CBS's primetime drama NCIS: L.A. on Tuesday took a gratuitous swipe at a prominent conservative strategist, referring to a murderous Venezuelan villain as ” the Karl Rove of Caracas .” As if to emphasize the point, the jab was repeated later in the episode. The March 22 show, titled, “Enemy Within,” revolved around a Venezuelan politician who was supposedly pro-American, but turned out to be opposed to the U.S. During a visit to Los Angeles, “Gutierrez” is targeted for assassination. A Navy lieutenant explained, ” Look, there's a hard-line faction in the country led by a guy named Miguel Cortez. He's like the Karl Rove of Caracas .” Later in the episode, the insult is needlessly repeated. “Special Agent Callen,” played by Chris O'Donnell parroted, “Cortez is the leader of the hard-line faction in Venezuela.” Another agent, played by Daniela Ruah, reminded, “Yeah, Chambers said he's the Karl Rove of Caracas.” See a detailed show story here . This isn't the firs time the NCIS franchise has resorted to liberal propaganda. On December 15, 2009 , the program featured an episode about a Christian suicide bomber. (Hat tip to NewsBusters reader Suzanne Smith for the heads up.) A transcript of the two exchanges from the March 22 episode follows:
Continue reading …enlarge Panels 7-9 of “The History of Labor in the State of Maine,” by Maine artist Judy Taylor. Democrats are the ones who are always taunted by the Republicans for being “politically correct,” but when was the last time you heard of a Democrat doing something so stupid, silly and just plain mean as this ? Teabag Gov. LePage is so incredibly tone deaf to the mainstream, I’ll be surprised if he makes it through an entire term without a recall movement: Once again, Republicans are trying to erase the history of America’s working people. In Maine, Republican Gov. Paul LePage has ordered the removal of a 36-foot mural depicting the state’s labor history from the Department of Labor. The 11-panel piece in part depicts a 1986 paper mill strike and “Rosie the Riveter” at Bath Iron Works. Judy Taylor, an artist based on Mount Desert, won a 2007 competition to create the mural to depict the “History of Labor in the State of Maine.” Further, the names of conference rooms are being changed to make them more “business friendly.” One is called the “Perkins Room,” for Frances Perkins, the first female Secretary of Labor and promoter of New Deal policies that improved workers’ rights on the job. Perkins championed labor reforms after the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist fire that resulted in the deaths of 146 garment workers in New York City. This Friday is the 100th anniversary of that tragedy. In a March 22 e-mail to staff , Maine’s acting commissioner of Labor Laura Boyett wrote: We have received feedback that the administration building is not perceived as equally receptive to both businesses and workers – primarily because of the nature of the mural in the lobby and the names of our conference rooms. From the Maine Sun Journal : According to LePage spokesman Dan Demeritt, the administration felt the mural and the conference room monikers showed “one-sided decor” not in keeping with the department’s pro-business goals. “The message from state agencies needs to be balanced,” said Demeritt, adding that the mural had sparked complaints from “some business owners” who complained it was hostile to business. I suppose the next thing is, they’ll want to change the name from Department of Labor to Department of Management? The governor “wants to pick a battle with working people,” says Maine AFL-CIO Presiden Don Berry. Paul LePage cannot erase our history, and he will not silence the voice of the working class in Maine. In 2009, Republicans on the Texas School Board successfully pushed to remove mention of farmworker leader Cesar Chavez and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. And when Republicans took over the House in 1995, then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich relegated to the bowels of the Capitol a depiction of the 1912 Bread and Roses strike by artist Ralph Fasanella that had graced the Capitol. Members of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Dept. then purchased it for our building in Washington, D.C.
