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New CBS Anchor Scott Pelley Threatens to Bring 60 Minutes-Style Fairness to Evening News

CBS News has lately been running ads touting their new Evening News anchor Scott Pelley as bringing “the world class original reporting of 60 Minutes, now every weeknight.” If so, those who hoped CBS would finally shift towards a more fair-and-balanced approach to the news may again be disappointed. Last year, MRC news analysts reviewed “the world class reporting” on 60 Minutes and found a lopsided agenda that strongly favored liberals. In the previous five years, 60 Minutes aired 35 interviews with liberal leaders and celebrities, most of which (69%) were friendly and unchallenging. In contrast, only five of the 17 conservative segments (29 percent) were soft, a huge tilt both in the amount and the tone of CBS’s coverage. In a “ Profile in Bias ” report MRC put together earlier this spring, Pelley’s 60 Minutes segments were well-represented for his generous coverage of liberals, including Hillary Clinton (“star power”) and retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens. Pelley also used his podium to make a case for universal health insurance and decried the horrible economy as seemingly taken from “the pages of the Great Depression” (that was during the Bush years, when unemployment was 5%, not during the Obama years). And, when one of his 60 Minutes pieces on global warming came under fire as being too one-sided, he disdained those who disagreed as akin to “Holocaust deniers,” grumbling to a reporter for CBSNews.com: “If I do an interview with Elie Wiesel, am I required as a journalist to find a Holocaust denier?” Here are a few of Pelley’s most notorious moments at CBS thus far (for the full package, visit www.MRC.org):

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How Failed Obama Foreclosure Relief Plan Contributes To Jobs Crisis [UPDATE]

