Showing posts with label Fox News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fox News. Show all posts

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Rachel Maddow on Juan Williams & Fox News' Islamophobia.



Rachel Maddow takes apart the right wing claim that Juan Williams has had his First Amendment Rights violated because he was fired for comments he made about Muslims.

MADDOW: Let’s be clear here. This is not a First Amendment issue. … The First Amendment does not guarantee you a paid job as a commentator to say what you want. Your employment as a person paid to speak is at the pleasure of your employer. In this case, it displeased Juan Williams’ employer, at least one of them, for him to have reassured the Fox News audience he too is afraid of Muslims on airplanes and that’s not a bigoted thing. … And so, Juan Williams lost that job. This is not a First Amendment issue. This is an issue of what your employer is OK with.
While Williams was fired for what he said by NPR, his comments actually produced a raise from Fox News.

Islamophobia is simply what Fox News does, so it's no surprise that Williams would have his contract extended - and be given a raise - when he says that he finds the sight of Muslims at an airport scary.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Hannity: Soros donations are a "well-funded, well-orchestrated movement to silence and intimidate" conservatives.



It's funny to watch Fox News complaining of others attempting to interfere with free speech and "silence conservatives".

Oh, how quickly they squeal when anyone mounts a defence against their barrage of lies.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Beck lashes out at the Tides Foundation and the "dirtbag[s]" connected to Tides.



Need any more proof of how dangerous Glenn Beck is? We already know that Byron Williams got into a shoot out with the Californian police on his way to, "start a revolution by travelling to San Francisco and killing people of importance at the Tides Foundation and the ACLU" after hearing Beck repeatedly talk of The Tides Foundation.

Watch here as Beck, again, brings up The Tides Foundation.

But it's how he does it that's so strangely creepy:

Beck: Well, lets start here: Tides. The Tides Foundation. Oh, oh. Did you guys think I wouldn't talk about it any more? Oh, oh, look who is wrong....
Byron Williams has already spoken about Beck's influence on him, which one would think would make Beck at least avoid the subject of The Tides Foundation out of shame if nothing else. But that would presume that shame is an emotion which this charlatan is capable of producing.

He is doing all this after The Tides Foundation chairman has asked people to stop advertising on Fox News and warned that those who do so may end up with blood on their hands.

Pike noted that "businesses that pay to broadcast commercials on Fox News are subsidizing Glenn Beck's television show by continuing to pump money into the network," adding, "It has become clear that the only way to stop supporting Beck is to stop supporting Fox News."

Pike concluded: "The next 'assassin' may succeed, and if so, there will be blood on many hands. The choice is yours. Please join my call to do the right thing in this regard and put Fox News at arm's length from your company by halting your advertising with them."

And yet Beck, shamelessly, launches yet another attack on The Tides Foundation.



Here, Beck boasts that he's still on air despite the fact that The Tides Foundation have called for a boycott of his sponsors. But, he doesn't mention why they want him boycotted. He doesn't mention that his hate filled rhetoric almost resulted in some of them being killed. Instead, he sees only a "liberal" plot to silence him.

This little creep really is going to get someone killed. And, as he here makes painfully clear, he doesn't care about that. He really is the most dangerous man in American broadcasting. Unhinged and, seemingly, unconcerned about the fact that his conspiracy fuelled hate speak almost resulted in bloodshed.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Compare and Contrast.



Here is Kilmeade's non apology.

KILMEADE: On the show on Friday, I was talking about Bill O’Reilly appearance on the View and I said this: “Not all Muslims are terrorists but all terrorists are Muslims.” Well, I misspoke. I don’t believe all terrorists are Muslims. I’m sorry about that if I offended or hurt anybody’s feelings. But that’s it.
Glenn Greenwald does an excellent job highlighting what happens to journalists who "misspeak" about other faiths.

The Washington Post, July 8, 2010:

Octavia Nasr has been fired. CNN fired the editor responsible for Middle Eastern coverage after she posted a note on Twitter expressing admiration for a late Lebanese cleric considered an inspiration for the Hezbollah militant movement. Octavia Nasr later apologized for her tweet, but CNN's senior vice president for international newsgathering, Parisa Khosravi, said Wednesday that Nasr's credibility had been compromised.

Politico, June 7, 2010:

In the world of political journalism, it's the end of an era: Helen Thomas has retired just months shy of her 90th birthday ... [Thomas] stepped down from her latest role -- a columnist for Hearst Newspapers -- in the wake of controversial remarks made in late May about the need for Jews to "get the hell out of Palestine" and return to Poland and Germany. "Helen Thomas announced Monday that she is retiring, effective immediately," read a statement from Hearst Newspapers on Monday. "Her decision came after her controversial comments about Israel and the Palestinians were captured on videotape and widely disseminated on the Internet."

