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When President Obama’s budget came out in February, with the greatest expansion of federal spending in American history, some sycophantic media outlets like The Washington Post ridiculously tried to sell the concept that Obama was pushing “deep cuts.” It was a publicity line that collapsed on itself within 24 hours. The Democrats are doing nothing to rein in the spending that is leading America into bankruptcy. What the Republican leadership is proposing, with its minuscule cuts, is a small fraction of a huge deficit. Freshman Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky is about the only one proposing significant cuts, and for that he will be massacred, if the media have their way. On the February 23 broadcast of ABC’s “Nightline,” they actually cartooned him as a crazed maniac with a chain saw. It was presented as “news,” but it had all the markings of a negative ad cooked up in the video lab at the DNC. Over this over-the-top animation, ABC’s Bill Weir spun like a top: “So, while the President argues for a budget scalpel [Obama looking reasonable, holding a scalpel], Rand Paul would use a chainsaw, shutting down the Departments of Energy and Education. He would kill the Consumer Product Safety Commission, shrink the Pentagon, and cut off all foreign aid.”' When Obama’s budget arrived, ABC’s own reporter Jake Tapper calmly noted the Obama budget blueprint proposed adding a whopping $7 trillion to the national debt over ten years. But his colleague Bill Weir apparently missed that company memo. He still thinks adding $7 trillion to the debt constitutes a “cut.” Sen. Paul has proposed $500 billion in cuts. That is less than a third of the projected deficit. To the leftist media, this constitutes taking out a chain saw. To the objective observer, it constitutes a start. Maybe ABC just likes hyperbole. So, when Obama went on a massive “stimulus”-enhanced spending spree, did ABC offer us cartoon graphics of a crazed Obama maniacally burning down a bonfire of tax dollars? ABC is trashing Sen. Paul for addressing what anyone who’s looked at a national debt graph can see: you can’t put a dent in the deficit with microscopic cuts like $61 billion in a $3.7 trillion budget. We’re staring at a projected $1.65 trillion deficit this year, the largest dollar number in American history. Why isn’t that number taken seriously by our alleged government watchdogs in the press? Whether one likes Paul’s list of cuts or not, the fact remains that we are still left with a wholly irresponsible $1 trillion deficit. The current House Republican proposal to spend $61 billion less in non-security spending than Fiscal Year 2010 is still a spending level many billions of dollars higher than Fiscal Year 2008 — when conservatives were beyond dismayed at Bush-era overspending. What the media wants is a massive budget battle not between the Republicans and the Democrats, but between the GOP and the media themselves. For them, it’s 1995 again, with another opportunity to derail the conservative agenda with a scorched-earth attack, allowing the Obama agenda to prevail. And truth doesn’t matter. Pompous network stars, who can find a “victim” for any potential spending cut liberals oppose, will make any insufficient budget-cut proposals sound extreme. “Nightline” host Terry Moran gave us a taste of that with his introduction of Rand Paul: “Up next: Even the most conservative Republicans balk at his proposals for slashing government. We sit down with the newly minted Senator, Rand Paul.” But “even the most conservative Republicans” know that $61 billion in budget cuts is a mere first-quarter play in opposing the Obama spending juggernaut. Moran also demonized Paul with this promo: “Senator No Surrender. He's the most controversial newcomer to Capitol Hill with a radical pedigree. But can Rand Paul's high ideals survive the Senate? We've got the ‘Nightline’ interview.” Did Terry Moran ever present Barack Obama as a “controversial newcomer” with a “radical pedigree,” given he had the most left-wing voting record in the Senate? No. Instead, Moran fawned over Obama repeatedly on the campaign trail about how he was an “American political phenomenon.”. Speaking of a “radical pedigree,” within weeks of Obama’s election, Moran was demanding the president impose extreme measures for the financial crisis – but in the opposite direction. This “reporter” openly advocated socialism: “Why not just nationalize the banks?” Welcome to Washington, Rand Paul. You’ll only know you’re doing the right thing when ABC, CBS, and NBC come running at you with cameras…and straitjackets

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NBC's Today interviewed Obama U.N. ambassador Susan Rice on Tuesday about Libya. It was dull. It had no crackling opposition. There was one question doubting the effectiveness of sanctions. Despite plenty of conservative criticism about Obama's weak and delayed responses, and Rice's odd downplaying of the Libyan situation by skipping Security Council meetings to go to South Africa, there was no reading angry newspaper editorials or citing criticism from congressional opponents. This is not the way NBC played when John Bolton was U.N. ambassador under Bush — not to mention that other black female named Rice. Here's the (brief) questions. Let me start out by – you have called Qaddafi delusional and disconnected from reality. Plain and simple here, are we dealing with a mad man? Well we've leveled these sanctions against Libya, but if this man, as he said clearly yesterday, has no intention of stepping down, then what good are these sanctions? What can they accomplish? We have repositioned U.S. Naval ships in that region for what purpose? This man, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, the so-called “face of the revolution,” how much credibility do you give him, does the government give him?