Every two weeks, the Media Research Center compiles the most outrageous liberal media quotes for our Notable Quotables newsletter. For the issue dated Monday, January 24, it’s a special edition, “ Conservatives in the Crosshairs ,” documenting the smarmy attempt by the liberal media to link conservatives — especially Sarah Palin, talk radio and the Tea Party — to the horrific shooting of U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords that left six others dead. After the jump, you'll find some of the choicer quotes we’ve uncovered, including three video clips. The full issue will be available at www.MRC.org by 9am Monday: First Impulse: Let’s Blame Conservatives Arizona Daily Star columnist/cartoonist David Fitzsimmons: “I must tell you as a columnist who has covered politics in this state, it was inevitable, from my perspective.” Anchor Martin Savidge: “Why do you say that?” Fitzsimmons: “Because the right in Arizona, and I’m speaking very broadly, has been stoking the fires of a heated anger and rage successfully in this state….The politics of the state does tend to be far to the right. I would say even rabid right.” — Exchange at about 2:30pm ET during CNN’s live coverage of the Giffords shooting, January 8. Fitzsimmons later conceded his remarks were “inappropriate.” “Remember, this is the deepest fear that was in the back of everybody’s mind going through the health care debate. A lot of members were threatened. Congresswoman Giffords’ windows at her district office were broken….There is [sic] a lot of fringe groups that were very upset with the health care law, felt that the federal government was overstepping its bounds, and that was in — within everyone’s mind. It looks sadly like it’s come to fruition today.” — NBC/MSNBC correspondent Luke Russert during MSNBC live coverage at about 3:30pm ET January 8. “We don’t have proof yet that this was political, but the odds are that it was. She’s been the target of violence before….Her father says that ‘the whole Tea Party’ was her enemy. And yes, she was on Sarah Palin’s infamous ‘crosshairs’ list. Just yesterday, Ezra Klein remarked that opposition to health reform was getting scary. Actually, it’s been scary for quite a while, in a way that already reminded many of us of the climate that preceded the Oklahoma City bombing….Violent acts are what happen when you create a climate of hate. And it’s long past time for the GOP’s leaders to take a stand against the hate-mongers.” — New York Times columnist Paul Krugman in a 3:22pm ET January 8 blog posting , less than two hours after news broke of Giffords’ shooting.
Continue reading …Media critic David Zurawik and former MSNBC contributor David Shuster got into quite a heated debate Sunday over the surprise exit of Keith Olbermann. Appearing on CNN's “Reliable Sources,” the pair also quarreled about the difference in journalistic standards at Fox News and MSNBC (video follows with transcript and commentary): HOWARD KURTZ, HOST: David Zurawik, had Olbermann simply become too difficult and too much of a disruptive figure within MSNBC to continue? DAVID ZURAWIK, TELEVISION CRITIC, “THE BALTIMORE SUN”: I think he did become too difficult during that period right after the November election with the donations, but also, Howie, the one thing that wasn't mentioned, that election night, when he and the four other hosts and commentators he had with him started literally heckling and abusing the conservative politicians who won victories when they came on to do interviews, I think — DAVID SHUSTER, FMR. ANCHOR AND REPORTER, MSNBC: That's a little unfair. ZURAWIK: Well, no. It's not unfair. David, it's not even close. (CROSSTALK) ZURAWIK: Yes, they were laughing at him. They were making fun of him. KURTZ: Well, they poked fun at John Boehner for crying, but — ZURAWIK: No, no, no. I mean when they interviewed him, Howie. KURTZ: OK. But it's a management decision not to put on news anchors on election night. Instead, to put on Olbermann, Maddow, Schultz. ZURAWIK: Yes. KURTZ: Let me turn — ZURAWIK: And they were very upset about it at MSNBC and at NBC News. They felt the brand was really diminished because politics and media meet on cable TV. KURTZ: Let me turn to David Shuster. SHUSTER: I'm not sure if I can accept your assertions of what was going on at NBC, but in any case — KURTZ: But you worked there a long time. SHUSTER: Yes. Not surprisingly, Zurawik was correct and Shuster was wrong. As NewsBusters reported on Election Night, the MSNBC crew belittled Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) during their interview with her. I guess Kurtz and Shuster forgot that. That said, things heated up again a few minutes later after Kurtz played a small portion of Olbermann's special comment from the evening of the shootings in