Editor's Note: NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center founder Brent Bozell issued the following statement and provided evidence on the double standard of blaming conservatives for the tragic shooting in Tucson, Arizona while repeatedly ignoring left-wing media outbursts wishing death upon conservatives: The so-called ‘news’ media have zero currency in this debate because we have documented the Left using hateful, vicious language far worse than any conservative. Their attacks on conservatives are untrue and utterly hypocritical. If they really cared about the effects of political rhetoric, they would have gone after any number of those left-wingers who have directly incited violence – starting with the man with the world’s biggest audience: President Obama . After all, he did say, “If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun.” But that would be a ridiculous charge. And besides, the media aren’t really concerned about violent rhetoric. This is part of a much more insidious and calculated campaign to criminalize conservative thought. Next they will ramp up support to regulate free speech on radio airwaves and the like. They want to illegalize opposition to liberal thought and are willing to accuse, indict and prosecute anyone who stands in the way of that Socialist goal. Here are some lowlights of the left-wing media’s death wishes: read more
Continue reading …Click here to view this media A reminder that back in March Elizabeth Hasselbeck of The View took the unusual step of criticizing Sarah Palin for her crosshairs ad. Segment originally aired March 26, 2010. via Huffington Post Sarah Palin’s gun sight-riddled campaign map is so militant that it’s even lost her the support of “The View” co-host Elizabeth Hasselbeck, who called Palin’s behavior “despicable.” After “View” co-host Joy Behar said the map, which features white and red gun sights drawn over districts whose Democratic representatives voted for health care, “looks like an al Qaeda Christmas card” Thursday, Hasselbeck — who campaigned with Palin in 2008 — spoke up in uncharacteristic agreement. “This hasn’t been a great week in terms of, I think, the Constitution and where it says that you’re supposed to, you know, everybody is, has a mandate to have insurance. But I think the way some Republicans are handling this is nothing more than purely despicable,” Hasselbeck said. “The names that are next to and being highlighted by those crosshairs — I think it’s an abuse of the Second Amendment. I also feel as though every single person on here is a mother, a father, a friend, a brother, a sister, and to take it to this level is — it’s disappointing to see this come from the Party, and I would hope that leaders like Sarah Palin would end this.” Joy Behar thanked her for it, shaking her hand. “Republicans are not speaking out against this and you may be the first one to do it, and I salute you, my girl.” Whoopi Goldberg would say “Republicans, whatever comes from this it’s on your heads.” enlarge Elizabeth Hasselbeck introducing Sarah Palin in Orlando, Oct. 26, 2008
Continue reading …This graphic says everything about Glenn Beck’s brain. What there is left of it. enlarge My theory? It was a fake nod to no violence with a wink on the left to the right-wing gun nuts. Now listen to Beck warn Palin to get a bodyguard because “there are nutjobs on all sides.” The violence he expresses is remarkable, even for Beck. Apocalyptic visions of violence. Oh, and “peace and love.” Give me a break. He loves Sarah Palin though, and certainly gives a dramatic reading of her email. There is a certain chaotic rhythm to what the right wing does. Even in their denials, they’re chaotic. They deflect, distract, and use cognitive dissonance as weapons to derail any meaningful discussion or attention to that which they have caused. It is their way of keeping followers under their thumb. Nothing illustrates this better than that graphic and this incredible piece of radio theater. (graphic: h/t @StopBeck – Angelo Carusone)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Think Progress noted, Joe Scarborough probably didn’t make a whole lot of right wingers happy with this segment on Morning Joe, but they left out a whole lot of caveats and false equivalencies that went along with this admission. Scarborough On Giffords Shooting: ‘Is This Not A Time For People, Like Sarah Palin…To Apologize?’ : Conservatives and tea party activists have reacted with rage to what they view as accusations from the left that they are somehow responsible for this weekend’s massacre in Arizona that targeted Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ). In reality, progressives are not trying to assign blame or argue that shooter Jared Lee Loughner — who seems to possess no coherent political ideology at all — is a member of any popular political movment, but rather to point out that words have consequences . Political and pundit leaders need to be aware that their words will reach the “serious and delirious alike ” and that their rhetoric should not serve to inflame ignorance. Some conservatives understand this. An unnamed “senior Republican senator” told Politico yesterday that “there is a need for some reflection here — what is too far now?” And on MSNBC this morning, former GOP congressman Joe Scarbrough and conservative stalwart Pat Buchanan agreed that right-wing firebrands like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) should “apologize” for their violent rhetoric — not to assume any culpability for the tragedy, but