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#1
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![]() "Fredrick Garvin" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 24 Feb 2005 20:07:56 -0500, Al Patrick expelled the following: ABC is airing a story about NASA now. You may want to watch it and read between the lines to see what they are preparing us to believe next! :-) The UFO "special" sucked to high heaven(tm). Same old nothing. The only remarkable thing about it was that it was done on a major network and hosted by a heavy hitter; Peter Jennings. Other then that, it was the same recycled UFO info that has been out there for the last few decades. There was one interesting thing, though.... Jennings did bring up "string theory" and suggest that alien visitors that could be a "million years" ahead of us could be hopping about the universe in worm holes or by folding space. Given that travel between the stars by means of conventional propulsion makes alien visitation all but a dead issue, the only way to keep the idea alive what so ever is to suggest that the little gray pud-knockers are getting here by other means. I'm glad he introduced the audience to that concept. At least with that, it isn't a total joke to keep an open mind to the possibility that some race of cosmic jerk-offs is coming here to study us or shop for cattle to butcher or what ever gets them off. Michael |
#2
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Michael Rennie (Klaatu) and his robot (Gork,or whatever he called that
robot) in that movie,The Day the Earth Stood Still,he did come to Earth to warn us,ya know. cuhulin |
#3
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nawwwww,the only reason they are coming to Earth is for our wimmins :{)
cuhulin |
#4
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#5
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wrote: I expect them to come forth some time in the next couple years -
possibly more or less - and tell us they HAVE DETECTED life outside earth ------------------------------------------- They have already said that. While I was watching the news on tv the other week (not the ABC one you mentioned), they said "scientists have discovered living organisms on Mars". |
#6
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On Sat, 26 Feb 2005 20:59:44 -0500, dvdguy2 wrote:
wrote: I expect them to come forth some time in the next couple years - possibly more or less - and tell us they HAVE DETECTED life outside earth ------------------------------------------- They have already said that. While I was watching the news on tv the other week (not the ABC one you mentioned), they said "scientists have discovered living organisms on Mars". Possibly. Don't get too excited yet. |
#7
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Check your local libraries or online for Popular Mechanics magazines or
Popular Science magazines about a year or so back and read about what fed govt says about they will qurrantine any space aliens from other planets and impound their space ship(s).I don't believe it will ever happen because I don't believe any space aliens from another planet or planets have ever came to Earth before or ever will come to Earth either.I am not saying there are not other planets out there with aliens with advanced technology but if there are,they are so far away we will never know for sure.I don't fall for any phoney baloney stuff.I have to see proof first before I will believe anything like that.I have never seen anything yet that looked space alien to me and I am sixty three years old.That Roswell stuff was a big Balloon that had spy cameras on it and it was sent up to spy on the rooskies atomic bomb making facilities in Russia and it crashed.That is why fed govt brought in the Troops and hauled that stuff away to wherever they took it to. cuhulin |
#8
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"Al Patrick" wrote
I think there may be a hidden message there. The government influences movies and documentaries that are made. .... THIS may be the beginning of the government getting around to saying, "We lied to you to protect you! We didn't think YOU could take it so we kept it quite. BUT NOW we need to do thus and so because ...." Leftie Anchorman Peter Jennings and his a CanadAlien broadcast As a child he was "bone lazy and a bit delinquent," Jennings told a Good Housekeeping Magazine interviewer, and he found school "boring." He was expelled from several private schools, then dropped out of school forever before completing 10th Grade. .... "My mother.was pretty anti-American," Jennings said on the September 6, 2002 CBS "Late Show with David Letterman. "And so I was, in some respects, raised with anti-Americanism in my blood, or in my mother's milk at least." .... Jennings had limited knowledge of American history and