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Netanyahu Heckler

UnumCommunitas says: Netanyahu heckler tied to Chimpanzee and Chief Obama who Disrupted speech to Congress shouting, 'stop Israeli war crimes'

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For many in the media Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu's reaction to Barack Obama insistence that his country return to the 1967 borders was out of bounds. ABC's Christiane Amanpour declared she was “stunned” by his “public lecture” of the President and NBC's Andrea Mitchell hissed, “it was really rude,” and charged he treated Obama ” like a school boy.” Mitchell didn't reserve her criticism to Netanyahu as she even went after Republicans who dared to take his side, accusing them of “piling on the president.” The following is a collection of some of the media's most outrageous outbursts over the Israeli prime minister's response to Obama, over the last couple of days: First up, on the May 22 edition of Meet the Press, Mitchell was offended “in the fashion” Netanyahu “lectured” the President, “treating him like a school boy.” DAVID GREGORY: At the same time, what's happening today, we want to take you live here in Washington, D.C., to the scene of AIPAC. This is the pro-Israel lobby, very powerful in the United States. The President will be speaking here, Andrea Mitchell, and this is on the heels of a rupture with Israel. The President said this week that any peace plan, a Palestinian state would have to go back to the borders of prior to the 1967 war. This was significant. ANDREA MITCHELL: He did have language that said there would be land swaps to protect Israel's security, but it was taken as a red flag by Netanyahu. And what happened then was that even if this was implicit in things that previous presidents had said, Netanyahu seized on it. Even before he got on the plane, he criticized the President, and in such a fashion! He lectured him in the Oval Office. And if you look at that picture that you have up there right now, it was a stone-faced Barack Obama and Netanyahu basically treating him like a school boy. People even who work for Netanyahu, some Israeli officials, told him later that he went too far. That it was, it was really rude and that there would be blowback to this. Also on Sunday, on ABC's This Week, Amanpour joined Jake Tapper in being flabbergasted by what they saw as Netanyahu exacerbating an already “frosty relationship” with Obama. CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR: So you talked about no relationship. I mean, they have a frosty relationship at best, right, Jake? JAKE TAPPER: There's no love lost, I think it's fair to say. And I also think it's fair to say that when Bibi in the Oval Office did something I've never seen happen… AMANPOUR: I was going to ask you… TAPPER: …which is, which is this little history lesson on the Jewish people and suffering, that did not endear him further to the White House. AMANPOUR: Were you, were you stunned by that? I mean, it did look like a public lecture. AARON MILLER, FORMER STATE DEPARTMENT OFFICIAL: Yeah, I mean, it was – it was pretty unprecedented. I mean, [Menachem] Begin used to lecture Carter, but it was done privately. Begin was too polite to do it publicly. Netanyahu saw an opportunity. He was clearly upset. I mean, he feels that he was set up. So this was payback. And it was payback at a time when the prime minister feels pretty self-confident that the peace process is going nowhere. And he has a number of cards to play. I'm not sure, however, for an American audience, you want to be in position of lecturing your only reliable ally. AMANPOUR: Even Jeffrey Goldberg, who is one of the most reliable friends of Israel in print and in all sorts of way, said that he was offended to see — to see the Israeli prime minister basically lecturing the President of the United States and that Netanyahu had, quote, “gone out of his way” to alienate this president. Over on CBS's Face the Nation Bob Schieffer took exception to Newt Gingrich calling Obama's demand for Israel to return to pre-1967 borders “dangerous.” BOB SCHIEFFER: And we're back with the Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich. Mister Gingrich, the President made a big speech on the Middle East last week. What did you think of it? NEWT GINGRICH: I think it is a disaster. I think it is extraordinarily dangerous. I think that it–defining the 1967 border would be an act of suicide for Israel. They are totally non-defensible. Ithink for the United States, you know– we don't have moral equivalence here. You have Hamaswhich is a terrorist organization whose stated goal is the destruction of Israel. You have a democracy. Now the idea that somehow we're supposed to be neutral between Hamas and Israel is fundamentally flawed. And I do not believe that we should have any pressure on Israelas long as Hamas's policy is the destruction of Israel. And as long as missiles are being fired into Israel and terrorists are preparing to try to kill Israelis. And I think it is– a President who can't control his own border probably shouldn't lecture Israel about their border. SCHIEFFER: I have to ask you though you're using words like dangerous. I mean, the President was calling for peace. How- why – why can you characterize that as dangerous? GINGRICH: Because how do you have peace with a Hamas organization whose stated goal is the destruction of Israel and driving every Israeli out of the country? I mean, read what Hamas says. This idea, that somehow– these people are firing missiles virtually every day intoIsrael. These people are constantly preparing for terrorism. They're recruiting children to be suicide bombers. How – how can you – the President talks about peace when he ought to be insisting that we cut off all aid to Hamas and isolate Hamas as long as it is a terrorist organization trying to destroy an entire people. I mean, I

