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Moyers Addresses PBS Coup

By Bill Moyers, AlterNet. Posted May 17, 2005.


In this highly anticipated speech the veteran public broadcaster takes on the PBS coup and its right-wing engineers who are 'squealing like a stuck pig.'

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I can't imagine better company on this beautiful Sunday morning in St. Louis. You're church for me today, and there's no congregation in the country where I would be more likely to find more kindred souls than are gathered here.

There are so many different vocations and callings in this room -- so many different interests and aspirations of people who want to reform the media -- that only a presiding bishop like Bob McChesney with his great ecumenical heart could bring us together for a weekend like this.

What joins us all under Bob's embracing welcome is our commitment to public media. Pat Aufderheide got it right, I think, in the recent issue of In These Times when she wrote: "This is a moment when public media outlets can make a powerful case for themselves. Public radio, public TV, cable access, public DBS channels, media arts centers, youth media projects, nonprofit Internet news services ... low-power radio and webcasting are all part of a nearly invisible feature of today's media map: the public media sector. They exist not to make a profit, not to push an ideology, not to serve customers, but to create a public -- a group of people who can talk productively with those who don't share their views, and defend the interests of the people who have to live with the consequences of corporate and governmental power."

She gives examples of the possibilities. "Look at what happened," she said, "when thousands of people who watched Stanley Nelson's The Murder of Emmett Till on their public television channels joined a postcard campaign that re-opened the murder case after more than half a century. Look at NPR's courageous coverage of the Iraq war, an expensive endeavor that wins no points from this administration. Look at Chicago Access Network's Community Forum, where nonprofits throughout the region can showcase their issues and find volunteers."

The public media, she argues, for all our flaws, are a very important resource in a noisy and polluted information environment.

You can also take wings reading Jason Miller's May 4 article on Z Net about the mainstream media. While it is true that much of the mainstream media is corrupted by the influence of government and corporate interests, Miller writes, there are still men and women in the mainstream who practice a high degree of journalistic integrity and who do challenge us with their stories and analysis.

But the real hope "lies within the internet with its 2 billion or more Web sites providing a wealth of information drawn from almost unlimited resources that span the globe. ... If knowledge is power, one's capacity to increase that power increases exponentially through navigation of the Internet for news and information."

Surely this is one issue that unites us as we leave here today. The fight to preserve the web from corporate gatekeepers joins media, reformers, producers and educators -- and it's a fight that has only just begun.

I want to tell you about another fight we're in today. The story I've come to share with you goes to the core of our belief that the quality of democracy and the quality of journalism are deeply entwined. I can tell this story because I've been living it. It's been in the news this week, including reports of more attacks on a single journalist -- yours truly -- by the right-wing media and their allies at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

As some of you know, CPB was established almost 40 years ago to set broad policy for public broadcasting and to be a firewall between political influence and program content. What some on this board are now doing today -- led by its chairman, Kenneth Tomlinson -- is too important, too disturbing and yes, even too dangerous for a gathering like this not to address.

We're seeing unfold a contemporary example of the age-old ambition of power and ideology to squelch and punish journalists who tell the stories that make princes and priests uncomfortable.

Let me assure you that I take in stride attacks by the radical right-wingers who have not given up demonizing me although I retired over six months ago. They've been after me for years now, and I suspect they will be stomping on my grave to make sure I don't come back from the dead.

I should remind them, however, that one of our boys pulled it off some 2,000 years ago -- after the Pharisees, Sadducees and Caesar's surrogates thought they had shut him up for good. Of course I won't be expecting that kind of miracle, but I should put my detractors on notice: They might just compel me out of the rocking chair and back into the anchor chair.

Who are they? I mean the people obsessed with control, using the government to threaten and intimidate. I mean the people who are hollowing out middle-class security even as they enlist the sons and daughters of the working class in a war to make sure Ahmed Chalabi winds up controlling Iraq's oil. I mean the people who turn faith-based initiatives into a slush fund and who encourage the pious to look heavenward and pray so as not to see the long arm of privilege and power picking their pockets. I mean the people who squelch free speech in an effort to obliterate dissent and consolidate their orthodoxy into the official view of reality from which any deviation becomes unpatriotic heresy.

That's who I mean. And if that's editorializing, so be it. A free press is one where it's OK to state the conclusion you're led to by the evidence.


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Bill Moyers is the former host of the weekly public affairs series NOW with Bill Moyers, which airs Friday nights on PBS.

