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MEDIA
Hate Radio's Bigotry Against Hispanics
On Monday, hate radio king Rush Limbaugh appeared on Fox News for five
minutes to
discuss the presidential race and managed to make an offensive
comment. Limbaugh called Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa (D),
who is
Hispanic, a "shoe
shine guy." Yesterday, Alex
Nogales, president of the National
Hispanic Media Coalition, blasted Limbaugh for uttering "the
same kind of nasty, bigoted, racist type comment
that has become so prevalent
in today's society, as practiced
by Lou
Dobbs, as practiced by [Sean] Hannity, [Bill] O'Reilly, [Michael]
Savage." Racial slurs, particularly fueled against Hispanics,
has
found a home on right-wing
radio, which claims 91
percent of radio airwaves. The
nation's leading Hispanic advocacy
group, National Council of La
Raza, launched a campaign earlier this year decrying right-wing radio
for its "rhetoric
that demonizes immigrants and Hispanic Americans."
"Talk like
Savage's, or Limbaugh's or O'Reilly's, has become routine,
even systematic, and certainly a big business. According to the Senate
Democratic Policy Committee, the top five radio station owners that
control 45 powerful, 50,000-watt or more radio stations broadcast
310 hours of nationally syndicated right-wing talk.
But they
broadcast only a total of five hours of countervailing talk," Salon
reported. Yet
these talkers are rarely held to account: For example, neither
ABC, Time, nor Politico mentioned the offensive remarks
when
reporting on Limbaugh's TV commentary this week. Progressive radio host
Mario Solis-Marich wrote Tuesday, "As a member of
the largest minority ethnic group and a member of the media, I am
continually puzzled and outraged by the idea that anyone can say
anything about Latinos without fearing any consequence."
DEMAGOGUING IMMIGRATION:
A
study by the Project for Excellence in
Journalism found, "Thanks to energetic opposition from Rush Limbaugh,
Sean Hannity, and Michael Savage, immigration
was the biggest topic, at 16%, on conservative talk radio
in the second quarter" of last year -- when conservative radio
led
the effort to defeat congressional comprehensive immigration reform,
largely by resorting to fear and hatred. Radio host Neal Boortz urged
listeners to help defeat "this illegal alien amnesty
bill" and "yank out the welcome mat." Speaking of undocumented
immigrants he said, "Give
'em all a
little nuclear waste and let 'em
take it on down there to Mexico.
Tell 'em...it'll heat tortillas." Michael Savage repeatedly exhorted
listeners to "burn
a Mexican flag"
and to "tell them to go back to where they came from." CNN's Glenn
Beck, who also has a radio show, took particular issue with Sen. John
McCain's (R-AZ) support for the immigration bill (though McCain has
since changed
positions), deriding the senator
as "Juan
McCain."
Beck called McCain's support for the bill and the fact that
his
national director of Hispanic outreach was of Mexican
background "an
audacious slap in the face."
A
'RACE WAR': Right-wing
radio's discussion of immigration often veers away from policy to
focus on race. Savage once warned his listeners, "The
European-American, or the white person, is being erased from America's
future...There
is a racial element to the immigration invasion,
at least I see it that way." Discussing a pro-immigrant parade in L.A.,
O'Reilly said, "So
now,
it's becoming a race war."
O'Reilly also accused supporters of
immigration -- "who hate
America...because it's run primarily by white, Christian men"
--
of
seeking "to
change
the complexion...of America."
These hatemongers have made clear their primary concern: maintaining a
white
majority. Just this year, Fox News's John Gibson gave "a big round of
applause" on his radio show to the "non-Hispanic
white women"
who were having babies, which he said vindicated his call on "the
dominant, or
largest population sector, which is Caucasians," to "make more
babies." "And
what
happens to white people?" Savage
wondered. "That's the real
question here. Will our brown brethren, who are so
nationalistic and so anti-gringo and anti-Anglo, be as enlightened as
the European-American is? I don't think so."
HEALTH
SCARE: Right-wing radio
hosts have also -- wrongly -- claimed that illegal immigrants should be
kept out of the United States because they bring strange diseases in.
