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Showing posts with label journalistic integrity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label journalistic integrity. Show all posts

Nuclear Hypocrisy: A-Bomb Maker Pakistan Breaks Ground On New Nuke Plant - Not A Peep From US, Israel or Europe

Pakistan has Atomic weapons, have tested them and is even reportedly willing to supply an A-bomb to Saudi Arabia on demand.  And when Pakistan starts construction on another nuclear plant (with China's help), we don't here a peep from the United States, Europe, or Israel.  Yet the United States, Europe and Israel work feverishly to control Iran's development of nuclear power.

Bomb: Illustration by _Gavroche_
Bomb. (Illustration: _Gavroche_)


Pakistan launches largest nuclear power project (via AFP)
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Tuesday launched the construction of the country's biggest atomic power plant and vowed to pursue further projects to make nuclear the largest energy source. The 2,200-megawatt plant is to be built with Chinese…

US '60 Minutes' Star, Lara Logan, Given Leave Over Benghazi Report


Lara Logan was lead correspondent on 60 Minutes' false Benghazi Story.
Lara Logan was lead correspondent on 60 Minutes' false Benghazi Story.


US '60 Minutes' star given leave over Benghazi report (via AFP)
CBS News on Tuesday put a correspondent for flagship program "60 Minutes" on leave over flaws in a critical report about last year's attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya. Lara Logan, a South African, also abruptly canceled her scheduled appearance…

Was 60 Minutes' Fraudulent Benghazi Story A CBS "Hit" On President Obama?: Husband of Correspondent A Former Propagandist for a PR Firm - Questions On If He 'Assisted' on Benghazi Story

Newsweek contributing editor Jeff Stein is raising questions about whether 60 Minutes correspondent Lara Logan's husband -- a former employee of a firm that planted "pro-U.S. stories in the Iraqi media in 2005" -- was involved in the show's now-retracted Benghazi report.

Lara Logan: lead correspondent on 60 Minutes' discredited Benghazi Story.
Lara Logan: lead correspondent on 60 Minutes' discredited Benghazi Story.

Stein explains that Burkett is "a former Army sergeant and onetime employee of a private intelligence outfit hired by the Pentagon to plant pro-U.S. stories in the Iraqi media in 2005." The Lincoln Group, Burkett's former employer, apparently specialized in producing videos and phony news clips that they would then feed to media outlets, "making them appear as originating from legitimate news organizations."

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White Supremacy at CNN: Network Giving A National Platform to White Racists

From Left - Frank Taffee, Newt Gingrich, and Mark O'Mara: Their presence on CNN suggests
an attempt to attract right-wing viewers at the expense of everyone else.

By Ronald Jackson
Perhaps we should have been forewarned when CNN "threw African-Americans under the bus" by hiring notorious race baiter Newt Gingrich to be a co-host for the re-incarnation of talk show "Crossfire" which had been shamed off the air by a blistering attack by comedian and social critic John Stewart (you can watch the now famous video here).  The dust had barely settled from a bruising 2012 presidential campaign during which Newt Gingrich dog whistled his way through the Republican primaries in a losing bid to be the presidential candidate for the Tea Party-dominated Republicans.  Outraged by the hiring of Newt Gingrich at the time, I listed eight reasons why CNN should not have hired Newt Gingrich in an online petition:
1) Newt Gingrich has implied that there was something "inherently wrong" with being African and Kenyan by suggesting that President Obama was informed by a Kenyan heritage. With this statement, Newt Gingrich also pandered to racist so-called "Birthers" who question President Obama's "Americaness." - "What if [Obama] is so outside our comprehension, that only if you understand Kenyan, anti-colonial behavior, can you begin to piece together [his actions]? That is the most accurate, predictive model for his behavior."

2) Newt Gingrich has suggested that the children of poor parents were inherently inferior by implying they were lazy and prone to crime. He was race baiting in this instance, since most Americans think the vast majority of poor Americans are African-American. - “Really poor children, in really poor neighborhoods have no habits of working and have nobody around them who works so they have no habit of showing up on Monday. They have no habit of staying all day, they have no habit of I do this and you give me cash, unless it is illegal.”