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Thank you, Bill Moyers!
Posted by: gonzoskismet on May 17, 2005 2:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For having the balls to say what must be said. Everybody else in the Amerikan media seems to have lost theirs along with their backbone and their brains!

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clairew
Posted by: clairewarnock on May 17, 2005 5:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is so distressing to feel totally powerless against this adminisration and its lackeys. The media is its own worst enemy.....see Bill O'Reilly. Sensationalism rules....sense does not. Bring back Bill Moyers to PBS.

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Adam Ash
Posted by: evertcilliers on May 17, 2005 8:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr Moyers,
You are the truest of patriots. I hope you keep returning to show how real journalism works.

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A great speech -- Ed Murrow would be proud
Posted by: adamselene on May 17, 2005 9:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bill Moyers' speech is a worthy successor to Ed Murrow' famous address to the Radio and Televison News Directors Association in 1958. He took up arms against the commercialization of broadcasting, and the powers that be never forgave him. Now, Moyers is speaking truth to power, as he has done throughout his career. It's up to the people to listen, learn, and be empowered.

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RE: It ain't news unless the gov't sez so
Posted by: dennyduke@earthlink.net on May 17, 2005 11:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just one of the many ways in which these people, as they claim, really do create reality, past, present, & future.

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Isn't it remarkable...
Posted by: josephefahy on May 18, 2005 4:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That after decades of crony DemPublican rule, the Presidential burden of safeguarding this nation's people and substance has been shouldered by Bill Moyers?

Finally, a man and an intellect up to the task.

Joe Fahy

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Lighting up the lies
Posted by: fritz on May 18, 2005 4:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, Mr. Moyers for being our high beams in such a time of darkness. As Amy Goodman says: How would state run media be different than what we have in this country today? You hit the nail on the head - all we need to do is report the truth - it's like sunshine on the vampire of lies and deceit being pumped out of Washington today. Journalism is not stenography - thank you for that reminder.

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Wow, a hero with integrity and courage!
Posted by: Pepper on May 18, 2005 4:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
HOw rare in todays world of media. I have had an ongoing conversation through email with the NY Times about their lack of coverage of almost everything important and critical for Americans to know about what is going on in this country.

I shouldn't call it a conversation. I tell them what they AREN'T doing and prove it with articles from overseas and they answer back defensively. I then send even more articles to prove my point and I get no response from editors.

I have saved all their email addresses and innundate them daily with overseas stories and tell them WHAT the news is in case they didn't know. hahahaha

I am sure I am driving someone there crazy and that is what it is going to take. The only way any of this works for them is if we all cooperate and allow them to keep it in the dark. Start with their employees. Keep showing them what the real news is and then let them see how its surpressed at their place of work and grumblings should begin. We will see.

Did you know one of the Board of Directors for the NY Times is a member of the Carlyle group owned by Saudi's and run by Bush Sr in the US? Well, that should tell you something right there.

Lets all start fighting back in our own little ways. Email the Times and harrass them daily with stories from overseas. If anyone wants to know how, just say so on this forum and I will contact you on how. Its working, they are emailing me back at least the employees are and that is a start for seeding dissent and dissatisfaction within the ranks. I think that is where its going to have to start.

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» *BEFORE* it's too late? Posted by: LMNOP
Damning, Truthful and Highly Effective
Posted by: Reinform.org on May 18, 2005 5:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This was one of the most revealing, truth-filled, damning, challenging, and brilliantly effective speeches that I have ever heard. Shame on the CPB and PBS for losing their mandate - and more power to Bill Moyers and to those concerned with media reform. We MUST back journalism in it's highest, most critical and effective form before we slip inescapably into the Orwellian abyss.

This speech is highly recommended for the reinforming of the American public. Please consider passing it around.

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I wish, I wish, with all my might...
Posted by: NonnyO on May 18, 2005 6:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish Bill Moyers would come back to NOW - or anywhere else on TV where everyone can tune in and hear him ask the difficult questions no one else asks of politicians or anyone else. I've totally blacklisted all mainstream media infotainment news since Moyers retired, and I barely watch even in-state news to get the weather forecast. Unfortunately, even local news has some version of lies put out by BushCo when they mention anything from national or international news.... (Yes, I get all my serious news from Internet e-newsletters from alternate media.) IF PBS doesn't have news and views from a variety of perspectives, they've dropped the ball, and many people will cease to contribute to them, I believe....