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Howard Dean: Far-Right Hates Muslims, Gays and Immigrants

As readers are likely aware, former Vermont governor Howard Dean is a contributor to CNBC, and in this role, he continues to say the darnedest things. On Monday's “The Last Word,” Dean said of the far-right, “They hate Muslims, they hate gays, they hate immigrants, and the rhetoric in the primaries shows that” (video follows with transcript and commentary): HOWARD DEAN, CNBC: Let’s look at what these guys are doing. The far-right is what I call the Hate Wing of the Republican Party. They’re over-represented in primaries, and of course when elections come along, they generally don’t win. But they can cause enormous trouble in the primaries. They hate Muslims, they hate gays, they hate immigrants, and the rhetoric in the primaries shows that. Honestly, is this the kind of talk Comcast and General Electric should tolerate from someone on their payroll? Oh, this is MSNBC? I withdraw the question.

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Chris Matthews: Paul Ryan’s Medicare Plan a ‘Death Certificate’ for Republicans

Remember all that talk four months ago in the wake of the Tucson shootings that political commentators needed to tone down their rhetoric? MSNBC's Chris Matthews certainly doesn't, for on Monday's “Hardball,” he called Rep. Paul Ryan's (R-Wisc.) Medicare plan a 'killer politically” and a “death certificate” for Republicans (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS: Welcome back to “Hardball.” Election Day in New York’s 26th district is tomorrow and voters will fill the seat held by former Congressman Chris Lee. The election’s been a tough battle focused on the House Republican plan to kill Medicare. The top three candidates include Democrat Kathy Hochul, Republican Jane Corwin, and Tea Partier Jack Davis splitting the vote on the right. So, will voters say “No” to the Paul Ryan Republican plan passed by the House Republicans to kill Medicare, and is this a trend that could continue into the 2012 House and Senate races across the country? Josh Marshall is the founding editor of Talking Points Memo and John Feehery is a Republican consultant. First of all, Josh, just a, just a little memory lane from last week. Newt Gingrich was all around the country getting his butt kicked because he went out there and said this Republican plan to basically replace Medicare is right-wing social engineering. He had to then go through the Cambodian reeducation camp for about three days, and ended up well swallowing all of the hell he was given on this issue, and accepting some sort of penitential experience. But everybody knows what Newt thinks. This is a killer politically. Then this week, Scott Brown up in Massachusetts said, “I'm not for it.” Is the message among thinking Republicans to be confirmed tomorrow that this, that this Medicare plan is a, is a, well, it’s a death certificate? It's a killer politically and a death certificate. It appears Matthews forgot what he and his guests said on January 10 of this year on the first installment of “Hardball” following the Tucson shootings: CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Good evening. I’m Chris Matthews in Washington, with this special edition of HARDBALL. This country has a history of political violence. Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley shot and killed in office, Teddy Roosevelt shot in the chest in 1912 while campaigning for the presidency, Franklin Roosevelt shot at a month before his inauguration. The bullet killed the mayor of Chicago. In 1950, assassins carried out a plot to kill Harry Truman, killing one of the president’s bodyguards, Jack Kennedy killed by an assassin, Gerald Ford shot at twice in separate assassination attempts, Ronald Reagan nearly killed by an assassin, saved only by the quick thinking of a Secret Service agent who gets him to the hospital in three minutes. Huey Long, George Lincoln Rockwell, Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy, Allard Lowenstein, Malcolm X all killed by gunmen. We’ve grown up with this stuff, knowing this stuff. We’re not like other countries, not in Europe, not in Africa, not in Asia, not in South America, not in Canada or in Mexico. It’s only here that political assassination has worked its way into the history books and won’t get out. Given this, why would anyone bring a gun to a political event in this country? Why would anyone want to? Why would any political leader think it’s just fine to do so? For one reason, I can only suppose, to say that guns can be a solution to a political difference. What does it mean when a possible presidential candidate paints targets, crosshairs over members of Congress she disagrees with, or when a Senate candidate says she supports “2nd Amendment remedies” to political differences with the Congress? How can a person who has any sense of our country’s history talk like that? John Wilkes Booth didn’t like which way the Civil War went. Lee Harvey Oswald was infatuated politically with Fidel Castro and didn’t like what Kennedy had said about him. Sirhan Sirhan didn’t like Bobby Kennedy’s strong support for Israel. Assassins often have recognized political motives, left and right, to go out and kill a politician. They don’t like what a leader says, they go kill them. The matter here is what you believe about gun violence and politics. Do we think guns are a proper reference point in political debate? If not, why are guns