culture. He pronounced words like "schedule" and "lieutenant" in a distinctly Canadian and aristocratic way - "SHED-u-al," "lef-TEN-ant." He once mispronounced Appomattox, site of Confederate General Robert E. Lee's surrender that effectively ended the War Between the States. He confused the U.S. Marine Corps anthem with the U.S. Navy's, "Anchors Aweigh." .... He impressed bosses by doing the first-ever interview with terrorist Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leader Yasser Arafat. .... "In the early 1970s, when he was single [i.e., divorced from his first wife] and head of the ABC bureau in Beirut, Peter Jennings dated Hanan Ashrawi, who at the time was also single and a graduate student in literature at the American University in the Lebanese capital," reported the December 30, 1991/January 6, 1992 U.S. News & World Report. "Jennings was introduced to Ashrawi's parents and sisters and became part of her circle of friends." Ashrawi was, in fact, the youngest of five daughters of a politically active doctor. At American University she was a leader of the General Union of Palestinian Students while dating Jennings. As an adult the chain-smoking Ashrawi became part of the public ruling circle of the Palestinian Authority in Arafat's regime. "Anyone who has known Hanan as long as I have," Jennings said, "is not surprised to see her emerge as a persuasive spokesperson for the Palestinians." On September 11, 2001, Jennings was Anchor of ABC when Islamist terrorists killed nearly 3,000 Americans in a series of attacks that destroyed New York 's World Trade Center and struck the Pentagon. "It is certainly a motivating factor," Jennings told viewers during his coverage of this horror, "that the hatred of the United States, and the hatred of the United States as a patron of Israel, whether you're from Afghanistan, or whether you're from Iran, Iraq, or inside the Palestinian territories is so intense at some levels, and has become more intense in recent months, that nobody will be, very many people will not be surprised at this attack today though like everybody else will be amazed at the magnitude and success of it." "[Peter Jennings] hosted what looked like a little intercontinental tea party for alleged experts on the Middle East," wrote liberal television critic Tom Shales in the September 17, 2001 Washington Post, "one of whom was professional Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi, whom Jennings hailed as 'widely known in the United States.' "Jennings wanted to know," wrote Shales, ".how anyone could hate America so much that they would launch this kind of vicious, calamitous attack. Ashrawi blamed U.S. foreign policy (for having 'fought Arab nationalism') and, predictably for her, Israel. Ashrawi complained that 'Israel is given preferential treatment, treated as a country above the law, as part of her condemnation. Jennings deferred to Ashrawi, as usual, and let her filibuster. It was a nauseating display," concluded Shales. Jennings never informed his audience about his close relationship with Ashrawi, nor of his having been "part of her circle" of radical friends in Beirut. In 1972, while covering the murder of 11 Israeli athletes by Palestinians at the Munich Olympics, Jennings went out of his way to refer to the murderers as "guerrillas" and "commandos," never using the word "terrorists." "I first saw Jennings on ABC when, as a young TV journalist, he reported from the Munich Olympics," wrote Martin Peretz, publisher of the liberal The New Republic in its September 13, 2001 issue. "And I was filled with disgust that his subsequent career has only deepened. At Munich - I still remember it, 30 years later - Jennings tried to explain away the abductions and massacre of the young Israeli athletes. His theme: The Palestinians were helpless and desperate. Ipso facto, they were driven to murder. That's life.." "In Sept. 2002, when ABC News aired a retrospective on the Olympic Massacre," wrote the web site HonestReporting.com, "Jennings unabashedly said that Israel should stop regarding the Palestinians as terrorists as a result of the Olympic Massacre of three decades ago. Jennings dismissed the continual barrage of thousands of Palestinian terror attacks against Israelis, not only before, but also since the '72 Olympics." In large part because of Peter Jennings, ABC News was quicker than its rivals to air foreign criticism of Israel and to portray Palestinians, other Arabs, Iranians and even terrorist organizations sympathetically. "I felt very strongly - and I still do - that there is much more than the Israeli side to the Middle East story," Jennings told Rolling Stone Magazine. "There are nineteen countries in the Arab world, and I worked in all of them." "It is Hezbollah, which means 'The Party of God,' that gets credit for liberating Lebanon from the long Israeli occupation," said Jennings in his report from Beirut on March 27, 2002. "Yesterday, I went to see its 38-year-old leader, Hassan Nasrallah. He is a popular member of the political establishment. The Bush administration says Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. 