USA Today, Oct. 1, 2010:

CNN has fired Rick Sanchez following his controversial comments on the radio show "Stand Up With Pete Dominick" ... On Thursday, Sanchez called Jon Stewart a "bigot," arguing that "The Daily Show" host is against "everybody else who's not like him." He also suggested that CNN is run by Jewish people. Stewart is also Jewish."

Nafees A. Syed, CNN, Sept. 23, 2010:

At a time when our nation's top university is more diverse than ever before, Harvard's recent decision to honor its former professor Marty Peretz on Friday for setting up an undergraduate research fund in his name comes as a big, disappointing surprise ... Here is the latest blog-post calumny: "Muslim life is cheap, most notably to Muslims" and "I wonder whether I need honor these people and pretend that they are worthy of the privileges of the First Amendment, which I have in my gut the sense that they will abuse" ... Despite the voices raised against it, the university just reaffirmed its decision to recognize him ...
One doesn't even have to comment on such blatant hypocrisy and double standards. It's simply there for all to see.

O'Reilly: "There's no question there is a Muslim problem in the world".



O'Reilly decides to double down on his claims regarding Muslims and now states, "There's no question there is a Muslim problem in the world".

He seems determined, as do many right wingers, to view all Muslims as somehow responsible for the behaviour of an extremist few and labels anyone who refuses to agree with his world view as suffering from "politically correct nonsense".

Of course, one is not being "politically correct" when stating that we are not battling against all Muslims, but are engaged in a war against certain Muslim extremists; one is simply being factual.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Doocy: "How embarrassing" that Beck's rally was "20 times bigger" than the 35,000 people at Obama's speech in Ohio.



Oh, this is especially moronic. Doocy apparently thinks Glenn Beck got 20 times as many people as the 35,000 who attended Obama's most recent rally.

So, is he seriously saying that Glenn Beck attracted 700,000 people? The number who supposedly attended that rally seems to grow week after week.

Poor Obama, he can't attract a crowd can he?


These morons simply say the first thing that pops into their heads.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Tides CEO: Fox News advertisers may end up with blood on their hands.



Tides CEO and founder Drummond Pike has asked advertisers to stop using Fox News to sell their products because of the link between Glenn Beck and the recent intention of Byron Williams to gun down members of the Tides organisation. Pike wrote:

In total, prior to the attempted rampage, Beck had attacked the Tides Foundation 29 times. On September 28th, more than a month after the shooting, Beck reiterated his focus on the Tides Foundation, warning, "I'm coming for you."

In jailhouse interviews, the gunman confessed he views Beck as a "schoolteacher" who "blew my mind." My would-be killer admitted that Beck "give[s] you every ounce of evidence you could possibly need" to commit violence.
Pike has gone as far as to imply that advertisers may very well end up with blood on their hands should they continue to advertise with Fox News.

Pike noted that "businesses that pay to broadcast commercials on Fox News are subsidizing Glenn Beck's television show by continuing to pump money into the network," adding, "It has become clear that the only way to stop supporting Beck is to stop supporting Fox News."

Pike concluded: "The next 'assassin' may succeed, and if so, there will be blood on many hands. The choice is yours. Please join my call to do the right thing in this regard and put Fox News at arm's length from your company by halting your advertising with them."

Beck has been sailing too close to the wind for a very long time now. It's long overdue that advertisers distanced themselves from Beck's hateful, paranoid, rhetoric. He is, literally, going to get someone killed.

Rupert Murdoch: no evidence of widespread NoW phone hacking.

Rupert Murdoch, facing questions from shareholders concerning the phone hacking allegations at the News of The World, has stuck firmly to the company line.

Speaking for the first time since the Guardian revealed that News Corp's UK subsidiary had paid more than £1m in out-of-court settlements to three victims of the practice, Murdoch stuck firmly to the company line.

"We have very, very strict rules," he said. "There was one incident more than five years ago ... the person who bought the bugged conversation was immediately fired. If anything was to come to light, and we have challenged those people who have made allegations to provide evidence ... we would take immediate action."

He has also dismissed the recent investigation by The New York Times into the allegations.

"Journalists who have been fired or unhappy or who are now working for other organisations I do not take as authority."

He added: "I don't take the New York Times, who are the most motivated in this, as authority."

The investigation by the British police has been somewhat undermined by the fact that the officer in charge of the inquiry, assistant commissioner Andy Hayman, subsequently left the police to work for News International as a columnist.

