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Saturday, January 21, 2006
Sell, Sell, Sell
Topic: WorldNetDaily
WorldNetDaily abandons the pretense of pretending an ad is a "news" article with a Jan. 21 article headlined "Meet WND's newest advertiser." WND goes about it in a strange way, though.

WND editor Joseph Farah is quoted as stating: "We value our advertisers. ... They make it possible for millions of readers to get their news for free – news often found nowhere else." But nowhere in the article is the advertiser (Right Wing Stuff) actually named, though it states what it sells ("the largest selection of liberal-baiting merchandise on the Net"). Meanwhile, WND has treated other advertisers as providers of actual news. WND apparently values some advertisers more than others.

If I were Right Wing Stuff, I'd complain.

Posted by Terry K. at 10:37 AM EST
Friday, January 20, 2006
Should Gay Actors Be Allowed to Portray Christians?
Topic: WorldNetDaily
It's not often we see a ConWeb editor contradict an atricle elsewhere on his website, but WorldNetDaily has such an example. A Jan. 20 WND article describes an alleged furor over the fact that gay actor Chad Allen portrayed a Christian missionary in the newly released movie "End of the Spear." The article asks whether it is "appropriate ... to portray a missionary martyr using an activist who blatantly promotes anti-Christian values and could use the film to further his agenda."

But the article links to WND editor Joseph Farah's Jan. 19 review of "End of the Spear." Farah enthusiastically endorsed the film -- "It's powerful. It's moving. It's suspenseful. It's beautiful. It's horrifying. It's evidence that miracles still happen in this sometimes beautiful, sometimes horrifying world in which we live" -- but if Farah was offended that a gay man acted in the film, he didn't show it in his review.

And this is a guy whose website will use the word "gay" only in scare quotes. This is a guy who wrote in his Jan. 16 column:

Notice the subtle way the struggle by blacks is equated with agitation by "the homeless" and homosexuals. This is Marxist Indoctrination 101.

If Farah has no apparent problem with a gay man successfully portraying a Christian missionary, why should anyone else?

UPDATE: Farah has also previously endorsed creating a blacklist of actors who hold "anti-American" views and who are "spoiled-brat political activists." In other words, people not unlike Chad Allen.

Posted by Terry K. at 6:31 PM EST
Updated: Friday, January 20, 2006 6:39 PM EST
CNS Attacks on Murtha Continue
Topic: CNSNews.com
Lest you thought CNSNews.com was done attacking John Murtha, a Jan. 20 article by Jeff Johnson tries to link him to Code Pink, a group reviled by conservatives for its anti-war protests outside Walter Reed Medical Center (CNS previously reported on those). The only actual link is that Murtha had his picture taken with Code Pink members when they visited his office.

The article's headline -- "Code Pink Praises Murtha, Picketed Military Hospital" -- vaguely implies that Murtha joined Code Pink in its Walter Reed protests. Johnson also quotes Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military Readiness, as insisting that Murtha was "embracing Code Pink," but he doesn't say what qualifies her to speak out on this issue. (Hint: She's a conservative, and WorldNetDaily books her speaking engagements.) Additionally, CMR's signature issue is opposing the placement of women in combat situations, which has nothing to do with Murtha or Code Pink.

But if having your photo taken with someone equals "endorsing" that person's views, as Johnson and Donnelly appear to claim, why hasn't CNS, to our knowledge, mentioned this?

Posted by Terry K. at 3:35 PM EST
NewsBusters Misleads on Abramoff Contributions
Topic: NewsBusters
A Jan. 20 NewsBusters post by Vinny Fiore misled readers on the accuracy of a claim made by Washington Post ombudsman Deborah Howell.

Fiore claimed that Howell wrote "the truth" when she stated in a Jan. 15 column that disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff "had made substantial campaign contributions to both major parties" and that Democrats "have gotten Abramoff campaign money." In fact, that is a broad, misleading statement that ignores the fact that money donated under Abramoff's name went only to Republicans.

While Fiore stated that Howell's "most recent response to her liberal critics ... basically us[ed] the facts," Fiore ignored those facts when he stated:

So when the Washington Post, a well-respected liberal organ writes of Democratic corruption in Congress--and with Jack Abramoff to boot--it is the equivalent of shining daylight on the vampiric left, who cannot brings themselves to admit that they, too, are as guilty as any Republican in what will turn into the next "something-gate" in Washington.

Fiore's claim that Democrats "are as guilty as any Republican" in the Abramoff scandal is contradicted by the facts as noted by Howell:

While Abramoff, a Republican, gave personal contributions only to Republicans, he directed his Indian tribal clients to make millions of dollars in campaign contributions to members of Congress from both parties.