'Hezbollah was proud to resist the Israeli occupation,' he says. 'We gave our lives. We are not terrorists.'" Jennings never informed his audience that Hezbollah was responsible for bombing the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon and a U.S. military barracks where 241 Marines were murdered by a Hezbollah truck bomb. He also neglected to mention the theocratic dictatorship of Iran's role in arming and funding Hezbollah, a Shiite terrorist organization with close ties to Tehran. As war with Iraq approached in 2003, Peter Jennings did reports favoring continued inspections by the United Nations. On January 21, 2003 Jennings reported on "several hundred artists and writers walking through the streets of Baghdad to say thank you to Saddam Hussein" whose regime "has always supported the arts." On his newscasts Jennings featured anti-war activists, described as noble idealists, but he never told viewers of the radical background of many activists nor that the organizer of the largest anti-war protests was the Marxist-Leninist pro-terrorist group International A.N.S.W.E.R. After U.S. troops removed Saddam, Jennings described those gathered at the toppling of the dictator's statue as "a small crowd." Jenning's protégé during the war, fellow Canadian and MSNBC reporter Ashleigh Banfield, ascribed U.S. policy to the influence of what she called "the Jewish Lobby." In 1975 Jennings returned to Washington, D.C. to host "A.M. America," forerunner to today's "Good Morning America." By 1977 he transferred to ABC' s London bureau, from which in 1978 he became part of a triumvirate of evening news anchors along with Frank Reynolds and, from Chicago, Max Robinson. In 1983 Frank Reynolds was suffering from cancer, and ABC chose Jennings to replace him. "Anchor people are slaves to the daily broadcast," Jennings has said. "Very high-priced slaves I grant you. But slaves." He has been enslaved as anchor of "World News Tonight" for more than 20 years. In 1990 he also began doing specials under the name "Peter Jennings Reports." These have often dealt with controversial topics. In 1999 he anchored a 12-hour series titled The Century and co-authored a best-selling book with the same name. In 2004 he anchored "Jesus and Paul - The Word and the Witness," a three-hour special that provocatively interpreted these founders of Christianity through the views of radical theologians such as Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong. "We may tell you all the time that our principal aim in life is to communicate and assist, inform," said Jennings on a 2001 CBS News special Breaking the News. "But if you see injustice and you can get people to do something about it, ahh, it's just a glorious feeling.. There's nothing a reporter likes more than to have an effect on policy." In what directions has Peter Jennings shaped ABC News coverage to influence policy? Decades of documentation and analysis by the Media Research Center and others, as well as statements by Jennings himself and those with whom he has worked, provide answers. "Peter, I believe, genuinely thinks of himself as a nobleman doing public good," former ABC News Correspondent Peter Collins told Cybercast News Service (CNS) in December 2003. "When he and his producer load and tilt a story, you can argue it's leftist bias, but it's just as effective to say they left out basic facts because they couldn't see them or they are incompetent to see them... In order to save the peasantry in America.it's their obligation to present these facts the way they present them." Jennings' patronizing condescension towards American "peasants" - "Americans are pretty insular people for the most part," he told David Letterman in 2001 - was never more on display than in November 1994 days after voters removed Democrats and put a Republican majority in control of both houses of Congress for the first time in four decades. "Ask parents of any two-year-old," said Jennings in his daily ABC Radio commentary on November 14, 1994, "and they can tell you about those temper tantrums: the stomping feet, the rolling eyes, the screaming. It's clear that the anger controls the child and not the other way around. It's the job of the parent to teach the child to control the anger and channel it in a positive way. Imagine a nation full of uncontrolled two-year-old rage. The voters had a temper tantrum last week.. Parenting and governing don't have to be dirty words: the nation can't be run by an angry two-year-old." Jennings did not vote in that election. He was a citizen of Canada, ineligible to cast a ballot