…So we're not directly dealing with him? Back on August 2, 2005 , NBC's Today was telling John Bolton to have a terrible day in this Andrea Mitchell report: “Well today is John Bolton's first full day on the job as UN ambassador. His challenge there will be to shake up the organization, as the President wants, without alienating anyone who can help him get the job done. As he arrived at his New York offices Monday Bolton ignored a handful of passersby booing his appointment.” Later in the piece Mitchell ran a critical soundbite from this liberal scold named Sen. Barack Obama and a warning from UN secretary general Kofi Annan. Mitchell then concluded her snarky piece: “Bolton's top challenges at the UN will include building support for U.S. policy on Iran, Iraq and North Korea, exactly the issues on which his own credibility has been challenged in the past.” Minutes later, Katie Couric interviewed Senators Chris Dodd and George Allen about Bolton, with all of the questions bashing Bolton. She began with Dodd: “Senator Dodd, let me start with you. You've been one of the most vocal critics, I know, of, of John Bolton and President Bush's choice as the U.S. ambassador to the UN. What is your biggest objection to him?” For a sense of what Rice could have been asked about, see Omri Ceren at Commentary on Rice's own moves, finding Libya wasn't a front-burner issue: Susan Rice was instrumental in pushing the Obama administration to join the UN Human Rights Council, insisting that engagement would allow the U.S. to “shape” the council’s policies and membership. That proved to be a somewhat inflated assessment when Libya was soon afterward — and quite easily — elected to the notorious Israel-bashing body. Rice subsequently declined to criticize the ascension of the Great Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, instead complimenting the election. So it’s entirely appropriate that the ambassador was unable to attend the emergency UN Security Council meeting on the violence sweeping Libya, on account of a global-sustainability conference in South Africa that had greater purchase on her attention: At great personal risk to himself and his family, Libya’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Ibrahim Dabbashi, pushed the UN Security Council to take up the violence in his home country. … The dramatic event prompted the first UN meeting of the 15 member Security Council on the uprisings sweeping across the region since the beginning of Tunisia’s revolution. … The United States was represented by Foreign Service officer and Ambassador Rosemary DiCarlo. … Rice, skipped the Libya meeting and instead flew to South Africa to attend a UN panel discussion on global sustainability. It’s probably unfair to lay out the timeline this way, implying as it does that Rice’s absence was a Libya-specific thing. She misses lots of events that clash with her internationalist sensibilities and multilateral promises. The ambassador quite literally wasn’t in the room when Iran — a state that uses serial rape as a weapon against imprisoned dissidents — was elected to the Commission on the Status of Women committee. Presumably, someone didn’t like the optics of that debacle, coming as it did a few months after Rice insisted that the UN mission was spearheading Obama’s “change in the nature and tone of our relationships … [which] is yielding concrete and tangible benefits here at the United Nations.” No one doubts that Ambassador Rice has a busy schedule. With the GOP looking to curtail UN funding, and with the UN’s own $43 million in-house PR shop not making much headway, she has recently taken to touring the country to give lectures on how “Main Street America Needs the United Nations.” But with the White House under fire for “voting present” on Libya — see Rick Richman’s brutal analysis of Obama’s speech — is it really a good idea to alter the narrative to “not even showing up to vote present”?

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Turkey and Iran may be winners, and the US a loser in the end – but first Arab societies must ‘win’ by making revolution work David Cameron’s suggestion that Britain may arm Libyan rebels opposed to Muammar Gaddafi vividly illustrates the dangerously fine line western leaders must tread as revolutionary unrest sweeps the Arab world. Despite recent violence, Libya is not yet in a state of civil war. But arming the opposition is a sure way to guarantee it soon could be. Thus a forcible intervention designed to help may have the opposite effect to that intended. Cameron’s ingenuous ideas about ending the Gaddafi era, outlined to the House of Commons this week, were prompted in part by a desire to ensure Britain is on the “winning” side when the history of the 2011 Arab awakening is written. This echoes the fatuous debate in Washington over whether Barack Obama “lost” Egypt when he abandoned Hosni Mubarak. Through their latest statements, the US and Britain are trying to assure, among other things, good post-revolution relations with successor regimes. But it’s clear, with the upheavals that began in Tunisia in December still spreading , that western military intervention in specific countries to hasten that end could be both hazardous and counter-productive. On the whole, affected populations say they do not want it , or only in very limited form. Gaddafi, for example, claims the US and Britain are bent on recolonisation and stealing Libya’s oil. He would like nothing better than to portray the rebellion as a western-inspired, anti-Arab plot. In terms of “winners” and “losers”, the US and close allies like Britain and Israel are already firmly positioned in the latter category. Washington has lost, or is losing, key alliances with pro-western leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen and some Gulf states. Where autocracies remain entrenched, as in Saudi Arabia, confidence in the western allies has been badly shaken, not least by the way they dumped Mubarak and suddenly ramped up the rhetoric of “universal values”. Successful revolutions will not guarantee