Tucson: KURTZ: Olbermann had great passion. Television likes that. But he also often made it personal. In fact, you were “The Worst Person in the World” I think on a couple of occasions. ZURAWIK: More than once, yes. That, to me, Howie, is typical of his recklessness and his character assassination. That's why I said he wanted to be Edward R. Murrow and he was more McCarthy than Murrow because — SHUSTER: Oh, come on, David. (CROSSTALK) SHUSTER: There's a false equivalency that you and other folks make between Keith Olbermann and Glenn Beck, and it's not fair. ZURAWIK: David, let him finish. Let's finish. This isn't one of your MSNBC shows. KURTZ: I'm going to let you respond in just a moment. Finish your point. ZURAWIK: I think that he will absolutely attack people and try to assassinate their character just the way Joe McCarthy did without facts. And to say that Bill O'Reilly, who has been much more reasonable in the last year than Keith Olbermann ever was on the air, much more responsible, to try to pin that on Bill O'Reilly, link him to that, is outrageous, Howie. KURTZ: David Shuster. SHUSTER: Look, the fact of the matter is, is there are people who have tried to carry out acts of violence who were inspired by Glenn Beck. That is not — KURTZ: Wait a minute. Bill O'Reilly — (CROSSTALK) SHUSTER: The fact of the matter is you're making a moral equivalency between Glenn Beck and Keith Olbermann, and it's simply not fair. ZURAWIK: I'm not making — SHUSTER: And the fact of the matter is, when people say that — ZURAWIK: I'm not making a moral equivalency. SHUSTER: — MSNBC is the liberal antidote to Fox News, and that there's an equal balance there, that's simply not true. KURTZ: But are you willing to say — and then I'll get to Jane– that sometimes Olbermann went too far? SHUSTER: Yes, of course. And, look, I consider myself a friend of Keith Olbermann's. I like his work. I'd like to say that his friendship was what was clouding his objectivity, but as NewsBusters has chronicled over the years, David Shuster is hardly a bastion of impartiality. Earlier this month, he even made the indefensible claim that MSNBC will never be as liberal as Fox is conservative. But I digress, for a few minutes later, former Fox contributor Jane Hall chimed in setting off some more fireworks: JANE HALL, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR AT AMERICAN UNIVERSITY'S SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION: I want to say one thing since I've been supportive of him. I think that some people on Fox had more people who disagreed with him on the air than Keith Olbermann did. KURTZ: Well, I've talked to him about this every time I interviewed him. HALL: I think he was pretty narrow, and therefore he left them open to the moral equivalence that people have been drawing. KURTZ: Well, I mean, let's be careful here. But, I mean, he did put on an hour which was very popular with his most passionate fans on the left, but which basically he did not invite guests who disagreed with him. And so there was a certain element of preaching to the choir. SHUSTER: Well, in part because most of the guests that he had on were journalists. I mean, he was interested — HALL: And they all agreed with him. SHUSTER: — in getting people on who provided information in a factual base to sort of set up Keith's analysis. KURTZ: But many of them were liberal columnists, too. HALL: Yes. They were more columnists than — SHUSTER: There were some, but — (CROSSTALK) ZURAWIK: Howie, I just want to make one point about — SHUSTER: But it was a very different type of show though than what Hannity or O'Reilly have been doing. ZURAWIK: I don't agree with him being a poetic voice for the left and all of the things that were said. What I am upset about is the recklessness he exhibited. When people say, oh, he was a little over the top, and, oh, he was a little bit too much, no. That is dangerous. That is the dangerous kind of rhetoric we have. And NBC News is absolutely right to say this does not belong on our airwaves, we're going to dial it back. And that's what's happening here. You watch how fast Maddow and all of the rest of them dial it back in a week. SHUSTER: Well, David, that may be true, that, in fact, NBC News want to put a certain set of journalistic standards on MSNBC, and a lot of people will cheer them on to do that, including people at MSNBC who respect Steve Capus. However, there are journalistic standards on many of these shows on Fox News. With the exception of a couple of new shows, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, they don't even attempt to subscribe to the journalistic principles that — (CROSSTALK) KURTZ: He said except for some news shows. Honestly, what can you expect from a liberal shill like Shuster? As for Zurawik, bravo!