in the United States. When his rival American news anchors were prevented by a legal travel ban from visiting Communist Cuba, Jennings traveled there to do reporting with his Canadian passport. In 2004 Peter Jennings announced that he had become a U.S. citizen, but this statement was incomplete. He in fact also retains Canadian citizenship and is therefore a dual citizen. Jennings' political views remain those of a cosmopolitan Canadian. He is far more European than American in values and culture. Among the most repeated themes in stories by Peter Jennings are that the United States is "lagging behind" the rest of the "industrialized world" (and Europe in particular) in government-provided health care, child care, paid leave for parents and other social programs. "The best child care system in the world..the Swedish system is run and paid for by the Swedish government, something many Americans would like to see the U.S. government do as well," declared Jennings in a virtual editorial on "World News Tonight" on November 22, 1989. Jennings did not mention that in the socialist nanny state of Sweden, children have been taken away from parents who were declared unfit for being overweight. "Mr. Bush believes in a universal tax cut," reported Jennings on October 4, 2000, "which would mean a very large chunk of money not available for government programs." His reporting depicts nearly every potential tax cut negatively. Jennings in 1996 dismissed the proposed "flat tax" as "a very radical notion." But Peter Jennings admires radicalism on the left. "Medical care was once for the privileged few. Today it is available to every Cuban and it is free," Jennings on April 3, 1989 told "World News Tonight" viewers. "Some of Cuba's health care is world class. In heart disease, for example, in brain surgery. Health and education are the revolution's great success stories." He did not mention that patients must bring their own sheets and light bulbs to the operating room or may die from lack of antibiotics. He did not mention that education includes making children work unpaid in factories, and that it includes military training to teach children how to "kill the Yanquis." After the mother of five-year-old Elian Gonzalez died trying to bring her son across the waters between Communist Cuba and the United States, the prison island's Marxist dictator Fidel Castro demanded the boy's return. President Bill Clinton's Administration sided with Castro and on an Easter Sunday used shock troops to attack reporters and at gunpoint to tear the boy from the arms of relatives in Little Havana, a suburb of Miami, Florida. "In Miami today, immigration officials met with the Miami relatives of Elian Gonzalez again," said Jennings, also siding with Castro, to begin his newscast on March 28, 2000. "And once again the government has failed to get the kind of cooperation from the relatives that might allow the case of this young boy to end in a civilized manner that is best for him." According to former ABC Correspondent Peter Collins, when in 1989 he proposed to do a report from Nicaragua on the 10th Anniversary of rule by the Soviet-aligned, Fidel Castro-supported Marxist Sandinista regime, Peter Jennings intervened. "[Jennings] himself called me up in Managua and essentially dictated to me what I should say. Basically what Mr. Jennings wanted was for me to make a favorable pronouncement about the 10 years of the Sandinista revolution," Collins told Cybercast News Service, "and he called me up, massaged my script in a way that I no longer recognized it." "The Sandinistas brought with them Marxist ideas about spreading wealth and creating a new, unselfish society," read part of the Jennings-rewritten script that ABC broadcast. "And in the first few years, they did manage to reduce illiteracy, the infant death rate and launched the biggest land reform in Central America. But the Reagan administration saw the Sandinistas as a threat and forced them into a war with the U.S.-backed Contras." Jennings frequently pressed ABC reporters to rewrite their stories with a more leftward slant. In recent years he has supported efforts by ABC News Political Director Mark Halperin to do the same. Halperin on the day of the final 2004 presidential debate, a debate moderated by Charlie Gibson of ABC News, sent out a memo directing all ABC news reporters and other personnel to deal more harshly with any misstatement by Republican candidate President George W. Bush than any by Democratic presidential candidate Senator John Kerry (D.