After getting laughed at by Monica Crowley for making a foolish comment about the disparate ways Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan handled Libya during their respective presidencies, Newsweek's Eleanor Clift doubled down on this weekend's “McLaughlin Group” by saying a Tea Party candidate can't win a national election. Crowley was once again up to the challenge and correctly pointed out, “If the government keeps spending like this, that Tea Party movement is only going to accelerate” (video follows with transcript and commentary): ELEANOR CLIFT, NEWSWEEK: If you elect a candidate, if you nominate a candidate that the Tea Party loves, that is someone that cannot win a national election in this country. MONICA CROWLEY, WASHINGTON TIMES: Well, I would not say that. CLIFT: Excuse me, Tea Party can win… CROWLEY: That's wrong. CLIFT: …certain districts and certain states, but they cannot win a national election, and… CROWLEY: Well, what we saw in November was a national… CLIFT: …the Democrats actually have a chance of taking back the House because they need to recapture 25 seats… CROWLEY: Forget it. CLIFT: …and there are at least 25 Tea Party freshmen who are not representing well in their districts. CROWLEY: Not happening, not happening. If the government keeps spending like this, that Tea Party movement is only going to accelerate. And all of the top tier Republican candidates, whether it’s Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich, they’re all facing enormous pressure from the Tea Party, and they’re going to have to change their positions and modify them to accommodate the Tea Party on spending and the size of government. Indeed. Folks like Clift and their ilk are either totally deluded about the power of the Tea Party or are trying to create a self-fulfilling prophecy by continuing to downplay its significance. Whichever it is, they do so at their own peril for this movement continues to grow and will likely have an even larger impact on the next elections than it did the previous ones.
Continue reading …After getting laughed at by Monica Crowley for making a foolish comment about the disparate ways Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan handled Libya during their respective presidencies, Newsweek's Eleanor Clift doubled down on this weekend's “McLaughlin Group” by saying a Tea Party candidate can't win a national election. Crowley was once again up to the challenge and correctly pointed out, “If the government keeps spending like this, that Tea Party movement is only going to accelerate” (video follows with transcript and commentary): ELEANOR CLIFT, NEWSWEEK: If you elect a candidate, if you nominate a candidate that the Tea Party loves, that is someone that cannot win a national election in this country. MONICA CROWLEY, WASHINGTON TIMES: Well, I would not say that. CLIFT: Excuse me, Tea Party can win… CROWLEY: That's wrong. CLIFT: …certain districts and certain states, but they cannot win a national election, and… CROWLEY: Well, what we saw in November was a national… CLIFT: …the Democrats actually have a chance of taking back the House because they need to recapture 25 seats… CROWLEY: Forget it. CLIFT: …and there are at least 25 Tea Party freshmen who are not representing well in their districts. CROWLEY: Not happening, not happening. If the government keeps spending like this, that Tea Party movement is only going to accelerate. And all of the top tier Republican candidates, whether it’s Mitt Romney or Newt Gingrich, they’re all facing enormous pressure from the Tea Party, and they’re going to have to change their positions and modify them to accommodate the Tea Party on spending and the size of government. Indeed. Folks like Clift and their ilk are either totally deluded about the power of the Tea Party or are trying to create a self-fulfilling prophecy by continuing to downplay its significance. Whichever it is, they do so at their own peril for this movement continues to grow and will likely have an even larger impact on the next elections than it did the previous ones.
Continue reading …Title: He’s Got His Eyes On You Artist: Rev. D.C.Rice & his Sanctified Congregation Happy Sunday. Watch out!