a return to cordiality. “If democracy does take root in the Middle East – and the jury is still out – the regimes that emerge may well be much tougher customers than the autocracies they replace,” said Charles Kupchan of the US Council on Foreign Relations . “Western observers and policy-makers had better stop operating under the illusion that the spread of democracy to the Middle East also means the spread of western values.” The twin forces of political Islam and nationalism would wield ever greater clout in more open, post-revolutionary Arab states, he suggested. In short, the strategic outlook has changed permanently. Nor will it be clear, for a considerable while, who western governments are dealing with. “The regimes that emerge may call themselves democracies and the world may go along with the lie, but the test of a system is how the power relationships work behind the scenes” US analyst, Robert Kaplan , said. “The Arab world must create from the dust of tyrannies legitimate political orders. It is less democracy than the crisis of central authority that will dominate the next phase of Middle Eastern history.” If there are any state “winners” so far in this rapidly shifting geo-strategic chess game, they are Turkey and Iran, Saudi and other analysts suggest. “Viewed through the prism of a zero-sum conflict between a US-led alliance of Arab autocrats and Israel against an Iran-led ‘resistance’ camp, the Arab rebellion has been nothing short of catastrophic for the anti-Iran forces, ” Tony Karon wrote in The National . But this conclusion, he warned, was “based on the flawed premise that a setback for the US is automatically a gain for Iran. The Arab declaration of independence from Washington is anything but a declaration of loyalty to Tehran” – despite Iranian claims. A more comfortable thought, for western leaders at least, is that moderate, secular, neo-Islamist-led Turkey may provide a paradigm for emerging post-revolutionary Arab societies. Turkish commentators certainly see it this way. Turkey’s reform experience “could assist them in building a platform for channelling the aspirations and expectations of people to reflect better governance and transparency”, Abdullah Bozkurt said in Today’s Zaman. “Turkey can certainly be an inspiration for a lot of people in these countries.” Such sentiments reflect the newfound confidence of a former Middle Eastern empire that has successfully reinvented itself, one century on, as an ambitious and supposedly benign regional power. But even help from such a quarter may initially be too much for the Arab world’s opposition forces and successor regimes at this delicate moment. First and foremost, they themselves must “win” by making their revolutions work – for it is they, more than any outsiders, who will suffer the consequences of failure. Foreign policy US foreign policy Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Egypt Saudi Arabia Arab and Middle East protests Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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NBC’s Todd Can’t Call Obama a Liberal but Labels GOP Governors ‘Conservative Warriors’

NBC's chief White House correspondent Chuck Todd, on Tuesday's Today show, had no problem labeling Republican governors like Scott Walker, “conservative,” but for some reason just couldn't get his lips to utter the word “liberal” when referring to the President. In a piece about Barack Obama meeting with the nation's governors, Todd observed that in his

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CNN Touts Liberal’s Film Targeting Supposed ‘Ignorance Surrounding Islam’

On Monday's Newsroom, CNN's Don Lemon helped film director Qasim Basir promote his new film “Mooz-lum,” which he hopes will ” clear up some of this ignorance ” about Muslims and their religion. Basir, whose last project “aimed at supporting presidential candidate Barack Obama,” claimed that ” in an average person's mind, who does not know anybody that's Muslim, it's like you see Muslim, you think terrorist .” Anchor Suzanne Malveaux introduced Lemon's segment, which ran 39 minutes into the 12 pm Eastern hour, as part of her network's “What Matters” series, which is a partnership with Essence magazine . Malveaux played up the film's “strong African-American cast and director,” and stated that her colleague “sat down with the director Qasim Basir to talk about the movie, and the state of Muslims in America.” An on-screen graphic signaled the primary focus of Lemon's interview: ” Religion + Intolerance: Don Lemon, Qasim Bair discuss 'Mooz-lum .'” Basir's “average person” claim led the segment and he continued with how he hoped to combat this supposed viewpoint: BASIR: In an average person's mind, who does not know anybody that's Muslim, it's like you see Muslim, you think terrorist. You hear terrorist, you think Muslim, and what we're trying to do with this film is separate the two, and get people to realize there are Muslims and there are terrorists. There are extremists. There are people that do horrible things, and then there are Muslims. Instead of asking why many people might think that way, or citing examples of Islamist terrorism, the CNN correspondent followed up by asking, “Why should I see this movie?” The director answered by making his first claim about “ignorance” about Islam and Muslims: BASIR: Because, most likely, it is a view that you have not seen before of Muslims in America, and given what we're facing today, the amount of ignorance surrounding Muslims and Islam, I feel it's necessary for people to see this, and for people to say, like, you know, I've never looked at it that way before. After playing a brief clip from the movie, where two veiled Muslim women are cornered by a mob armed with hockey sticks (part of the same scene is shown 22 seconds into the teaser trailer for the film ), Basir continued that ” this ignorance is what creates fear, and fear, there's so much more that happens when that is in the picture. So, we're