-Massachusetts). "In terms of the direction that Peter Collins recalls Peter Jennings pushing in - and that was to the left of where the correspondent is - that's consistent with my experiences, and I think most [ABC News correspondents'] experience," Bob Zelnick told Cybercast News Service. Zelnick ended his 21-year career as an ABC News reporter in 1989 and now chairs the Department of Journalism at Boston University. Is Jennings a biased journalist? "I'm a little concerned about this notion everybody wants us to be objective," he said in October 2004, noting that journalists are human and have points of view through which they filter their perceptions of the news. He added: "There's a whole industry of conservatives saying, 'Ah, it's those damn liberals,' and a whole group of liberals saying, 'It's all those damn conservatives.'" "Historically in the media, it has been more of a liberal persuasion for many years," L. Brent Bozell III quotes Jennings as saying in his 2004 book Weapons of Mass Distortion: The Coming Meltdown of the Liberal Media. "It has taken us a long time, too long in my view, to have vigorous conservative voices heard as widely in the media as they now are." "I think there is a mainstream media," Peter Jennings told CNN's Larry King on May 15, 2001. "CNN is mainstream media, and the main, ABC, CBS, NBC are mainstream media. And I think it's just essentially to make the point that we are largely in the center without particular axes to grind, without ideologies which are represented in our daily coverage, at least certainly not on purpose." On the October 17, 2000 "World News Tonight," Peter Jennings eulogized Soviet apparatchik and Communist Party USA leader Gus Hall, who died that week at age 90. Gus Hall devoted his life to defeating America in the Cold War and to establishing a totalitarian dictatorship in the United States, none of which was mentioned by Jennings. "Hall," said Jennings, "never wavered." http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/in...asp?indid=1733 |
#9
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Peter Jennings is a left wing Commie,in my opinion.About seven years ago
I heard a radio talk show host say that by 10:00 AM in the mornings,he has done his news thingy for the day and he usually is in Central Park walking his dogs. cuhulin |
#10
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![]() tianli_ wrote: "Al Patrick" wrote I think there may be a hidden message there. The government influences movies and documentaries that are made. ... THIS may be the beginning of the government getting around to saying, "We lied to you to protect you! We didn't think YOU could take it so we kept it quite. BUT NOW we need to do thus and so because ...." Leftie Anchorman Peter Jennings and his a CanadAlien broadcast As a child he was "bone lazy and a bit delinquent," Jennings told a Good Housekeeping Magazine interviewer, and he found school "boring." He was expelled from several private schools, then dropped out of school forever before completing 10th Grade. ... "My mother.was pretty anti-American," Jennings said on the September 6, 2002 CBS "Late Show with David Letterman. "And so I was, in some respects, raised with anti-Americanism in my blood, or in my mother's milk at least." ... Jennings had limited knowledge of American history and culture. He pronounced words like "schedule" and "lieutenant" in a distinctly Canadian and aristocratic way - "SHED-u-al," "lef-TEN-ant." He once mispronounced Appomattox, site of Confederate General Robert E. Lee's surrender that effectively ended the War Between the States. He confused the U.S. Marine Corps anthem with the U.S. Navy's, "Anchors Aweigh." ... He impressed bosses by doing the first-ever interview with terrorist Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leader Yasser Arafat. ... "In the early 1970s, when he was single [i.e., divorced from his first wife] and head of the ABC bureau in Beirut, Peter Jennings dated Hanan Ashrawi, who at the time was also single and a graduate student in literature at the American University in the Lebanese capital," reported the December 30, 1991/January 6, 1992 U.S. News & World Report. "Jennings was introduced to Ashrawi's parents and sisters and became part of her circle of friends." Ashrawi was, in fact, the youngest of five daughters of a politically active doctor. At American University she was a leader of the General Union of Palestinian Students while dating Jennings. As an adult the chain-smoking Ashrawi became part of the public ruling circle of the Palestinian Authority in Arafat's regime. "Anyone who has known Hanan as long as I have," Jennings said, "is not surprised to see her emerge as a persuasive spokesperson for the Palestinians." On September 11, 2001, Jennings was Anchor of ABC when Islamist terrorists killed nearly 3,000 Americans in a series of attacks that destroyed New York 's World Trade Center and struck the Pentagon. "It is certainly a motivating factor," Jennings told viewers during his coverage of this horror, "that the hatred of the United States, and the hatred of the United States as a patron of Israel, whether you're from Afghanistan, or