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tv   [untitled]    November 29, 2010 7:30pm-8:00pm EST

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three thirty am in moscow good to have you with us here on our t.v.'s in your headlines washington says the recent release of classified documents is an attack on the u.s. and the international community whistleblower website wiki leaks published two hundred fifty thousand secret u.s. diplomatic wires from around the world some analysts claim the revelations show u.s. government incompetence. under suspicion in tehran accuses the u.s. and israel of potting the assassination of iranian nuclear scientists one physicist died another was booted in separate attacks the two researchers were actively involved in iran's nuclear program. and china calling for an emergency meeting of the six nations involved in the north korea disarmament talks as tension builds on
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the korean peninsula joint naval exercises between the u.s. . and south korea are underway despite warnings from pyongyang north korea has reportedly put its surface to surface missiles on high alert. next a special report on claims of corruption within us local media stay with us. one just from. the san antonio airways can try. to. keep the crowd. on. our story begins during the great depression times were hard and broadcasting
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was brand new it seemed like a miracle. l.c.l. transmitted into the queue behind your radio dial. wherever you may be to radio brought entertainment and sports and news of the world right into our own homes. as broadcasting retained faith it was hope. in that spirit our government made policies to make sure the media protects the public i'm simply ways are considered public property the federal communications commission is charged with the responsibility of protecting the people the f.c.c. decided broadcasters needed to be licensed to licenses were free of charge but there was a catch t.v. and radio owners had to serve the public if they did not people could challenge their sizes and the f.c.c. could take them away. and the f.c.c.
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understood that radio and t.v. you should be owned locally so they passed strict rules limiting the number of stations any one person could elevation independent leader to stay cool be told me six hours in operated by n.b.c. . then came the war. and radio became a lifeline. for president of united states the information we were getting was vital we all knew that it's a date which will live. in infamy important or national security important to our democracy our readers edward morrow figures from it and we learned this new medium could be used against us hegemony not anything they were laid off in a video proof of her yankee birth or. her.
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for. what they did of course of those fascist regimes wasn't just broadcast over and over again the information and the perspective of the point of view and the propaganda that they wanted people to digest absorb and so the federal communications commission back in one thousand nine hundred eighty nine and cooperated something called the fairness doctrine the fairness doctrine required radio and t.v. stations to provide coverage by only important controversial issues and to provide a reasonable opportunity for the presentation of contrast in a few points you ask to bring them on you have to give people the opportunity to express an alternative point of view now it was a code mark that served us well good evening through the administrations of truman eisenhower kennedy johnson nixon ford and carter more generally like yours robert reich. and then a real media man came into power what i worked faithfully execute the ronald reagan
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was the keen deregulation of his f.c.c. deregulated t.v. and radio active so one person could own dozens of broadcast ations nationwide and said the free market would provide fairness in broadcasting so they got rid of the fair to start. anyway back then republicans and democrats passed a bill to reinstate the fairness doctrine newt gingrich and trent lott were co-sponsors. but ronald reagan vetoed it. the nine hundred ninety six telecommunications act suddenly allowed big companies like clear channel to own twelve hundred stations nationwide brown program them with conservative talk radio was. to sit at the bars. and looking at the five largest operators what we found was a nine to one or ten to wanted fan which conservative talk show hosts self
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declared conservative hosts versus folks who declare themselves liberal or progressive. vantage of roughly twenty five hundred hours of conservative talk as opposed to two hundred fifty hours of liberal or progressive talk this is an extraordinary amount but in places like houston texas for example. we found looking monday through friday can commercialize radio stations one hundred percent conservative talk no progressives no liberals represented the two thousand and seven study by free press and the center for american progress shows ninety two percent of conservative stations don't air even a single minute of the other side you want to hear a radio talk or bash republicans good luck especially if you live in the midwest the mainstream that breaks the inside the beltway mystique but you might hear it schultz ed does his nationally syndicated show out of fargo north dakota and his
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ratings are good he's matching bill o'reilly's numbers. don't see talkers magazine now is out the ed schultz show has got over three million listers progressive talk we got it start in two thousand and four and it now seems to be having an effect many formerly red states that heard ed and air america were highly competitive voted blue in two thousand and eight while those that heard only conservative talk went read. as usual but here's the scary part since the democrats made gains in the two thousand and six election corporate radio took to get into every other progressive talker in the key swing state of ohio off the air first and. then columbus fall and replaced them with shows they get half there are things that they're out there greasing the skids right now in the winter of those seven with a zero point six number. when i
