At the top of Wednesday's CBS Evening News, anchor Katie Couric lamented: “The President tries to comfort a nation in mourning, but even on a rare day of unity, politics and controversy intervene.” A clip was then played of Sarah Palin's Facebook video reaction to the Tucson shooting and media finger-pointing: “Journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel.” Later, correspondent Chip Reid reported that in his speech at the memorial service for the victims, “one thing we're told he [President Obama] will not do is get into the political battle that's developed over this tragedy.” Reid then added: “a battle that became even more heated today when Sarah Palin joined the fray.” Reid proclaimed: “In a nearly eight-minute video, Sarah Palin defended herself against critics who have accused her of using inflammatory, even violent words and images, in last year's campaign. Especially a map that used the crosshairs of a gunsight to target some Democrats, including Gabrielle Giffords.” Continuing to attack Palin, Reid declared that she had “ignited a new controversy by using the term 'blood liable,' which refers to false allegations from the Middle Ages that Jews murdered Christian children to use their blood in religious ceremonies.” A clip was played of Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder and dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center: “Jews have paid a terrible price. They were accused falsely. Their children were murdered because of these libels.” Reid noted how: “Some political analysts say the remark was straight out of Sarah Palin's political playbook.” He cited CBS News chief political analyst and editor of The Atlantic, Marc Armbinder, who slammed the former Alaska governor: “And she will often make her case in the most explicit, most inflammatory, most attention-getting way that's possible.” Reid concluded: “Again, we're told the President will not take sides in that battle.” Like Couric and Reid mentioned, President Obama did avoid politics in his speech, and as correspondent Ben Tracy pointed out on Thursday's Early Show: “While some have rushed to politicize the tragedy this week, the President called on all Americans to rise above partisan differences.” The word “some” would include CBS, which was politicizing the tragedy a little over an hour before the memorial service. On Wednesday, NewsBusters' editor at large Brent Baker cited Reid's report while also pointing out NBC's Andrea Mitchell going after Palin on the Nightly News. Here is a full transcript of Reid's January 12 report: 6:30PM ET TEASE: KATIE COURIC: The President tries to comfort a nation in mourning, but even on a rare day of unity, politics and controversy intervene. SARAH PALIN: Journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel. 6:33PM ET SEGMENT: COURIC: President Obama flew to Arizona today to speak at a memorial service there, but first, he stopped at University Medical Center to visit Congresswoman Giffords and other victims of the shooting. Chip Reid is in Tucson tonight. Chip, it's become a familiar role for presidents in times of tragedy – consoler-in-chief. CHIP REID: Sadly, it has, Katie. And as you can see from these pictures, he's going to have a very large crowd to hear his remarks. Thousands of people are being diverted to an outdoor stadium where they'll get a feed of the remarks. One thing we're told he will not do is get into the political battle that's developed over this tragedy, a battle that became even more heated today when Sarah Palin joined the fray. PALIN: That is reprehensible. REID: In a nearly eight-minute video, Sarah Palin defended herself against critics who have accused her of using inflammatory, even violent words and images, in last year's campaign. Especially a map that used the crosshairs of a gunsight to target some Democrats, including Gabrielle Giffords. Today, Palin said it's not she but her critics who are inciting violence. PALIN: Journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence that they purport to condemn. REID: But she ignited a new controversy by using the term 'blood liable,' which refers to false allegations from the Middle Ages that Jews murdered Christian children to use their blood in religious ceremonies. RABBI MARVIN HIER [FOUNDER & DEAN, SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER]: Jews have paid a terrible price. They were accused falsely. Their children were murdered because of these libels. REID: Some political analysts say the remark was straight out of Sarah Palin's political playbook. MARC ARMBINDER [CBS NEWS CHIEF POLITICAL ANALYST]: And she will often make her case in the most explicit, most inflammatory, most attention-getting way that's possible. REID: Again, we're told the President will not take sides in that battle. He'll spend most of his short speech memorializing the victims. Katie. COURIC: Chip Reid reporting from Tucson tonight. — Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media One tea party leader says that Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) has herself to blame for getting shot in the head Saturday. The Arizona congresswoman shouldn’t have attended an event “in full view of the