3) Newt Gingrich has slandered Palestinians by suggesting there is no such thing as a Palestinian people. - "I think we have had an invented Palestinian people who are in fact Arabs."


4) Newt Gingrich supported stripping Hispanic Americans of their voting rights by getting rid of bilingual ballots. - "I would have ballots in English."

5) Newt Gingrich implied that there was something inherently wrong with being Muslim and pandered to bigoted "Birthers" by suggesting it was President Obama's own fault that bigots think he's Muslim. - "You have to ask, why would they believe that? It's not because they're stupid."

6) Newt Gingrich implied that there was something inherently wrong with being Muslim and pandered to bigoted "Birthers" by suggesting that the media was hiding President Obama's "Muslim friends." - “It is just astonishing to me how pro-Obama they are,” he said, “Do you think you are going to see two pages on Obama’s Muslim friends?"

7) Newt Gingrich deliberately catered to racist voters by stereotyping President Obama as "The Food Stamp President." Most Americans believe African-Americans are the primary recipients of Food Stamps, which is false. Gingrich was cynically exploiting this misperception for racist reasons. CNN itself posted an article on Newt Gingrich's "Foodstamp" remark titled "'Food stamp president': Gingrich's poetry of hate"

8) Newt Gingrich signaled his hatred for gays by funding an Anti-Gay hate group. - "The Associated Press revealed that one of the cogs in Newt Gingrich’s vast network of business enterprises and front groups, ReAL Action, provided $125,000 to the American Family Association Action, an anti-gay activist organization that has been officially labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center."
I concluded by pointing out the following about the signal CNN was sending by the hiring of Newt Gingrich:
By hiring Newt Gingrich as a host of "Crossfire" CNN endorses, validates, and mainstreams racism, religious intolerance, and homophobia - all in a sleazy attempt to appeal to and attract bigoted viewers. CNN is blowing its own racist 'dog whistle' by hiring Newt Gingrich. 
CNN ignored the pubic outrage concerning the bigoted Newt Gingrich and hired him anyway, signaling that attracting some of FoxNews' right-wing viewers was more of a priority than respecting the interests and sensitivity of their African-American viewers.

It was a clear sign of what was to come.

The next thing we know, CNN hires lawyer Mark O'Mara as a legal pundit. O'mara was fresh off of his role as defense lawyer for George Zimmerman, who was on trial for murdering an unarmed teenager named Trayvon Martin.  Zimmerman was found "not guilty" during that trial, after which one of the jurors came forth and admitted she (and other jurors) thought Zimmerman was guilty but had been swayed by the slanted and straighjacketing instructions from the judge. During the trial, O'Mara defamed the dead teen with a blizzard of boogieman stereotypes: claiming he had video tape of Martin and his "gang friends" roving around attacking people. O'Mara was forced to apologize when it was discovered the video tapes didn't exist.

So with all the legal pundits available, why did CNN hire Mark O'Mara?  Clearly CNN was trying to send a signal to all the bigots who were "wowed" by O'Mara's mean-spirited treatment of the deceased teen Trayvon Martin. CNN was dogwhistling to right-wingers: "Come to CNN, we have your backs!"

And now there's the case of Frank Taffee, a so-called "friend" of George Zimmerman. Zimmerman has had numerous run-ins with the law soon after he was acquitted in the murder of Trayvon Martin. In the latest incident, Zimmerman was accused of threatening a girlfriend with a shotgun—the second time after the trial he was accused of threatening a woman with a gun. After Zimmerman was arrested and let out on bail for this latest violent incident, CNN invited Taffee to the airways to defend Zimmerman. Unbeknownst to most of CNN's viewers, Taffee is a convicted criminal and unabashed racist who hosts a white-power podcast. CNN didn't bother to tell its viewers about Taffee's supremacist proclivities. 

Here is the video of Frank Taffee, and the welcoming treatment he received at CNN:


Taffe also appeared on another Time Warner media property, cable channel HLN, on the programs "Nancy Grace" (watch it the show: here) and "Dr. Drew On Call" (watch the show: here).