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration’s inability to stem the foreclosure crisis ricocheted dramatically on Friday, as the Labor Department released unexpectedly low job-growth numbers that pushed the unemployment rate back over 9 percent. The jobs report comes on the heels of both a devastating report that found housing prices hit new lows in March and warnings from economists that the tumbling real estate market threatens to drag the economy back into recession. “The jobs numbers, they ain’t pretty, man,” economist Jared Bernstein told HuffPost. Bernstein left the Obama administration last month to join the Center on Budget Policy and Priorities, a highly respected left-of-center Washington think tank. “You don’t wanna make too much out of one month, but when that month reflects other trends in the economy, you want to take note.” “The bottom line is that the job market simply isn’t meeting the basic employment and income needs of working families,” he said. “This is an emergency,” said Preeti Vissa, community reinvestment director of the Greenlining Institute, a foreclosure relief advocacy group. “The ongoing foreclosure crisis is well on the way to dragging the whole economy into a double-dip recession if strong action isn’t taken immediately.” The connection between the foreclosure crisis and rampant unemployment is well known by economists and the administration. Diving home values and heavy debt burdens force cutbacks in both consumer spending and tax revenue for local governments. These reduced spending levels and lower government revenues force layoffs in both the public and private sector. And those layoffs, in turn, spur more foreclosures. A July 2010 report from the International Monetary Fund suggested that foreclosure problems added 1.25 points to the unemployment rate — or more than 10 percent. On Thursday, President Barack Obama warned House Democrats in a private meeting that the housing situation could drag down the entire economy. His stated concern about foreclosures, however, doesn’t match up with the administration’s public response. One House Democrat who was in the meeting complained that the president “said housing was the main thing dragging down the economy, with Geithner nodding solemnly like they’d done everything humanly possible for the last 27 months to fix the housing market.” Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-Calif.) said Obama’s approach to the foreclosure crisis has been “an absolute failure” and predicted it will continue to drag down the economy unless he changes tack. “For the life of me, I can’t figure out why a community organizer who says he cares about families, who says he cares about communities, has just turned his back on one of the biggest problems in America,” said Cardoza, who co-chairs the Democratic Caucus Housing Stabilization Task Force. “The way they get defensive when you point out it’s been a failure just underscores to me they don’t have a clue about what to do.” Cardoza’s central California district has been hit hard by foreclosures. The three cities he represents — Modesto, Stockton and Merced — all rank in the top 10 cities with the highest foreclosure rates in the country. Three out of five homeowners in his district are “underwater,” owing more on their home loans than their houses are worth. “I don’t blame [the administration] for causing the housing crisis,” Cardoza said. “But at two-and-a-half years in office, if they can’t figure out something to do soon that turns us around, I guarantee you they will pay for this at the ballot box.” Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) said Tuesday that he plans to renew his push on the administration in the coming weeks to put housing issues on the front burner. Specifically, he called for a better mortgage modification system and foreclosure intervention that includes third-party mediation. “Our economy cannot recover until our housing market recovers,” Merkley said in a statement. Republicans took shots at Obama for botching both the economic policy and the messaging. “There’s an old axiom in politics: under-promise, but over-deliver,” said a Senate GOP leadership aide. “He did the opposite.” For nearly a year, the Obama administration has been boasting to voters of economic improvement. The White House embarked on a PR blitz dubbed “Recovery Summer” last year and toured the country to spread the good news that jobs were finally coming back. Political strategists say that message is not convincing businesses, consumers or voters. The heavy losses sustained by congressional Democrats in the November 2010 elections were largely the result of the sagging economy. “They’ve gotta show that they’re gonna be on the side of the middle class in these hard times,” said Mike Lux, CEO of Progressive Strategies, a Democratic political consulting firm. “The only way an administration wins when they’re governing during hard times is by convincing people you’re still working for them in the middle of a very tough moment. I just don’t think there’s any way to convince people that the economy is good, because it ain’t.” That call for a new economic narrative from Obama reflects consistent polling results from Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg, who urged Democrats on Thursday to alter their message to reflect “a real economy” outside Washington “that’s not changing.” “The indicators are all speaking together that something more needs to be done,” Bernstein told HuffPost. “I’m not sure there’s any magic to such a pivot other than to stand up and say something needs to be done.” Bernstein recently defended the administration’s inaction on housing, saying that it had been very difficult politically to provide relief to borrowers. In an early May interview with HuffPost, White House economic adviser Austan Goolsbee cheered what appeared to be three consecutive months of stronger job growth. “It’s clearly a trend,” Goolsbee said. “We’ve had, in the last three months, an average gain of a quarter of a million private-sector jobs a month. That could not be more different than the three-quarters of a million jobs we were losing when the president took office.” But today’s numbers undermine confidence in the trend. The Labor Department revised prior months’ job gains so that the past three months — March, April and May — showed an average climb of just 160,000 jobs per month, only marginally better than the 152,000 increase seen in the prior three-month period. The administration’s claims of job market improvement have frequently been coupled with caveats. Even the triumphant Goolsbee warned last month that “we’ve got a long way to go” on the economy. But the administration has been unwavering in its claims that its signature foreclosure relief effort, the Home Affordable Modification Program, has been a success. Anti-foreclosure advocates have long bemoaned the program as overly reliant on the very Wall Street banks whose reckless lending helped spark the housing and financial mess. HAMP was also thoroughly criticized in several reports from the Congressional Oversight Panel for the bank bailout, and a new report from the Government Accountability Office indicated that over 75 percent of housing counselors have a negative view of HAMP. The program has only helped a small fraction of the 3 million to 4 million borrowers that President Obama claimed it would aid when the initiative was announced in February. Some homeowners have reported being stuck in limbo for more than a year. Advocates say several other plans could provide relief without creating “moral hazard” — a term economists use to describe a policy that could inadvertently encourage economically destructive behavior. By revising bankruptcy law to allow judges to write-off mortgage debt in bankruptcy, struggling homeowners could receive aid, provided they were willing to subject themselves to the financial hardships of filing for bankruptcy. Alternatively, economist Dean Baker, co-director of the progressive Center for Economic and Policy Research, has promoted a “right-to-rent” policy, in which borrowers on the brink of foreclosure would be given the right to rent their homes for up to five years. Since banks are reluctant to operate as landlords, Baker says the policy would encourage banks to offer meaningful loan modifications. Still, Bernstein added, the administration needs to resist the “cut spending craze,” which “threatens to make an already tough situation worse.” While congressional Republicans are unlikely to let up in their political assault on government spending, he noted that a bipartisan commission led by former Federal Reserve Vice Chairwoman Alice Rivlin and ex-Sen. Pete Dominici (R-N.M.) in Nov. 2010 proposed a payroll tax cut that could create jobs by putting more money in workers’ pockets. The Rivilin-Dominici plan recommended that the government lift all payroll taxes for both companies and employees for one year. This report has been updated to include comment from Cardoza, Merkley and the Senate GOP aide. Ryan Grim contributed to this report.