just trying to erase, clear up some of this ignorance .” Lemon threw a softball at a director in his final question: ” So Tariq is a character. Is he kind of like you? Is it semi-autobiographical? Did you experience some of the things that he does? ” After he gave his answer, Malveaux came back and complimented the movie: ” Looks like a great film .” Basir's own personal website notes his strong support of Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign and the amount of effort he took to get him elected: Next Qasim went on to create a short film series aimed at supporting Presidential candidate Barack Obama. The series, The Inspiration of Barack: “Yes We Can” Film Series , is a compilation of seven short films all dealing with different people who become inspired by Obama to take essential steps forward in their lives …he took the series to theaters around the country, urging attendees to get involved with the Obama campaign . “My whole purpose is to help change the world. Obama getting in office will be a huge step in that direction .” Besides this film series, the director voiced his support for Obama on Huffington Post. In a November 3, 2008 post , Basir went so far to claim that the Democrat needed to be elected because Republican candidate John McCain would become a second Ronald Reagan: All you have to do is look back forty years ago….There were movements ranging from anti-war, black power, women's rights, sexual revolution, etc. It was a time when the American people realized that it was not only OK to question government, but it was our right. Those who lived it can speak on it much better. But for those of us who didn't, all we have to compare it to is the movement of now…. The protests, marches, sit in's, etc. got us very far in terms of this countries progress, but they scared the right & center so much that they also got us Reagan. We won't let this happen again . This time we are not scared, more people than ever understand exactly what has to happen. That we cannot afford to let the progression of this movement end with another Reagan, or in this case, McCain . As you might expect, CNN didn't mention any of this about Basir during the segment, and the director helped them revisit their months-old charge that Islamophobia is now “mainstream” in America . — Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here .

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Rachel Maddow Plays Gay Card: Defends Her Own Lies By Calling Critics Homophobes

The folks at MSNBC should be deeply embarrassed and ashamed of their prime time commentator Rachel Maddow. Having been exposed by Politifact for lying last week about Wisconsin having a budget surplus, Maddow on Thursday hypocritically defended herself by playing nine cherry-picked words from the broadcast in question while disgracefully calling her critics homophobes (video follows with transcript and commentary): RACHEL MADDOW, HOST: There are too many people who work too hard on this show for us to get slandered when we are in fact telling the truth. Usually, somebody saying something untrue about MSNBC or about this show, usually, honestly, it doesn’t rise above the level of somebody being wrong on the Internet. But sometimes it’s real newspapers doing what looks like real fact-checking and they really get it wrong. The right wing this week, for example, got very excited when a “St. Petersburg Times” project called PolitiFact called a piece of our reporting on the Wisconsin crisis false. It was specifically about Wisconsin’s budget. They said, quote, “Maddow and the others are wrong. There is indeed a projected deficit in Wisconsin.” Flashing red lights. Bells and whistles. Meter to red. Maddow lied. She said there is no budget shortfall in the state of Wisconsin. Roll the tape. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: There is, in fact, a $137 million budget shortfall. (END VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: “PolitiFact” ran a whole article about me supposedly denying the existence of a budget shortfall in Wisconsin. They say, quote, “Here’s the bottom line: there should be no debate on whether or not there is a shortfall. We rate Maddow’s take false.” Tape? (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: There is in fact a $137 million budget shortfall. (END VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: “PolitiFact” says I am false, false, because I denied there is a budget shortfall in Wisconsin. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: There is in fact a $137 million budget shortfall. (END VIDEO CLIP) MADDOW: If you are somebody who does not bite your nails, but you would like to start, if you feel like reading the letters we sent to “PolitiFact” asking them to please run a correction on this, we have posted those letters on our blog so you, too, can share in our frustration. They have told us they do not intend to run a correction about their mistakes on this, which I should not find astonishing but I do. “PolitiFact,” you are wrong here on the facts and bluntly and you ought to correct it. Putting the word “fact” in your name does not grant you automatic mastery of the facts. And that was her entire defense. Rather than actually address the rest of her segment last Thursday, which as Politifact and NewsBusters reported did indeed inform viewers, “Despite what you may have heard about Wisconsin’s finances, Wisconsin is on track to have a budget surplus this year,” Maddow next went after Politifact for what she believed were prior mistakes in its findings about totally unrelated issues: MADDOW: When Karl Rove wrote in “The Wall Street Journal” that Barack Obama had, quote, “The worst ratings of any president at the end of his first year,” “PolitiFact” rated that mostly true, even though the approval rating Mr. Rove cited was 49 percent and Ronald Reagan posted a 48 percent approval rating at the end of his first year. It did not matter to “PolitiFact” apparently. They rated