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Women’s Magazine Pounds Megyn Kelly About Fox News Bias, Palin’s Offenses Against ‘Free Speech’

Via Mediaite, we learn Fox anchor Megyn Kelly granted an interview to the women’s magazine Marie Claire , but her interviewer, Yael Kohen, apparently never watches the media. Even after a huge cover spread and interview in Newsweek magazine, Yael sticks to an old (and false) liberal talking point in playing “gotcha” with Kelly, asking ” I assume you believe in free speech. How do you feel about the fact that Sarah Palin doesn't talk to the press unless it's Fox News?” Earth to Kohen: Palin, a private citizen, exercises free speech in deciding which interview proposals to accept. Kelly strongly suggested the question wasn't factual: “Well, I don't know if the premise of the question is correct, because she has talked to other outlets. I think there are certain outlets she doesn't like. And I think she thinks she's been treated unfairly by people in the press.” But the liberal interviewer persisted that Palin had to submit to liberal-media bombardment: MARIE CLAIRE MAGAZINE: But isn't that part of the job? Isn't that what politicians have to do? KELLY: I suppose so. If I were Sarah Palin, would I want to sit in an interview with someone who was secretly out to get me? Probably not. But as a journalist, do I want candidates to make themselves available to all of us? Yes, I do. I think it's a good idea. Then Kohen became more direct in her aggression against Fox News: MARIE CLAIRE MAGAZINE: Do you think that ideologues like Glenn Beck have harmed Fox's reputation as a legitimate source of unbiased news? KELLY: If Fox had promoted Glenn Beck as a straight newsman who would be delivering the nightly update, like Bret Baier, then yes. But it was clear from the beginning — and it remains clear — that Glenn Beck is an opinion host. He doesn't report as a journalist and isn't making any attempt to be a journalist. MARIE CLAIRE MAGAZINE: Do you think Fox is biased? KELLY: No. Fox News covers stories that some other news outlets won't cover. We ask some questions that other news outlets wouldn't ask. And sometimes that's perceived as bias by people who've grown up in a world where there are only liberal outlets. No one will find it surprising that this women’s magazine didn’t pound Mika Brzezinski about whether MSNBC was biased when she was interviewed earlier this year. Somehow, it never came up. But they suggested Kelly deserved being meat in Jon Stewart’s satire grinder: MARIE CLAIRE MAGAZINE: He has called you out for being a hypocrite. For example, you challenged a guest who accused your network of using Nazi rhetoric in reference to Democrats. Then Stewart ran clips of your colleagues doing exactly that. Is he taking you out of context, or do you take his point? KELLY: I had never said it didn't happen. My guest asserted that it happened every night on Fox News, and I said, “That's not true.” And then Fox critics put words in my mouth and tried to criticize me for them. Jon Stewart definitely takes [things I say] out of context for humorous effect. And I think he would admit that. But it's really one of those can't-lose situations because every time he mocks me, it increases my visibility and bumps my ratings. So mock away!

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Aung San Suu Kyi greeted by thousands on trip out of Rangoon