whether you're from Iran, Iraq, or inside the Palestinian territories is so intense at some levels, and has become more intense in recent months, that nobody will be, very many people will not be surprised at this attack today though like everybody else will be amazed at the magnitude and success of it." "[Peter Jennings] hosted what looked like a little intercontinental tea party for alleged experts on the Middle East," wrote liberal television critic Tom Shales in the September 17, 2001 Washington Post, "one of whom was professional Palestinian spokeswoman Hanan Ashrawi, whom Jennings hailed as 'widely known in the United States.' "Jennings wanted to know," wrote Shales, ".how anyone could hate America so much that they would launch this kind of vicious, calamitous attack. Ashrawi blamed U.S. foreign policy (for having 'fought Arab nationalism') and, predictably for her, Israel. Ashrawi complained that 'Israel is given preferential treatment, treated as a country above the law, as part of her condemnation. Jennings deferred to Ashrawi, as usual, and let her filibuster. It was a nauseating display," concluded Shales. Jennings never informed his audience about his close relationship with Ashrawi, nor of his having been "part of her circle" of radical friends in Beirut. In 1972, while covering the murder of 11 Israeli athletes by Palestinians at the Munich Olympics, Jennings went out of his way to refer to the murderers as "guerrillas" and "commandos," never using the word "terrorists." "I first saw Jennings on ABC when, as a young TV journalist, he reported from the Munich Olympics," wrote Martin Peretz, publisher of the liberal The New Republic in its September 13, 2001 issue. "And I was filled with disgust that his subsequent career has only deepened. At Munich - I still remember it, 30 years later - Jennings tried to explain away the abductions and massacre of the young Israeli athletes. His theme: The Palestinians were helpless and desperate. Ipso facto, they were driven to murder. That's life.." "In Sept. 2002, when ABC News aired a retrospective on the Olympic Massacre," wrote the web site HonestReporting.com, "Jennings unabashedly said that Israel should stop regarding the Palestinians as terrorists as a result of the Olympic Massacre of three decades ago. Jennings dismissed the continual barrage of thousands of Palestinian terror attacks against Israelis, not only before, but also since the '72 Olympics." In large part because of Peter Jennings, ABC News was quicker than its rivals to air foreign criticism of Israel and to portray Palestinians, other Arabs, Iranians and even terrorist organizations sympathetically. "I felt very strongly - and I still do - that there is much more than the Israeli side to the Middle East story," Jennings told Rolling Stone Magazine. "There are nineteen countries in the Arab world, and I worked in all of them." "It is Hezbollah, which means 'The Party of God,' that gets credit for liberating Lebanon from the long Israeli occupation," said Jennings in his report from Beirut on March 27, 2002. "Yesterday, I went to see its 38-year-old leader, Hassan Nasrallah. He is a popular member of the political establishment. The Bush administration says Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. 'Hezbollah was proud to resist the Israeli occupation,' he says. 'We gave our lives. We are not terrorists.'" Jennings never informed his audience that Hezbollah was responsible for bombing the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon and a U.S. military barracks where 241 Marines were murdered by a Hezbollah truck bomb. He also neglected to mention the theocratic dictatorship of Iran's role in arming and funding Hezbollah, a Shiite terrorist organization with close ties to Tehran. As war with Iraq approached in 2003, Peter Jennings did reports favoring continued inspections by the United Nations. On January 21, 2003 Jennings reported on "several hundred artists and writers walking through the streets of Baghdad to say thank you to Saddam Hussein" whose regime "has always supported the arts." On his newscasts Jennings featured anti-war activists, described as noble idealists, but he never told viewers of the radical background of many activists nor that the organizer of the largest anti-war protests was the Marxist-Leninist pro-terrorist group International A.N.S.W.E.R. After U.S. troops removed Saddam, Jennings described those gathered at the toppling of the dictator's statue as "a small crowd." Jenning's protégé during the war, fellow Canadian and MSNBC reporter Ashleigh Banfield, ascribed U.S. policy to the influence of what she called "the Jewish Lobby." In 1975 Jennings returned to Washington, D.C. to host "A.M. America," forerunner to today's "Good Morning America." By 1977 he transferred to ABC' s London bureau, from which in 1978 he became part of