble unnecessarily.
It's human nature. (Score:3, Insightful)
But all the evidence that comes out shows how worthless their sacrifice was and how they were used by a government that lied to them.
Some can see how they were used and grow beyond it.
Some cannot and will attack anyone who says that it was a useless war. These are the ones that will be used again by the same government that lied to them last time.
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:2)
I didn't think anyone's freedom of speech was being violated? Or are you yet another person who thinks that everytime somebody doesn't get their way their right to free speech is violated?
Here's a hint. If their freedom of speech had been violated, we probably wouldn't be talking about this right now...
Just a slashdotter who's sick of all this "Foo's freedom of speech is being violated!"
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:2)
Also, I don't see CNN, ABC, or NBC airing Farenheight 9/11 during prime time.
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:2)
Can you please provide a link to back this up?
I doubt that ABC and NBC would give money individually of their parent companies (Disney and GE? respectively).
I see Viacom [opensecrets.org] gave $167446 to Kerry, and Time Warner (parent of CNN) gave $288,299.
Here is some information about donations to Bush [opensecrets.org], which includes similar contributions from big companies.
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:2)
Just look at some of those ads "The Freefall of the American University: How US Colleges corrupt your kids minds and morals". "Reagans war in war and Deed".
In the article, they use the term "left-wing", but oddly don't refer to any donors as "right-wing".
Also, one big reason why CBS and NBC have donated more money to Kerry is that they have donated more money to both Candidates. NBC and CBS are much bigger then
Also, I ch
Re:Kerry camp actually THREATENED Sinclair! (Score:2)
Re:All I can say (Score:4, Insightful)
Without regard to your political leanings, I suspect you will live to regret saying that.
What this really does is set a precedent opening the door to outright political warfare over the public airwaves. You can be certain if this goes forward, that some politically-motivated group will respond with an anti-Bush message much worse than anything even Moore would be accused of stooping to. (And remember, if it air's after the Kerry attack, there will be even less time for the forces-of-truth to pick apart the lies.) It may not happed this election cycle, but once the tactic is considered allowable, you can write-off any hope of getting fair and balanced coverage of the issues from any aspect of the public media. The prize will be just too big to ignore.
We mustn't be led into the trap of saying "it's okay for <one candidate> to get away with ruining our country, because <the other guy> got away with it; down that road lies only madness and ruin.
Re:All I can say (Score:2)
Re:All I can say (Score:4, Informative)
1. Michael Moore doesn't own 62 stations, and he didn't force anyone to show his movie. He made it, and people gladly lined up to see it. It may have been a little too conspiritorial in a few places, but no one has proved it untrue, and it's certainly not showing up masquerading as a news show.
2. Despite what you are determined to believe, while the memos may have proven to be fake, the 'real facts' did in fact get out and guess what, they support what's expressed in the memos. That's what made it possible to verify them. Everyone and their brother agreed that what's in them is true.
3. George Soros also has not forced anyone to broadcast anything. He's written a rational essay, and paid for it to be dispatched like any other advertising. See point #1.
Now if Dan Rather had put Fahrenheit 9/11 on TV and dressed it up as news, then you might have a point, but you seem to be hanging on to your simplistic views a little too tightly.
Re:All I can say (Score:2)
I suggest you do more research.
masquerading as a news show
Masquerading as a news show? The release itself is very clear that it is a film by an outside group, and the story above even says it a documentary. If they have to call it news to get around the horrible screw up of campaign finance reform just to get some fairness in the media, that's unfortunate. As I said, I sure as hell hope they fix all this before the next election.
the memos may have proven to be fake, the
Re:All I can say (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't understandy why this documentary is such a big deal then. This is a documentary (it's factual) that calls into question John Kerry's behavior after/during the Vietnam war. 60 Minutes aired a documentary that called into question George Bush's behavior during the war. 60 Minutes was broadcast on FAR more stations then this will be. Dan Rather reported misconduct by Bush during the war. It could be called news, history, documentary, whatever you want. The behavior of John Kerry at the same time is now being reported by some other source (although maybe less "reputable" than Dan Rather).
This is not a sensationalistic documentary like Moores, this is going to be speeches given by Kerry, an account of where he was, and interviews with wives of POWs who say that their husbands were made to listen to Kerry as torture when they were in prison (to demoralize them, I guess).
To complain about this but not Dan Rather's 60 Minutes is a double standard.
Re:All I can say (Score:4, Insightful)
2. Despite what you are determined to believe, while the memos may have proven to be fake, the 'real facts' did in fact get out and guess what, they support what's expressed in the memos. That's what made it possible to verify them. Everyone and their brother agreed that what's in them is true.
While I disagree with all your points, this one is particularly troubling. Are you saying that it is okay if evidence is fake, as long as it supports your assumptions? What if a district attorney submitted into evidence a photoshopped picture of the defendant killing somebody, just to help his case that if the 'real facts' got out, everyone would know the defendant was a murderer? Wrong, wrong, wrong... conclusions should be arrived at based on the evidence at hand, not evidence conjured up to support foregone assumptions.
"Everybody and his brother" has expressed similar doubts about Kerry's record but you don't see the Swift Boat Vets fabricating documents do you? They get blasted enough as "liars" just for providing eyewitness accounts that paint Kerry in an unfavorable light, but if someone resorts to criminal acts of forgery to make Bush look bad, that's alright?/P.