that, the statement from Mr. Rove as mostly true. What? Yes. Because apparently the word “true” means a lot less than you think it means. “PolitiFact” also said that Democratic Congresswoman Nita Lowey’s explanation of the Stupak Amendment, the abortion amendment to health reform, they called that a false analysis. When “PolitiFact” was challenged on that claim by the Web site “FireDogLake,” “Politifact” reportedly conceded to “FireDogLake” that what Congresswoman Lowey had said about the bill, her analysis of the bill, they conceded that OK, what she said could be true in some cases. They just didn’t find it to be a likely predictor of what was going to happen in the future. So, even though they apparently conceded it could be true, they decided to not run a correction and stick with their ruling that it was false. It could be true, but we’re going to call it false. Because what is true really? We have fact in our name. I have no interest in defending Politifact on these issues for they are totally unrelated to the matter at hand. What Maddow did – and what her employers should be disgraced by – is defend herself with the classic misdirection of impugning the messenger while offering no real defense for being accused of lying other than the cherry-picked sentence, “There is, in fact, a $137 million budget shortfall.” But what surrounded those nine words in her February 17 broadcast ? RACHEL MADDOW, HOST: I’m here to report that there is nothing wrong in the state of Wisconsin. Wisconsin is fine. Wisconsin is great, actually. Despite what you may have heard about Wisconsin’s finances, Wisconsin is on track to have a budget surplus this year. I am not kidding. I’m quoting their own version of the Congressional Budget Office, the state’s own nonpartisan “assess the state’s finances” agency. That agency said the month that the new Republican governor of Wisconsin was sworn in, last month, that the state was on track to have a $120 million budget surplus this year. So, then why exactly does Wisconsin look like this right now? (VIDEO CLIP PLAYS) MADDOW: Why is there a revolt in the American Midwest tonight? Why are we in day three of massive, massive protests — real upheaval in Wisconsin’s capital city of Madison? Why are we seeing what was described today by my friend John Nichols, a seventh-generation Wisconsinite, as perhaps the biggest protests that have been seen in that state since Vietnam? Why is this — look at this — why is this happening? As the state’s own finances show, it is not happening because people who work for the state are the cause of some horrible budget crisis. It’s not because teachers are lazy and rich. It’s not because greedy snowplow drivers have bankrupted the state somehow. The state is not bankrupt. Even though the state had started the year on track to have a budget surplus — now, there is, in fact, a $137 million budget shortfall. Republican Governor Scott Walker, coincidentally, has given away $140 million worth of business tax breaks since he came into office. Hey, wait. That’s about exactly the size of the shortfall. What is happening in Wisconsin right now has absolutely nothing to do with public workers. The headline here, the way this keeps getting shorthanded, is workers angry after state is forced by budget crisis to crack down. That’s not what’s going on. The state is not being forced to crack down. A lot of states do have budget crises right now, but heading into this year, Wisconsin was not one of them. Let’s be clear what came before and after the cherry-picked nine words that Maddow and Company used for her defense: • I’m here to report that there is nothing wrong in the state of Wisconsin. Wisconsin is fine. Wisconsin is great, actually. Despite what you may have heard about Wisconsin’s finances, Wisconsin is on track to have a budget surplus this year. • I’m quoting their own version of the Congressional Budget Office, the state’s own nonpartisan “assess the state’s finances” agency. That agency said the month that the new Republican governor of Wisconsin was sworn in, last month, that the state was on track to have a $120 million budget surplus this year. • Even though the state had started the year on track to have a budget surplus — now, there is, in fact, a $137 million budget shortfall. Republican Governor Scott Walker, coincidentally, has given away $140 million worth of business tax breaks since he came into office. • A lot of states do have budget crises right now, but heading into this year, Wisconsin was not one of them. Could she have been any clearer? This segment last Thursday was designed to dishonestly disprove the claim of a “$137 million budget shortfall” not support it, and that’s what Politifact accurately deemed was false: [Maddow] added a kicker that is also making the rounds: Walker and fellow Republicans in the Legislature this year gave away $140 million in business tax breaks — so if there is a deficit projected of $137 million, they created it. Maddow and others making the claim all cite the same source for their information — a Jan. 31, 2011 memo prepared by Robert Lang, the director of the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau. It includes this line: “Our analysis indicates a general fund gross balance of $121.4 million and a net balance of $56.4 million.” We were curious about claims of a surplus based on the fiscal bureau memo. In writing it when it was released, reporters from the Journal Sentinel and Associated Press had put the shortfall at between $78 million and $340 million. That’s the projection for the end of the fiscal year, June 30, 2011. Walker himself has settled on $137 million as the deficit figure, a number reporters have adopted as shorthand. We re-read the fiscal bureau memo, talked to Lang, consulted reporter Jason Stein of the Journal Sentinel’s Madison Bureau, read various news accounts and examined the issue in detail. Our conclusion: Maddow and the others are wrong. There is, indeed, a projected deficit that