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was on there in the fall of zero five it was like a two point four the same scam is strange to me you did it. market that you're going to have a problem and it isn't just ohio since two thousand and six dozen so well performing liberal programs have been taken off the air across the country fresno new haven san diego austin and many more i think it's political and i don't think there's any doubt you can look at the numbers this business is owned by conservatives it's managed by conservatives and it is programmed by conservatives the distorting effect of all that was causing a problem in our democracy was causing people to act based on false information to make decisions about public policy to make decisions in the voting booth based on simply information that was wrong and that there had to be
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a corrective to that and so in may of two thousand and four i launched a media matters media matters is a research website which tracks conservative misinformation in the news it's a simple concept record with talk show hosts and news people say then check their facts turns out there's a lot of false would also good which david brock used to perpetrate other david brock and evidence about anita hill that has been sincere by liberals time pattern of crying sexual harassment or political radicalism most important are likely destroyed. then he learned he'd been lied to i came to be aware that the people around clarence thomas who had helped me write that account. didn't believe the account themselves same with rocks troopergate story that led to the paula jones lawsuit the judge dismissed that case because it had no merit. in
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other words it was a frivolous lawsuit and that whole thing led to president clinton's impeachment. i just couldn't do what i was doing anymore once i realized what it was he'd been working for a newspaper magnate richard mellon scaife who paid the american spectator magazine two million dollars to dig up dirt on the clintons the information didn't need to be true just damaging the conservative movement also had a hidden media agenda well they claim that the complaint is one of liberal bias i think and i've looked pretty carefully at the sun i've looked at many of the studies that claim this at the end of the day the real goal is to disable journalism from being able to do its job independently and neutrally jane and her husband steve wilson were an award winning investigative reporting teams working at w.t.v. news in tampa bay florida first then they uncovered
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a story about tour moments being secretly injected into our milk supply t.v. team ran this promotion for the investigation to cancer nobody else in the country covered this and then they get fired for trying to tell the story when b.t.h. manufacture monsanto threatened to sue fox news w t v t pulled the report then tried to get the investigators to change their story. but the reporters wouldn't back down they can ask you to put things on the air broadcast to the public over the public airwaves that are untrue that are unsubstantiated or flat out on true and that's also what they were asking us to do they crossed that line and that's an important distinction to make so a korean wilson threaten to report the news distortion to the f.c.c. that's when you fire them very courageous they file a whistle blower suit and they go to trial a korea tourney john chambliss most or so celebs. this. all of the year and from
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there on him through it no one ever is made to talk to scientists or to distort the story in a way that we will believe that monsanto these folks refused to do in this weather for steve wilson played his own case you know what this story cost. two careers. and i want it. there was only one way or wilson could win under judge roll steinberg instructed the jury for they'd have to prove w. t.v. station management had deliberately tried to distort the news proof of a violation requires that the plaintiffs establish that the via t.v. t.'s station or news management acted intentionally and deliberately to falsify or distort plainness proposed a news report on b g eight wilson last but jane won her case because she
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threatened to disclose to the federal communications commission on your oath the broadcast of a false distorted or slanted news report yes so a creep proved news distortion and you wouldn't know it from the spin on w t v t there fox thirteen representatives say the jury through its verdicts clearly stated that the station did not tell a korean wilson to falsify and distort the news through their b. g.h. story but we are completely vindicated on the finding of this theory that we do not distort news for lost wages eighty eight thousand seven hundred and twenty five dollars that does not have to do with the story of the news that is not the true false vacation of the four last earning capacity one hundred twenty thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars i think today is a wonderful day for boxer two for other damages two hundred fifteen thousand five hundred and twenty five dollars fox appealed the jury's decision which is in the end their attorneys argued there is no law against distortion you haven't found