Continue reading …Just how ignorant of politics and recent history is MSNBC's Ed Schultz? Well, on Friday, he attacked Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) for giving a competing response to the upcoming State of the Union address even though presidential candidate Barack Obama did the same thing in 2008 (video follows with transcript and commentary): SCHULTZ: Welcome back to THE ED SHOW, the “Battleground” story tonight: Da Bears. No, that`s coming up later. Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann is setting herself up for a presidential run. She`s in Iowa tonight speaking at an Iowans for Tax Relief event, and she`s meeting with the top Republicans in the state. Bachmann has been floated as a potential challenger to Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar in 2012, but folks, look, she wants something bigger than that. She wants it all. She wants the Oval Office. Today, the Tea Party Express announced that Bachmann will give her own response to the State of the Union address. I think this is unbelievable. Has anybody else ever done this? Not only is Bachmann trying to put herself on equal footing with the President of the United States, she`s undermining her own party. Lots of loyalty there, huh? The Republicans already chose someone to give the response and that`s budget chair Paul Ryan, but Bachmann is going to rogue. I guess, you could say she`s going rogue. As the folks at The Blaze reported Saturday, the official Democrat response to George W. Bush's final State of the Union address on January 28, 2008, was made by then Kansas governor Kathleen Sebelius. However, then Sen. Barack Obama gave his own response at his campaign website. The Huffington Post even reported the news that evening with a full transcript of his comments and the video: As the Daily Caller reported Friday, Bachmann's response next week will be broadcast online. As such, what makes it any different than what Obama did three years ago? I guess that answers Schultz's question, “Has anybody else ever done this?” Nice job, Ed. Your employers must be so proud of you.
Continue reading …The internet has been all abuzz since Keith Olbermann's surprise announcement that Friday would be his last appearance on MSNBC's “Countdown.” Over at the liberal website Salon, Steve Kornacki wondered, ” Is Olbermann the victim of his own success? “: MSNBC, for its part, embraced the identity Olbermann was offering them. By 2008, his frequent guest, Rachel Maddow, was given her own show at 9 p.m. And liberal radio host Ed Schultz was given his own shortly after that. Lawrence O’Donnell, another left-of-center voice, was added just a few months ago. Eventually, the network adopted a new motto — “Lean forward” — that’s about as subtle as Fox’s “fair and balanced” pledge. MSNBC’s prime-time lineup is now awash in progressive politics. Of course, now that he’s surrounded by similar voices, Olbermann isn’t nearly as essential to MSNBC’s brand, which surely has something to do with his abrupt departure on Friday night…Now that they’ve built a loyal prime-time audience of left-leaning viewers, NBC’s executives may simply feel that they can afford to be rid of Olbermann and all of the headaches he brings with him. It used to be that he was the only reason liberals turned on their channel at night. Now he’s one of many reasons — a victim of his own success, in other words. Hot Air's Ed Morrissey doesn't agree : Other than Maddow, whom Olbermann most certainly discovered and nurtured into a parallel show, the other people in the lineup had careers in broadcasting before Olbermann.
Continue reading …If Barack Obama is going to win re-election, he's going to have to count on massive, overwhelming, support from his base.