I can't tell you how much I miss hearing the truth every time I tuned in to anything Moyers has been on (whether I like the truth or not doesn't matter - I WANT to hear the TRUTH!!!). I can't tell you how much I miss his intelligent, thoughtful discussions on a myriad of topics with philosophers, poets, writers, whomever.... Every time one of Bill Moyers' speeches is published on the Internet I save it, and savor reading every morsel of common sense and intelligence expressed in his words with all the eloquence, and even hard-hitting charm, of absolute truth.... I yearn for truth in journalism as the starving yearn for food, or the thirsty for water... and never find it in mainstream media, thanks to BushCo and his cronies; what a disappointment to hear infotainment journalism, read between the lines, compare to news from around the world, and know we are constantly being lied to, repeatedly, daily! I'm old now, and wonder if truth in journalism will come back to mainstream media any time before I die.

I wish Bill Moyers would run for president.... He would most assuredly have my vote!

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pat steele
Posted by: migrant on May 18, 2005 6:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you Alternet for posting the text. I've been looking all over for a print version.
Thank you Bill Moyers for being the voice still heard crying in the wilderness of our present political climate.

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» RE: pat steele Posted by: aimesq
alternetter
Posted by: AlterNetter on May 18, 2005 6:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was in the audience as Mr. Moyers delivered his stunning speech. It was riveting– certainly the most powerful address I have ever witnessed. Some women around me were in tears. A gentleman behind me, whose reaction was somewhat less restrained, frequently shouted out, "Amen, Brother Moyers!" He spoke for many of us there that morning.

Thank you, Alternet, for posting the transcript. For those who would like to WATCH archival video of the speech (and other spectacular speeches given at the media reform conference), please check out:
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/
freepress/index.shtml

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alternetter
Posted by: AlterNetter on May 18, 2005 7:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For some reason, I was unable to access
the QuickTime video of Mr. Moyers speech
via Alternet's link above.

So, for anyone else who wants to
SEE THE VIDEO,
but is having difficulty accessing it
via that link, I recommend trying:
http://www.cctvcambridge.org/
freepress/index.shtml

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Joe Jacobs, Helena, MT
Posted by: MTguy on May 18, 2005 8:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For as long as I can remember (I'm 52), every time I saw Bill Moyers on TV he spoke the truth as he saw and found it. Not the Left Wing truth, just the truth. Period.

To cite an example of how the current administration views telling the truth, President Bush recently made a stop in Great Falls to present his proposals for Social Security. Would you like to hear what he has to say? Invitation only, I'm afraid.

Where is the story that these appearances are paid for with tax revenue paid by ALL taxpayers, not just the Administration approved ones?

If Bill Moyers had been working at one of the local TV stations, you can bet he'd of had the story. As it was, that little pertinent fact did not appear in any of the coverage of the President's visit in any media.

I hope that Mr. Moyers doesn't quite stay as retired as he thought he might when he made that decision last year. The American public needs to hear as voice now more than ever before. Our future depends on it.

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radicalmum
Posted by: radicalmum on May 18, 2005 9:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you Bill Moyers. Thank you for being there as I grew to teach and guide and encourage. Thank you for helping me become an adult who is now raising my 3 children to be what I am. Not a Liberal or a Conservative, but a citizen of the world in search of truth.

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the anti-christ is in the white house
Posted by: sailor50 on May 18, 2005 9:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks AlterNet for publishing Moyers' speech. I don't know where else I would be able to read it. The title of my comment would be a fitting propaganda tool against Bush and his ilk. It fits their style. Lowdown, dirty and an attempt to jar and wag the public with a mean phrase. The current GOP in power represent the lowest of humankind. And to think I once served the GOP as a precinct committewoman. Yikes! I'm even concerned now that the false Newsweek report was a set-up. Publicists create news, and this is what may have happened to Newsweek.

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Will the next Bill Moyers please stand up
Posted by: NoPCZone on May 18, 2005 9:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although I do not agree with everything or even most everything Mr Moyers has said over the years, I have always gained from his insight and opinion. Before somebody turns out the last light on the very dark street of 'journalism' and 'reporting' in the US, somebody please light a couple of candles.

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Bill Moyers, you are a TRUE Patriot
Posted by: electricmonk on May 18, 2005 9:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, Bill Moyers for standing up to this continued outrage - may we all follow your example and standup for our country and to our government with dignity and without anger.

