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This morning I was in eastern NC scanning the SW dial because my
"regular" station did not come in too well about 8:00 a.m. I flipped to 9650 because I knew Seoul (? sp), S. Korea usually came in pretty well that time of day. It came in very well, but I soon tired of it and flipped to a station that seemed to be promoting communism. They told of Castro and how he prepared his people for Ivan the hurricane by going on air live about 3 or 4 hours per night for several nights prior to Ivan's arrival. They boasted of the trucks coming and hauling off the people with their refrigerators, etc. so no one lost a life in Cuba (as opposed to several states in the U.S.A.) and not too much property damage to the occupants' personal property. They didn't mention the real property - probably because communist countries don't allow much of it. They probably lived in "government" housing. They concluded by saying something like "Ivan is no match for Castro" but those are probably not the exact words. Then came the announcement: You are listening to NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO! (I had pressed the FM button to get the local news.) Isn't it nice that we spend years defending the world from communism and then our national public radio system boasts of how wonderful it is? In case you doubt any of this or wish to have the exact wording you might need to contact NPR or check their web site. |
#2
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![]() "Al Patrick" wrote in message ... This morning I was in eastern NC scanning the SW dial because my "regular" station did not come in too well about 8:00 a.m. I flipped to 9650 because I knew Seoul (? sp), S. Korea usually came in pretty well that time of day. It came in very well, but I soon tired of it and flipped to a station that seemed to be promoting communism. They told of Castro and how he prepared his people for Ivan the hurricane by going on air live about 3 or 4 hours per night for several nights prior to Ivan's arrival. They boasted of the trucks coming and hauling off the people with their refrigerators, etc. so no one lost a life in Cuba (as opposed to several states in the U.S.A.) and not too much property damage to the occupants' personal property. They didn't mention the real property - probably because communist countries don't allow much of it. They probably lived in "government" housing. They concluded by saying something like "Ivan is no match for Castro" but those are probably not the exact words. Then came the announcement: You are listening to NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO! (I had pressed the FM button to get the local news.) Isn't it nice that we spend years defending the world from communism and then our national public radio system boasts of how wonderful it is? In case you doubt any of this or wish to have the exact wording you might need to contact NPR or check their web site. Perhaps the report was factually correct, and the Cuban people -were- appropriately prepared. I'm not sure I see this as "promoting Communism;" Ivan is a big story, so what's a little fawning over Castro among friends. IMO, NPR's obvious bias is usually as apparent in what they -don't- cover as in what they do. I doubt, for example, that they're all too concerned with the dissidents in Castro's prisons. |
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