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How Failed Obama Foreclosure Relief Plan Contributes To Jobs Crisis [UPDATE]

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration’s inability to stem the foreclosure crisis ricocheted dramatically on Friday, as the Labor Department released unexpectedly low job-growth numbers that pushed the unemployment rate back over 9 percent. The jobs report comes on the heels of both a devastating report that found housing prices hit new lows in March and warnings from economists that the tumbling real estate market threatens to drag the economy back into recession. “The jobs numbers, they ain’t pretty, man,” economist Jared Bernstein told HuffPost. Bernstein left the Obama administration last month to join the Center on Budget Policy and Priorities, a highly respected left-of-center Washington think tank. “You don’t wanna make too much out of one month, but when that month reflects other trends in the economy, you want to take note.” “The bottom line is that the job market simply isn’t meeting the basic employment and income needs of working families,” he said. “This is an emergency,” said Preeti Vissa, community reinvestment director of the Greenlining Institute, a foreclosure relief advocacy group. “The ongoing foreclosure crisis is well on the way to dragging the whole economy into a double-dip recession if strong action isn’t taken immediately.” The connection between the foreclosure crisis and rampant unemployment is well known by economists and the administration. Diving home values and heavy debt burdens force cutbacks in both consumer spending and tax revenue for local governments. These reduced spending levels and lower government revenues force layoffs in both the public and private sector. And those layoffs, in turn, spur more foreclosures. A July 2010 report from the International Monetary Fund suggested that foreclosure problems added 1.25 points to the unemployment rate — or more than 10 percent. On Thursday, President Barack Obama warned House Democrats in a private meeting that the housing situation could drag down the entire economy. His stated concern about foreclosures, however, doesn’t match up with the administration’s public response. One House Democrat who was in the meeting complained that the president “said housing was the main thing dragging down the economy, with Geithner nodding solemnly like they’d done everything humanly possible for the last 27 months to fix the housing market.” Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-Calif.) said Obama’s approach to the foreclosure crisis has been “an absolute failure” and predicted it will continue to drag down the economy unless he changes tack. “For the life of me, I can’t figure out why a community organizer who says he cares about families, who says he cares about communities, has just turned his back on one of the biggest problems in America,” said Cardoza, who co-chairs the Democratic Caucus Housing Stabilization Task Force. “The way they get defensive when you point out it’s been a failure just underscores to me they don’t have a clue about what to do.” Cardoza’s central California district has been hit hard by foreclosures. The three cities he represents — Modesto, Stockton and Merced — all rank in the top 10 cities with the highest foreclosure rates in the country. Three out of five homeowners in his district are “underwater,” owing more on their home loans than their houses are worth. “I don’t blame [the administration] for causing the housing crisis,” Cardoza said. “But at two-and-a-half years in office, if they can’t figure out something to do soon that turns us around, I guarantee you they will pay for this at the ballot box.” Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) said Tuesday that he plans to renew his push on the administration in the coming weeks to put housing issues on the front burner. Specifically, he called for a better mortgage modification system and foreclosure intervention that includes third-party mediation. “Our economy cannot recover until our housing market recovers,” Merkley said in a statement. Republicans took shots at Obama for botching both the economic policy and the messaging. “There’s an old axiom in politics: under-promise, but over-deliver,” said a Senate GOP leadership aide. “He did the opposite.” For nearly a year, the Obama administration has been boasting to voters of economic improvement. The White House embarked on a PR blitz dubbed “Recovery Summer” last year and toured the country to spread the good news that jobs were finally coming back. Political strategists say