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My New PBS Pledge
Posted by: JackieGiles on May 18, 2005 9:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I plan to call my local PBS station during their pledge appeals and make this pledge: As much as I enjoy many PBS presentations I will not abet or condone the recent takeover by right-wing hacks or their demonizing of a truth-teller like Bill Moyers by giving PBS one penny. I know that will hurt the local stations which have little power to make PBS policy, but so be it. Complain to CPB Boss Kenneth Tomlinson. Please make a note of my comment.

I will then mail a copy of the above to CPB.

I invite others to do the same, or find your own creative way to reverse this corruption of all CPB was meant to be.

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» RE: My New PBS Pledge Posted by: benhur
» RE: My New PBS Pledge Posted by: pappy1
Dr. Denise Adams
Posted by: benhur on May 18, 2005 9:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, Bill.
You are one of the few voices of sanity left in this schizophenic society. Please keep up your good work and let us know how we can help send your message across.

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Moyer's talk
Posted by: Henry H. Hirschbiel on May 18, 2005 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a fine speech.

But its (necessary) length points to one of the chief problems facing broadcast media outlets today. Everyone seems convinced that anything longer than 2.5 minutes will cause folks to change the channel. Who is willing (or able) to take the time and effort to present such wonderful essays?

No one except for "NOW" or "P.O.V." or "NPR." What will become of us?

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If only others will follow your example...!
Posted by: Cindy on May 18, 2005 11:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Moyers,
It is not surprising that even in "retirement" it would take a journalist and true patriot of your caliber to stand up and speak the truth to power. You set the standard for what the media and journalism are supposed to be. If only the editors at Newsweek, the latest victim of the neo-con propaganda machine, had your courage and principles. Instead they are bending over backwards to apologize and allowing themselves to be intimidated by this government/corporate regime. Otherwise known as "Fascist state". Newsweek is simply the latest trophy mounted above the propaganda mantle of the right-wing. They join Dan Rather and CBS,PBS, Senators Kerry and McCain and far too many others.
Mr. Moyers we need you and other like-minded journalists.
Build a movement, start a new media outlet, call us to the streets and we will come. Until we take back the media, the masses will remain in denial and delusion and the politicians will have no impetus to act on behalf of our democracy.

Sincerely,
Cynthia Ambrogne-O'Toole
Scarborough, Maine

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In addition to Moyers...
Posted by: NonnyO on May 18, 2005 12:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just read the transcript of George Galloway's speech to the Senate today.... I wish more people in America were like Galloway....

I hope AlterNet gets a copy of the transcript and posts Galloway's speech, too. After re-reading Moyers' speech (for the third time - I can't get enough of good writing, truthful speech!), reading Galloway was another breath of fresh air....

I'll bet a quarter that Galloway won't be mentioned on MSM infotainment news on any network this evening.... too bad; America loses every time BushCo censors the press....

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» RE: In addition to Moyers... Posted by: scribblingwoman
» RE: In addition to Moyers... Posted by: max'smom
Jason Miller: Activist writer
Posted by: pitbull38 on May 18, 2005 1:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am the Jason Miller who wrote the article in Znet from which Mr. Moyers quoted. As an activist writer whose reward comes from making a difference for the cause of social justice and civil liberties rather than receiving monetary compensation for my efforts, it is quite gratifying to have a journalistic icon refer to my work. Bill Moyers is one of the journalists with integrity to whom I referred in my article.

As Mr. Moyers said, it is incumbent upon those of us who still care about salvaging what is left of our republic to keep the Internet relatively free from corporate and government influence and corruption.

As a humble contributor to the cause of intellectual freedom, I feel honored to have Mr. Moyers reference my thoughts, and inspired that there are icons like him who share similar objectives and values.

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Bravo to Mr. Moyers, and I'm as mad as hell . . .
Posted by: Betitsa on May 18, 2005 3:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bravo to Bill Moyers. I am sending this speech to everyone I know. The alternetter who said Murrow would have been proud of Moyers is right.

I am stunned by the revelations about the Beltway media today. I grew up in metropolitan Washington DC, and am thankful to those in PBS/CPB who made it possible for me to watch the Watergate hearings in school, and I remember the local tv news being sharp and on the ball, because their beat was the Capitol. I remember when Washington really was a two-newspaper town, with the Washington Star and the Washington Post.

Even in my own high school journalism class I learned that as a reporter, you do not parrot handouts from the body you are covering. I am outraged by the depths to which at least some of the Washington and the nation's press corps has sunk. The media never considered what is happening in Iraq right now an "occupation" because the government never called it that?! Hanley's 2003 AP story about torture of Iraquis in American prisons not being carried by newspapers because it was not officially sanctioned and didn't come with a government handout?! What is happening here? What happened to independent thinking and actually doing the leg work to get a story, and reporters and editors not relying on handouts and unnamed official sources?! Didn't we--or at least the media--actually retain anything we learned from Watergate?