Continue reading …In a fine example of the new civility at MSNBC, Lawrence O'Donnell on Tuesday actually yelled at an Arizona Congressman who didn't agree with him about the need for gun control following the shootings in Tucson. The discussion on “The Last Word” really got heated after the host made the case to Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.) that additional security at Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' (D-Ariz.) Congress on Your Corner event wouldn't have mattered because “The overwhelming majority of bullets fired by police officers always miss their target” (video follows with transcript and commentary): LAWRENCE O'DONNELL, HOST: Joining me now, Republican congressman from Arizona, Trent Franks. Thank you very much for joining me tonight, Congressman Franks. REP. TRENT FRANKS (R), ARIZONA: Lawrence, thanks for having me on. O’DONNELL: Congressman, don’t you wish Jared Loughner had a smaller capacity ammunition clip when he went to Gabby Giffords’ event in Tucson? FRANKS: Lawrence, I wish that Jared Loughner had the capacity to have a moral impulse towards fellow human beings and a commitment to protect them as children of God. That’s the real issue here. You know, from the very first hours of this tragedy, Lawrence, I have listened to the left try to politicize this while people are making funeral arrangements for lost loved ones. And I have to tell you, I think that when the left says, well, it’s the rhetoric or, well, it’s the Tea Party or, well, it’s Sarah Palin — you know, I guess, first of all, I’d like to say if every person on the earth had the respect for innocent human life that Sarah Palin does, we wouldn’t have violence anywhere on any corner of the globe. And I’m just frustrated that in this tragedy, that people have tried to politicize this and have tried to make everything but a crazed killer the problem. The real problem here is that whatever statement this lunatic was trying to make, he was willing to kill innocent children of God to do it. He had no respect for innocent human life, and that is the great challenge of society. If we can’t put that forward as the central focus here, then, I think we missed the boat on all counts. Nice thoughtful response, yes? Not as far as O'Donnell was concerned: O’DONNELL: Congressman Franks, I’ll try again. Do you wish that his gun held 10 bullets instead of 31 bullets? FRANKS: I wish he had not had a gun and he shouldn’t have a gun at all. He was, I think, mentally ill, and we have laws against that in many places. And I think to focus on the clip is like saying that, you know, we’ll combat drunk driving by limiting the size of fuel tanks. The bottom line is that the real focus here should be on the killer and not the gun. The gun was essentially the same type of gun that police officers use in across Europe and in many places here and perhaps, you know, you mentioned a quote that I made earlier. You didn’t mention the context of the quote. If perhaps a police officer or someone there was responsible, maybe very few people would have had to die. Maybe the gunman would have been stopped before he started. We don’t know. But I do know this: it wasn’t the gun that was the problem. It wasn’t Sarah Palin that was a problem. And it wasn’t the rhetoric that was the problem. It wasn’t the Tea Party that was a problem. It was a crazed lunatic without regard for innocent human life. That was the problem. O’DONNELL: Well, you did entertain the hypothetical that you wished there was someone else there with a gun who could have — FRANKS: You left out the last — you left out the second part of the quote. O’DONNELL: Go ahead. FRANKS: I was responding to when people were saying it was the gun, it was the gun, it was the gun. And I said, well, perhaps, if someone — an additional gun has been there in responsible hands, I said in responsible hands. We have the — you know, the truth is very few people would advocate taking guns out of the hands police officers. They think police officers should have guns to be able to stand against those who have no regard for innocent human life, and I agree with that. But the real argument is then that it’s not the gun, it’s whose hands its in that’s the issue. And my quote was in responsible hands, and again, it was in response in an effort by the left to say that the gun was the problem. That wasn’t the focus of my comments here in the media here at all. I’ve been trying to essentially make the case. And again tonight, I make the case that the real challenge in our society is to see each other as children of God, as fellow human beings. And if we did that, the rhetoric would be transformed, the debate itself would have a whole new emphasis, and maybe we could se this last best hope of mankind extended for future generations a little longer. Now watch as O'Donnell starts getting angrier and angrier: O’DONNELL: OK. Your actual quote was, “I wish