that message is not convincing businesses, consumers or voters. The heavy losses sustained by congressional Democrats in the November 2010 elections were largely the result of the sagging economy. “They’ve gotta show that they’re gonna be on the side of the middle class in these hard times,” said Mike Lux, CEO of Progressive Strategies, a Democratic political consulting firm. “The only way an administration wins when they’re governing during hard times is by convincing people you’re still working for them in the middle of a very tough moment. I just don’t think there’s any way to convince people that the economy is good, because it ain’t.” That call for a new economic narrative from Obama reflects consistent polling results from Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg, who urged Democrats on Thursday to alter their message to reflect “a real economy” outside Washington “that’s not changing.” “The indicators are all speaking together that something more needs to be done,” Bernstein told HuffPost. “I’m not sure there’s any magic to such a pivot other than to stand up and say something needs to be done.” Bernstein recently defended the administration’s inaction on housing, saying that it had been very difficult politically to provide relief to borrowers. In an early May interview with HuffPost, White House economic adviser Austan Goolsbee cheered what appeared to be three consecutive months of stronger job growth. “It’s clearly a trend,” Goolsbee said. “We’ve had, in the last three months, an average gain of a quarter of a million private-sector jobs a month. That could not be more different than the three-quarters of a million jobs we were losing when the president took office.” But today’s numbers undermine confidence in the trend. The Labor Department revised prior months’ job gains so that the past three months — March, April and May — showed an average climb of just 160,000 jobs per month, only marginally better than the 152,000 increase seen in the prior three-month period. The administration’s claims of job market improvement have frequently been coupled with caveats. Even the triumphant Goolsbee warned last month that “we’ve got a long way to go” on the economy. But the administration has been unwavering in its claims that its signature foreclosure relief effort, the Home Affordable Modification Program, has been a success. Anti-foreclosure advocates have long bemoaned the program as overly reliant on the very Wall Street banks whose reckless lending helped spark the housing and financial mess. HAMP was also thoroughly criticized in several reports from the Congressional Oversight Panel for the bank bailout, and a new report from the Government Accountability Office indicated that over 75 percent of housing counselors have a negative view of HAMP. The program has only helped a small fraction of the 3 million to 4 million borrowers that President Obama claimed it would aid when the initiative was announced in February. Some homeowners have reported being stuck in limbo for more than a year. Advocates say several other plans could provide relief without creating “moral hazard” — a term economists use to describe a policy that could inadvertently encourage economically destructive behavior. By revising bankruptcy law to allow judges to write-off mortgage debt in bankruptcy, struggling homeowners could receive aid, provided they were willing to subject themselves to the financial hardships of filing for bankruptcy. Alternatively, economist Dean Baker, co-director of the progressive Center for Economic and Policy Research, has promoted a “right-to-rent” policy, in which borrowers on the brink of foreclosure would be given the right to rent their homes for up to five years. Since banks are reluctant to operate as landlords, Baker says the policy would encourage banks to offer meaningful loan modifications. Still, Bernstein added, the administration needs to resist the “cut spending craze,” which “threatens to make an already tough situation worse.” While congressional Republicans are unlikely to let up in their political assault on government spending, he noted that a bipartisan commission led by former Federal Reserve Vice Chairwoman Alice Rivlin and ex-Sen. Pete Dominici (R-N.M.) in Nov. 2010 proposed a payroll tax cut that could create jobs by putting more money in workers’ pockets. The Rivilin-Dominici plan recommended that the government lift all payroll taxes for both companies and employees for one year. This report has been updated to include comment from Cardoza, Merkley and the Senate GOP aide. Ryan Grim contributed to this report.