I guess that's what infuriates me most. Often willful ignorance on the part of about half of the American voters is one thing, and is bad enough, but laziness or forgetting or ignoring how to do the job on the part of the Washington and international-news press is quite another.

I know this allusion is soaked in irony, coming as it does from Network 's satiric "mad prophet of the airwaves Howard Beal," but I'm as mad as hell and I really don't want to take this any more!

Thank you Mr. Moyers for giving solid and also eloquently presented information. A little well-informed, principled anger is not a bad thing.

I would like to find out where those public meetings on the media will be; that's a start. How about more boycotting of advertisers who advertise in news outlets that don't tell the truth? Something really organized, that gets to where it matters to those in power--their wallets.

By the way, I would also vote for Bill Moyers as president.

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Thank you Bill Moyers, and please, look just a little further
Posted by: politicstahl on May 18, 2005 6:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just finished reading your speech on the Internet, having just missed it in person.

Your thoughts about the parallel with Nixon are right on the mark. His personal downfall was what saved us. If you look a little at the ever-growing substance of the 9/11 Truth Movement you will be able to see even more parallels. And I hope you will.

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Scott
Posted by: Scott on May 18, 2005 8:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes and thank you Bill for the speech. One would hope IT would make them wiggle and squirm, but I doubt it since THEY have such a black heart. I also loved the way the British or Scotland guy took on the Senators! HE made them squirm and when it got TOO hot they let him leave. Maybe PBS will squirm too!!!!!!

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A Light in the Darkness
Posted by: inthewoods on May 18, 2005 9:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have ever shown us the way, the truth, and the light. Though I know your retirement is well deserved, please stay with us awhile as the need is great. Your courage, spirit, and honor are an inspiration to all of us who write, and, many of us who read. May your light never dim and may your spirit be taken up by those to follow. Bless you, dear friend of us all.

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Radioactive lapel flags
Posted by: LMNOP on May 18, 2005 9:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just a fantasy, but what if we distributed radioactive lapel flags and crosses in all of America's churches? That's the kind of ethnic cleansing I could support. I know, politically incorrect. But I can still dream. Remember, they have declared cultural war against us, and if you value your secular life, feedom and egalitarianism, you better find a weapon or another country.

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Founding Fathers In Dismay, Too
Posted by: Kevinmarley on May 19, 2005 12:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Further down the road, we traveled on this truly miraculous journey and saw Independence Hall with its simple elegant colonial charm standing like a beacon of Light, of Hope in an otherwise dark world. But that too, like City Hall, espied earlier, was crumbling noisily to the ground as red bricks fell and the white trimming cracked and broke down under the weight of neglect. Our national monuments were crumbling! Our first hall of democracy was perilously in danger of being condemned for we had become a lazy country of sleepy citizens and inveterate, greedy materialists!

It was sacrilege of the worst kind!

Standing on sacred ground.

We defiled.

Ourselves.

By forgetting.

Our first principles.

Of Liberty, Truth, and the Pursuit of Happiness.

Our Founding Fathers, a group of about thirty men dressed in the styles of colonial America, watched this sad spectacle and vociferously complained to anyone who would listen:

"It's a democracy of the people, by the people, but for the very few," Thomas Jefferson lamented as he sat, by himself, almost crying on the steps.

"Give me Rights, and more Rights, but not Responsibilities!" Patrick Henry said in blustery, sardonic voice pacing about tormented. Slowly, he pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and dried his eyes while few were looking.

The conversation then meandered lazily until Benjamin Franklin interjected: "There are more human rights than they have presently discovered. There are the rights to lifelong training and education, and to self-actualization to name a few. America, bless Her heart, still has a long life ahead of her, if they but see that Democracy, Freedom, and Justice are but evolving Ideas."

"Here! Here!" Thomas Paine said, "It is only Common Sense, I must say, that their creative genius, their vital force, and not ours--since we are no longer There--will be the only thing that will sustain them. If they only believed in themselves, that they are the rightful heirs to this beautiful land and that they have the wisdom to keep it going during these dark times, then they will meet with Prosperity."

"They need a philosopher-king like you, George!" Alexander Hamilton, the ever-willing servant, added.