Continue reading …While NB usually focuses on the national news media, sometimes a local news segment is just so brazenly biased that it merits at least a mention. A local NBC News affiliate in New York decided it would fact-check a National Republican Congressional Committee attack ad aimed at Kathy Hochul, the Democratic candidate for the congressional seat left vacant by former Rep. Chris Lee (R). The segment, which called some NRCC claims “false” and others “misleading,” is such a transparent – and poor – attempt to provide cover for Hochul that Townhall's Guy Benson wondered whether it was ” the worst 'fact check' ever ” (though he decided that honor should go to Politifact ). Check out the ad in question – and NBC2's attempt at rebuttal – below the break. Here is NBC2's fact-check segment: Benson breaks down the segment's “findings”: Wooten says the ad is “false right off the top” because it insinuates Hochul is a Washington Lobbyist. The truth: She was a lobbyist in DC, but isn't any more. Busted! Except…the commercial doesn't say Hochul is an active lobbyist. In fact, it clearly indicates just the opposite. Wooten conveniently clips the footage right before the voiceover explains how the Democrat “learned how to tax and spend as a Washington lobbyist, and she's been taxing and spending ever since.” Based on my rudimentary grasp of the english language, “learned” is in the past tense, and “ever since” generally refers back to a previous incident or action. “As most of us know, Hochul doesn't even live in the nation's capital,” Wooten snidely reports. That's correct, as evidenced by the Buffalo, New York street address depicted in the ad itself. Next, our intrepid truth squad blows the lid off of several additional “misleading at best” claims in the spot. The script “misleads” viewers by suggesting that as a local and county executive, Hochul voted “to raise fees on all kinds of things,” including playing golf and owning a dog. The verdict: It turns out that Hochul did, in fact, vote to raise fees on golfing — but only on public courses. And the vote was unanimous. And (“the kicker”) it was supported by a citizens' group. Busted! Although the NRCC claim may be absolutely true, Wooten admonishes his audience, what drags it into “misleading at best” territory is the omission of some barely germane (at best!) context. What about the “misleading” claim that Hochul raised fees on dog ownership? Lay your righteous truthiness on us, Michael: “Hochul did vote to impose a dog licensing fee in 2004,” but it was required by the state and was lower than a similar fee in a neighboring town. Busted! Thank heavens NBC2 is “on our side.” Without their convoluted “fact check,” I might have come to the conclusion that the candidate had done…precisely what she did. Thank God for the Fourth Estate, huh?
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …I don’t know who MC NxtGen is, but his analysis of the threat Andrew Lansley’s proposals pose to the NHS is bang on I don’t know who the artist MC NxtGen is, but having watched his superb take down on YouTube of Andrew Lansley and his plans for the NHS – the Andrew Lansley Rap – I suspect he’s set for great things. Like a No
Continue reading …Average households to be £750 a year worse off while NHS funding pledge is ‘sailing perilously close to the winds’ George Osborne’s deficit-cutting strategy is at risk of being blown off course by rising prices and slower growth, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has warned, threatening the coalition’s pledge to raise NHS spending every year. In its analysis of the budget, the independent thinktank also estimated that the average household would lose £750 this year as a result of higher taxes and benefit cuts implemented by the chancellor since coming to power. “Over the whole parliament, tax and benefit changes will hit household incomes to the tune of more like 5%, or £1,500 a year,” said the IFS director, Paul Johnson. David Cameron promised that spending on the health service would rise in real terms – adjusted for inflation – in each year of the current parliament, but the IFS said Osborne would have to find more cash to avoid breaking the pledge next year. Gemma Tetlow of the IFS said the government was only fulfilling its promise in 2011-2 because NHS spending in the current financial year had been lower than Osborne forecast in October’s spending review. She added that the next four years would be the tightest spending period for the NHS since the 1950s. On the Treasury’s current plans, the IFS calculates that NHS spending will fall in 2012-3 and stagnate in 2013-4, before rising by just 0.1% in the final year of the parliament. Paul Johnson said: “The government is meeting its pledge, but is sailing perilously close to the wind.” John Healey, the shadow health secretary, seized on the IFS analysis, saying the NHS faced a real terms cut