Records from the Federal Elections Commission and the Center for Public Integrity show that Abramoff’s Indian clients contributed between 1999 and 2004 to 195 Republicans and 88 Democrats.

Yes, despite the fact that twice as many Republicans as Democrats received money from "Abramoff's Indian clients," coupled with the fact that Abramoff "gave personal contributions only to Republicans," Fiore still believes that Democrats "are as guilty as any Republican." Go figure.

And we thought the MRC cared about accuracy in its media criticism.

UPDATE: Full disclosure: My employer, Media Matters, has been critical of Howell on this issue.

Posted by Terry K. at 12:36 PM EST
Updated: Friday, January 20, 2006 12:53 PM EST
Plantation Hypocrisy
Topic: NewsBusters
In a Jan. 20 NewsBusters post, Tim Graham insisted that Hillary Clinton was "pandered to Al Sharpton's crowd" when she made her "plantation" comment.

We don't recall Graham or anyone else at the MRC being offended enough by to not run "pandering" articles applying the "plantation" metaphor to Democrats.

Posted by Terry K. at 11:26 AM EST
Thursday, January 19, 2006
NewsMax Claim Contradicted
Topic: Newsmax
A Jan. 19 NewsMax article claimed:

On January 11, the Washington Times reported federal investigators were focusing on [Senate Democratic Leader] Reid and four other lawmakers in their probe of lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

However, a source close to the Abramoff investigation has contradicted the Times, telling the Las Vegas Review-Journal that the Justice Department "is not focusing on" Reid in its Abramoff probe.

Telling both sides of the story -- what a concept. NewsMax might want to try that sometime.

Posted by Terry K. at 11:25 PM EST
Guilt by Association
Topic: NewsBusters
A Jan. 19 NewsBusters post by Scott Whitlock continues his previous work in attempting to falsely attach Hillary Clinton to Harry Belafonte's controversial remarks. Whitlock wrote:

The following day, Monday, January 16, the pop singer made a late appearance at the Canaan Baptist Church in New York with Hillary Clinton, -- yes, this was her infamous "plantation" speech. The two did not share a podium, but spoke at different times. This is the second event that Clinton and Belafonte both attended. On January 13, they were at a Children’s Defense Fund dinner together. Could protecting Mrs. Clinton be the reason the media isn’t following the story?

Because it's irrelevant? Because Clinton has never claimed she endorses what Belafonte said?

If such guilt-by-association links are truly important and relevant, perhaps Whitlock should ask his boss, L. Brent Bozell III, how many Washington gatherings Bozell has been to that were also attended by Jack Abramoff.

Posted by Terry K. at 7:35 PM EST
New Topic
Topic: NewsBusters
Given the fact that NewsBusters is the home of all sorts of misinformation, we've added a NewsBusters topic list to ConWebBlog (at top left of page). NewsBusters-related posts prior to this appear under the Media Research Center topic list.

Posted by Terry K. at 7:24 PM EST
Updated: Thursday, January 19, 2006 7:25 PM EST
No Kneejerk Conservatism Here!
Topic: Media Research Center
In a Jan. 19 NewsBusters post noting that the "ideal slate of Oscar candidates" compiled by New York Times movie critics was heavy on "Brokeback Mountain," Clay Waters commented: "No liberal conventional wisdom here!" Waters added that the critics "have revealed liberal sympathies in their film critiques," presumably for their praise for "Brokeback Mountain."

Has it ever occurred to Waters that "Brokeback Mountain" may actually be a good movie, and that he is merely displaying his own "conservative sympathies" by criticizing anyone who praises the film because the film's subject matter makes him feel all icky inside?

Posted by Terry K. at 12:47 PM EST
NewsMax Betrays Lee, Confederacy to Attack Clintons
Topic: Newsmax
A Jan. 18 NewsMax article begins this way:

When Hillary Clinton used her Martin Luther King Day tribute to accuse Republicans of running Washington like an Old South "plantation" - she knew whereof she spoke.

In fact, when Hillary and Bill ran Arkansas, Dr. King didn't even have a holiday in his honor - at least not all to himself.

Instead, Arkansans celebrated a combination holiday that honored both King and Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general who fought to allow the South to keep blacks enslaved.