even mentioned in our political discussions? Why are they carried to political events? Is there any other interpretation than this, that some people believe guns, the threat of using them, are a political solution to this country’s debate? Can we, out of this horror in Arizona, simply agree on this one thing? Don’t bring guns to political events. Don’t talk about guns in a political argument. Let’s stop it right here. Gun violence against politicians is not a metaphor. It’s not about the Old West. It’s not cowboy talk. It’s not about the Founding Fathers and the British army. When you talk about using guns or threatening to use them against policies or politicians you don’t like, it’s for real. When you bring a gun to a political event, you are the problem. And leaders who refuse to say just this are themselves part of the problem. Let’s begin with three members of Congress who are all close friends with Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords — U.S. Congressman Raul Grijalva of Arizona. He represents another part of Tucson. Also with us, U.S. Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida and Congresswoman Chellie Pingree of Maine. Thank you all for joining us. I want to start with my friend, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and talk about this development tonight, and that is that Michael Bennet, the senator from Colorado, has just had someone threaten his life. That person has been arrested. This goes on. Your thoughts. REP. DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ (D), FLORIDA: Well, my thoughts, just to follow up on your introduction to the show or that — you’re absolutely right, Chris. We have to tone down the rhetoric. We have to really look inside ourselves. I think members of Congress need to lead by example. And then, hopefully, by removing and checking ourselves on the violent rhetoric that far too many people sometimes use in the political arena, that we’ll be able to lead by example and push the outside world, the shock jocks and the — and other political leaders, to take a page from our book. It’s absolutely critical because there’s fragile people who are mentally unstable that, you know, we just don’t know when they’re going to take those — that language literally. MATTHEWS: Congressman Grijalva, your thoughts about this, coming so close to where you live and your friend? REP. RAUL GRIJALVA (D), ARIZONA: Yes, it’s been devastating for all of us. We’re happy with some of the prognostics that’s happening about Gabby, but generally, it’s a level of shock. That’s all I can say. And you know, this whole political discourse that we’ve had for the last four or five years in this country, we’re not — I’m not saying that this has led to this, but there is a contributing factor that all of us in political life that use rhetoric that is incendiary, that creates demons out of other people — we need to be very careful and we need to tone that whole thing down. MATTHEWS: And Congresswoman Pingree from Maine. Thank you for joining us, as well. REP. CHELLIE PINGREE (D), MAINE: Absolutely. Well, our thoughts and prayers are with Gabby and the families of all the victims of this senseless crime. And it was a deranged person, but the fact is, it gives us an opportunity to talk about political speech, to remember that words do matter, that as Debbie Wasserman Schultz said, people are influenced by these words. And you know, honestly, it happens on the left and the right. There was a left-wing blogger, when Debbie didn’t vote for Nancy Pelosi, said, Gabby Giffords, you’re dead. In my state, there’s a right-wing group that has a slogan on its Web site that said, If you’re willing to fight for your country, are you willing to kill for your country? We can’t use language like this and expect that it won’t have some effect on civil discourse, which is critical to our political system. So, roughly four months ago, two days after the Tucson shootings, Schultz told Matthews, “We have to tone down the rhetoric…Hopefully, by removing and checking ourselves on the violent rhetoric that far too many people sometimes use in the political arena, that we’ll be able to lead by example and push the outside world, the shock jocks and the — and other political leaders, to take a page from our book.It’s absolutely critical because there’s fragile people who are mentally unstable that, you know, we just don’t know when they’re going to take those — that language literally.” I guess Matthews has forgotten this, as he did Grijalva telling him, “This whole political discourse that we’ve had for the last four or five years in this country, we’re not — I’m not saying that this has led to this, but there is a contributing factor that all of us in political life that use rhetoric that is incendiary, that creates demons out of other people — we need to be very careful and we need to tone that whole thing down.” It appears he also forgot Pingree saying, “We can’t use language like this and expect that it won’t have some effect on civil discourse, which is critical to our political system.” Now, four months later, Matthews is quite comfortable saying Ryan's plan is a “killer politically” and a “death certificate.” Just more proof that all the hand-wringing about violent rhetoric in politics back then utter nonsense, for people like Matthews are now using the same language against their Republican rivals they were complaining about in January. And that ends this installment of “What a Difference a 'D' Makes.”