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critical thinking and truthful media
Posted by: tjones on May 19, 2005 8:38 AM   
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I used to regularly watch NOW and believed that it was the only truthful journalism around on tv except an occasional Frontline piece or a 60 Minutes piece or one segment in Newshour with Lehrer.

Disturbingly, though, I discovered that many liberal/progressive friends I knew had never heard of the show. Even after my telling them about it, few watched it.

It seems that even critical thinking people are slowly giving up because of the complexity of issues and the chaos we are living in.

I think all of us who think critically and want truthful journalism, should join together and start a national newspaper and build a culture of critical journalism in this country. Financially it can be done in contrast to TV which would cost so much.

Yes, there are many critical, anti-rightwing magazines now such as Nation, In these Times, etc.etc., but their effort is fragmented and marginalized now. And a lot of their work is so difficult to read and understand.

The newspaper I am suggesting should not be so overly nuanced and detailed that only a Marxist Ph.D. can comprehend it. It should be readily accessible to a college freshman and universities and colleges should be the first target of such a publication.

From this newspaper, many developments can emerge such as discussion clubs, etc. Right now, many young people I know are bewildered by the sophisticated discussion that you see in newsmedia such as the Nation although they know that the mainstream media are not trustworthy.

Perhaps Mr. Moyers can step forward and consolidate all the critical media such as the Nation and In these Times and the others forgetting the nuanced differences and build a simple, truthful, powerful newspaper (both regular and online) under his editorship.

I am not sure if the little egos on the left can accept this, but unity demands a sacrifice of petty egoes and unity is the only force that can forge an effective resistance to the campaign of untruth that most US media is. In effect they are delivering propaganda and not news.

As for our Tomlinson, I wonder if he recognizes the name Goebbels.

All the best to Mr. Moyers's future efforts.

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mjchubaty@aol.com
Posted by: mjchubaty@aol.com on May 20, 2005 6:57 AM   
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Moyers is right on target. He has articulated the substance of what most of us feel and know in our hearts and are unable to say due to lack of forum and ability. We live in a frightening time.

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MOYERS' LIES (A FEW OF..)
Posted by: BillLoathingtheMilitaryClinton on May 20, 2005 7:48 AM   
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Moyers Lies: 1. "They exist not to make a profit, not to push an ideology, "

BILL CLINTON RESPONDS: Please, Moyers, when did you Leftists fail to "push an ideology" just as you do here and now.
Lying is terrible, and you do it constantly.


Moyers again:

"I should remind them, however, that one of our boys pulled it off some 2,000 years ago -- after the Pharisees, Sadducees and Caesar's surrogates thought they had shut him up for good. "

BILL CLINTON: When hateful, anti-American Christophobes aren't calling us "neocons" or "bible-thumpers" or "fundies' or "right wing religious extremists," they're invoking Christianity for themselves in profoundly hypocritical fashion. Being a LEFT WING Christian is lovely. Being a conservative Christian consigns one (IN LEFT-THINK) to vile epithets, pejoratives, and hate speech. "You can't be a Christian and a conservative." - Hillary the Lesbian


Liar Moyers lies some more:

Mermin also quotes public television's Jim Lehrer acknowledging that unless an official says something is so, it isn't news.
"In other words," says Jonathan Mermin, "if the government isn't talking about it, we don't report it."


BILL CLINTON RESPONDS: Not in the slightest. First Moyers boasts of all the wonderful things newsies do to expose corruption in government. That isn't "an official saying something." It's a coverup. Worse, Leftists in America have become a mouthpiece for al Jazeera. Bad news is ALWAYS sprayed all over the press and ABC and CNN and CBS.


Lying Moyers lies on: the chemical industry's long and despicable cover-up of its cynical and unspeakable withholding of critical data about its toxic products from its workers,

BILL CLINTON THE RAPIST: The Left's long and despicable practice of bombing ski lodges and spiking trees and more recently firebombing SUVs in the name of the environment is far more common. THe Left's creation of such terrorists as The Unabomber is one mere example.

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» RE: MOYERS' LIES (A FEW OF..) Posted by: mendomama
Gloria Chou
Posted by: gloria chou on Oct 28, 2005 7:59 PM   
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To Bill Moyers,

I read your recent address to the Wealth and Giving Forum. Our mail boxes are filled with many solicitations for funds, all appear to be worthy causes. I would appreciate if you would publicize a list of projects that are on the "growing edge of things", like some of those subsidized by the Schumann Foudation.

Thank you Bill for all your contributions toward a just and humane world.

Sincerely,

Gloria Chou
Washington State

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