So why does CNN, HLN and Time Warner continue to contaminate the airways with avowed supremacists like Frank Taffee? Perhaps the same reason that big media corporations have provided a national platform for bigots like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh: to keep racism "live and well" in America and to attract the same rabid right-wing viewers that Fox News has been able to attract via an endless stream of racist, anti-women, anti-Muslim, and anti-gay vitriol. This is how networks like CNN prove their "swag" to the white racists of America.

Perhaps the blame for CNN's far-right shift should lay right at the doorstep of CNN's new "head honcho" Jeff Zucker, who was hired to bring CNN out of last place in the cable news ratings war. In an article titled, "The Last Charge of the Master Race: The South’s 'Lost Cause' Addiction," Ishmael Reed points out:
Gingrich, a serial hypocrite called Obama “the food stamps president” and “entertainer-in-chief,” conjuring an image of the president as a white-lipped minstrel adorned with white gloves, which is probably why Gingrich was hired by CNN’s Jeff Zucker, who created an atmosphere at NBC for women described by Ann Curry as “cruel.”

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CNN Doubles Down on Pro-Nuclear Bias

How did CNN respond to activist calls for balance to its airing of pro-nuke Pandora's Promise? By compounding the bias with a post-show roundtable, Nuclear Power: The Fallout From Fear, that featured a panel just as slanted as its title.

CNN Panel Discussion
NRDC's Dale Bryk provides the only voice of skepticism
on CNN's nuclear roundtable following the network's
airing of pro-nuke documentary Pandora's Promise.
CNN aired the pro-nuclear power film Pandora's Promise on November 7. The film was little more than propaganda (FAIR Action Alert, 10/25/13), brooking virtually no dissent from the views of the film's seven principal "stars"--one-time anti-nuclear environmentalists who now say the planet can only be saved from the ravages of fossil fuels by a rapid, large-scale investment in new, supposedly fail-safe "fast reactors."

In advance of the airing, FAIR and RootsAction presented CNN with a petition signed by over 27,000 activists, demanding the news network present a more balanced discussion of the issue.

How did CNN respond? By compounding the bias with a post-show roundtable, Nuclear Power: The Fallout From Fear, that featured a panel just as slanted as its title.

Moderated by CNN's Anderson Cooper, the panel was stacked three to one in favor of the film's premise. Dale Bryk of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the lone anti-nuclear voice, was outnumbered by the film's director, Robert Stone, climate scientist James Hansen and former nuclear plant operator Michael Friedlander. During the panel, Bryk had her remarks ridiculed as "silly" by Hansen and "delusional" by Stone, with no objection from Cooper, who seemed at times to play the role of a fourth pro-nuclear panelist. At one point he confronted Bryk on the role of renewables by parroting the film's line that "alternative solutions like solar, wind...will never be a real solution."

At another point, Cooper asked the filmmaker a leading question that suggested nuclear power has been remarkably safe: "Can you point to how many people have died from--I mean, Three Mile Island, nobody died. Emergency procedures there worked, correct?"

Cooper's language could have come straight from any number of past corporate media whitewashings of nuclear power dangers. For instance, NBC's 1993 broadcast What Happened? (3/16/93) concluded that "the system worked" at Three Mile Island--that aside from some "communications" issues, people near the Pennsylvania plant were happily living their lives years after the 1979 partial meltdown there (Extra!, 7/1/93).

Three Mile Island had resulted in only a "a minor release" of radiation, agreed Stone, adding that, in the US, "not a single death has occurred from commercial nuclear power in the entire 50-year history."