public” if she had security concerns, according to Tucson Tea Party co-founder Trent Humphries. Giffords warned MSNBC’s Chuck Todd last year that there would be “consequences” to violent rhetoric and imagery after Fox News’ Sarah Palin released a graphic which placed crosshairs over the congresswoman’s district. “But the thing is that the way that [Palin] has it depicted has the crosshairs of a gunsight over our district,” Giffords said. “And when people do that, they’ve gotta realize there’s consequences to that action.” But Humphries thinks Giffords was just speaking out against Palin for political gain. “It’s political gamesmanship,” he told the Guardian . “The real case is that she [Giffords] had no security whatsoever at this event. So if she lived under a constant fear of being targeted, if she lived under this constant fear of this rhetoric and hatred that was seething, why would she attend an event in full view of the public with no security whatsoever?” “For all the stuff they accuse [Palin] of, that gun poster has not done a tenth of the damage to the political discourse as what we’re hearing right now.” “There are people who are genuinely confused, scared, and I understand it. But there are also people who are deliberately manipulating this event and tragedy for political ends,” Humpries added. And he may be right. Another tea party group in California has been using the tragedy to raise money. In an e-mail to supporters this week, the Tea Party Express asked for donations. “Instead of prayers for the victims and their families, the Left was consumed with using this massacre to score political points by blaming the tea party movement, Gov. Sarah Palin and now Rush Limbaugh,” the e-mail said. “That’s why we’ve asked you for your support. Let’s show the Left that instead of us being silenced, that there awful attacks on us will only backfire and that the tea party movement will be stronger than ever!” “Please, make a contribution online right now to the Tea Party Express,” the letter concluded.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Gee, and here I thought that all this talk about violent rhetoric was just a figment of our liberal imaginations: One arrested in threats against Seattle congressman A California man accused of threatening to kill Seattle Congressman Jim McDermott has been arrested and charged in federal court. Charles Turner Habermann — a 32-year-old Palm Springs, Calif., resident with a $3 million trust fund — was arrested Wednesday morning on allegations that he made threatening phone calls to the office of the Seattle Democrat late last year. Federal authorities contend Habermann admitted to making the calls because he was angry about taxes, but said he wouldn’t risk losing his trust fund by attacking McDermott. Federal prosecutors in Seattle described statements left by Habermann in two Dec. 9 phone calls as an “expletive-laden” effort to influence McDermott’s vote on tax policy. According to charging documents, Habermann to have threatened to kill McDermott’s friends and family, then, in the second call, threatened to put McDermott “in the trash.” Contacted by the investigators the day after the messages were left, Habermann allegedly admitted to threatening McDermott and an congresswoman not identified in court documents. This guy was also quite obviously a Tea Party loving patriot, because he referred to the Founding Fathers frequently in his expletive-laden rant: A McDermott staffer contacted the FBI on Dec. 10, reporting that the congressman’s Seattle office had received the offending phone calls. In one, the caller was heard calling McDermott “a piece of human filth,” “a communist,” and a “piece of (expletive) garbage.” “Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, or George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, if any of them had ever met uh, uh Jim McDermott, they would all blow his brains out,” Habermann said in the first rambling message, according to charging documents. “They’d shoot him, in the head. They’d kill him, because he’s a piece of, of, of disgusting garbage. … “Any you let that (expletive) scum bag know, that if he ever (expletive) with my money, ever the (expletive) again, I’ll (expletive) kill him, okay,” Habermann continued, according to charges. “I’ll round them up, I’ll kill them, I’ll kill his friends, I’ll kill his family, I will kill everybody he (expletive) knows.” Here’s what’s really pretty remarkable about this: Remember that bizarre Bill O’Reilly column attacking McDermott for daring to suggest (while discussing whether to extend the Bush tax cuts) that Jesus might have been more concerned about helping the poor get their unemployment checks than he would in ensuring rich guys get their tax cuts? It was published at BillOReilly.com, by pure coincidence, on December 9 : enlarge Which just COINCIDENTALLY happens to be the day that Habermann called and unleashed this rant from California. Far be it from me to suggest that there might be some connection there. Heavens no. That would be uncivil and unfair. O’Reilly might unleash the Flying Monkey Ambush Squad Featuring Jesse Watters on me. Lord only knows what kind of hate-filled death threats I’d get then.