Continue reading …I’m probably dooming the chances for any C&L blogger to appear on CNN (Home to Blogger Extraordinaire Erick Erickson!), but it has to be said: Howard Kurtz is a big friggin’ idiot. Huge. For a person with a purported focus of examining how the media covers the news, he has a dumbfoundingly shallow understanding of journalism. Or maybe he just plays dumb to further his own agenda… Like for example, when he talks to veteran newsman Ted Koppel on the state of television news and the death of true journalism. Koppel famously wrote an op-ed complaining that the prevalence of opinion on cable news has killed giving viewers information, i.e., journalism. Now this is an area near and dear to my heart, and the subject with which I spend the vast majority of my time on this site. And while an pretty considerable argument can be made to the fact that Koppel is ignoring the plank in his own eye when it comes to failed journalism, it’s Kurtz whose sole focus appears to be bringing up examples of that evil liberal bias in news, in the form of Keith Olbermann and NPR. In the sixteen minute interview, Kurtz is really only interested in bringing up the dangers of opinion media when it pertains to MSNBC or NPR. Koppel tries to play the equivalence game, but Kurtz keeps going back to Olbermann, showing a clip from the Special Comment did on the false equivalence of Koppel comparing Keith to anyone at Fox News. Koppel blandly defends himself in saying that Olbermann probably didn’t watch every Nightline, which is probably true but distracts from the more salient meta-point: the metamorphosis of news divisions from being loss leaders to being required to make a profit for their parent companies has turned them less into information disseminators to entertainment arbiters. And that has hurt our democracy greatly. KURTZ: But, you know, [Olbermann] got good ratings at MSNBC. KOPPEL: Absolutely. KURTZ: Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck have good ratings at Fox. CNN has struggled a bit with an approach that’s probably closer to the objective news you’re talking about. There are exceptions, Eliot Spitzer. KOPPEL: You’re describing the problem, Howard. KURTZ: Right. KOPPEL: I mean, if they were not getting good news doing — KURTZ: Yes. KOPPEL: — you know, wildly-opinionated material, they wouldn’t be doing it. They’re only doing it — KURTZ: Why is it a problem if people like to watch it? KOPPEL: Because we’re not talking about entertainment, we’re talking about news. And news is important in a democracy because the idea that a voting public actually have access to objective information and that the focus of the journalism be on issues that are of genuine importance, not just of wide-ranging interest And Howie’s next question? “Isn’t Charlie Sheen news?” *sigh* Kurtz also throws in O’Keefe’s debunked video smear of NPR for good measure, of course abdicating any responsibility for providing that contextual bit of information. How ironic in a conversation about how the media is failing us. I’m also going to let you contemplate all the oblique references Kurtz made to Koppel’s wealth (“in his converted barn office”, “pictures of Koppel with the notables in his career”) and questions about his friendship with Henry Kissinger as to whether Kurtz felt that needed to be taken into consideration when evaluating the truth of Koppel’s statements on the death of journalism. Transcripts below the fold KURTZ: Network news was a very different business decades ago, with plenty of bureaus around the world and owners who were willing to lose money on these operations. They were seen — and it sounds kind of quaint to say so — as a public service. These days, ABC, NBC, CBS must compete with increasingly opinionated cable channels, with millions of blogs and Web sites and Twitter, and not surprisingly, some broadcast veterans believe the business is — and this is a technical term — going to hell in a hand basket. Ted Koppel has become an outspoken voice in that debate more than 30 years after he launched the late-night ABC program that came to be called “Nightline.” (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) TED KOPPEL, ANCHOR, “NIGHTLINE”: Good evening. This is a new broadcast in the sense that it is permanent and will continue after the Iran crisis is over. There will also be nights when Iran is not the major story. I’m Ted Koppel in Ramallah. This is Ted Koppel in Mogadishu. Iraq. Wilmington, Delaware. Moscow. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: I sat down with Koppel in his home office, which is in a converted barn in the Maryland suburbs. We’re bringing it to you now. Our conversation took place before the Japanese earthquake and the military action in Libya. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) KURTZ: Ted Koppel, welcome. KOPPEL: Thank you. KURTZ: Thank you for having us out to the barn. We are in a rare period right now where the media devoting significant reasons to international stories. First, Egypt. Now Libya. Is that refreshing or rather temporary, in your view? KOPPEL: I think it’s one of these regular occurrences that happens when there is an international crisis. And it lasts for a couple of weeks, sometimes even a couple of months. And, I mean, is there any doubt in your mind that we’re not going to be hearing much out of Egypt a month from now, or much out of Tunis a week from now or — KURTZ: Very little doubt. And why is there, in your view, so little appetite on American television in particular, the media in general, for covering the rest of the world? I mean, there’s a war in Afghanistan going on 10 years now, and it almost seems to be a forgotten war. KOPPEL: You’re absolutely right. There are two reasons. One, it is incredibly expensive, as you know, to cover overseas news, and particularly to cover war zones. KURTZ: But it was expensive back in the day when you did a lot of globe trotting. KOPPEL: It was. And back in those days — I mean, back in the 1960s and ’70s, networks tended to look upon news organizations as being loss leaders. They were making their money on the comedy shows. They were making their money on the cop shows. And they were very possibly losing money, although there’s some argument about that, on their news divisions. And they were prepared to do that because, among other things, the FCC, in those days, had some clout. And, among other things, the FCC, in those days, actually had the ability and an apparent willingness to take the licenses away from radio stations, television stations and, although it never happened, even hypothetically, a television network. KURTZ: And now, news is expected to be profitable. KOPPEL: That’s correct. KURTZ: And therefore you think — but I also wonder whether it’s not just the expense. That’s clearly a major factor. Isn’t there a sense that there’s been a great appetite among the public for coverage of the rest of the world? KOPPEL: It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, Howard. I mean, if you tell people long enough, you don’t have an appetite for foreign news, and if you convince yourself that the American public doesn’t have an appetite for foreign news, then, after a while, you say well, they don’t have an appetite for it, we don’t have the budget for it. Perfect. I would argue it’s our responsibility to develop an appetite. Most people don’t start life, you know, enjoying a good steak. They only learn to do that — KURTZ: An acquired taste. KOPPEL: It’s an acquired taste. KURTZ: Let me ask you about a “Washington Post” opinion piece you wrote a while back that caused a bit of a stir. You said you were saddened by the partisanship in prime time — KOPPEL: Right. KURTZ: — on Fox News and MSNBC. Why saddened? A lot of people say, well, look, by evening time, people know the headlines, they’ve seen them online, they’ve read the newspapers, they like opinion. KOPPEL: Again, if we’re only talking about it through the prism of entertainment, I take the point. But if the purpose is to provide some journalism, then I think the journalism requires and our times require a little more serious objectivity. And I think there has to be a willingness on the part of the public to accept that journalism is trying to do an honest job of giving them an objective accounting of what’s going on in the world and an objective appraisal of what’s really important in the world. In the face of what Fox is doing, and in the face of what MSNBC is doing, there’s no reason for the public to assume anything other than that what we’re doing is putting forth our own opinions. KURTZ: You particularly went after Keith Olbermann pretty hard. You said that he was avowedly, unabashedly and monotonously partisan. KOPPEL: Well, I went after — I went after Mr. Olbermann at that time because he was very much in the news. You may recall at that point, he had been suspended for, what was it, two days or three days? KURTZ: It ended up being two days for contributing money to three Democratic candidates. And, in fact, the fallout from that episode led pretty directly to his leaving MSNBC. KOPPEL: Right. KURTZ: Did that — KOPPEL: I mean, I could just as easily have picked on someone over at Fox, or other people at MSNBC. It — KURTZ: As you know, he came back at you pretty hard. KOPPEL: He did. He did. KURTZ: And he wrote among — he said on the air, among other things, that you were “worshipping the false God of utter objectivity.” That’s a word you’ve already used. And then he brought up the run-up to the Iraq War. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) KEITH OLBERMANN, MSNBC: The stories of Mr. Koppel’s career will emphasize the life he’s so admirably shown on the Iran hostages. Those stories though will probably not emphasize that in 2002 and 2003 and 2004 and 2005, Mr. Koppel did not shine that same light on the decreasingly coherent excuses presented by the government of this nation for the war in Iraq. (END VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: I’m sure you’d like a chance to respond. KOPPEL: Well, I’m not sure I feel I need a chance to respond. He clearly didn’t see all the “Nightlines” that we did. And most particularly, he cannot have seen a 90-minute or even two-hour town meeting that we did, the title of which was sort of self-explanatory, “Why Now?” And we did that in early March of 2003, literally a couple of weeks just before the war began. And the whole point of the program was, why is it so important that we go in and that we invade Iraq? So I don’t expect Mr. Olbermann to have seen all the programs. But before he makes a wide-ranging charge like that, I do expect that he’d have someone else do the research. KURTZ: But, you know, he got good ratings at MSNBC. KOPPEL: Absolutely. KURTZ: Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck have good ratings at Fox. CNN has struggled a bit with an approach that’s probably closer to the objective news you’re talking about. There are exceptions, Eliot Spitzer. KOPPEL: You’re describing the problem, Howard. KURTZ: Right. KOPPEL: I mean, if they were not getting good news doing — KURTZ: Yes. KOPPEL: — you know, wildly-opinionated material, they wouldn’t be doing it. They’re only doing it — KURTZ: Why is it a problem if people like to watch it? KOPPEL: Because we’re not talking about entertainment, we’re talking about news. And news is important in a democracy because the idea that a voting public actually have access to objective information and that the focus of the journalism be on issues that are of genuine importance, not just of wide-ranging interest — I realize that Mr. “Two and a Half Men” — KURTZ: Charlie Sheen. KOPPEL: — Charlie Sheen, Charlie Sheen clearly is entertaining an awful lot of people in his real life role. But is that really important? Is there — KURTZ: Your former network gave Charlie Sheen an hour in prime time on “20/20.” Other networks gave him a platform. Look, he’s a highly-paid television star — KOPPEL: Right. KURTZ: — who got a very public divorce from CBS over a popular show. Is that not news in some fashion? KOPPEL: Sure it is. Is it worth a primetime documentary? I don’t think so. And I don’t think so in particular in a world in which however many people it is now — and the numbers vary — 15 to 20 million people unemployed in this country, 6,000 Americans who have died over the course of the last eight or nine years in Iraq and Afghanistan, the whole Mediterranean, North Africa, Persian Gulf up in flames, in danger of going up in flames. I think there are things we need to know about as an informed electorate. KURTZ: So you see the media as kind of chasing the shiny, superficial, the sensational? KOPPEL: I see the media — KURTZ: Too often? KOPPEL: I see the media as trying — as chasing the — what are we going to call it, the popcorn rather than the broccoli, and even the steak and the baked potato. I think the media, these days — with notable exceptions — I think the media is so desperate to try to turn a buck at a time when the competition has become much fiercer than it’s ever been in years past, that the inclination to do hard news over the kind of fluffy news that draws a big audience is irresistible. (END VIDEOTAPE) KURTZ: More of my conversation with the longtime ABC anchor in a moment, including Koppel’s thoughts on that undercover sting against NPR and whether the taxpayers should keep subsidizing the embattled network. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) KURTZ: More now of my conversation in his home office with Ted Koppel. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) KURTZ: From this very office you do commentaries for National Public Radio. KOPPEL: Right. KURTZ: Obviously, NPR suffered a big embarrassment with the hidden camera video that found a top executive making very disparaging remarks about the Tea Party. An NPR chief executive resigned this week, which helped fuel a debate that was already on the way, which is why should, at a time of huge budget deficits, an organization like NPR get taxpayer dollars? KOPPEL: Well, I must confess, I’m not the best person to tell you about the financial breakdown. But my understanding of it is — KURTZ: Ten to 15 percent of its budget. KOPPEL: Yes. But most of the stations that will be hardest hit are, by definition, as I understand it, the smallest stations in the smallest communities. And that those stations tend to get as much as 50 percent of their annual budget from that congressional funding, whereas NPR itself, I think, gets a relatively minor amount. It’s not NPR per se that is going to be most damaged by this. It’s going to be the smallest stations in the communities that have the fewest options anyway, that probably don’t have a local newspaper, that may not have a radio or a television station with a news department that depends almost exclusively on NPR for any sort of insight into what is happening both in the country and in the world outside. They’re the ones that are going to be hardest hit. KURTZ: That debate will not go away. Let me come back to your “Washington Post” piece. KOPPEL: Sure. KURTZ: You wrote that, “Broadcast news has been now outflanked and will soon be overtaken by scores of other media options.” Was this inevitable? How did they lose this war? KOPPEL: The same way that radio initially lost the war to television, the same way that newspapers lost the war to television news. KURTZ: Technology? KOPPEL: Technology. Technology always has to be addressed, but, you know, when one technology — I mean, there’s no question in my mind that television did a lesser job of covering the news than newspapers did in their heyday. But the technology was so attractive, that people just flooded over to television by the tens of millions. And newspapers had to accommodate to it. So, too, I think network television is — has had to accommodate already to cable television, is going to have to accommodate to the blog sites and the Internet, and eventually even to Facebook and Twitter. But there is a danger there, you know. KURTZ: A lot of TV people are on Facebook and Twitter. And what is the danger? What is — what