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Matthews on Romney, Pawlenty and Huntsman: ‘I Don’t Want An Interview With Any Of These Guys’

MSNBC's Chris Matthews opened his “Hardball” program Monday by once again bashing the possible Republican presidential candidates. With Indiana governor Mitch Daniels dropping out Saturday, Matthews focused his attention on Mitt Romney, Tim Pawlenty, and Jon Huntsman telling guests John Heilemann and Mark Halperin, “I don’t want an interview with any of these guys” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: You first, you first. Which one of these fellows, we mentioned three of them, they're regular Republicans, conservative Republicans, I assume, I guess we are thinking that perhaps left to right it's probably Huntsman, Pawlenty and then Romney today, but it keeps changing. Which one of these could excite a big heated room down in Tampa, Florida, next September, when all the people are there, the whole party, left, rather right to far right, is present? Which could excite them and turn them on most likely? Mark? MARK HALPERIN, TIME MAGAZINE: All three have the potential to do it. But all of them have challenges, that is a challenge for all three of them, that particular skill. JOHN HEILEMANN, NEW YORK MAGAZINE: I think the one who has the most potential to be able to tap into the Tea Party's energy is Tim Pawlenty because in fact he is more of a populist, he’s more of a working class guy and he’s more of a social conservative. And we’re going to see him run that way in Iowa for instance. He’s going to run as a strong evangelical Christian. He can tap into a lot of that grass roots energy in a way that the other two might not be able. MATTHEWS: Well, I have an advantage over you guys: I don’t want an interview with any of these guys. Imagine saying that about men that could actually end up being president – that you don't want to interview them because you think they're boring. Should journalists only interview candidates that give them a thrill up their leg? Would Matthews have declined to interview Walter Mondale in 1984 or Michael Dukakis in 1988, neither of which were at all exciting? Ironically, Matthews' colleague Rachel Maddow predicted on his syndicated program this weekend that one of the GOP candidates would refuse all interviews with mainstream media outlets. Maybe Matthews wants to be the snubber rather than the snubbee. Of course, this is all a smokescreen, for the most exciting possible GOP candidate – from a purely entertaining level – was Donald Trump, and Matthews spent weeks trashing him day after day. As such, it's not excitement Matthews is looking for in a candidate – it's liberalism, and any that don't slant left are the subject of his ire. This was extremely obvious Monday as no matter how he pounded on the threesome in question, the “Hardball” host's guests – who both had significant access to the 2008 candidates for their book “Game Change” – were far more positive. Halperin for example mentioned that he had spent the weekend covering Huntsman and found the former ambassador to China to have a greater ability to speak about that nation than any presidential candidate he's ever seen with the exception of Bill Clinton. The Time magazine editor ended his thought by saying that Huntsman shows potential on a range of issues that if he lives up to, “I think he will be the next President of the United States.” Matthews was having none of this and instead told his guests, “I have an advantage over you guys: I don’t want an interview with any of these guys.” And this is what passes for journalism today at the so-called cable news network known as MSNBC.