required attention, and Walker and GOP lawmakers did not create it. More on that second point in a bit. The confusion, it appears, stems from a section in Lang’s memo that — read on its own — does project a $121 million surplus in the state’s general fund as of June 30, 2011. But the remainder of the routine memo — consider it the fine print — outlines $258 million in unpaid bills or expected shortfalls in programs such as Medicaid services for the needy ($174 million alone), the public defender’s office and corrections. Additionally, the state owes Minnesota $58.7 million under a discontinued tax reciprocity deal. The result, by our math and Lang’s, is the $137 million shortfall. […] Meanwhile, what about Maddow’s claim — also repeated across the liberal blogosphere — that Walker’s tax-cut bills approved in January are responsible for the $137 million deficit? Lang’s fiscal bureau report and news accounts addressed that issue as well. The tax cuts will cost the state a projected $140 million in tax revenue — but not until the next two-year budget, from July 2011 to June 2013. The cuts are not even in effect yet, so they cannot be part of the current problem. Here’s the bottom line: There is fierce debate over the approach Walker took to address the short-term budget deficit. But there should be no debate on whether or not there is a shortfall. While not historically large, the shortfall in the current budget needed to be addressed in some fashion. Walker’s tax cuts will boost the size of the projected deficit in the next budget, but they’re not part of this problem and did not create it. We rate Maddow’s take False. Indeed, and in her defense of her lies, Maddow on Thursday evening addressed none of the points made by Politifact instead just twice played for her audience nine words as a supposed declarative statement that were actually what the segment set out to disprove. Pretty pathetic when you think about it, so pathetic that Politifact responded to her nonsense Friday: Maddow's criticism in Thursday's show used artful editing and told an incomplete story. At issue is whether we checked the right factual claim. We examined her statement that Wisconsin “is on track to have a budget surplus this year.” But she maintains that in the same segment, she made clear that she knew the state had a shortfall. (You can read a transcript of the entire segment here.) We chose to examine her surplus claim because we had requests from many readers and it was the main focus at the beginning of her segment. It went on for nearly a minute. Her later statement about the shortfall was very brief and her main point seemed to be that the shortfall was created by $140 million in tax breaks for businesses. Still, we acknowledged in our article that she made that point. In her criticism of PolitiFact Thursday night, Maddow misled viewers by repeatedly playing just a nine-word snippet of her saying that “There is in fact a $137 million budget shortfall.” She neglected to include her full quote in context: “There is in fact a $137 million budget shortfall. Republican Gov. Scott Walker, coincidentally, has given away $140 million worth of business tax breaks since he came into office. Hey, wait. That's about exactly the size of the shortfall.” That artful editing — plus the fact that she didn't mention the more lengthy quote that we checked — deprived viewers of the full context for her remarks and our reasoning for checking the claim we checked. We not only examined that claim, we also debunked the suggestion from Maddow and others that the tax breaks were the cause of the $137 million shortfall. When her producer Bill Wolff e-mailed us earlier this week asking for a correction (his correspondence to us has been posted on the Rachel Maddow blog) we reviewed our work, watched the segment and decided no correction was warranted. The Politifact article included some of those hysterical e-mail messages from Wollf. Readers are advised to get a good chuckle and review them Unfortunately, there was nothing funny about Maddow's next offering during this segment Thursday: MADDOW: Right now, on the Internet, there are people who are upset with a host at the FOX News channel whose name is Shepard Smith. They are upset because Mr. Smith cited the same data that I cited recently about big money outside contributors in the last election cycle. According to opensecrets.org, which everybody cites, which tracks federal election filings and which nobody is impugning, here are those contributors. We’ve been talking about this for the last few days. Of the top 10 — seven of the top 10 from the last election, seven of the top 10 are contributing to the right. Only three of them are contributing to the left. And the only three that are contributing to the left are unions. This I believe is a key piece of analysis for understanding why the Republicans are going after unions. If you can dismantle unions, if you can weaken unions and the sector in the economy where unions are strongest is the public sector, if you can weaken unions, that has clear partisan implications. There are only three of the top 10 contributors of big money of outside groups in the last election who are not contributing to right wing causes and they are the unions. But the right wing is on fire right now about Shep Smith citing that same information I cited because I also cited it and therefore, it must be false. Because this particular burst of anger is a pure right wing Internet phenomenon, if you have seen anything about this, you have probably seen it retweeted at some point as Rachel Maddow is wrong and she looks like a man. Also favorite Rachel Maddow is wrong and also gay. You know, just because you don’t like the way it sounds when I say it or you don’t like my hair cut, or you don’t like that I’m gay, it does not mean that what we say is not true. Those are the real numbers from opensecrets.org. Those are the real big money outside contributors from the last election cycle. It was true