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Homeowners Foreclose On Bank Of America (VIDEO)

Sweet justice. That’s how foreclosure defense attorney Todd Allen described the feeling of going to a Bank of America branch in Naples, Fla. to seize their assets. Faced with a pair of sheriff’s deputies locking down his building, the branch manager capitulated and handed over a check for $2,534. The sum was to cover Allen’s fees from a case where he represented clients that the bank had tried to foreclose on — despite the fact that they paid for their home in cash. According to the News-Press in Fort Myers, Bank of America opened their case against Warren and Maureen Nyergers in February of 2010 and voluntarily dropped it two months later, but never coughed up for the couple’s legal fees as ordered by a judge. North Carolina’s WFMY has the details on how justice was served: Sheriff’s deputies, movers, and the Nyergers’ attorney went to the bank and foreclosed on it. The attorney gave instructions to to remove desks, computers, copiers, filing cabinets and any cash in the teller’s drawers. After about an hour of being locked out of the bank, the bank manager handed the attorney a check for the legal fees. WATCH:

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Daily Kos Week in Review: Beware the Ryan Ruin

A year ago, Paul Ryan was an obscure minority House member

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Israeli troops fire on Golan Heights protesters

Syrian state television reports at least 14 dead after attempted border breach by pro-Palestinians Israeli troops opened fire on Sunday at a crowd of pro-Palestinian protesters who tried to break into the Israel-controlled Golan Heights from neighbouring Syria, killing at least 14 people and wounding scores of others. The casualty figures came from Syrian state television and were confirmed by the head of a hospital treating the victims. The Israeli military said it was not tracking casualties on either side. Israel accused the Syrian regime of orchestrating the violence – the second border clash in less than a month – to deflect attention from its bloody crackdown on the uprising against its president Bashar al-Assad. Syrian television said the melee was spontaneous and reflected built-up anger among Palestinians. The protests marked 44 years since the 1967 Middle East war erupted. Israel had mobilised thousands of troops to prevent a repeat of last month’s disturbance when hundreds of people broke through a border fence, entered the Golan Heights and clashed with Israeli forces. “Unfortunately, extremist forces around us are trying today to breach our borders and threaten our communities and our citizens. We will not let them do that,” the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu told his cabinet. He said security forces had been ordered to show “maximum restraint”. Despite Israel’s warnings, hundreds of demonstrators – a mix of Palestinians and their Syrian supporters – passed Syrian and UN posts and marched to the barbed-wire-lined trench the Israeli military dug along the border after last month’s unrest. Protesters waved Palestinian flags and threw rocks and debris over the fence. As the crowd reached the border, soldiers shouted warnings through megaphones. “Anybody who gets close to the fence is endangering his life,” they said. When the demonstrators pushed forward, troops opened fire, sending crowds running in panic. Several wounded people were taken away by demonstrators, but dozens more continued heading toward the trench. Those evacuating casualties shouted “shahid” (martyr). Protesters, most of them young men, eventually managed to cut through coils of barbed wire marking the frontier, entering a buffer zone and crawling toward a second fence guarded by Israeli troops. Dr Ali Kanaan, director of the Quneitra hospital, confirmed the television report of 14 dead – 12 Palestinians and two Syrians. He said 225 were wounded. The youngest victim was a 15-year-old Palestinian, Mohammed Issa, who lived in the Neira refugee camp in Aleppo. Several protesters said they saw a landmine explode near two Israeli soldiers as they were chasing away the crowds at the border. “We were trying to cut the barbed wire when the Israeli soldiers began shooting directly at us,” Ghayath Awad, a 29-year-old Palestinian who was shot in the waist, told the AP at the hospital. Mohammed Hasan, a 16-year old student, was wounded in both feet. “We want on this occasion to remind America and the whole world that we have a right to return to our country,” he said. The recent protests are designed to draw attention to the plight of Palestinian refugees who fled or were expelled from their homes during Israel’s war of independence in 1948. The original refugees, and their descendants, now number several million and they demand the right to return to the families’ former properties. Israel says such a move would spell the end of the country as a Jewish state. About half a million Palestinian refugees live across 13 camps in Syria, a country with a population of 23 million. Palestinians are allowed to work and study, but they do not have citizenship and cannot vote. The Israeli military put the blame on the Syrian regime, which has killed more than 1,200 citizens during three months of demonstrations against Assad. The Syrian military, which tightly controls access to the border, did not keep the protesters from reaching the fence. “This is an attempt to divert international attention from the bloodbath going on in Syria,” said Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich, an Israeli military spokeswoman. “We are guarding our border. I wish they had obeyed our verbal warnings, but they chose instead to clash with the soldiers.” There was relative calm on Israel’s other borders on Sunday. Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Israel Syria Palestinian territories guardian.co.uk

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Chris Brown: Al Qaeda Spokesman Instructs Terrorists To Stock Up At Local Gun Shows

In a video released today Al Qaeda spokesman Adam Gadahn encourages terrorists to use American gun shows to arm themselves for potential Mumbai-style attacks . Gadahn’s video laid out a new tactic for Al Qaeda to continue their murderous terrorist agenda : America is absolutely awash with easily obtainable firearms. You can go down to a gun show at the local convention center and come away with a… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Media Matters for America Discovery Date : 04/06/2011 01:24 Number of articles : 3