Continue reading …Yet another example of the pathological left-wing meme in response to the Tucson bloodbath — do as we say, not as we spew. Here's Bill Press on his radio show this morning, telling all dozen of his listeners what he thought of Sarah Palin's remarks yesterday on the “blood libel” of liberals blaming conservative rhetoric as root cause of the gunman's rampage ( audio ) — To me, it reminded me of those hostage videos we've seen where there's a terrorist on each side holding a gun to a person's head and they're forced to read a script, while she read the script, first of all, yesterday saying don't! don't! let's not criticize each other now.
Continue reading …Answers to the question: “To what extent, if any, does each of the following statements describe you?” Images credit Harris Interactive A writer for an environmental website cannot help but being concerned about a Harris poll that shows interest in environmental issues to be waning. The numbers were not all that strong to begin with, and appear to be on the decline. What’s going on her… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Think Progress Priorities, people. President Obama, the First Lady and several members of the House of Representatives boarded Air Force One en route to the memorial service for the victims of the Tucson shooting tonight. But Speaker of the House John Boehner isn’t one of them. He’s got a previous engagement: an RNC cocktail party fundraiser. No, I’m not kidding : Speaker John Boehner will host a cocktail party for the Republican National Committee at the same time that President Barack Obama will be addressing the nation at the memorial service for victims of the Tucson shooting. The Ohio Republican is holding a 7 p.m. cocktail reception Wednesday night for 168 RNC members, who are in the Washington area for an annual meeting. The event is sponsored by Boehner’s political action committee and will take place at Maryland’s National Harbor resort. The RNC party coincides with the 8 p.m. EST memorial ceremony at the University of Arizona in Tucson, where Obama will honor the victims of Saturday’s shooting rampage that left six dead and 14 wounded, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), who is in critical condition. A Boehner aide said the Speaker plans to leave the RNC party before Obama begins his remarks. Well, isn’t that sensitive of him? According to Ben Smith of the Republico. ..er, the Politico , Boehner is expected to use this time gathering money to tout lobbyist Maria Cino for RNC chair. You know, nothing says ‘bringing a change to Washington’ than promoting a lobbyist at a party. No, really, I’m serious. In the old days, the lobbyist would be bringing the congressperson to the party, to promote their cause. Congrats to Boehner for turning that old canard on its ear.
Continue reading …As NewsBusters previously reported , Chris Matthews on Tuesday blamed conservative talk radio hosts Mark Levin and Michael Savage for supposedly creating the climate of hate that led to Saturday's shootings in Tucson, Arizona. On Wednesday, FBN's Don Imus and his sidekick Bernard McGuirk responded to the “angry,” “vile,” “psycho,” “spittle-spewing” MSNBCer (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more
Continue reading …Arizona Politicians Take Closer Look at Security: MyFoxPHOENIX.com So an Arizona GOP leader, a former campaign worker for John McCain, steps down after his wife asks him if his precinct leaders will shoot at their house . It seems Anthony Miller just isn’t conservative enough to please the local GOP’s Tea Party fringe. Several of his allies also resigned. Gee, I wonder if this is for the obvious reason? Several GOP officials from the same area in Arizona have resigned following last week’s shooting rampage in Tucson, including a district chairman who said threats from local tea party members caused him to be worried for the safety of himself and his family. Anthony Miller, 43, stepped down earlier this week as chair of Republican District 20 after his wife expressed concerns about “constant verbal attacks” against him since helping Sen. John McCain win reelection in November, The Arizona Republic reported. McCain was opposed by some parts of the conservative tea party movement in Arizona. Since the election victory, Miller said he has been the subject of intimidating and threatening rhetoric in person and on Internet message boards. Still, Miller said, he had no plans to leave his post until the attempted assassination of Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords during a massacre that left six dead and 14 wounded. “I wasn’t going to resign but decided to quit after what happened Saturday,” Miller told The Huffington Post Wednesday. “I love the Republican Party but I don’t want to take a bullet for anyone.” Miller, who is black, said a number of the attacks were racially based. At an event in Lake Havasu City, Ariz., Miller told The Huffington Post that someone called out, “There’s Anthony, get a rope.”
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