But NewsMax has previously run a whole passel of articles praising Lee, including tributes on Lee's birthday for three years:

-- Let America not forget January 19, 2005, the 198th birthday of General Robert E. Lee. -- Calvin E. Johnson Jr., Jan. 19, 2005 (a version of this commentary also appeared Jan. 18, 2004, and Jan. 18, 2003)

-- Lee has taken a beating in recent years. Because he fought for the Confederacy, his image is being removed from public places all over the South, as a symbol of "hate" and "racism." Yet a remarkable book called "Robert E. Lee on Leadership" by H.W. Crocker III has convinced me that "Marse Robert" would have been the first to protect innocent Muslims on the streets of New York. ... Lee was a terror to his enemies. In battle after battle, he routed well-fed, well-equipped federal forces two and three times the size of his own starving, threadbare army. Yet, like George Bush today, Lee was criticized for being too soft on the enemy. ... It is time to replace Lee's portraits, wherever they have been taken down, time to restore Marse Robert to the schoolbooks, and to honor him as the great American he truly was. -- Richard Poe, Nov. 8, 2001

-- Some of the witless anti-Ashcroft rhetoric has bordered on the absurd. One of his critics, for example, expressed horror at Ashcroft's alleged kind words about Robert E. Lee and T.J. Jackson. Imagine, finding something good to say about Stonewall Jackson, a man so sunken in depravity that his motto was "Duty is mine, Consequences are God's." -- Phil Brennan, Jan. 10, 2001

NewsMax also decried as "plantation politics" the fact that then-Gov. Bill Clinton signed a law in 1987 that says the top blue star in the state flag symbolizes the Confederacy. But a November 2003 NewsMax "Insider Report" approvingly cited a book on the South and the Confederacy as evidence of Clinton's political acumen on the issue:

Bill Clinton, the smartest Democrat in a generation, knew better than to go anywhere near the issue, quietly declining all suggestions that he remove the Confederate motif from Arkansas' state flag. As Clinton recognized, Yankee moralizers are no more welcome today than were the carpetbaggers of 142 years ago.

Is NewsMax really changing its mind about the Confederacy, a cause still embraced by many of its conservative readers? Or is it just temporarily setting aside its principles in order to push yet another smear against the Clintons?

Posted by Terry K. at 12:16 PM EST
Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Then and Now
Topic: WorldNetDaily
I don't think I need to remind you who is behind the National Enquirer. I don't think I need to tell you how politically motivated this sensational story about [Rush Limbaugh's] drug abuse is. But I will anyway. Remember how the National Enquirer rushed to the defense of Bill Clinton when he was accused of rape. Don't forget the tabloid's attorney is none other than David Kendall, Bill Clinton's own legal counsel.

-- WorldNetDaily editor Joseph Farah, Oct. 3, 2003

Five years after it broke the news of Jesse's Jackson's fathering of a daughter out of wedlock, the National Enquirer is now reporting Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., has a "love child" of his own.

-- WorldNetDaily, Jan. 18

Posted by Terry K. at 11:40 PM EST
What A Surprise
Topic: Newsmax
A Jan. 16 NewsMax column by Dick Morris focusing on Peter Paul's allegations against Hillary Clinton fails to mention Paul's status as a convicted felon.

Posted by Terry K. at 8:57 PM EST
The Daily Les, 1/18
Topic: The Daily Les
It involved two things near and dear to Les Kinsolving's heart -- gays and the White House -- so you know he just couldn't resist asking about it in the White House press briefing:

KINSOLVING: There's been extensive reporting of a homosexual group, Soulforce, calling on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual and trans-gender Americans to be the first in line at this year's White House Easter Egg Roll on April 17th, as a way to show the nation their so-called families. And my question: Will the President take any measures to prevent these activists from using this non-political event as a way to push their agenda on the rest of us?


Posted by Terry K. at 6:23 PM EST
Again!
Topic: WorldNetDaily
In a Jan. 18 WorldNetDaily article mentioning that Hebron is the site of the Tomb of the Patriarchs, Aaron Klein once again fails to mention Baruch Goldstein's 1994 massacre of Arabs there, though he notes a 1929 "Arab pogrom in which 67 Jews were murdered."

Posted by Terry K. at 5:59 PM EST
Why Project 21 Won't Be Denouncing Hillary Clinton
Topic: The ConWeb
A Jan. 17 press release by Project 21 -- the black conservative group that is the home of Mychal Massie -- issued a statement condemning recent remarks by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin. Project 21 member Council Nedd said of Nagin: "Now he is practicing plantation politics in an attempt to keep his job."

Looks like the members of Project 21 are trying to keep their hypocrisy in check after ConWebWatch caught Massie denouncing Rep. Charles Rangel for saying that "George Bush is our Bull Connor" despite his own history of likening Democrats to Bull Connor.

Posted by Terry K. at 12:42 PM EST
Updated: Wednesday, January 18, 2006 12:48 PM EST

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