And there are reports that the police ignored huge amounts of evidence.

Police who investigated the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World obtained previously undisclosed telephone records which showed a vast number of public figures had had their voicemail accessed – and then decided not to pursue the evidence, according to official papers seen by the Guardian.

The revelation – contained in paperwork from inside the Crown Prosecution Service – raises fundamental questions about the behaviour of Scotland Yard, which has claimed repeatedly that it found evidence of "only a handful" of people whose mobile phone messages had been intercepted by the News of the World's private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire.

The paperwork also reveals that police and prosecutors adopted a deliberate strategy to ringfence the evidence which they presented in court in order to suppress the names of particularly prominent victims, including members of the royal family. The existence of this strategy has been omitted from all public statements, including evidence made to the House of Commons media select committee.

It may well be that The Guardian and The New York Times have got this utterly wrong, but my instinct is to believe them before I believe Rupert Murdoch, especially as Murdoch claims not to have even read The New York Times article in question.

He can hardly be said to have seriously looked into this if he hasn't even bothered to read the allegations which are being made against his newspaper.

But then, how seriously can you take someone who says this?

He also defended the company's decision to donate $2m to the Republican party, insisting it was "in the best interests of the country".

"In the case of these two donations we judged it to be in the best interests of the company," said Murdoch. "It had nothing to do with editorial policy or journalism ... or anything else. We believe it is certainly in the interests of the country, shareholders and prosperity that there is a fair amount of change in Washington."

And do the shareholders have any say about Murdoch donating this amount of their company's funds to the Republicans?

Asked whether shareholders would be consulted he emphatically responded: "No. You have the right to vote us off the board if you don't like it."

And he says this whilst supposedly promoting democracy....

When the truth emerges, my money is not on this guy having gotten it right.

Click here for full article.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

O'Reilly: "Nobody outside of your crazy left-wing loons believes" that Fox carries water for GOP.



Only "loons" believe what is glaringly obvious, according to O'Reilly.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Beck and Byron Williams.


I've spoken before of Glenn Beck's influence on California highway shooter Byron Williams, the man who into a gun battle with the California Highway Patrol.

Well, now Williams has spoken, and it's very hard not to come to the conclusion that Glenn Beck validated a lot of this man's insane conspiracy theories.


Williams: I would've never started watching Fox News if it wasn't for the fact Beck was on there. And it was the things he did, the things which he exposed, which blew my mind. I said, well nobody does this.

Williams: So now they've got Beck labelled as... trying to incite violence... If the truth incites violence, it means that we've been living too long in the lies.
Indeed, the link between Beck's insane rhetoric and William's is so hard to deny that even fellow radio hosts are now turning on Beck.

Mike Malloy:

"Glenn Beck is a co-conspirator in the case," Malloy told his listeners on Monday. "He should be in jail."

Malloy went on to say that FOX News personality is "pathologically nuts," a "paranoid schizophrenic" and "a dry drunk and a dry drug user."

I think Malloy goes too far, but it is clear that Beck's insane rantings do appear to validate some of the most insane beliefs of the conspiracy theorists.

Many people have noted before how dangerous the rhetoric Beck employs is, but this is the first time that someone accused of a violent crime has been so specific in naming Beck as an influence.


Williams: You need to go back to June, June of this year, 2010, and look at all his programs from June. And you'll see he has been breaking open some of the most hideous corruption. I would say, like a year ago I was watching him, and it was okay. He was all right you know. A little young, but now he's getting it. He really, really is a lot better. He's getting used to it. I don't think he's a natural newscaster, you know what I mean? I look at it more like a schoolteacher on TV, you know?
As I say, Beck doesn't give people like Williams their insane theories, but it's impossible to deny that he validates them.

He's been sailing too close to the wind for a long, long, time. It was inevitable that someone like Williams would come along quoting Beck as an influence.

You can't talk crazy to the crazies for as long as Beck has done without one of them doing something crazy.

Saturday, October 09, 2010

Beck: Fire department "had to" let Tennessee house burn down, otherwise, you have "Obamacare".



Glenn Beck actually agrees that firemen were right to watch a man's house burn down.

You can see how O'Reilly now comes across as a voice of reason compared to the insanity of the new extremist right wing of the Republicans which Beck represents.

In their world it really is every man for himself.

Friday, October 08, 2010

Hannity: Nevada voters "have a duty" to throw Reid out of Congress.



The "fair and balanced" news channel tells voters that they "have a duty" to throw Harry Reid out of office.