are we in danger of losing as we migrate online to sites that we like, perhaps opinions that we like or agree with? KOPPEL: In and of itself, when you frame it as narrowly as that, the danger is not all that great. But when we find a large segment of the information-consuming public consuming information that is limited to 140 characters, consuming information that, by virtue of Facebook, for example, tends to deal with some of the more frivolous parts of our lives, that’s attention, then, that is not being given to some of the issues out there that are of much greater importance. There is a need. You know, there’s no way of saying this, Howard, without sounding a little bit like an old man who is losing touch with new technology, but the fact of the matter is that in a democracy, an uniformed electorate is the greatest danger that there is. If we confuse just the rapid-fire exchange of small morsels of information on trivial subjects with real information, then I think we knock the props out from under a really functioning democracy. And there’s a certain irony in the fact that at precisely the time when we are celebrating what we perceive to be the rise of democracy, encouraged by Twitter, encouraged by Facebook, in places like Tunisia and Libya and Egypt, that we fail to see that that is just the first step in the process. And already in Egypt, we’re beginning to see that what we thought was the revolution was just the overthrow of a tyrant. KURTZ: Right. KOPPEL: The process is going to take a long, long time. KURTZ: Before we go, you have a very nice life here. You do the NPR commentaries. KOPPEL: Right. KURTZ: You do commentary for BBC, as well. After so many years of “Nightline,” do you miss the adrenaline of daily journalism? KOPPEL: Oh, sure. Oh, sure. I don’t think anyone who has loved this business as I’ve loved it can honestly say that, you know, when stuff starts happening in Benghazi and Tripoli and Cairo and Tunis, that — KURTZ: You want to get on a plane. KOPPEL: — I’m not, you know, sort of in my mind’s eye, packing a backpack and trying to get on the first jet, yes. KURTZ: Ted Koppel, thanks very much for letting us visit you here at your office. KOPPEL: My pleasure. (END VIDEOTAPE) KURTZ: After that conversation, Koppel showed us around his converted barn. I saw all the editorial cartoons that he was in, magazine covers and newspaper headlines, particularly around the time when ABC tried to replace “Nightline” with David Letterman. And then, of course, the photos of him with various famous people. We see there Kermit the Frog. One of them that caught my eye was Henry Kissinger. Here’s what he had to say about the former secretary of state. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) KURTZ: When you get to know some of these people over the years, Kissinger, for example — I’m sure you’ve interviewed him dozens and dozens of times — do they become friends and not just interview subjects? KOPPEL: Henry Kissinger has become a friend over the years. And that happened before I came to the conclusion that being friends with people who were still policy makers was not a good idea. We became friends, we are friends, we will remain friends. I never will allow that to happen again. KURTZ: So you took a lesson from that, not to get too close? KOPPEL: Exactly.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media While discussing one year after the passage of The Affordable Care Act, whether most Americans support the law or not, Brit Hume throws this bit of nonsense out there: HUME: What I would say about this is, think how different this would be now had the president and the Democrats in Congress been willing to incorporate some Republican ideas; a serious attempt at tort reform for example. He would have gotten I think not only much of what, he, the president wanted, Republicans would have gotten some of they wanted. A bunch of them would have voted for it. This notion that it’s a partisan bill would be gone and the whole picture would look different right now from the way it does. I actually in my life have never seen anything like this. I’ve never seen a bill with this much consequence rammed through by one party alone. And it raised questions about the legitimacy of the measure from the start and those questions persist today. And that is why, even with the polls that you and Juan cited and there are others that show something quite different, the thing remains up in the air and I think Bill is right in thinking that it will be a burden to this presidency. What fantasy world is Hume living in? Does he really think we’re supposed to believe that Republicans were ever going to vote for that bill, no matter how many of their ideas were incorporated into it? This is the party of Jim DeMint who said he wanted the stall the bill being passed for as long as possible because he wanted it to be Obama’s “Waterloo” that John wrote about here — SC’s Jim DeMint would rather bring pain to President Obama than help the American people . And would someone please explain to me what good it did to do all that wrangling and deal making with Olympia Snowe that Susie wrote about here ? As Jon Perr pointed out in this post, bipartisanship is dead, “but it is the Republican Party which killed it.” — Bipartisanship’s Willing Executioners : Republicans win, even when they lose. That appears to be the