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11 Sarah Palin Quotes Presented By Teenage Girls (PICTURES)

Sarah Palin was mysteriously out of the spotlight for a few months, but this week she’s driven her way back into the news cycle — on a tour bus traveling across America for as-yet-undefined reasons. And as grating as Palin’s brand of thin-skinned straight shooting can be, we’re happy to see another cycle of flubs, gaffes and misstatements before the ride is over. Although Palin has yet to announce a presidential run, we can’t wait until she does. But until then, how about we take a look at some of Palin’s more memorable statements from a source that seems more natural — the mouth of a teenage girl? We can’t be the only one to think that she’s probably at home with Bristol’s peers, talking-wise. Vote for the one that seems the most fitting and let us know if we missed any other hilariously juvenile Palinisms.

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Senior al-Qaida operative ‘killed by US missile strike in Pakistan’

Muhammad Ilyas Kashmiri, considered possible successor to Osama bin Laden, believed to be dead after drone attack A senior al-Qaida operative, regarded as one of the most dangerous militants in the world, has been killed in a US missile strike in Pakistan, according to a local intelligence official. The death of Muhammad Ilyas Kashmiri – thought to be a possible successor to Osama bin Laden – was another intelligence coup for the US, after its special forces killed bin Laden in Abbottabad, close to Islamabad on 2 May. “We are sure that he was killed. Now we are trying to retrieve the bodies,” said the Pakistani intelligence official. “We want to get photographs of the bodies.” It is not the first time reports of Kashmiri’s death have surfaced. He was reported to have been killed in a September 2009 US drone strike. Pakistani media said Kashmiri had been killed this time, quoting Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami (HUJI), the al-Qaida-allied group he headed. “We confirm that our Amir (leader) and commander in chief, Muhammad Ilyas Kashmiri, along with other companions, was martyred in an American drone strike on 3 June 2011, at 11:15pm,” Abu Hanzla Kashir, who identified himself as an HUJI spokesman, said in a statement faxed to a Pakistani television station. “God willing … America will very soon see our full revenge. Our only target is America.” The authenticity of the statement could not be verified. HUJI was behind the March 2006 suicide bombing of the US consulate in Karachi, in which four people were killed and another 48 wounded, the US State Department said. Other intelligence officials said earlier that late on Friday night, a US drone aircraft had fired three missiles at a militant centre in the village of Shwkainary, in South Waziristan, killing a total of eight militants, including five of Kashmiri’s supporters. The Pakistani Taliban, which has strong ties to al-Qaida, said earlier that reports of Kashmiri’s death were false. The US Department of State had described Kashmiri as a “specially designated global terrorist”, adding him to a list of high-profile militants. In March 2010, the US attorney’s office quoted in a statement a Chicago taxi driver charged with sending money to Kashmiri as saying the Pakistani militant told him he “wanted to train operatives to conduct attacks in the United States”. The Pakistani media had speculated that Kashmiri was the mastermind of a militant siege of a naval base last month which humiliated the country’s military. al-Qaida Global terrorism Pakistan guardian.co.uk

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Richard Gere: Obama Will Be ‘One of Our Great Presidents’

Actor and activist Richard Gere told CNSNews.com on Capitol Hill that President Barack Obama has done an “extraordinary job” in office and will probably go down as one of America's “great presidents.” Gere was on Capitol Hill to testify before the House Foreign Affairs Committee about religious freedom and human rights in Asia. After his testimony, CNSNews.com asked Gere, “Has President Obama, in your mind, been tough enough on China regarding human rights?” Gere said, “No, no, he [Obama] has a ways to go. I think he’s finding his way of how forceful to be. I know what his own private feelings are – those are clear.” “I think he’s also finding out with the Chinese you have to be very frontal,” said Gere. “You have to be very clear. You have to be unconfused and you must be very strong. I think he’s getting there but he could be stronger, yes.” CNSNews.com also asked Gere, “Are you supportive of his job performance overall?” Gere said, “Overall, I think he’s done an extraordinary job.

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