there had been one more gun there that day in the hands of a responsible person.” FRANKS: Yes, in response — in response to people who were saying that the gun was the problem. O’DONNELL: A responsible person — a responsible, Congressman, would have been a police officer, let’s say a very well-trained in firearms New York City police officers. You are aware, aren’t you, sir, that most of the bullets fired by American police officers miss their target. The overwhelming majority of bullets fired by police officers always miss their target. O'Donnell might have been referring to a December 9, 2007, article in the New York Times dealing with the issue of police officer marksmanship. What Lawrence potentially missed was the intention of the piece was to address how difficult it is for cops to shoot to wound: While popular culture has embedded both extremes — the hardened mantra of “shoot to kill” and the benevolent private eye (think Barnaby Jones) who expertly inflicts only a flesh wound — the truth is that neither practice is a staple of police guidelines. In fact, the most likely result when a policeman discharges a gun is that he or she will miss the target completely. So an officer could no sooner shoot to wound than shoot to kill with any rate of success. In life-or-death situations that play out in lightning speed — such precision marksmanship is unrealistic. The article did address statistics showing that in New York City and Los Angeles, police officers do typically miss their targets. However, the Times pointed out this data is misleading: Bad marksmanship? Police officials and law enforcement experts say no, contending that the number of misses underscores the tense and unpredictable nature of these situations. For example, a 43 percent hit rate for shots fired from zero to six feet might seem low, but at that range it is very likely that something has already gone wrong: perhaps an officer got surprised, or had no cover, or was wrestling with the suspect. “When you factor in all of the other elements that are involved in shooting at an adversary, that’s a high hit rate,” said Raymond W. Kelly, the New York police commissioner. “The adrenaline flow, the movement of the target, the movement of the shooter, the officer, the lighting conditions, the weather … I think it is a high rate when you consider all of the variables.” Indeed. Yet O'Donnell on Tuesday seemed to be suggesting that as a result of these statistics, those killed and wounded in Tucson wouldn't have been better served by additional security at the Giffords event: O'DONNELL: So, what the hypothetical you’re entertaining is an extremely reckless one in which bullets would be fired, very likely miss their target, according to law enforcement records on how handguns are used there. I’m asking you to entertain another hypothetical, and that hypothetical is, imagine this event occurred in 2003 when Jared Loughner, by federal law enacted by the Democrats, 10 years earlier, would not have been allowed to get his hands on a magazine that held 30 bullets. He only would have been able to fire 10. Then he would have had to reload, and those heroes who stopped him when he tried to reload would have stopped him after firing 10 and more citizens of Arizona would be alive today in your state if that magazine held only 10 bullets. I’ll ask you again — do you wish Jared Loughner’s magazine only held 10 bullets instead of the 31 that he fired? FRANKS: And I will tell you again, sir, that I wish he had not had a gun at all. O’DONNELL: So, you’re not going to answer that question about the magazine? Will you answer the question about the magazine? (CROSSTALK) FRANKS: I will on one basis, on one basis. Will you answer the question — you said that the police officers miss all the time — will you say that you’re glad there were no police officers there that day? O’DONNELL: No, I will not say that. FRANKS: All right. And I will not say, I will not say that — (CROSSTALK) O’DONNELL: — entertain your hypothetical. Your hypothetical might have been helpful, might not have been not helpful. But now, consider my hypothetical, it’s 2003. He can only fire 10 bullets. Arizona would have been better off, right? Your constituents in Arizona would have been better off if Jared Loughner, by law, could only fire 10 bullets? FRANKS: See, I think that that presupposes he couldn’t have changed clips or all kinds of things. O’DONNELL: He couldn’t change clips because the colonel was there to stop him, because those heroes in that parking lot were there to stop him. We saw him try to change clips, and he couldn’t do it. That’s what stopped him. FRANKS: Well, I give every credit to those who stopped him. But I will say to you again to blame the gun rather than the individual is why we continue to have these problems. O’DONNELL: I blame the individual for the first 10 bullets. I blame the law for the next 21 bullets that he