conventional wisdom after the Democrats’ crucial victory in the Senate health care vote this weekend. In its wake, media outlets gave credence to John McCain’s assertion that thanks to President Obama, Washington is “more partisan” and “more bitterly divided than it’s been.” That followed the pronouncement of CNN’s supposedly moderate Republican analyst David Gergen , who proclaimed the party line vote “a tragedy” since it did not garner a “super majority,” a result for which “blame is pretty evenly divided.” To be sure, McCain and Gergen are right that bipartisanship is dead. But it is the Republican Party which killed it . The numbers don’t lie. For over a generation, Democrats have acquiesced in the GOP’s budget-busting tax cuts for the wealthy, while Republicans instead presented a unified rejectionist front on the economic programs of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. Worse still, the Republicans’ record-breaking use of the filibuster since being relegated to the minority in 2006 has made the 60 vote threshold a permanent fixture of the Senate. As for Gergen’s nostalgia for the political parties that passed Social Security and Medicare with bipartisan majorities, they simply don’t exist anymore. Sadly, President Obama’s almost pathological obsession with bipartisan consensus only served to produce more political masochism when it came to this month’s health care votes. In the House , exactly one Republican voted for a health care reform bill which passed by a 220-215 margin. Contrary to John McCain’s mythology that in the Senate, there had been “no effort that I know of — of serious across the table negotiations,” Obama repeatedly reached out to GOP Senators like Olympia Snowe and left the writing of the Senate health bill to the bipartisan ” Gang of Six .” For that, President Obama only got what Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) called a ” holy war ” – and zero Republican votes. And as Rachel Maddow pointed out last year, Republicans just loved the individual mandate, before they decided they were against it because a Democrat proposed it — Republicans Frivolous Lawsuits: They Loved the Mandate Before Calling it Unconstitutional . This is the Republicans idea of “bipartisanship” that Karoli reminded us of last December — Mitch McConnell Will Work With President Obama to do Republican Things . But Brit Hume expects us to believe that if they’d just gotten some of that tort reform Republicans wanted into the health care bill, they’d all have been voting for it in droves. Sure Brit, when pigs fly.
Continue reading …Even when they tackle the question of NPR's liberal bias, NPR can't help themselves. The NPR show On The Media on
Continue reading …Harry Wesley Coover Jr created the glue by accident while working for Tennessee Eastman Company Harry Wesley Coover Jr, known as the inventor of Super Glue, has died at his home in Kingsport, Tennessee, aged 94. Coover was working for Tennessee Eastman Company when an accident resulted in the creation of cyanoacrylate – better known as Super Glue – according to his grandson, Adam Paul of South Carolina. An assistant was distressed that some new refractometer prisms were ruined when they were glued together, marking the invention of the popular adhesive. The US president, Barack Obama, honoured Coover in 2010 with the National Medal of Science. Coover was born in Newark, Delaware. He received a degree in chemistry from Hobart College in New York before getting a master’s degree and PhD from Cornell. He worked his way up to become vice president of the chemical division for development at Eastman Kodak. Coover and the team of chemists he worked with became prolific patent holders, achieving more than 460. The work included polymers, organophosphate chemistry, the gasification of coal and of course, cyanoacrylate. Coover also had a part in early US television history, appearing with Garry Moore on the game show I’ve Got a Secret. Moore, the show’s host, and Coover were hung in the air on bars that were stuck to metal supports with a single drop of his glue during a live television broadcast. The Industrial Research Institute, for which he served as president in 1982, honoured Coover with a gold medal and the US Patent Office inducted him into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron, Ohio, in 2004. United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld claimed Sunday that the intervention in Libya was riddled with “confusion,” unlike the invasion of Afghanistan. “If you go into something with confusion and ambiguity, and we have heard four or five different explanations of why we’re there, that is the root of the problem,” he told ABC’s Jake Tapper. “The confusion that comes from that. Confusion about what the mission is. Confusion about who the rebels are. Confusion about whether or not Gaddafi should be left in power. Confusion about what the command and control should be.” “It seems to me [in the Afghanistan invasion], we proceeded in a very orderly way. President Bush made a decision that America had been attacked. That was unacceptable. We were going after al Qaeda and remove the Taliban. He set that as the mission and put together a coalition to take on that mission. That’s exactly the way it should be done.” Tapper didn’t follow up with Rumsfeld about confusion that took place during the Iraq war.