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a stash. you haven't found a rule we haven't found a regulation what we're doing is importing into that's the news distortion policy and it went to the second district court of appeals in florida and they bought the fox argument that yes it is a policy but it's not technically against any and all rule of regulation to distort the news what they're saying is the news really belongs to the corporation that that's putting it out and that it's not against the water while the public it's an f.c.c. rule but it's not against the law where does that leave us as people who are served by the broadcast airwaves. vice president joe biden. the socialist and completely devastated by the ruling and wilson ended up paying fox attorney fees. the road to war in iraq took some strange turn stranger the torture the west african country of be sure reports which do hold government accountable like this can cost a lot of money from the team of people who put months into research and travel and
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production just to air one eight minute story to build a nuclear bomb explode they've largely been replaced with coverage like this the costs very little anna nicole smith interview that means profits for shareholders and divert attention. you know whatever happened to investigative reporting and i think part of what happened is corporatization of the media it's the bottom line the first thing you do is you fire a quarter of the newsroom or half the newsroom so you don't even have the reporters to go out there and to get the story it's you know how can you get a quick and i can tell you it's a lot cheaper to have two people arguing on t.v. from you know you know polarized point of view than actual reporters out there digging up the story and saying ok america here's the facts you decide maybe. this is the. media consolidation means fewer reporters and those who remain
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too often feel pressured. to play nice with government it's a nasty little game called access that is one of the biggest media manipulations is you want our guy you want our woman well you better play the game you better play by our rules if you want that we call that in our field a get interview some real headline maker everybody wants to get on their air and you want that person that's a valuable commodity you better play the game the top newsmakers in the bush administration were a great cat and they were all over the airwaves as they made their case for war in iraq where were the hard questions is. abysmal i think that the press dropped the ball i think when they should have been the real watchdogs and should have let the chips fall where they may they do paul to totally and they did say in the run up to the war it was so clear for two years we were
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going to war and nobody asked why but we know now. that saddam has resumed his efforts to acquire nuclear weapons high quality aluminum tubes which is what you have to have in order to build a suitable for nuclear weapons production there were no weapons of mass destruction worth the per se or the first thing to scare everyone we don't want the smoking gun that could come in the form of the mushroom cloud note. we do have solid evidence of the presence in iraq. will create a members there was a pattern the relationship that went back at least a decade between iraq and al qaeda was a lot of obvious deception at a time when it was crucial for our country which was right after nine eleven they felt that they had big to be super patriots and support the government no matter what they gave up their one weapon which was skepticism out of the news to peek at
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the administration. i have a contract between him and an iraqi border to time and time and dangers saddam hussein put his biological weapons laboratories in trucks little turned out to be true only talk shows instead of providing clarity on the single most of mine an issue of our generation the press only created confusion it is smoking gun is an interesting phrase six years after the attacks on new york city in the pentagon the newsweek poll showed forty one percent of americans thought saddam hussein was directly terrorist attacks i don't think we ever i know i didn't say that there was a direct connection between september eleventh and saddam hussein nobody's ever suggested that the attacks of september the eleventh were ordered by iraq no wonder the news media has lost the public trust they want to make policy choices based on truth and what i heard is that people didn't really quite feel
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that the mainstream media in the media as we most of us experience. was truth telling the group fairness and accuracy reporting did a. study. two weeks around february fifth two thousand and three right before the invasion before major nightly newscasts n.b.c. a.b.c. c.b.s. and the p.b.s. news hour with jim lehrer there were three hundred ninety three interviews done around the war only three were with antiwar leaders three of almost four hundred when half the population was opposed to the invasion that is no longer in mainstream media that's an extreme that beating the drums for war a recent new york times report says the media got right in bed with the pentagon to promote the war former military officers would get talking points directly from the pentagon then say them on the air no questions asked if they certainly don't share
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this gesture. that is meeting with a retired u.s. general talking point imagine an iraq ruled by the message needs to be a magine iraq imagine iraq under control zarko you're talking point link iraq to iran i believe that iran is now the number one troublemaker in iraq that's bad enough but a lot of these pentagon pundits were making big money from defense contracts most of the t.v. and the radio military analysts have ties to military contractors people who could possibly be making money on the war most would consider that a potential conflict of interest maybe not even potential at the same time reporters who did ask hard questions were punished by the white house luckily their managers stood by them reporter jonathan landay covered the speech dick cheney gave in august two thousand and two to the veterans of foreign wars many of us are convinced that saddam hussein will acquire nuclear weapons fairly soon that was