when Open Secrets said it. It was true when I said it. It is true when Mr. Smith over at the FOX News channel said it. And if you squint a little bit it is true, I do sometimes look like a dude, and I am definitely gay. Calling bullpuckey is fun. Calling bullpuckey is journalistically useful. It is a neat idea to be able to call balls and strikes in facts and news, to fact check things you hear in the news and fact-check things you hear politicians and political figures say. People do get stuff wrong and it should be pointed out. When I confused the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution in terms of which one had a preamble, you may recall that I not only apologized for that. I sung and danced my apology to that. When you get something wrong, it is both good practice and I find satisfying to own up to it. Say you got it wrong, learn something about it, and move on. But that should apply to everybody. That should apply to everybody even if you have the word “fact” in your name, or in what you say you are doing. Calling somebody a liar when they are not lying is not the same as fact-checking. That is just bullpuckey, too. Staggering nonsense. As NewsBusters reported Wednesday, this all began with Maddow’s appearance on NBC’s “Tonight Show” the previous evening when she badly misrepresented data concerning campaign contributions during the 2010 elections: MADDOW: But, if you look at like the last election cycle, of the top ten people donating money in that election, seven of them were giving to Republicans. It was all corporate interests and right-wing PACs and stuff. Seven of the ten were all right-wing. And the only three that weren't were unions. As NewsBusters noted Wednesday, Maddow was wrong about this in a number of ways. Most importantly, with Leno, her term “top ten people donating money in that election” was proved false on several counts. After a tip from a reader, more investigation was done, and it was determined that Maddow must have been talking about other data at the website Open Secrets which she proved by referring to it on Thursday. As NewsBusters observed, when Maddow cited this data, she was either ignorantly or intentionally being imprecise. When she discussed this issue on her program Monday, she referred to “top ten big money contributors.” But Tuesday on the “Tonight Show” she said “top ten people.” Defending herself from criticism Thursday, she said “big money outside contributors,” but still has never said “top ten outside non-party committees” which is actually the data she’s been consistently citing without once identifying it properly. In reality, there is a difference. Outside non-party committees are folks that contribute money for political causes but not specific candidates. That's why they're deemed “non-party.” This is a smaller sub-section under the broader category of “outside spending groups.” If you look at all ” outside spending groups ” for 2010 at Open Secrets – which by Maddow's wording consistently has been the implication – you'll find that four of the top ten contributors were liberal with only two of them being unions. This would have completely destroyed her point that unions are the only “big money outside contributors” giving to Democrats thereby invalidating her assertion that this is the reason Gov. Walker is trying to blame the “supposed” deficits on public sector unions in his state. It appears that even after being exposed for this falsehood, Maddow still feels comfortable saying “big money outside contributors” even though the data she’s citing is “ outside non-party committees .” I guess “big money outside contributors” sounds much better than the truth. It also allows her to withhold from her viewers that by far the largest “big money outside contributor” in 2010 was the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Maddow's point would be further refuted if one looked at total contributions of “outside non-party committees” over the past several election cycles rather than just the most recent one when a conservative wave took over the nation. It is indeed true that outside conservative non-party committees donated far more than liberals in 2010 – $190 million to $94 million – but in 2008, these numbers were $160 million liberal vs. $120 million conservative. In 2006 it was $39 million liberal to $20 million conservative. In 2004 it was $121 million liberal to $69 million conservative. As such, in the limited segment of contributors that Maddow has been harping on the past week – though not properly identifying them – liberal groups out-donated conservatives three of the last four election cycles. And, as John Romano noted Thursday, if you look at the broader “outside spending groups” data – which Maddow has been implying – since 2004, Democrats have nothing to complain about: According to OpenSecrets.org Republicans received $267.3 million vs. $201.4 million for Democrats in 2010.

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On Friday’s NBC Nightly News, during a report which focused on a group of Libyans helping to organize protests against dictator Muammar Qadhafi, correspondent Richard Engel gave viewers a glimpse into oppressed people looking to America for support as he concluded his report by relating that these protesters “have been waiting for a strong message from Washington.” He also recounted that he had seen graffiti at the rebel headquarters calling on President Obama to “choose between the Libyan people or Qadhafi.” Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the Friday, February 25, NBC NightlyNews: RICHARD ENGEL: In this burned-out courthouse, now the opposition headquarters, volunteers are gathering evidence of what they call war crimes, hoping one day to bring Qadhafi's regime to justice. Protesters have been waiting for a strong message from Washington. Written in graffiti on the wall at that protester headquarters today, it said that President Obama must choose between the Libyan people or Qadhafi.