a triumvirate of evening news anchors along with Frank Reynolds and, from Chicago, Max Robinson. In 1983 Frank Reynolds was suffering from cancer, and ABC chose Jennings to replace him. "Anchor people are slaves to the daily broadcast," Jennings has said. "Very high-priced slaves I grant you. But slaves." He has been enslaved as anchor of "World News Tonight" for more than 20 years. In 1990 he also began doing specials under the name "Peter Jennings Reports." These have often dealt with controversial topics. In 1999 he anchored a 12-hour series titled The Century and co-authored a best-selling book with the same name. In 2004 he anchored "Jesus and Paul - The Word and the Witness," a three-hour special that provocatively interpreted these founders of Christianity through the views of radical theologians such as Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong. "We may tell you all the time that our principal aim in life is to communicate and assist, inform," said Jennings on a 2001 CBS News special Breaking the News. "But if you see injustice and you can get people to do something about it, ahh, it's just a glorious feeling.. There's nothing a reporter likes more than to have an effect on policy." In what directions has Peter Jennings shaped ABC News coverage to influence policy? Decades of documentation and analysis by the Media Research Center and others, as well as statements by Jennings himself and those with whom he has worked, provide answers. "Peter, I believe, genuinely thinks of himself as a nobleman doing public good," former ABC News Correspondent Peter Collins told Cybercast News Service (CNS) in December 2003. "When he and his producer load and tilt a story, you can argue it's leftist bias, but it's just as effective to say they left out basic facts because they couldn't see them or they are incompetent to see them... In order to save the peasantry in America.it's their obligation to present these facts the way they present them." Jennings' patronizing condescension towards American "peasants" - "Americans are pretty insular people for the most part," he told David Letterman in 2001 - was never more on display than in November 1994 days after voters removed Democrats and put a Republican majority in control of both houses of Congress for the first time in four decades. "Ask parents of any two-year-old," said Jennings in his daily ABC Radio commentary on November 14, 1994, "and they can tell you about those temper tantrums: the stomping feet, the rolling eyes, the screaming. It's clear that the anger controls the child and not the other way around. It's the job of the parent to teach the child to control the anger and channel it in a positive way. Imagine a nation full of uncontrolled two-year-old rage. The voters had a temper tantrum last week.. Parenting and governing don't have to be dirty words: the nation can't be run by an angry two-year-old." Jennings did not vote in that election. He was a citizen of Canada, ineligible to cast a ballot in the United States. When his rival American news anchors were prevented by a legal travel ban from visiting Communist Cuba, Jennings traveled there to do reporting with his Canadian passport. In 2004 Peter Jennings announced that he had become a U.S. citizen, but this statement was incomplete. He in fact also retains Canadian citizenship and is therefore a dual citizen. Jennings' political views remain those of a cosmopolitan Canadian. He is far more European than American in values and culture. Among the most repeated themes in stories by Peter Jennings are that the United States is "lagging behind" the rest of the "industrialized world" (and Europe in particular) in government-provided health care, child care, paid leave for parents and other social programs. "The best child care system in the world..the Swedish system is run and paid for by the Swedish government, something many Americans would like to see the U.S. government do as well," declared Jennings in a virtual editorial on "World News Tonight" on November 22, 1989. Jennings did not mention that in the socialist nanny state of Sweden, children have been taken away from parents who were declared unfit for being overweight. "Mr. Bush believes in a universal tax cut," reported Jennings on October 4, 2000, "which would mean a very large chunk of money not available for government programs." His reporting depicts nearly every potential tax cut negatively. Jennings in 1996 dismissed the proposed "flat tax" as "a very radical notion." But Peter Jennings admires radicalism on the left. "Medical care was once for the privileged few. Today it is available to every Cuban and it is free," Jennings on April 3, 1989 told "World News Tonight" viewers. "Some of Cuba's health care is world class. In heart disease, for example, in brain surgery. Health and education are the revolution's great