Continue reading …• Funding body ‘spending far too much on itself’ • Report comes at start of crucial week for the arts The Arts Council in England has been told to sell works from its art collection – which includes masterpieces by Anish Kapoor, Sarah Lucas, Mark Wallinger and Damien Hirst – in a highly critical report. In what is to be a crucial week for the arts – English cultural organisations will be told on Wednesday how much public money they will receive from the Arts Council – the report from the parliamentary select committee on culture criticises the funding body for “spending far too much on itself”. The MPs on the committee, chaired by Tory John Whittingdale, condemn a “gross waste of public money” and “failure of leadership” over the body’s conduct in relation to the Public, the West Bromwich gallery that cost £52m to build but went into administration before it opened. The report also deeply criticises ministers’ “disturbing modus operandi” in abruptly abolishing a number of cultural bodies, notably the UK Film Council. That episode was “handled very badly by the government”, says the report. “It is extremely regrettable that a film-maker of the stature of Tim Bevan has, as a result, decided to take no further part in government-sponsored initiatives.” Bevan, the co-founder of Working Title and co-producer of films such as Fargo and Four Weddings and a Funeral, chaired the UK Film Council at the time of its abolition. The Arts Council hit back at the report, with a spokesman calling its findings out of date and criticising the choice of witnesses called to give evidence, saying the committee would have “benefited from a wider range of viewpoints”. She defended the organisation’s record, saying, “The Public is old news and is not representative of the Arts Council’s investments in capital projects.” And she poured cold water on the recommendation that the council gets rid of artworks: “Selling off works of art from the Arts Council collection is also not a sensible solution to the current budget cuts.” The collection, now containing 7,500 works, was founded in 1946 to buy modern and contemporary art to lend to public galleries and museums nationwide. It also organises touring exhibitions, such as that devoted to Anish Kapoor now on in Manchester. Works from the collection have never been sold before. Leading figures in the arts defended the council’s record. Sir Nicholas Hytner, artistic director of the National Theatre, said the body “has our confidence” and Anthony Sargent, general director of the Sage arts venue in Gateshead, called it a “transformed institution”. On top of recommending the council sell, or “strategically deaccession”, artworks to make it more financially sustainable, the report suggests amalgamating the art collections of the organisation with those of the government and the British Council. The committee also said it was not convinced there was a need for so many symphony orchestras to receive funding from the council and the BBC; claimed heritage had been underfunded compared with the arts; and expressed concern at the deep level of cuts to funding for culture proposed by some local councils. The arts world is waiting anxiously for the results of public funding applications, which are due to drop into email inboxes up and down England between 7.30am and 9.30am on Wednesday. Grant applications have been made by 1,300 organisations; almost half will be unsuccessful. The Arts Council received a 29.6% cut in its grant-in-aid from central government at the last comprehensive spending review, making heavy cuts inevitable, although the council has promised not to “salami-slice” and to protect excellent organisations from the deepest cuts. The Arts Council, which cut its running costs by 15% in a restructuring completed in April 2010, has been told by the government to cut its running costs again, this time by 50%, with only 15% of the cuts being passed to the “front line”. Senior figures in the arts defended the council’s recent record. “The process has been as good as it could have been,” said Hytner. He said many unsuccessful applicants would be “hugely aggrieved”, but added: “I don’t see how it can be avoided.” Director Sir Richard Eyre said Arts Council chief executive Alan Davey was “a good thing” and said the body had been put in a “hellish position” because of overall cuts from central government. Sargent said” “Three years ago, the council was a disappointing laughing stock. I am not saying it’s perfect, but as far as they can, Davey and [the body's chair] Liz Forgan have played a difficult hand with real skill.” A spokesman for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport said a formal government response would be published in due course. Main points • Arts Council England has been “spending far too much on itself” • ACE “played a major role in the gross waste of public money” on the Public, West Bromwich • “Strategic deaccessioning” – ie, selling of artworks – from the Arts Council Collection is advised • The committee was “disturbed” by the number of local authorities proposing substantial cuts to arts • Small arts organisations are at greater risk from funding cuts than large ones, a matter of “great concern” • Committee “not convinced” there is a need for so many subsidised orchestras • Abolition of the UK Film Council was “handled very badly by the government”. Similar “disturbing modus operandi” followed for other abruptly axed cultural bodies • Heritage “suffered disproportionately” in funding cuts compared with arts Arts funding Art Charlotte Higgins guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Schoolgirl shot dead by paratrooper in 1976 • Letter