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Fox News Fatigue, Firsthand

I say this to the world: Dave Neiwert is my hero. Anyone who can seriously monitor the Fox News grind day after day deserves a medal of honor. I have spent a week watching, and come away with the understanding that a steady diet of what they serve over there will leave you sick, angry, and spelling-challenged. I knew something was wrong yesterday when I had to stop and think about how to spell a word I’ve known how to spell forever. It was something simple, like “labelled.” But I had to think about it for more than a few seconds. This is not like me. I am anal about spelling and rarely make a mistake. Using a spell-checker is a matter of pride with me. I could, but I won’t. What evil influence could possibly be corrupting my spelling abilities? I found myself not even caring if I could spell it right just as long as I could be done with what I was doing. And then it hit me. I realized yesterday marked a full week of watching Fox. I knew it had to be the culprit. As one who has banned Fox News from my house for years, it is never, ever on. But with Dave gone, I volunteered to monitor it for a week in his absence. I did learn a few things, about myself and about their techniques. enlarge I learned there is a “theme of the day”, set at 3AM California time when Fox and Friends comes on with their faux friendly little coffee klatch. Yesterday’s theme was “Liberals are less civil than Tea Partiers.” It began last night with Bill O’Reilly’s ongoing claim that he’s unfairly accused of being unfair. But today, it was the overriding, dominant theme. Every show serves their own flavor of the theme inside the context of the main story, which happened to be the Wisconsin showdown with Governor Walker. Whether they were talking about the reporter punking the governor, or protests in solidarity with Wisconsinites, it is hammered home over and over and over and over again. No one is exempt or escapes The Theme, not even Glenn Beck. Watch here, as he takes a break from his incoherent ranting about President Obama making a statement about Libya while they were sleeping, and how that must have been because he had to coach his daughters or something. I’m convinced he was just pissed that his show was interrupted for it. Here’s the clip: Click here to view this media For Beck, it’s all about the SEIU, and how horrible it would have been if Tea Partiers sang their new “fight song”. There’s The Theme: Liberals are evil, tea partiers were unfairly maligned. Moving on to Hannity, here’s the opening screen: enlarge This, from the guy who refers to the President as “the anointed one”. And later in the show, he had this horrible awful video supplied to him by FreedomWorks showing awful, awful mean liberal racists being mean and racist to a black guy holding a Gadsden flag. Here you go. One interesting thing is how they interpreted the shouts to “go back to your own side.” I watched it twice, and it appeared to me that protesters were separated by ropes, and he had wandered over to the side where the union protesters were. Click here to view this media There was one clearly racist question tossed at him by the older woman who wanted to know if he had any children — that he admitted to. That was uncalled for and was definitely rude. But it doesn’t rise to the level of punching someone out , or any of the effigy-burnings and related symbolic violence we saw with the tea partiers. And of course, Monica Crowley calling Obama “Obama Mubarak” over the DOMA decision was certainly civil, don’t you think? Next, we move into the O’Reilly hour where he does his very best to be “fair” while gabbling on with the Fox and Friends crew about the President’s “defiance” with regard to DOMA. No mention of mean liberals (remember, he started that on Wednesday), but I do note that his word of the day is ” meretricious “. This is what it’s like every single day. I started out sort of understanding what Glenn Beck was saying in the beginning of the week, but by the end of the week not only did I not understand him, the sound of his voice gave me a migraine. Someone said he speaks in tongues. Yes, he probably does but the spiritual language he speak is the language of liars and fools. Even conservatives wonder about him , but even with all of that, he still has one helluva dog whistle and he uses it…liberally. They take the theme and flog it mercilessly for that day, then let up as the next theme emerges. It’s a symphony of sorts — a symphony with lots of percussion, dissonance, and out of tune clanging cymbals with a shrill, high-pitched, irritating whistle barely audible at all times. It does something to viewers, even viewers who are discerning or fair in how they view the world, issues and the political landscape. It keeps them angry all the time. Outraged. Either they share the outrage and anger of their TV hosts, or they’re outraged and angry at the BS being shoved in their face. It’s as much a brainwashing technique as strapping someone in a chair and forcing them to watch the same themes over and over and over again. There are code words. Lots and lots of code words. And of course, the classic slams wrapped in a question. O’Reilly earlier: “Is Barack Obama an effective leader?” Repeating the same graphic over and over of the “fleebaggers” — the 14 Democrats who left the state as the only effective method of filibuster. All of this leads to fatigue; fatigue turns to irritation; irritation turns to apathy. I would shrug at comments that would have gotten a rise out of me earlier in the week. They count on that. For people like me that constant cymbal clang becomes overwhelming and I just shut down, sick of the whole thing. This is how they win. They wear you down over time with fear, anger, and apathy unless you’re strong enough to resist. It’s why John and David wrote Over the Cliff, and why we here at Crooks and Liars come back every day and debunk their lies in small, bite-sized chunks that can be barely tolerated but still digested. I wonder how long detox will take?

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Apparently Barack Obama’s opposition to lobbyist influence isn’t as strident as advertised. Obama’s aides still consult with lobbyists, Politico reports—they just do it across the street from the White House. These chats, held in meeting rooms just off the White House campus, aren’t recorded in the visitor logs that…

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“If American workers are being denied their right to organize when I’m in the White House, I will put on a comfortable pair of shoes and I will walk on that picket line with you as president of the United States.” — Barack Obama, quoted by  Slate , while making a campaign speech in 2007. The president is a very cautious man. Everything is discussed, analyzed and ruminated upon. But some things? For some things, you really want a leader, and I can’t think of one good reason why Barack Obama can’t go to Wisconsin. If he were a Republican, he would simply say, “I made a campaign promise and I have to keep it.” Mr. President, just this once, I actually want you to think like a Republican. Keep your promise — and don’t apologize for it.

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