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based on absolutely nothing it was as if it was pulled out of thin air there was absolutely no intelligence no evidence whatsoever for that assertion landi and more and struggle began writing about faulty intelligence about how there was no link between iraq and al qaeda about failed policies that series of stories one station of people in the pentagon trying to shut me out of travel with the secretary of defense i was not allowed to have not been allowed in or invited onto trips pentagon trip since a long time three years. the chill by white house correspondent william douglas two he had been trying to get on the vice president's plane in early two thousand and four there were some things that the vice president did like that we wrote. there was no on the plane it's my belief that a lot of journalists did not ask hard questions. this administration's policies
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particularly in the run up to the war. because they were afraid of losing and having happened to them what happened to me and has happened to others an example of why media ownership matters to democracy for reporting. sheds light on the reasons why. they are being asked to go and risk life and limb and health and family and everything else. and if that displeases the secretary of defense if it just pleases the vice president so be it. the biggest scandal of the bush administration is the story of reporters who protected their access to top officials first and put their responsibility to the public last. the story really begins with him bastard joseph.
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wilson was the acting ambassador to iraq before the first gulf war when saddam hussein took more than one hundred american hostages joe wilson stared him down saddam hussein backed off and released the americans for that president george herbert walker bush proclaimed wilson a national hero. then that he heard president george w. bush make this statement in the two thousand and three. british. significant. from africa a year earlier the cia had sent wilson to investigate the uranium claim and he knew it wasn't true corruption. in the new york times that touched off a firestorm at the white house. tried to discredit wilson by writing a story that wilson's wife valerie plame who worked at the cia said. on the trip
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trouble was she worked as a spy for the cia nobody was supposed to know she worked there the cia even told no that not to publish that information but no that did. told me he asked me not to use your name did not say she was she was uncovered. in any activities former president bush was not amused human intelligence spies. is very important. it's pretty hard to get it. if somebody working clandestine service . his name is going to appear i'm sure that. deputy defense secretary richard admitted he was the first to leak despise name and he apologized for it. but white house staffers karl rove in lewis libby also spraying the covert agents name to reporters at the same time for sure in the president's own
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press secretary they had nothing to do with it they are good individuals they're important members of our white house team and that's why i spoke with them so that i could come back to you and say that they were not involved i went to both those individuals asked them point blank were you involved in the leaking of valerie plame identity in any way both them told me unequivocally no but scott mcclellan now says that in his new book rove and libby lied to him and it turns out a lot of reporters knew it but said nothing and scott mcclellan the white house spokesperson gets up and he says karl rove is absolutely vaal well there were at least three probably four people if not in that room that watched it live at various news organization the knew that that was a flat out lie because they had talked to karl rove about plame and who she was good with. access to the white house they allowed themselves to be used for political gain using the reporters enough. to carry out their political mission
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and that's different from cultivating a source to get information that's of value to you as a journalist here you are being used by the tolerant official to carry out their political work instead of clarifying the facts in this national security breach the media just had a free for all i think that while i always you know upsets valerie and i says she wasn't covert which is just ridiculous was she in fact a covert agent was never even proved there is no doubt that her relationship with the cia was classified if you give the identity of a classified person it doesn't mean diddly squat to be a covert agent and i still don't believe she was in any covert activities he knew whether she was covert or not from day one and she isn't she's never been proven to be covert to endangering national security by outing a covertly a operators are not of course he was not a cover it up or the i.r.s.
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says that she was for the record valerie plame wilson was a covert agent the cia put it in writing. the clues that speak to the times. where rich academic life gives birth to innovative ideas. margie goes to the area which together with boosting industrial development. offers to make a journey into russia's history. and to enjoy birds and vivid cultural life. welcome to the pier and region in russia. on our. in the movie. the grand imperial
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trying. to. see. the hotel treat.
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