Nobel laureate tests the limits of her freedom on first political trip into countryside since release from house arrest Thousands of well-wishers lined roadsides in Burma to welcome the opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi as she tested the limits of her freedom on Sunday by taking her first political trip into the countryside since being released from house arrest. The military-dominated government had warned that her journey could trigger riots, but it took place peacefully in two towns north of Rangoon. The last time she travelled out of the city to meet supporters, assailants ambushed her entourage. She escaped harm but was detained and placed under house arrest for seven years, from which she was released last November. On Sunday, Aung San Suu Kyi opened public libraries in Bago, about 50 miles (80 km) north of Rangoon, and in the nearby town of Thanatpin, where she gave a 10-minute speech calling for unity and asking people to continue to support her political party, the National League for Democracy (NLD). She urged the crowd of hundreds to persevere despite economic hardships that have forced many to seek jobs abroad. She made a similar speech in Bago, implying that true democratic change would take time. “I know what the people want and I am trying my best to fulfil the wishes of the people,” she said. “However, I don’t want to give false hope.” In Bago, during a visit to a pagoda, crowds shouted: “Long live Daw Aung San Suu Kyi!” Ma Thuza, a 35-year-old woman watching the scene, said: “I can die happily now that I’ve seen her.” Aung San Suu Kyi travelled in a three-car convoy followed by about 27 more vehicles – filled mostly with journalists and supporters. Security agents, with wireless microphones protruding from their civilian clothes, monitored each stop she made. Thousands of people lined the roadsides to catch a glimpse of her convoy as it passed by, some cheering and waving. The Nobel laureate stopped several times, and well-wishers handed her red roses and jasmine flowers. Win Htein, an NLD leader, said the trip was crucial because it “will test the reaction of the authorities and will test the response of the people”. “This trip will be a test for everything,” Htein said. An NLD spokesman, Nyan Win, said more trips would follow, but neither the dates nor the destinations had been decided. After half a century of army rule, Burma organised elections late last year and officially handed power to a civilian administration in March. But critics say the new government, led by retired military figures, is a proxy for continued military rule and that little has changed. Some 2,000 political prisoners remain behind bars, more than 100,000 refugees live in neighbouring countries and sporadic clashes have erupted in the north-east between government troops and ethnic militias who have been fighting for greater autonomy for decades. On Friday, Aung San Suu Kyi held her second meeting with the minister for labour and social welfare, Aung Kyi, opening a rare channel of dialogue between the two sides. The state-run New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported on Saturday that the two sides agreed to co-operate on national stability and development. Also on Friday, the information minister, Kyaw Hsan, urged Aung San Suu Kyi to officially register the NLD as a party, a step that would imply its acceptance of the government’s legitimacy and also allow it to legally take part in politics. If her group reaches an accommodation with the government, it could serve as a reason for western nations to lift political and economic embargoes on the country that have hindered development and pushed it into dependence on neighbouring China. The previous military government ordered the party’s dissolution after it refused to register for last November’s general election, which the NLD called unfair and undemocratic. Aung San Suu Kyi has travelled outside Rangoon since her release from house arrest. Last month, she journeyed to the ancient city of Bagan with her son on a private pilgrimage that nevertheless drew large crowds of supporters and scores of undercover police and intelligence agents. She made no speeches, and the trip ended without incident. In June, the government said it would not stop her from travelling upcountry to meet supporters, but warned that the visits could trigger riots. Aung San Suu Kyi Burma guardian.co.uk

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Soldier from 1st Battalion The Rifles was killed by an improvised explosive device while on foot patrol in southern Afghanistan A British soldier has been killed in an explosion in southern Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence said on Sunday. The soldier, from 1st Battalion The Rifles, was killed by an improvised explosive device while on foot patrol on Friday in the Shaparak area of the Nahr-e Saraj district of Helmand province. His family has been informed. Spokesman for Task Force Helmand Major Rolf Kurth said: “It is my sad duty to inform you of the death of a soldier from 1st Battalion The Rifles in the Shaparak area of the Nahr-e Saraj District of Helmand Province today. “The soldier was part of a foot patrol promoting a local community engagement project when he was killed in an explosion. “Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends at this difficult time.” Afghanistan Military guardian.co.uk

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Magical thinking with Tom Friedman, Cokie Roberts, and…Nixon?

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly Professional Left Podcast with our own Driftglass and Bluegal , once again taking on our Villagers and their beltway conventional wisdom as only they can. Have a great weekend and enjoy the podcast everyone. Featured in this episode — Lemkin: Cokie’s Law vs. Social Security. . You follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And if anyone wants to wish them well, they’re finally going to make it official and are tying the knot next week. Congratulations Fran and Driftie!

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Magical thinking with Tom Friedman, Cokie Roberts, and…Nixon?

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly Professional Left Podcast with our own Driftglass and Bluegal , once again taking on our Villagers and their beltway conventional wisdom as only they can. Have a great weekend and enjoy the podcast everyone. Featured in this episode — Lemkin: Cokie’s Law vs. Social Security. . You follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And if anyone wants to wish them well, they’re finally going to make it official and are tying the knot next week. Congratulations Fran and Driftie!

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Magical thinking with Tom Friedman, Cokie Roberts, and…Nixon?

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly Professional Left Podcast with our own Driftglass and Bluegal , once again taking on our Villagers and their beltway conventional wisdom as only they can. Have a great weekend and enjoy the podcast everyone. Featured in this episode — Lemkin: Cokie’s Law vs. Social Security. . You follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And if anyone wants to wish them well, they’re finally going to make it official and are tying the knot next week. Congratulations Fran and Driftie!

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Open Thread with The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Magical thinking with Tom Friedman, Cokie Roberts, and…Nixon?

enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly Professional Left Podcast with our own Driftglass and Bluegal , once again taking on our Villagers and their beltway conventional wisdom as only they can. Have a great weekend and enjoy the podcast everyone. Featured in this episode — Lemkin: Cokie’s Law vs. Social Security. . You follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal . And if anyone wants to wish them well, they’re finally going to make it official and are tying the knot next week. Congratulations Fran and Driftie!