Later, Stone said of the Fukushima accident: "Nobody has died, nobody has gotten sick, and according to the best science in the World Health Organization, nobody ever will." What  WHO (2/28/13) actually says is that "the estimated risk for specific cancers in certain subsets of the population in Fukushima Prefecture has increased," and that one-third of the emergency workers at the plant have an increased cancer risk.
Three Mile Island: Photo by Richard Owens
Three Mile Island (Photo: Richard Owens)
When FAIR asked epidemiologist Steven Wing of the University of North Carolina's School of Public Health to comment on Stone's claims, he acknowledged that no deaths had resulted immediately from acute radiation poisoning at Three Mile Island or Fukushima, but that longer-term cancers caused by radiation were a different story:
The cancers from the TMI accident were measured through a survey of hospital records which showed that leukemia incidence was 6.9 times higher during 1981-85 in the area most affected by radioactive plumes compared to the least affected areas. In Fukushima, the cancers will occur in the future and can be estimated based on people's radiation doses and the knowledge that there is no threshold below which radiation doesn't cause cancer. This is the same way we estimate cancers from smoking, asbestos or other carcinogens.
Wing added that even nuclear power plants running under normal conditions are not necessarily safe:
For routinely operating reactors, excess childhood cancer has been demonstrated in several European studies, although no comparable study has been conducted in the USA.
The role of renewables in planning a cleaner and safer energy future was disparaged by everyone on the panel except NRDC's Bryk. The same was true of virtually everyone who appeared in the film for more than a few moments. (The few dissenting voices heard in the film--e.g., Helen Caldicott, Ralph Nader--were little more than props, providing brief soundbites stating supposed myths, which were then ridiculed at length by the film's principal players.)

Such a position can only be sustained by excluding leading authorities on renewables, like electrical and nuclear engineer Arjun Makhijani,  the president of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research, who says:
A zero-CO2 US economy can be achieved within the next 30 to 50 years without the use of nuclear power. The US renewable energy resource base is vast and practically untapped. Available wind energy resources in 12 Midwestern and Rocky Mountain states equal about 2.5 times the entire electricity production of the United States. Given that we can satisfy our electricity needs by harnessing only 40 percent of the wind energy resources in these 12 states, it is extremely likely that we will be able to do away with CO2.
Edwin Lyman, a physicist and senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists, says that the kind of reactor touted in Pandora's Promise isn't the fail-safe technology flogged in the film, and isn't fully designed or ready for commercial use. No one like Lyman appears in the film, and CNN didn't include him in the panel either; they did permit him a column on CNN.com (11/7/13), where he charges Stone with promoting "numerous half-truths and less-than-half-truths":
Like the story of Pandora itself, the tale of the integral fast reactor (IFR)--or at least the version presented in the movie--is more myth than reality. In the final assessment, the concept's drawbacks greatly outweighed its advantages. The government had sound reasons to stanch the flow of taxpayer dollars to a costly, flawed project that also was undermining US efforts to reduce the risks of nuclear terrorism and proliferation around the world.
Lyman pointed out that the fast reactor, even when fully developed, would produce more nuclear waste, not less, as claimed in the film. "Stone did not include anyone in the film who could have provided a more balanced and realistic assessment" of the fast reactor, Lyman said--which could be said of CNN's discussion of nuclear power in general.

Considering the bias of CNN's documentary, it's unsurprising to find that two of its chief funders are billionaire boosters of nuclear energy. Virgin's Richard Branson, who with US nuclear industry officials proposed a meeting with President Obama and then-Energy Secretary Steven Chu to lobby for IFR nuclear technology, is listed as the film's executive producer. Branson claimed at the time not to have any direct financial interest in nuclear power.

The film's other billionaire funder, Microsoft founder Paul Allen, is an investor in "advanced nuclear technologies," according to the website of his venture capital firm, Vulcan Inc.



Reprinted with permission from Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting.

Disinfo Wars: Alex Jones’ War on Your Mind

Jones' sensationalist tactics has consistently caused more damage than good to legitimate movements that stand in opposition to government repression and big media propaganda. When powerful people and big media want to "delegitimize" a belief or a movement, they need only suggest that Jones is associated with it.