fired. FRANKS: Well, you know, you’re suggesting that there wouldn’t be other ways that he could have done that. What if he brought a bomb and all kinds of things? O’DONNELL: W know what happened, we know what stopped him. When he had to reload, it was over. We know the facts, Congressman. We know exactly how it ended. Don’t pretend that you don’t know how it ended and who ended it. He couldn’t reload, and the heroes there on the scene stopped him. FRANKS: He shot — according to what you’re saying, he shot 31 times, and there was no one there to stop him that could have. That was the basis of my comment. The fact is that we need to try our best to see each other as children of God and to point the finger at the lack of respect for innocent human life, which is essentially the biggest challenge in all of society. And we need to make sure that crazed lunatics don’t get weapons and we need to make sure that if they do, that we can stop them if necessary. O’DONNELL: There was a lack of respect for human life in the federal government in 2004 when the ban on those magazines was allowed to expire. FRANKS: Let’s just take — O’DONNELL: Congressman Trent Franks, we got to cut it there. We’re out of time. FRANKS: Yes, let’s take the guns away from everyone, our police officers, everyone. That will solve the problem, right? O’DONNELL: Don’t be silly. Congressman Trent Franks, Republican of Arizona, thank you very much for joining us tonight. Actually, Franks wasn't being at all silly. It was O'Donnell who demonstrated some pretty pathetic interview skills by not only bringing up the police accuracy issue, but also screaming at his guest when he didn't agree. And these folks on MSNBC have the nerve to lecture America about the hostile tone on Fox News and conservative talk radio.
Continue reading …Keith Olbermann on Monday cherry-picked a new poll to bash the Tea Party as a violent threat to elected officials. As he discussed new findings in a Daily Kos/Public Policy Polling survey about who thinks violence against the current American government is justified, the “Countdown” host highlighted the Tea Party's number while conveniently ignoring demographic groups that responded at an equal or higher rate (video follows with transcript and commentary): KEITH OLBERMANN: And today on this Martin Luther King Day, two former national leaders spoke about rhetorical violence. Former Vice President Cheney telling NBC News, quote, “Certainly, there`s nothing wrong with and I wouldn`t be critical about people who were saying, `Look, we need to be careful about our rhetoric. We need to treat one another with respect during the course of our political debates.” Mr. Cheney, however, resisting the notion that violent rhetoric could fuel violent action. Not so former President Clinton. In a statement on MLK Day, saying, quote, “We live in a world where what we say and how we say it can be read, heard or seen by those who understand exactly what we mean and by those whose inner demons take them to a different place.” A new poll taken after the shooting showing only a handful of Americans, 5 percent or 6 percent, calling violence against the current U.S. government justified, but 13 percent of the Tea Party says it is. That's true, but as Mediaite's Tommy Christopher noted , the highest positive response to this question was 17 percent from folks aged 18-29. Isn't it newsworthy after what happened in Tucson that the youngest people that can legally purchase guns in this country are three times more disposed to violence against the government than the nation as a whole, especially since the shooter was 22? Apparently not to Olbermann! And that's not the only group that polled at either the same or greater rate than the Tea Party. “Other” under race scored at 14 percent while folks making less than $30,000/year pulled 13 percent. Also of note, under party affiliation, “Independent/Other” polled at 10 percent. Some more interesting numbers from this poll were that Liberals polled at 7 percent, ahead of moderates and conservatives at 6 percent. This means Liberals not only polled higher than the rest of the country, but also higher than conservatives. And, although whites and blacks polled at 6 and 5 percent respectively, Hispanics polled at nine percent. When combined with 14 percent for “Other” under race, this means non-white/non-black Americans see violence against the government as being far more acceptable than the entire nation. Add it all up, and there were some very interesting findings in this poll. Yet Olbermann chose to focus attention exclusively on the Tea Party: The folks at MSNBC.com also felt the need to highlight the Tea Party, as here's the picture promoting this segment at the cable network's website: And this is the still shot viewers see before the video plays: Is this really what qualifies as journalism at MSNBC? Sadly, yes.
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