• WTF...Again!

    From TIM RICHARDSON@1:123/140 to ROSS SAUER on Saturday, October 23, 2010 11:16:00



    On Juan Williams - Rich Galen - Townhall Conservative

    Juan Williams was fired from National Public Radio for a comment he made on
    Fox (with whom he has also had a long-term contract) in which he said on
    the Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor:


    "I'm not a bigot. You know the kind of books I've written about the civil rights movement in this country. But when I get on the plane, I got to tell you, if I see people who are in Muslim garb and I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims, I get worried. I get nervous."


    NPR, which admitted its executives were "uncomfortable" with Williams' appearances on Fox, issued this statement:


    "His remarks on The O'Reilly Factor this past Monday were inconsistent with
    our editorial standards and practices, and undermined his credibility as a
    news analyst with NPR."


    NPR's own reporting of the controversy had this:


    "Williams' presence on the largely conservative and often contentious prime- time talk shows of Fox News has long been a sore point with NPR News executives."


    Not only that, but NPR's chief operating officer, Vivian Schiller, explaining NPR's decision to cut Mr. Williams loose said at a public event in Atlanta that,

    "He should have kept his feeling about Muslims between himself and his psychiatrist or his publicist - take your pick."


    Whoa! Check please!


    Are you telling me that the woman who is the CEO of National Public Radio essentially said that Juan Williams is crazy?


    And she still has her job?


    Juan Williams was fired from National Public Radio for a comment he made on According to a Wikipedia entry:


    "She graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor's degree in Russian studies and Soviet studies" and "Prior to leading NPR, Schiller was a senior vice president of NYTimes.com."


    Which goes a long way toward explaining those white flecks which appear in the corners of Vivian's mouth when she talks about the Fox News Channel.


    Williams said:


    "I've been there 10 years. I have taken shows on that network to unprecedented heights, served key roles there, raised tons of money for them. I don't fit in their box, I'm not a predictable, black liberal."


    I have known Juan Williams for, maybe, two decades. Maybe longer. We are not pals and we don't hang out together.


    I have not always agreed with Juan, and I suspect he does not often agree with me. But I have always believed that when he has made a statement, it has come from his heart, sifted through his significant intellect.


    That fact that NPR has decided that it is a violation of its journalistic ethics (which, in itself, is an oxymoron) for Mr. Williams to have expressed
    an honest opinion tells us much more about NPR than it does about Mr.
    Williams.


    Here is a short list of what I suspect are DOs and DON'Ts at NPR:


    -- DO say good things about medical marijuana. DON'T say good things about cigarettes.


    -- DO say good things about Palestinians. DON'T say good things about
    Israelis.


    -- DO say positive things about "green jobs." DON'T say good things about manufacturing companies.


    -- DO say wonderful things about Barack Obama. NEVER say anything good about ANY Republican.


    NPR says it gets about two percent of its funding ($3.3 million) from the Federal government, the point being the financial geniuses at NPR consider
    that to be an insignificant amount. I certainly hope that once the new Republican majority in Congress gets settled in it (a) takes steps to reverse Obama care and (b) frees NPR from the shackles of its Federal subsidy.


    Roger Ailes, the head man at Fox, immediately signed Juan Williams to a new contract "that will give him an expanded role with the network."


    Ailes described Williams as "a staunch defender of liberal viewpoints" and "an honest man whose freedom of speech is protected by Fox News on a daily basis." Maybe what we should do is go down to New York Avenue, where NPR is headquartered, and hand out copies of the First Amendment.


    Rich Galen has been a press secretary to Dan Quayle and Newt Gingrich. Rich Galen currently works as a journalist and writes at Mullings.com





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  • From Richard Webb@1:116/901 to TIM RICHARDSON on Tuesday, September 25, 2012 18:15:49
    TIm,

    WTF are you doing spewing this crap in this echo? You're
    not in one of your right wing noise echoes where you can
    make a hobby out of sparring with Otto Sauer. Please pay
    attention to where you're posting.

    Would have posted this in netmail, but Ed doesn't let users
    access netmail.

    Richard
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