Alex Jones: Caricature by DonkeyHote
Alex Jones. (Caricature: DonkeyHote)
Jones’ ability and pattern of delegitimizing controversial, yet evidence-based contingents of so-called truth movements through radicalization and guilt by association, is eerily analogous to the blueprints of various US Government programs– most notably COINTELPRO from the 1960s and ‘70s. More recently, this has also been the case regarding establishment efforts to discredit the Occupy Wall St. Movement. This article will explore the work of Alex Jones’ and the effects he has had on others who research similar controversial subjects, and how research into those very subjects comes to be viewed in the public once Jones is perceived as a spokesperson or figurehead.

by Nolan Higdon
In 1833, William Miller predicted the second coming of Jesus Christ in the year 1843. Only after his fourth failed prediction, each of which saw hundreds of thousands of followers turn out, did his followers abandon him. By this time, Miller had already absconded with copious amounts of their money, spent on his publications and for ascension robes that were supposed to prepare them for Jesus Christ’s arrival.1 A profiteer relying on distortion and unfulfilled predictions, contemporary radio personality and activist Alex Jones operates in the same mode as Miller. Instead of ascension robes, Jones profits from the fear and uncertainty he relentlessly peddles via DVDs, publications, books, a TV show, a radio show, and websites.

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60 Minutes and Benghazi: When a Hoax Sounds Like a Hoax

The fact their main witness had written a book about the Benghazi embassy attack for by a conservative book publisher should have raised red flags for 60 Minutes.  And the fact the witness claimed to have "sneaked" into an al-Qaeda controlled hospital should have
raised in more questions.


By Peter Hart
60 Minutes retracted its report about Benghazi, after documents surfaced that cast doubt on the reliability of their key source. But his story was dubious from the start.

Media reporters and critics are devoting enormous space to a 60 Minutes report about Benghazi that has been retracted. The program explained that new documents contradict one of their main sources. But even without those documents, CBS should have suspected they were being hoaxed.

Lara Logan, CBS' correspondent for the hoaxed story.
On November 10, 60 Minutes aired an unusual correction: It was no longer standing by their October 27 report about the attack on a US diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya. The segment has been disappeared from the CBS website–a dramatic step, for sure, and one that makes the brief correction that appeared at the end of the show all the more unusual.

On the new broadcast, correspondent Lara Logan explained that one of the main sources, a security contractor named Dylan Davies, gave an account that CBS could no longer trust to be accurate.

But why did they believe him in the first place? Davies' story–which he also told in a book published by Threshold, a conservative imprint of CBS-owned Simon & Schuster–should have raised some red flags. Here's part of the CBS segment, where Davies is identified as Morgan Jones:

LOGAN: On a night he describes as sheer hell, Morgan Jones snuck into a Benghazi hospital that was under the control of Al-Qaeda terrorists, desperate to find out if one of his close friends from the US Special Mission was the American he'd been told was
there.

JONES: I was dreading seeing who it was, you know?

LOGAN: Mm-hm.

JONES: And it didn't take long to get to the–to the room. And I could see in through
the–through the glass. And I didn't even have to go into the room to see who it was. I knew who it was immediately.

LOGAN: Who was it?

JONES: It was the ambassador, dead.

So he sneaked into an Al-Qaeda controlled hospital and immediately found Stevens' body. Did this not strike CBS as dubious? If not that part, then surely this part of the interview would raise some red flags: 

LOGAN: Not long afterwards, Morgan Jones scaled the 12-foot high wall of the compound that was still overrun with Al-Qaeda fighters.

JONES: One guy saw me. He's–he just shouted. I couldn't believe that he'd seen me, because it was so dark, and he started walking towards me.

LOGAN: And as he was coming closer?

JONES: As I got closer, I just hit him with the butt of the rifle in the face.

LOGAN: And?

JONES: Oh, he went down, yeah.

LOGAN: He dropped?

JONES: Yeah, like–like a stone.

LOGAN: With his face smashed in?

JONES: Hm. Yeah.

LOGAN: And no one saw you do it?

JONES: No.

LOGAN: Or heard it?

JONES: No, there was too much noise.

A skeptical interviewer might start to wonder about this person's account, since it is, well, unbelievable.