Re:All I can say (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:All I can say (Score:4, Informative)
While investigating a supposedly thirty-year-old document, a news team discovered that the writer expressed similar reservations verbally. They also discover that the circumstantial facts were all true (missed a physical...outside pressure applied to fudge some paperwork...etc.) News team therefore assumes a document is valid. Sloppy journalism, yes. Personal vendetta by a journalist to sacrifice his career and reputation to smear the President? Doubtful, but some of you will believe anything...
Contrast that to your example. "Everyone and his brother" hasn't expressed similar doubts about Kerry's service. Actually, of all of the servicemen on those 3 patrol boats, ONE EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT has his doubts...the rest of the "everyone" got this information third-hand. They happen to hook up with some Texas political operatives who smeared McCain 5 years ago, they write a book and form a supposed "group" of Swift Boat Vets. Sorry, pretty low on the credibility chart for me.
You, however, seem to have been swept up in the story about the story.
document
While we're on the subject of foregone assumptions,
"everyone and his brother" hasn't expressed doubts about Kerry's service...and while the Swift Boat Vets have Let's see, if we examine what was said
Re:No different from a newspaper endorsement (Score:2, Insightful)
Hell Yes, It Is (Score:5, Insightful)
>[T]his is really no different from the New York Times endorsing a candidate for president
The NY Times, or any other newspaper, doesn't use the publicly owned airwaves to distribute its copy and doesn't need a government license to publish. Sinclair, and all other teevee stations do and are subject to the FCC Fairness Doctrine and its implementing regulations. If this is OK, them I'm sure all our neo-con pals will be OK with Turner Broadcasting airing Farenheit 911 on Monday November 1, followed, of course, by a fair and balanced panel discussion at 11 pm PST.Re:Hell Yes, It Is (Score:2)
The overthrow of the Fairness Doctrine is what allowed for the development of political talk radio. A Rush Limbaugh would not really be feasible if the Fairness Doctrine were still in place.
Cable Is FCC Regulated (Score:2)
"The Federal Communications Commission first established rules in 1965 for cable systems which received signals by microwave antennas. In March 1966, the Commission established rules for all cable systems (whether or not served by microwave). The Supreme Court affirmed the Commission's jurisdiction over cable in United States v. Southwestern Cable Co., 392 U.S. 157 (1968). The Court ruled that "the Commission has reasonably concluded that regulatory authority over CATV is imperative if
Re:Not everything anti-Kerry is pro-Bush (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not everything anti-Kerry is pro-Bush (Score:5, Insightful)
Incorrect. Airwaves are not "free speach" zones. They are heavily regulated finite resource. They are leased to business but they are a public resource. One of the requirements from the FCC is that they are administered in the public interest. Sinclair claims that this program is "news".
That claim - that this is a 90 minute news piece done for the public good - doesn't pass the laugh test.
Re:Not everything anti-Kerry is pro-Bush (Score:2)
By your reasoning CBS,NBC,ABC should all have had their licenses pulled years ago for out and out fraudulent broadcasting. As an aside in 2000 FOX broke the story of george bush's drunk driving 3 days before the election. Was that in the public interest or an attempt to interfere with the election ?
Re:Not everything anti-Kerry is pro-Bush (Score:2)
This is not about freedom of speech, it's about using the scarce airwaves in a responsible manner.
If Sinclair chose to run its mocku^H^H^H^H^Hdocumentary in theaters, on the Internet, in newspapers, or on giant rotating signs on blimps, that would be OK. But by trying to abuse the airwave rights that we the people gave them, they are doing something that is not OK.
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Re:Not everything anti-Kerry is pro-Bush (Score:2)
Re:I see some good discussion here. (Score:2, Insightful)
Note that Sinclair is a busness. As such it wants to make $$$ at every oportunity. Last I heard F911 made over $250M. If the Kerry bash piece is such a great work of art that it would actually catch an audience they would have released it to the theaters. Obviously it must be a total bore. THATS why they have to shove it down our throats.
F911 is a riot (in addition to being a pretty good basher of the Bushies).
Re:Equal time doesn't apply (Score:2)
Re:Fairplay (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Fairplay (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually the "liberal" media's coverage of the Swift Boat Vet ads dramatically increased their air play and dramatically increased the damage they did to Kerry. I don't think most people would have seen them had they not been played over and over nationally and internationally on
Types of propaganda. (Score:3, Informative)
Grey: Contains facts, half-truths, parts of the story, etc.
Black: Lies. May contain some facts, but definately contains lies.
f9/11 is either white or grey, depending upon whom you talk to. There are no outright lies in it.
The "Swift Boat" stuff is either grey or black, depending upon whom you talk to.
Just because two items are both propaganda does not mean that they are both the same or that they can both be dismissed.
The "Swift Boat" ads are black.
Incorrect. (Score:3, Informative)
"However, in 2002 Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf agreed to revive (http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?id=674) plans of a trans-Afghan gas pipeline; Alim Razim, Afghanistan's minister for Mines and Industries, described UNOCAL as the "lead company" in the revived plans, although they continue to deny renewed involvement."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahrenheit_9/11
I'm saving space and not dealing with your other examples. But they are all just as easi
Re:Fairplay (Score:3, Informative)
Lets start by impeaching the credibility of the witness. The secretary is a democrat and a kerry supporter. She wasnt his personel secretary. Last but not least if you watched the interview dan rather did a lovely job of leading her.
If you want further testimony. Col. Killians wife and son both disown the memos, both claim he wouldn't write things like that down. To be fair the son is a republican.
Killians commander disowned the memo's and stated categorically that there was no fa