success stories." He did not mention that patients must bring their own sheets and light bulbs to the operating room or may die from lack of antibiotics. He did not mention that education includes making children work unpaid in factories, and that it includes military training to teach children how to "kill the Yanquis." After the mother of five-year-old Elian Gonzalez died trying to bring her son across the waters between Communist Cuba and the United States, the prison island's Marxist dictator Fidel Castro demanded the boy's return. President Bill Clinton's Administration sided with Castro and on an Easter Sunday used shock troops to attack reporters and at gunpoint to tear the boy from the arms of relatives in Little Havana, a suburb of Miami, Florida. "In Miami today, immigration officials met with the Miami relatives of Elian Gonzalez again," said Jennings, also siding with Castro, to begin his newscast on March 28, 2000. "And once again the government has failed to get the kind of cooperation from the relatives that might allow the case of this young boy to end in a civilized manner that is best for him." According to former ABC Correspondent Peter Collins, when in 1989 he proposed to do a report from Nicaragua on the 10th Anniversary of rule by the Soviet-aligned, Fidel Castro-supported Marxist Sandinista regime, Peter Jennings intervened. "[Jennings] himself called me up in Managua and essentially dictated to me what I should say. Basically what Mr. Jennings wanted was for me to make a favorable pronouncement about the 10 years of the Sandinista revolution," Collins told Cybercast News Service, "and he called me up, massaged my script in a way that I no longer recognized it." "The Sandinistas brought with them Marxist ideas about spreading wealth and creating a new, unselfish society," read part of the Jennings-rewritten script that ABC broadcast. "And in the first few years, they did manage to reduce illiteracy, the infant death rate and launched the biggest land reform in Central America. But the Reagan administration saw the Sandinistas as a threat and forced them into a war with the U.S.-backed Contras." Jennings frequently pressed ABC reporters to rewrite their stories with a more leftward slant. In recent years he has supported efforts by ABC News Political Director Mark Halperin to do the same. Halperin on the day of the final 2004 presidential debate, a debate moderated by Charlie Gibson of ABC News, sent out a memo directing all ABC news reporters and other personnel to deal more harshly with any misstatement by Republican candidate President George W. Bush than any by Democratic presidential candidate Senator John Kerry (D.-Massachusetts). "In terms of the direction that Peter Collins recalls Peter Jennings pushing in - and that was to the left of where the correspondent is - that's consistent with my experiences, and I think most [ABC News correspondents'] experience," Bob Zelnick told Cybercast News Service. Zelnick ended his 21-year career as an ABC News reporter in 1989 and now chairs the Department of Journalism at Boston University. Is Jennings a biased journalist? "I'm a little concerned about this notion everybody wants us to be objective," he said in October 2004, noting that journalists are human and have points of view through which they filter their perceptions of the news. He added: "There's a whole industry of conservatives saying, 'Ah, it's those damn liberals,' and a whole group of liberals saying, 'It's all those damn conservatives.'" "Historically in the media, it has been more of a liberal persuasion for many years," L. Brent Bozell III quotes Jennings as saying in his 2004 book Weapons of Mass Distortion: The Coming Meltdown of the Liberal Media. "It has taken us a long time, too long in my view, to have vigorous conservative voices heard as widely in the media as they now are." "I think there is a mainstream media," Peter Jennings told CNN's Larry King on May 15, 2001. "CNN is mainstream media, and the main, ABC, CBS, NBC are mainstream media. And I think it's just essentially to make the point that we are largely in the center without particular axes to grind, without ideologies which are represented in our daily coverage, at least certainly not on purpose." On the October 17, 2000 "World News Tonight," Peter Jennings eulogized Soviet apparatchik and Communist Party USA leader Gus Hall, who died that week at age 90. Gus Hall devoted his life to defeating America in the Cold War and to establishing a totalitarian dictatorship in the United States, none of which was mentioned by Jennings. "Hall," said Jennings, "never wavered." http://www.discoverthenetwork.org/in...asp?indid=1733 Bottom line: Jennings is just another 'tard from CanaDuh... a highly paid 'tard, but a 'tard none the less. dxAce Michigan USA |
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