to simply acknowledge that “they’ve been irresponsible in their rhetoric”: SCARBOROUGH: So Pat, is this not a time for people, like Sarah Palin, who have used violent imagery – she just has. I know some of my conservative friends and family members won’t like that reality. Or, Michele Bachmann, who said she wants Minnesotans armed and dangerous. Isn’t this an opportune time for them to apologize -– not saying that it led to anything — but just saying that they’ve been irresponsible in their rhetoric and they’re going to be more careful moving forward? […] I am just saying though, I mean, God, you’ve worked for two presidents. Would you not be in there if you were working for Sarah Palin right now, saying, go out and say it had nothing to do with this shooting, but you understand that it was irresponsible, and you’re going to be more careful moving forward. Wouldn’t you give her that advice if you were her aide? PAT: Well, I certainly would. I would give everybody the advice to tone down the rhetoric and get away from military and the armed metaphors and things that a lot of us have used in campaigns, especially at a time like this. You know, I sure would Joe. I’d have thought a little more of this admission if we didn’t have so much of the “all sides do it” false equivalencies nonsense. As Think Progress noted in the portion of the post I did not quote here, Michelle Malkin came out with a list of claims that liberals have been acting as badly as conservatives when it comes to the over heated rhetoric after this tragic shooting in Arizona. When that list includes Democrats in our government or leadership positions calling for their political opponents to be shot or afraid to come out of their homes, you can tell me that all sides are equal in this debate. As to the Morning Joe interview, I’m frankly surprised Scarborough got Palin fan-boy Buchanan to admit that he’d tell his girlfriend to lay off the “armed metaphors”. It’s a step in the right direction for both of them, which is welcomed, but I’m quite sure it won’t mean any less typical political hackery from either of them on a daily basis or the need for them to be called out for it.
Continue reading …NewsBusters has exhaustively documented the way in which the liberal media and Dem politicians have sought to exploit the Arizona shootings, seeking to pin blame on a range of Republicans and conservative media figures. It was thus nothing short of surreal to listen to MSNBC analyst Mark Halperin this morning.
Continue reading …enlarge Getting a little too close to home in 1954 Click here to view this media Under the heading of “never say never”, an unprecedented attack took place on Capitol Hill during a session of Congress on March 1, 1954. A group of Puerto Rican nationals opened fire from the gallery, spraying the floor of the House of Representatives in a hail of some 30 bullets. Five Representatives were shot and seriously wounded in the attack before the Nationals, Lolita Lebron, Rafael Miranda, Andres Cordero and Irving Rodriquez were arrested. It served as an unpleasant wakeup call to those who felt the Halls of Congress and elected officials were immune to acts of violence. Something which, no doubt makes it all that much more apparent today. And something which, sadly is taken for granted in 2011.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media CNN’s Howard Kurtz and the San Francisco Chronicle’s Debra Saunders did their best to give cover to Sarah Palin for her crosshairs map targeting Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. It’s pretty bad when even Politico hack Roger Simon has had enough of your nonsense. As he rightfully pointed out, Palin doesn’t have to be directly responsible for what happened with this shooting to have a conversation about the violent political rhetoric coming from her and the rest of the right wing noise machine in America and the fact that it needs to stop. Edit: A tweet by Howard Kurtz on Saturday. enlarge KURTZ: You just saw that montage, Roger Simon, and you can’t make a worse mistake than that, to declare a member of Congress dead. And I find it disappointing, because we’ve been through so many stores like that, where fragmentary information turns out to be wrong. SIMON: Well, you’re always going to get certain things wrong on these stories. The number of dead always climbs and shrinks, and climbs again. I remember as a young school kid hearing that Vice President Johnson had been shot and President Kennedy had been wounded. That got flipped around. The fact is, we go with what we hear. That’s often wrong. KURTZ: But why not wait? Look, we understand it’s happening, you’re seeing sort of news gathering in its roughest and rawest form. Why not wait until it’s confirmed. If she was dead, we would have found out 20 minutes later. KURTZ: And on that point, Debra Saunders, a couple of hours after this tragic shooting, even as we weren’t sure who was alive and who was dead, I Googled “Gabrielle Giffords” and “Sarah Palin.” And lots of stories and blog posts came up talking about Sarah Palin, 10 months ago, putting up a map of the Democrats she wanted defeated, and using crosshairs, gun sites, to represent those targets, and, of course, she used the rhetoric about “Don’t retreat, reload.” And in a way that I found to be — you know, first of all, I guess how about a decent interval? The victims were still being rushed to surgery. But I also felt like, was it fair to bring her into something that she had nothing to do with? SAUNDERS: Well, it was ideological opportunism. I