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Chris Matthews Needs to Take a Look in the Mirror if He Wants to Know Why We’re Not Seeing Union Protests on TV

Click here to view this media Chris Matthews has been on somewhat of a roll over the last week or so, asking why the labor unions in the United States aren’t taking a page from these astroturf tea partiers and showing up in Washington D.C. to protest on the weekends and send President Obama a message that they’re concerned about jobs and getting our economy back on the right track. On this Thursday’s edition of Hardball , The Nation ‘s John Nichols pushed back at Matthews assertion that there aren’t union members out there hitting the streets and protesting and talked about what’s been going on in Wisconsin for months on end now. What he did not really respond to is why we’re not seeing massive numbers of protesters in our nation’s Capitol. Nor did he ask Chris Matthews why our national media has largely been ignoring the protests that have been going on in Wisconsin and across the country and in our Capitol for weeks and months on end now. I wish Nichols had asked Chris Matthews why, when unions and other liberal groups have held rallies in D.C., they’ve been either largely or completely ignored by our national media. The AFL-CIO just held a rally to protest Wal-Mart last week in D.C. in conjunction with some other groups. Did we hear any of these pundits on cable television talking about it? Of course not. But if twenty of these astroturf “tea party” members show up somewhere, we’ve got at times more from the media showing up to cover the events than we’ve got protesters. I think Chris Matthews needs to look himself in the mirror if he doesn’t understand why it appears to most people who watch cable television and apparently to himself that there aren’t large numbers of working people and union members taking to the streets and holding rallies and why it’s completely dishonest and disingenuous to compare real grass roots and union protests who don’t have any big money behind them to the astroturf events they love to hype so much. There are large numbers of protests going on around the country, but the vast amount of them are local and not national and our national media ignores them. When liberal groups do sponsor events in D.C., no one in the national media is hyping them, much less covering them as we’ve seen from them with their breathless coverage of these astroturf “tea party” rallies. If Chris Matthews thinks unions members should be showing up in our nation’s Capitol week after week, who does he think is going to pay to bring them there? Unions, unlike these astroturf “tea party” groups do not have big corporate money paying for buses to haul people across the country to show up at these rallies. And to that point, a good deal of these people that are showing up at the “tea party” events are retirees. How many union members does Chris Matthews think can afford to just drop everything and trek on up to D.C. week after week to attend a protest? And how many of them are working weekends in the first place? Just because you’re a member of a union, that doesn’t mean you have your weekends off, or that you or your union has enough spare cash laying around to pay for anyone to be attending rallies far from their homes. I know of exactly one nationally syndicated show that does an adequate job of giving media coverage to protests by working people whether it be here in the United States or across the world, and that’s Democracy Now. If Chris Matthews and the rest of our corporate media gave one tenth of the type of coverage she does week after week, day after day to the groups that are out there protesting, one, maybe more people would show up at them because they’d know about them in the first place. And two, maybe our politicians would pay a little more attention because sadly our politicians do seem to pay a lot more attention to our Villagers in the corporate media than they do to the working class that has been out there and voicing their grievances in public. And that’s not the fault of the dwindling number of unions we have left in the United States that Matthews apparently wants to blame here for not doing more so that our politicians quit ignoring their frustrations with the race to the bottom we’ve seen with their policies that are destroying what’s left of the middle class in America. Unions are doing what they can. But they’re surely not getting any help from Matthews and his ilk, which just makes it even more of an uphill battle. And segments like this one are harmful to that cause and not helpful with assigning blame where it doesn’t belong. Transcript below the fold. MATTHEWS: Well, let me go back to John and then back to you, Josh. I raised this issue about labor. And I`m labor. I like labor. And I think generally they`re a fabulous force for American life in the last 100 years. And if we didn`t have them, I don`t where we would be. We wouldn`t be anywhere good. And my question is, why don`t they take up some of this animus, some of this excitement that the Tea Party has? Why aren`t they holding big demonstrations for jobs? It`s such a winner. You come to Washington with people in T-shirts in hot weather and they come in and they demonstrate, they speak, they get together, they have a tremendous sense of community and excitement. And then the president gets the message and he can react to that. It gives him a foundation, you know, to bounce off and say, look, the people want jobs, I`m giving them jobs. I`m risking it, even if Republicans — why don`t they do that, John? Why don`t they come out in the streets? NICHOLS: Look, Chris, they did come out in the streets in Wisconsin in February and March. And it`s exactly what you described. MATTHEWS: Yes. NICHOLS: There are people whose lives were changed by joining those mass demonstrations. MATTHEWS: OK. Good. NICHOLS: And the big frustration I have isn`t the Washington demonstration. It`s the fact that during these recall races, the Democrats, the Democratic strategists said, oh, don`t talk so much about labor rights. Soften the message. Dumb it down. MATTHEWS: Oh, really. NICHOLS: I think there`s a problem not only with labor, but with the Democratic Party not wanting to defend working people and labor issues. MATTHEWS: Even unemployment? NICHOLS: Even — they`re lousy on it. This president — you were just talking in that last segment, this president can`t get excited about unemployment. He couldn`t get energized and angry. MATTHEWS: OK. Thank you. Well, that`s a damning statement. Sir, that`s a tough, damning statement. We`re going to listen to that woman for a while. Let that reverberate right now.

