We need to be aware that the press, and not just Faux, is going to try their best to skewer our candidate even if they have to obscure the facts or even outright make things up, just like they did to Al Gore. We at DU should not fall for this tactic just because the victim is not our preferred candidate. I am using an example from Dean, because as a Dean supporter I obviously pay more attention to his press covergae. But I am sure there are examples from other candidate's coverage. Please post any similar stories you might be aware of.
The blogworld has quite a few commentaries recently about the hack job being done on Dean by the mainstream press. Remember the "Gore Lies" perpetrators? Well, they're back.
In reference to this week's
Dean-bashing article by Howard Fineman, apparently one of the people Fineman quoted as criticizing Dean on his blog, WVMicko, is not a troll, but a longtime avid Dean supporter and he is ticked off. He sounds off at the
Dean blog. I'd like anyone here at DU who has never ever uttered a critical word about a Democrat that they normally support to raise their hand. This person's critical blog comments were intentionally filtered out of a mountain of positive commentary this same supporter has made.
Blogger
Needlenose comments on a supposed news article on the Iowa debate by AP writer Calvin Woodward, which opens with
this quote: "For a brief time in their debate Sunday, Democrats seemed to be hewing to a New Year's resolution to stick more carefully to the facts on taxes, the budget and more. But old habits die hard."
As the blog points out: "To repeat, that's the lead paragraph of a news article. From the Associated Press, the most mainstream source of news in the United States -- where, apparently, it's now accepted newsroom policy to "objectively" label all Democrats as liars.
And what constitutes a lie, in the view of the AP? Why, even true statements, if they're uttered by a Democratic presidential candidate like Howard Dean:
'He said 60% of Americans got a tax cut of $304 from Bush -- revising a statement in an earlier debate that 60% saved $325. Those cuts appear to be in the ballpark when it comes to the poorest 60% of Americans -- many of whom pay little federal income tax to begin with.' "
The author then goes on to claim that the middle class actually did get substantially higher tax cuts, but only if you pick specific groups of middle class folks, obviously not including the bottom 60%, begging the question of exactly who qualifies as middle class, or what the definition of "is" is.
And
dKos takes on AP writer Nedra Pickler, who also wrote about the Iowa debate, but decided
to make a few edits in her candidate quotes:
Writes Pickler: "In a feisty, first debate of the election year, Howard Dean drew fire from fellow Democrats on Sunday over trade, terror, taxes and more, then calmly dismissed his rivals as "co-opted by the agenda of George Bush."
"I opposed the Iraq war when everyone else up here was for it," said the former Vermont governor, invoking the issue that helped fuel his 2003 transformation from asterisk in the polls to front-runner."
But in the
transcript of the actual debate, Dean didn't misrepresent the positions of his fellow anti-Iraq war candidates. In fact, he specifically credited them: "DEAN: The proper role of the federal government in education is not to pass bills like No Child Left Behind. I have two big policy differences with almost everybody up here. I opposed the Iraq war; with the exception of Dennis and Carol, everybody else supported it."
We have to be ever vigilant DUers. Just because we are paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get us. The press has and will continue to distort the words and ideas of our candidates because they by and large all whore for the Republicans. Let us not also become their mouthpieces in some misguided sense of loyalty to a specific candidate. Let us be very circumspect and cautious about what the press says, especially the likes of Howard Fineman and others who relentlessly bashed Gore last time around!!