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Beck: Dems position on Bush tax cuts is "the same old class warfare".



Beck repeats the lie that it "would cost nothing" to extend the Bush tax cuts and states that it is "class warfare" to ask that the rich pay roughly the same rate of income tax which they paid under Ronald Reagan.

Tags: ,

Monday, October 04, 2010

Milbank: Beck is "Dangerous" and encouraging the fringe.



Dana Milbank sees Glenn Beck as "one of the great opportunists in our culture" who "sees where things are going" and then "reinvents himself to get out in front of that and lead the parade."

He then discusses the myriad of ways in which Beck has changed his stances over the years.

"We know that a dozen years ago he was pro-choice, pro-abortion rights and was wearing a pony tail. We know that, when George W. Bush was president, he came out in favour of the Tarp bailout for banks. And now rails against it. So, we do know that he has changed his views at various times, it's very difficult to know what he believes."


He then talks of the way Beck peddles conspiracy theories and mentions the Nazis an inordinate number of times.

And he concludes that Beck is "dangerous."

But his point about Beck as an opportunist is the one which most resonates with me. He's not terribly bright, he really doesn't understand a lot of what he is talking about, but he is good at feeding red meat to a certain kind of deranged ultra right wing conservative.

And, if any of them took the time to look at his own record, they would find that he used to support the very things which he now claims to despise.

Fox News Watch Panel Whines About President Obama's Criticism of Fox in Rolling Stone.



Watch Jim Pinkerton pretend that Obama's criticism of Fox News is actually a criticism of the Fox News viewers.

It seems incredible to me that Fox can even pretend that they don't have an agenda.

Friday, October 01, 2010

Beck: Obama was "sent away" from Indonesia because his mom didn't want him influenced by "someone who's not a Marxist".



Beck gets more ridiculous with each and every day that passes.

Now, Obama's mother sent him to Hawaii because she didn't want him influenced by someone who was "not a Marxist". Surely even his moronic viewers realise that this is a serious overreach? He doesn't even care how ridiculous he sounds these days.

OneNation march plans send Glenn Beck into a Red-baiting frenzy: Marxists are everywhere!



Oh dear... Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert's plan to hold a rally mocking Glenn Beck's world changing, historic, most fabulous thing to happen ever ever ever rally, has caused Mr Beck's brain to implode.

Beck: Now, I'd love to see the president come out and denounce socialism, Marxists, communists, revolutionaries. Once! Mr. President, once! Deny Marxism, Communism, revolutionaries! Tell us you are against all of this!

Marxism is evil, and the only thing it has contributed to in the history of mankind is mass graves. All of these groups, and the president of the United States, want nothing short of fundamental transformation of America. It is not about cleaning up corruption. It is only a beginning -- a beginning of a radical, revolutionary Marxist land.

Do not allow them to get away with the lies! Do not allow them to say that we are just "one nation, working together". "We're just trying to put America back to work, and putting America back together." These people, a lot of them have fought their entire life to destroy America!

It's ironic that Stewart and Colbert call their public protest, "A Rally To Restore Sanity", as it has clearly driven Beck even more insane than usual.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Hannity and friends complain about Obama's Fox criticism.



Obama stated this:

The golden age of an objective press was a pretty narrow span of time in our history. Before that, you had folks like Hearst who used their newspapers very intentionally to promote their viewpoints. I think Fox is part of that tradition -- it is part of the tradition that has a very clear, undeniable point of view. It's a point of view that I disagree with. It's a point of view that I think is ultimately destructive for the long-term growth of a country that has a vibrant middle class and is competitive in the world. But as an economic enterprise, it's been wildly successful. And I suspect that if you ask Mr. Murdoch what his number-one concern is, it's that Fox is very successful.
Cue Sean Hannity to step forward and prove the very point which Obama was making. On what other news channel could one refer to "The Anointed One" and have everyone understand instantly that you are referring to the president?

What is that, if not having "a very clear, undeniable point of view"?

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Hannity solicits Rand Paul's advice for Christine O'Donnell on how to handle the "got you" media.



Fox News are now officially endorsing the Christine O'Donnell/Sarah Palin/Sharron Angle/Rand Paul campaign policy of only talking to Fox News and no-one else.

It's a tacit admission that their candidates are not sufficiently equipped to have their views properly examined, but, as always, Fox have found a way to blame this on "the Liberal media".

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Burns: GOP candidates aren't "going on Fox for an interview, they're going there for an infomercial to help raise money".



What Burns says here isn't even controversial. Fox News has given up any pretence of fairness. They are now basically fund-raising for Tea Party candidates.