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Dissident republicans suspected of attack during rioting near the end of a loyalist parade through the city Dissident republicans are suspected to have thrown a pipe bomb at police lines during riots in Derry on Saturday night. The Northern Ireland police service said no one was injured in the blast which happened at Free Derry Corner shortly before 7pm. The trouble continued with petrol bombs thrown at the police in the Butcher Gate area close to the city centre. The rioting erupted near the end of the loyalist Apprentice Boys’ parade, during which 15,000 marchers and their supporters walked through the city to mark the anniversary of the 1688/89 siege. Masked republican youths attacked police vehicleswith petrol bombs and a number of cars were also hijacked and set alight, including a woman and her daughter who were pulled from their car in the Creggan Street area. A Royal Mail van was also hijacked at Madamsbank Road and torched in Earhart Park. Motorists in the area were warned to be vigilant as a car was set alight in Fahan Street and a van was hijacked on the Leckey Road. Police also came under attack when petrol bombs were thrown at the Apprenctice Boys’ headquarters, the Memorial Hall and at PSNI vehicles. SDLP Assembly man for Derry Mark H Durkan described the scenes in the city as “disgraceful”. “I do believe we have a serious situation here, there’s quite a large number of youths gathered in the Bogside. We had a couple of vans set alight. There’s also a car in flames. I just hope the police have a good handle on the situation.” Two arrests were made earlier in the day for disorderly and riotous behaviour and a 16-year-old boy was arrested for disorderly behaviour at premises on the Dungiven Road. Northern Ireland Crime Henry McDonald guardian.co.uk

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Palin: Our Demise Will Be From ‘Liberals Spending Too Much Money’

Click here to view this media Even though Sarah Palin still hasn’t declared that she’s going to enter the 2012 GOP primary race, that didn’t stop Sean Hannity from giving her the opportunity to throw a few flames at President Obama when she showed up at the Iowa State Fair this weekend. Apparently Palin is terribly upset with the level of government spending and our debt like the rest of them in her party and rather than assign blame where it belongs, which is with those Bush tax cuts, Republicans signing off on the Medicare Part D prescription drug giveaway that wasn’t paid for, our illegal invasions of a couple of countries that were never a threat to us, and just the horrible state of our economy that is a result of conservative policies over the last thirty or forty years, who did Palin blame for our problems? You guessed it. Liberals. I hate to break it to you Sarah, but “socialism” and wanting to take care of the least among us is not the problem with what’s wrong with our society. A race to the bottom on wages, not doing anything about our horrid trade laws, corporate welfare, and allowing these too big to fail institutions on Wall Street and our banking system to continue without being broken up and regulated properly are our problems. Just calling government spending and borrowing a problem without looking at just what areas in specific are making things for Americans worse and not better is just repeating nonsensical talking points and something Palin and her ilk are very good at. I hope things are finally getting to a point where there are a good deal of Americans are just tuning this nonsense out if they are even watching this propaganda on Fox to begin with. I’ll just say in my own personal experience and conversations with co-workers on how things are going right now and with what needs to change, no one I’ve spoken to cares about our debt. What they do care about are fair wages, our trade laws, getting Americans back to work, their kids finding a job, retaining our social safety nets, and the huge inequity between those at the top and those on the lower rung of our economy right now and how you raise those wages. We may not be able to do much about the Fox-bots who watch this stuff and take it seriously, but I think there is a great deal all of us can do with just talking to our neighbors and our friends and our families with calling these lies out and with having genuine conversations about what is needed to fix our ailing economy. I wouldn’t doubt if it Palin is trying to set herself up as Rick Perry’s running mate if he gets the nomination. I think she’s too lazy to actually do the hard work it takes to become the nominee herself. God help all of us if that ticket would actually win. It would be George W. Bush on steroids and then we would actually be having a real conversation about the demise of America. That is if our Republican House of Representatives and their allies, the Republican governors across the country don’t beat them to it first with destroying what’s left of our economy.

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