mean, it’s very human, when something like this happens, you want the villain to be the person you hate. And so a lot of people rushed to do that. You know, I’ve got to tell you, I’m a conservative. When I heard this story, my first thought was, oh, no, it’s a right-wing nut with a gun. And I think that these stories about the Tea Party being a ticking time bomb are crap. I find them offensive, but we know that there are extremists. KURTZ: But you said, oh, no, it’s a right-wing nut with a gun, because you feared that then anybody on the right would, by implication, be blamed for this shooting? SAUNDERS: No. Because I feared it was true. I mean, that was my first thought. KURTZ: And let’s say it was true. Let’s say it was true. SAUNDERS: But you know, that’s not our job. KURTZ: Hold on. Let’s say it was a right-wing nut with a gun. It does seem to have been a nut, a guy — a 22-year-old kid whose political ramblings are utterly incoherent. But so why should anyone else be blamed if it was a right-wing nut? Which is was not, by the way. SAUNDERS: No, it wasn’t. And I guess — I mean, we know that there are extremists and we know that parties have to deal with the extremists on their side. But I also, of course — I mean, as somebody in the business — and let’s — six people are dead. This is an awful tragedy. A little girl who just got on the student council shot. So this is just — this is not a political event. KURTZ: It’s awful. SAUNDERS: Let’s get that — it’s just horrible. But I also — as an opinion person, I could just see myself getting sucked into this thing where a bunch of people — and there were some people. There were people in the media with no impulse control. People like Keith Olbermann and Paul Krugman, who just, boom, started hitting Sarah Palin and, boom, started hitting the right before the facts were in. You know, it’s our job to first — it’s not our job to give our first impulses, because they are often wrong. KURTZ: They’re often wrong. Let me get — SAUNDERS: It’s our job to get the facts. SIMON: Let me give you my second and third impulse then. KURTZ: OK. SIMON: I’m not ready to surrender the point that what Sarah Palin did by putting crosshairs over congressional districts was a good and innocent thing to do. KURTZ: No, it was a dumb thing to do. SIMON: More than dumb. KURTZ: OK. SIMON: More than dumb. (CROSSTALK) SIMON: In fact, Representative Giffords complained at the time that these ads went up. KURTZ: Right. We have that tape. SIMON: Because they were bad things to do, and that they degraded the political culture in America. KURTZ: OK. PAGE: Well, I think for one thing, as Roger mentioned, this is not a new issue. This — ever since Sarah Palin first posted those pictures with the crosshairs, there were complaints about them. And right now I think if the situation were politically reversed, if a liberal was using this kind of rhetoric about a conservative, rest assured, you would hear from the conservative camp complaints. KURTZ: But that would be just as wrong. PAGE: That said, I’m not going to jump to conclusions about any particular incident like this one as to what motivated this young man. He obviously does show signs of being unhinged. And it’s a little too easy to ascribe political motive to that. KURTZ: It’s a little to easy. But Roger, you disagree. PAGE: At the same time though, the atmosphere has gotten too volatile. The rhetoric has gotten too volatile. We need to tone it down. SIMON: With all respect, Clarence — and you know I respect you — what is too easy to do is to ignore the Sarah Palin ads and say we can’t know that these ads caused the killing. Absolutely true. We can’t know it, we’ll never know it. SAUNDERS: No, no, no. Do not do this. Do not — SIMON: But then say, therefore, such ads do not require our criticism, do not require us to speak out against them, when this wasn’t called for. KURTZ: At the time, yes, but it’s 10 months later. Debra, let me get you in here because you obviously feel strongly. SAUNDERS: Yes. Don’t cheapen this whole thing. Don’t do this yet. We don’t know. Let’s just — this is a horrible, horrible tragedy, outrage, awful thing. You know, what Sarah Palin did, the target stuff, Howie, you wrote about this. It’s something campaigns do. It’s sort of like an act of guilt, that she erased it. But, you know, this isn’t about Sarah Palin. This is about these six people. This is about a congresswoman who goes out and tries to talk to her constituents and is killed — I’m sorry — I made the mistake — is shot. And don’t cheapen this by trying to make it what you want it to be ideologically. Maybe we’ll find out that’s the case later, but this is just not the time for it. It’s wrong, and you shouldn’t do that, Roger. SIMON: This isn’t about cheapening the deaths of those unfortunate people and the woundings of the others. This is about whether we collectively, as the news media, who has a big bullhorn, speak out against the use of such images of targets on people’s faces. They didn’t use faces, they used congressional districts. You can’t tell me we should say, oh, I’m not going to complain about that because it cheapens the death of those children. It doesn’t cheapen it. It gives it meaning of some kind. SAUNDERS: It has nothing to do with it. But, Roger, it has nothing to do with it as far as we know. If we find out something later, fine. But we don’t know that there is any nexus. KURTZ: We will continue this debate in a couple of moments. Transcript via Lexis Nexis .
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