O'Reilly
agreed with a caller into his radio show who said that illegal
immigration "surpasses the impact of 9/11" because "each
one of these
people is a biological weapon."
The caller claimed that that
"illegals crossing the border" are bringing
"tuberculosis, syphilis, leprosy." O'Reilly agreed, and said there was
"an absolutely airtight case" that more Americans "have either been
killed or injured, based upon the 11 million illegals who are here,"
than died on 9/11. (O'Reilly later insisted he "never
said anything
like that.") Last summer, CNN's
Lou Dobbs repeatedly
claimed that there were "7,000"
cases of leprosy
in the U.S. in the last three years, and suggested the cases were due
to
illegal immigrants. When confronted with a CBS analysis that found only
7,000 cases of leprosy in the last 30 years -- and an unknown number
involving
illegal immigrants -- Dobbs simply replied, "If
we
reported it, it's a fact."
Under the Radar
VETERANS -- PENTAGON WARNS OF 'HARM' FROM WEBB'S EFFORT TO GIVE SOLDIERS BENEFITS AFTER SERVING 'ONLY' TWO YEARS: Currently, there are 56 senators, including 10 Republicans, who have joined Sen. Jim Webb's (D-VA) effort to dramatically expand educational benefits for returning veterans. The 21st Century GI Bill would pay a significant portion of college costs for all servicemembers, including national guard members, who served on active duty after Sept. 11, 2001. The Pentagon and the White House oppose the bill, out of an apparent fear "that too many will use it." In a press briefing yesterday, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell explained the administration's opposition, warning of the "harm" Webb's bill would do to troop retention and objecting to the generous benefits given after "only" two years of service. Instead, the Pentagon supports giving GI benefits after a full six years, meaning that, a soldier who participated in the invasion of Baghdad in April of 2003 and had remained in service ever since would be forced to wait a whole year before becoming eligible for full benefits. The New York Times's Bob Herbert recently pointed out that more robust educational benefits will only help the military fill its enlistment quotas with qualified Americans. VoteVets chairman Jon Soltz and Gen. Wesley Clark said recently, "it is morally reprehensible to fix the system so that civilian life is unappealing to service members, in an attempt to force them to re-up."
ETHICS -- FBI RAIDS OFFICE, HOME OF SPECIAL COUNSEL IN CORRUPTION INVESTIGATION: FBI agents raided the home and office of federal Special Counsel Scott Bloch yesterday, seizing computers and documents related to a corruption investigation. "Employees said the searches appeared focused on alleged obstruction of justice by Mr. Bloch during the course of an 2006 inquiry into his conduct in office," the Wall Street Journal reported. Bloch had been tasked with looking into whether former White House aide Karl Rove used government resources to help elect Republicans in 2006. But at the same time, Bloch has engaged in his own Rove-like behavior and has been under investigation since 2005. Steve Benen of The Carpetbagger Report describes the bizarre nature of the raid: "Only with the Bush gang is this set of circumstances even possible -- Bloch is ostensibly investigating the Justice Department for its political activities, and simultaneously the Justice Department sends the FBI to raid Bloch's office and home."
CONGRESS -- HOUSE WILL SUBPOENA ADDINGTON, KEY ARCHITECT OF BUSH'S TORTURE PROGRAM: Yesterday, the House Judiciary Committee voted to subpoena David Addington, Vice President Cheney's chief of staff, to compel him to testify about the administration's interrogation programs. Addington has been a pivotal player in the torture program, personally watching and approving interrogations at Guantanamo Bay in 2002. Addington has said he will agree to testify if subpoenaed, but in yesterday's White House briefing, White House Press Secretary Dana Perino hedged, stating, "Look, the subpoena was just served. He said he would respond appropriately, and I'm sure he will." The AP also reports that former Office of Legal Counsel head John Yoo, author of several legal memos that sanctioned torture, has reversed course and agreed to testify before the committee as well, along with other architects of the administration's torture program, including former Pentagon official Douglas Feith and former attorney general John Ashcroft. Former CIA director George Tenet "is still in negotiations with the committee, according to House Judiciary Committee spokeswoman Melanie Roussell."