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Less than 24 hours after a devastating tornado ripped through Joplin, Missouri – killing at least 116 people – an MSNBC anchor was busy putting a political spin on the tragedy. Tamron Hall wondered aloud on “News Nation” today whether climate change was to blame for the rash of hurricanes and tornadoes that ravaged several states, including Missouri, over the last few months. “What about climate change?” speculated Hall, interviewing Dr. Howard Bluestein. “You have many people who see these severe storms, and not just the tornadoes, but the strength of hurricanes and even severe storms, we're getting hail and high winds right now from Texas, I believe, all the way through the Midwest. Is this a result of climate change or an effect of climate change?” Bluestein, a meteorology professor at the University of Oklahoma, dismissed Hall's baseless conjecture: “I don't think we can prove whether or not the occurrence of all these bad events this year are due to global warming whatsoever. They could be simply due to natural variability.” Hall began the interview with an open-ended question about the potential causes of these severe weather events, but after Bluestein suggested “random chance” could be the culprit, the daytime anchor pressed the climate change issue. A transcript of the segment can be found below: MSNBC News Nation May 23, 2011 2:34 p.m. EDT TAMRON HALL: What about climate change? You have many people who see these severe storms, and not just the tornados, but the strength of hurricanes and even severe storms, we're getting hail and high winds right now from Texas, I believe, all the way through the Midwest. Is this a result of climate change or an effect of climate change? Dr. HOWARD BLUESTEIN, University of Oklahoma: Well I can't speak for hurricanes, but for tornadoes and supercells, I don't think we can prove whether or not the occurrence of all these bad events this year are due to global warming whatsoever. They could be simply due to natural variability. After all, when you think back to some of the other historic events, like April 30 1974, the tornadoes in Missouri in 1953, the tri-state tornadoes back in 1925. If you through the records, you'll see that every 20, 30, 40 years there are these tremendous widespread outbreaks and some of them occurred long before we were talking about global warming. HALL: Alright, Dr. Howard Bluestein, of the University of Oklahoma, where they certainly see their share of tornadoes in that state. Thank you so much, sir. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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NBC’s Mitchell Admonishes ‘Really Rude’ Netanyahu Treating Obama ‘Like a School Boy’

At the end of Sunday's Meet the Press, NBC chief foreign affairs correspondent Andrea Mitchell scolded Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for daring to criticize President Obama's call for Israel to return to 1967 borders: “…he criticized the President, and in such a fashion! He lectured him in the Oval Office….basically treating him like a school boy.” Mitchell went on to declare: “People even who work for Netanyahu, some Israeli officials, told him later that he went too far. That it was, it was really rude and that there would be blowback to this.” The leading voice of criticism in Israel was Netanyahu's liberal political opponent, Tzipi Livini, who also called on the Prime Minister to resign. On her 1PM ET hour MSNBC show on Friday , Mitchell also took Republican presidential candidates to task for denouncing Obama's call for pre-1967 war borders in Israel, remarking: “Whatever happened to politics ending at the water's edge?”

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Rachel Maddow Predicts GOP Presidential Candidate Refusing All Mainstream Media Interviews

MSNBC's Rachel Maddow this weekend predicted that there is going to be a Republican presidential candidate that will refuse to do any interviews with the mainstream media. She told her fellow panelists on the syndicated “Chris Matthews Show” that it could be Sarah Palin (video follows with transcript and commentary): RACHEL MADDOW, MSNBC: Mine is a prediction. I predict that there will be a candidate from the right side of the Republican Party, it may be Sarah Palin, somebody else, but they will establish a new litmus test for Republican candidates, which is that they do not do mainstream media interviews. That doing a mainstream media interview is itself a capitulation. That only conservative media should be engaged with by the nominee. CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Meaning Fox, Limbaugh, radio? MADDOW: That’s right. KELLY O’DONNELL, NBC: Boy, if I’m on a GOP bus, that is a depressing, depressing prediction. MADDOW: Hey, good news is I’m always wrong. Well, that's good news for everyone except the folks that watch her on a nightly basis and think what she's saying bears any semblance to the truth. If she knows what she's saying is always wrong, maybe she should begin each of her programs with a disclaimer. A conservative can dream, can't he?

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Keith Olbermann On Letterman: Talks Current TV, NBC Exit (VIDEO)

Keith Olbermann made his first television appearance since his exit from MSNBC on Wednesday, chatting with David Letterman on “The Late Show” about his new Current TV show, as well as current events. Olbermann’s new show–which, like his MSNBC show, will be called “Countdown”–starts June 20. Letterman asked him what caused him to leave MSNBC in January. “At some point…it’s occurred to me that the best place for me to start doing the news…would be at a place that’s just in the news business and nothing else,” he said. “Just a company that’s just news and we could kind of make every decision relying on that…and that had been at the back of my mind for a while.” Letterman asked Olbermann about the nine employers he has left during his professional career, and wondered what the state of the bridges he burned are. “I did not burn the bridges,” Olbermann said. “I have napalmed them.” Letterman then turned to the question of the name of the show. How, he wondered, had Olbermann managed to keep it after leaving MSNBC? “We just sort of did it,” Olbermann said. “We’ll hear from them if they’re not happy.” WATCH:

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Google News Archives stops digitizing old newspapers, picks great day to do it

Ain’t like you’ll be reading ‘em anyway after today’s over. Google News Archives stops digitizing old newspapers, picks great day to do it originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 May 2011 00:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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