One of the most significant challenges to the story came when the Washington Post's Karen DeYoung (10/31/13) reported that Davies seemed to have told a different story: 

"But in a written account that Jones, whose real name was confirmed as Dylan Davies by several officials who worked with him in Benghazi, provided to his employer three days after the attack, he told a different story of his experiences that night.

"In Davies' 2-1/2-page incident report to Blue Mountain, the Britain-based contractor hired by the State Department to handle perimeter security at the compound, he wrote that he spent most of that night at his Benghazi beachside villa. Although he attempted to get to the compound, he wrote in the report, "we could not get anywhere near…as roadblocks had been set up."

"He learned of Stevens' death, Davies wrote, when a Libyan colleague who had been at the hospital came to the villa to show him a cellphone picture of the ambassador's blackened corpse. Davies wrote that he visited the still-smoking compound the next day to view and photograph the destruction."

Evidently CBS was unaware of these documents–despite the fact that they initially defended their reporting by claiming they'd spent one year reporting the story.

The corporate media have been unusually dogged in pursuing the Benghazi story–which has been pushed by right-wing media and several Republican politicians. The level of attention has always been hard to figure out, but it seems to center on the fact that some Republicans believe that the Obama administration misled the country about who exactly attacked the US facility. The White House had initially raised the issue of an anti-Islam video being the motivation for the attacks, which some thought was  a coverup, since they contend the attack was actually a carefully orchestrated assault by Al-Qaeda-linked militants.

Lara Logan (left) and Davies. CBS provided Davies a global platform for his lies.
The controversy has been blown wildly out of proportion; as I noted (FAIR Blog, 10/17/12), there were contemporaneous media accounts from the scene of the attack where some of those involved declared they were furious about this video.

In any event, the White House was not linking the video to the attack for very long, so as coverups go, it was never a very good one.  But Benghazi continues to be an obsession on the right; it's entirely possible that the drive to report "what really happened" led CBS to believe an unbelievable story. In the wake of the Benghazi attack, Logan gave a speech that included an impassioned call for a US military response (which was noted by Democracy Now! on November 11): "I hope to God that you are sending in your best clandestine warriors, who are going to exact revenge." So it seems possible that Logan's dedication to that particular cause may have impacted her judgment.

Her brief apology struck many observers as insufficient. Huffington Post media reporter Michael Calderone  (11/11/13) wrote, "Sunday's brief acknowledgment didn't resemble a news program seriously trying to get to the bottom of how it got duped."

Indeed, there are important questions to ask about how CBS mishandled the criticism of the story, and the segment itself.

But on some level the answer is quite straightforward: An unbelievable account of a dramatic event is probably unbelievable for a reason.




Reprinted with permission from Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting.

60 Minutes Reporter Who Got Burned Airing a Right-Wing Narrative About the Benghazi Embassy Assault - Was Staunch Advocate for a Revenge Attack on Libya

Davies book was pulled
from the market.
Author Dylan Davies was touted by 60 Minutes as a reliable 'witness' to the Benghazi embassy attack. The CBS news program was using Davies to promote the right-wing narrative that the Obama Administration was 'hiding something' about the embassy attack, but Davies turned out to be lying concerning his whereabouts the day of the attack. 

Lara Logan (left) and Davies. CBS provided Davies a global
platform for his lies.
Mr. Davies was on 60 Minutes to promote his new book about the embassy attack. The book was published by Simon & Schuster, which is owned by CBS' parent company Viacom.

Lara Logan, a 60 Minutes correspondent and one of the key reporters on the 60 Minutes Benghazi story, was a staunch advocate for a revenge attack on Libya and her opinions about 'getting back at Libyans' for the Benghazi embassy attack appears to have clouded her judgement on the story. Davies Book is no longer for sale: did he lie merely to sell books? Was 60 Minutes attempting to attract right-wing viewers by airing a right-wing narrative of the Benghazi embassy assault?



Lara Logan expresses her feelings for revenge during
 a speech before the Better Government Association 
in October 2012.



Video clip courtesy of DemocracyNow!: You can watch or download the full segment here.