Think Fast
"The Bush administration has not found disaster recovery files for White House e-mails from a three-month time period in 2003…raising the possibility that messages sent before and after the invasion of Iraq may never be recovered." The White House claims a court proposal to search and preserve White House e-mail records would "yield marginal benefits at best, while imposing substantial burdens and disruptions."
A record-breaking 1.6 million voters cast ballots in Indiana’s Democratic and GOP contests yesterday. This figure "smashed the 1992 primary turnout of a little more than 1 million votes." North Carolina also reported "unprecedented" turnout.
Today, the House is set to begin debating a sweeping housing rescue bill that "could see the government buy up $15 billion of abandoned homes." It would also help half a million homeowners facing foreclosure by offering "fresh spending, tax credits and a new government guarantee on many risky loans to bolster the national housing market." President Bush has threatened to veto the legislation.
Anti-war Republican Rep. Walter Jones (NC-03) "comfortably defeated" a primary challenger in his conservative congressional district yesterday by a margin of 60-40 percent after facing stiff opposition "over his outspoken stance" against the Iraq war. Camp Lejuene, one of the largest Marine Corps bases in the country, is located in Jones's district.
House Veterans Committee chairman Bob Filner (D-CA) "lashed out" at Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary James Peake yesterday during a hearing for having previously attempted to "cover up" veterans suicide data. "What we see is a pattern -- deny, deny, cover up, cover up," Filner said.
In the "most specific assertions to date," lawyers for detainees at Guantanamo Bay say they believe that government agents have "monitored their conversations." One lawyer is so concerned that she said in an affidavit that she is "no longer accepting new clients of any type because she could not assure them of confidentiality."
Yesterday, EPA Associate Deputy Administrator Jason Burnett -- dubbed "the John Yoo of the EPA" -- announced his departure from the agency. Burnett had been responsible for crafting legal arguments that promoted arsenic in drinking water, catered to industry on mercury regulations, overruled scientists on soot health standards, and defied the Supreme Court's decision on global warming.
President Bush "sent the Senate a new slate of Federal Election Commission nominees" yesterday in an apparent effort "to break a Senate confirmation deadlock." But the move was "greeted coolly" by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) because Bush retained Hans von Spakovsky and removed David Mason, who clashed recently with Sen. John McCain (R-AZ).
And finally: Radar writes, "Looking to steal a car? Tucker Carlson's unlocked Volvo station wagon is available and probably in the parking lot at D.C. hub The Palm right now." Carlson recently told The Hill that he never locks his car, even though a woman once stalked him. He also once found a man "asleep and wrapped in newspaper in the back seat of his Volvo station wagon. 'I beat on the windows and made him get out,' he says."
Good News
"The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded $61.1 million to a Midwest multistate environmental partnership to develop new ways of capturing and storing greenhouse gases."
State Watch
WASHINGTON:
State's Office of African-American Children's Services, "once
considered
a
national model in the way it tried to address the high number of black
kids in the child-welfare system," has officially closed.
CALIFORNIA:
"California's voter-created stem cell institute is expected to award
$227 million in grants today."
INDIANA:
At
least 10 retired nuns were barred from voting in Tuesday's
primary "because they lacked photo IDs required under a state
law that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld last week."
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Former Vice President
Al Gore: It is "obscene" that
President Bush has dismissed "George Washington's 200-plus year
prohibition on torture."
ATTACKERMAN:
The close relationship between the rise of private contracting in Iraq
and the fall of quality oversight.
TALKING
POINTS MEMO: Fox News's wealthy
white males get their chuckles from
discussing "downscale voters."
POLITICAL
ANIMAL: Washington Post
columnist and former Bush speechwriter
Michael Gerson disingenuously claims that there has been no
conservative war against science.
Daily Grill
"I hope that the military will realize they have to accept aid from
everybody they can possibly accept it from."
-- First Lady Laura Bush, 5/5/08,
on the Burmese government's response to the recent cyclone
VERSUS
"[T]he U.S. government was turning down many allies' offers of
manpower, supplies and expertise worth untold millions of dollars.
Eventually the United States also would fail to collect most of the
unprecedented outpouring of international cash assistance for
[Hurricane] Katrina's victims."
-- Washington Post, 4/29/07
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