in the next two years. “David Cameron is more concerned with his ideologically driven NHS reorganisation than keeping his promises on the health service,” Healey said. The business secretary Vince Cable defended the budget in the Commons, saying the cuts were, “painful but very necessary,” and caused by Labour’s mismanagement of the economy. The shadow chancellor Ed Balls described the government’s strategy as, “deeply flawed, misguided and unfair”. He said: “My advice to the chancellor is take the blinkers off and look at what is actually happening out there in our economy. It’s hurting but it’s not working.” Cable hit back, accusing Balls of “bumptious self-confidence,” and adding that Labour’s starting point, “seemed to be that the past was another country, that 2010 was year zero”. The IFS’s number crunching revealed that the overall impact of Wednesday’s budget – in which a headline-grabbing petrol duty cut was paid for by a windfall tax on North Sea oil companies – would be minimal. But Johnson said that together with the worsening inflation outlook, the downgrades to growth forecasts by the Office for Budget Responsibility would make deficit targets harder to meet. “In terms of the fiscal plans, it’s steady as she goes. But risks to the plans are already beginning to crystallise in lower predicted growth and higher predicted inflation,” he said. Brendan Barber, general secretary of the TUC, said the OBR’s forecasts revealed that the squeeze on hard-pressed families was set to continue, and urged Osborne to slow the pace of cuts. “The government must heed the economic warning signs and change course,” he said. “Over 100,000 people will be marching through central London on Saturday to call on the government to abandon its damaging cuts and to set out an alternative based on jobs, fairer taxation and growth.” Overall, IFS analysis shows that the government’s austerity plans – including the VAT rise and other tax increases, as well as reductions in benefits and tax credits, are highly regressive, hitting those at the bottom of the income scale hardest. By 2015, the poorest 10% of the population will be more than 6.5% worse off as a result of the squeeze, while the richest 10% will lose out by just over 3%. Only those at the very top of the income scale – earning more than £100,000 a year – will lose more than the poorest in society. Osborne said Wednesday’s statement would move Britain “from rescue, to reform, to recovery”. But IFS experts expressed scepticism about many of the measures in his Plan for Growth, published alongside the budget. Helen Miller, an IFS economist, echoed the chancellor’s claim to have “put fuel in the tank of the economy,” said, “these measures might have put fuel in the tank, but they have done very little to affect how many miles we’ll get to the gallon.” Chris Huhne, the climate change secretary, defended the decision to take 1p off fuel duty, despite previously warning that the UK “must get off the oil hook”. He said high prices were causing hardship, particularly for people in rural areas. “We need to take account of people’s concerns. But in the long run price signals are very clear … sometimes you need to go backwards to make a bigger jump forwards.” Too close for comfort Nick Clegg inadvertently played to some Liberal Democrats’ worst fears when he was caught telling David Cameron that he could not see what the two men could disagree about in a general election TV debate in 2015. The deputy prime minister was caught making the jokey aside after the two men had appeared together in Nottingham, left, at a post-budget question-and-answer session. At the end of the public meeting, Cameron told their audience that the event might have been “a bit better-natured between the two of us” than the TV debates would be during the 2015 election campaign. But as they left backstage, Clegg forgot his TV mic was still turned on and said to the prime minister: “If we keep doing this, we won’t find anything to bloody disagree on in the bloody TV debates.” The Lib Dem leader was then seen looking down at his mic – realising that, like Gordon Brown during the 2010 general election, his words would be picked up by the broadcasters. The remark was dismissed as a joke by his aides, but it will fuel concerns among some Lib Dems that their leader will find it difficult to establish a separate identity to fight the Tories in 2015 after working for so long with Cameron in government. Labour said it was already considering telling broadcasters it will not be involved in three-way TV debates with Clegg and Cameron on the basis that they are both from the government. Patrick Wintour Budget 2001 George Osborne David Cameron Ed Balls Budget Spending review 2010 Tax and spending NHS Family finances Heather Stewart Larry Elliott Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk
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