to mother formally apologises for killing Majella O’Hare was 12 years old. It was a bright summer’s day in 1976 and the schoolgirl had just walked past an army checkpoint on the way to church. Moments later, she lay dying on a country road in County Armagh, shot in the back by a paratrooper. Now, almost 35 years after the infamous killing, an unprecedented apology from the Ministry of Defence will be handed over to her elderly mother at a ceremony in Belfast. The letter, signed by the defence secretary, Liam Fox, belatedly corrects the army’s account of the incident and acknowledges that the soldier’s subsequent courtroom explanation was “unlikely”. British Irish Rights Watch , a civil liberties group that has campaigned for decades for a formal apology, welcomed the statement and hoped that it would open the way for a more conciliatory approach by military officials. The only other occasion an apology has been offered for the army’s behaviour during Northern Ireland’s Troubles – albeit in more general terms – was after publication of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry last summer. Then, David Cameron described the Parachute Regiment’s actions in Derry as “unjustified and unjustifiable”. The death of Majella O’Hare followed a spate of sectarian murders in south Armagh. It was 14 August 1976 and she had set off for confession with some school friends. “They came upon an army patrol,” her brother Michael, now 62, told the Guardian. “She had walked on about 20 or 30 yards when [shots] rang out from a general purpose machine gun. Three shells were found on the ground. Two bullets hit her in the back. “The soldier [Private Michael Williams] was carrying the weapon cocked and ready but he would have had to exert between 10 and 12lb of pressure to fire it. “My father was the school caretaker and he had been outside cutting the grass and tidying up. He heard shots. There was panic; he know something terrible had happened and ran to the scene. “The soldiers were giving him abuse, shouting: ‘What do you think you are doing? You’re only the fucking grass-cutter.’ Even after he found her on the road and cradled her in his arms, they were abusive.” Majella was airlifted to Daisy Hill hospital but died in the military helicopter. Williams, of the 3rd Battalion Parachute Regiment, claimed he had fired in response to an IRA sniper attack. The RUC investigated and the paratrooper was charged with murder. By the time of the trial, the charge had been reduced to manslaughter. Lord Justice Maurice Gibson, sitting alone without a jury, accepted there probably had been a gunman who fired simultaneously even though there was no independent evidence of anyone hearing other shots. Gibson, who was killed with his wife by an IRA roadside bomb in 1987, acquitted Williams. At the end of the trial Mary O’Hare, Majella’s mother, approached Williams. “She asked him ‘why did you do it?’ He looked at her and shrugged his shoulders,” Michael O’Hare recalled. “Majella was a lovely child, going about her life in childlike ways and not feeling threatened at all. My father was so affected afterwards; he never really recovered from the shock and died in 1992.” An inquiry by the Police Service of Northern Ireland’s Historical Enquiries Team (HET), which re-investigated the case, found there was no evidence to suggest there had ever been an IRA gunman. The HET’s director, Dave Cox, last summer called on the army to apologise for killing Majella. The letter says: “I apologise for Majella’s death and offer you my heartfelt sympathy. Although many years have passed, I have no doubt that your grief and that of your family has not diminished … both the initial investigation by the RUC and the more recent review have concluded that it was unlikely that there was a gunman in the area when the soldier involved opened fire and struck Majella, as he claimed. “The soldier’s actions resulted in the loss of a young and innocent life, causing sorrow and anguish for those who knew and loved Majella. “On behalf of the army and the government, I am profoundly sorry that this tragic incident should have happened.” Mary O’Hare is now 88. She will be handed the letter by the Northern Ireland secretary, Owen Paterson, in Belfast. “It’s good to get this apology,” Michael O’Hare said. “It’s not going to bring Majella back but at least it will set the record straight for history. When you send trained killers out to use firearms in a warzone, you can never feel safe. “I would like to meet Michael Williams and see if there’s genuine regret about what happened. Closure will never be there but [there is] compassion and a sense of comfort that we have been denied for 35 years.” Jane Winter, director of British Irish Rights Watch who has followed the case for many years, said: “This is a full-blown apology from the MoD and on behalf of the nation. “It’s incredible that it’s taken so long. HET investigators tried to talk to Private Williams but got no further than his lawyers. They said he was contrite about what happened but would never [be able to give evidence] in the state he was now in. “I have never seen a letter like this. We have tried to get apologies before. I hope this sets a precedent for other families.” The Historical Enquiries Team, whose re-investigation led to the apology, has so far examined 1,400 deaths that occurred during the Troubles. It has provided fresh insights for many of the families of the bereaved, including those of soldiers who were killed on tours of duty in Northern Ireland Military Defence policy Northern Ireland Liam Fox Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
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