Weekend Drive-By
If you want to be frustrated, watch the Sunday talk shows as we continue to miss the point and discuss the trivia. The newspapers weren’t much better. So for better or worse here are my Sunday thoughts:
- Howard Kurtz of CNN’s Reliable Sources was working hard again at missing the point. The first thing they discussed was whether the White House criticism of Fox as no longer a news channel was effective, instead of a real examination of how Fox manipulates the news. Howard criticizes the lack of fact checking and he doesn’t do his own. See The Fox Propaganda Network.
- On the same program they discussed how the bogus story about the Chamber of Commerce reversing their stand on global warming and climate protection tricked the mainstream media. I listened to a journalist whine about the pressure to get the news out fast. Well, sweetheart, it isn’t news if it’s false. They have yet to examine their role in this problem. Their job is not to megaphone what other’s say, but to provide us with relevant stories that are fact checked. The operative words here are relevant and fact checked.
- The New York Times reported that small businesses are facing up to 20% increases in their health insurance costs with no real reason why. Meanwhile that moron Mitch McConnell says he won’t vote for the health care reform bill because it would raise rates. Let’s see, rates are going out of sight without reform, and he won’t support reform because it will raise the rates. Hmmm. Sadly the public option the glacial Congress is considering will not allow private business to be part of it. This is such a no-brainer yet we just refuse to face a single payer system. (Small Business Faces Sharp Rise in Health Care)
- The Huffington Post (Leaderless) reported that our gutless President has decided to go with a Public Option that would only be available with a trigger mechanism. Talk about failure to lead. Meanwhile others talk about a public option with a “level playing field”. What that means is raise the cost of the Public Option so the insurance industries are still able to rake off large profits. When oh when will we figure out that providing health care is not appropriate to the profit motive, just like police and fire protection?
- Meet the Press today did highlight one important fact and that is the Administration’s focus on executive pay in the banks is just eyewash and is not real reform. Until they structurally reform the system so that nobody is too big to fail, the government will always be the lender of last resort. See Regulating Banks.
- In a really scary story, the New York Times (Prosecutors Turn Table on Student Journalists) reported that in Illinois, local prosecutors have subpoenaed the grades, grading criteria, class syllabus, expense reports and e-mail messages of the journalism students from Northwestern’s Medill Innocence Project, which has helped lead to the release of 11 inmates. You can read the article, but what we have here is shoot the messenger, not examine the message. To me it is clear they are trying to stifle this kind of embarrassment by trying to sully the program instead of dealing with the factual findings. If you don’t see the connection to this and the State’s Secret Act and the problems with it, then call yourself a Republican.
- Finally on a positive note, it was nice to see Frank Rich echo my sentiments about the media and the balloon incident (The Fox Propaganda Network), while Maureen Dowd echoed my sentiment that the Catholic Church is trying to recruit the small minded from the Anglican Church (Bashing Organized Religion). Every now and then I actually hit on something.
Another week where the rich get richer, the poor get poorer, our President fails to lead, and the media and the nation continuing their glide to oblivion shunning critical thought. All in all not many cheery thoughts.


