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DarrinS
09-18-2012, 04:04 PM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443995604578002523312508286.html?m od=rss_opinion_main


The Fourth Estate, Still Thrilling to the Spirit of '08





After an astounding week of ardent media focus on Mitt Romney's criticism of the initial U.S. response to mob assaults on American diplomatic outposts, the furor is dying down—but it's not over by any means. Nor was the message that the furor sent a negligible one.

Condemnations of Mr. Romney had come thick and fast. He had been "crass and tone deaf," in the view of MSNBC's Chuck Todd. He had committed a "slander" against the president, according to Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic.

Journalists in pursuit of this story—to the exclusion of virtually all else going on—were quick to point out that denunciations of Mr. Romney were by no means limited to Democrats, that criticism came from Republican commentators too. This fact was hardly surprising—the sanctimony of the virtuous knows no political bounds.

The spectacle of those hordes of journalists in single-minded pursuit of the Romney story day after day—days that saw the killing of four Americans, embassies burned and trashed, mobs of the faithful running amok—shouldn't have been surprising either. It's the most dramatic indicator yet that in this election the pack journalism of four years ago is alive, and well, and in full cry again.

Especially wonderful to hear were all the charges about Mr. Romney's political opportunism and tone-deafness—this after three days of a Democratic convention distinguished by shameless, nonstop exploitation of the military raid that put an end to Osama bin Laden. It is impossible to imagine any other president in American history orchestrating even two minutes—much less three days—of the self-glorification and wallowing in a victory won by the nation's armed forces that was on display at the convention. If any of this orgy of boasting in the interest of a political campaign caught the attention of those commentators whose sensibilities were so offended by Mr. Romney last week, we haven't heard about it.

The governor's offense, as the world knows, had to do with his blast at the eye-popping apologias that had come from our Cairo embassy while mobs of the faithful were gathering to wreak havoc over a crude YouTube video insulting to Islam—apologies that Mr. Romney linked to the general inclinations of the Obama administration.

For this he was pilloried as having criticized the president in a time of urgent crisis. Or, as Andrea Mitchell put it Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," Mr. Romney had come out with his statement when the State Department didn't know where Ambassador Chris Stevens was—"the body was missing."

At the time of Mr. Romney's initial statement, of course, no word had as yet come about Stevens's fate or those of his murdered colleagues. Which didn't prevent members of the press and pundits from proclaiming, all the rest of the week, that Mr. Romney had embarked on a political attack while the world was aflame and the president embroiled in the crisis. The same president who would, in the midst of that crisis, go tootling off to Las Vegas for a campaign fundraiser.

By the time the presidential campaign had ended four years ago, the media's role in driving the outcome had become a fact too obvious to dispute. The impact of the journalistic horde's devotion to the Democratic candidates was clear, the evidence vivid—especially in the case of reporters transported to a state of ecstasy over candidate Obama's speeches. One New York Times reporter wrote of being so moved he could barely keep from weeping. Not for nothing did the role of the press become a news story in itself—an embarrassing one that might, serious people thought, serve as a caution during future campaigns.

In 2012 Barack Obama is no longer delivering thrilling speeches, but an unembarrassed press corps is still available, in full prosecutorial mode when it comes to coverage of the Republican challenger. If you hadn't heard the story about Mitt Romney's bullying treatment of another student during his prep-school days—1965, that is—the Washington Post had a story for you, a lengthy investigative piece. On the matter of Mr. Obama's school records, locked away and secured against investigation, the press maintains a serene incuriosity.

Mr. Obama continues to receive the benefits of a supportive media—one prone to dark suspicions about his challenger. The heavy ooze of moral superiority emanating from all the condemnations of Mr. Romney last week, all the breathless media reports on those condemnations, did not begin with something he said last week. But the moral superiority was certainly on its gaudiest display. Mr. Romney's tone was offensive, unpresidential, his critics charged.

Yet it is the president of the United States—the same one who presented himself as the man who would transcend political partisanship because we were all Americans—who has for most of his term set about dividing the nation by class, by the stoking of resentments. Who mocks "millionaires and billionaires." Who makes it clear that he considers himself the president of the other—the good—Americans. How's that for presidential tone?

No one could have missed the importance to Mr. Obama's campaign of the class-war themes that reverberated continually during the Democratic convention speeches. The references to "millionaires and billionaires" are by now a reliable applause line for the campaign. Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm underscored the point with an address whose opening line declared, with a strange note of defiance—it wasn't the only thing strange about the speech—that the heart of America wasn't to be found in corporate board rooms.

But it is Vice President Biden who has been the most faithful purveyor of Mr. Obama's class-war theme. Earnest, affable, with a bottomless cache of wise maxims from his mother and father, the persuasive Joe Biden excels at explaining, in his accomplished infomercial tones, how the other side wants to ensnare you, the poor and the helpless. And how, I promise you, folks, Barack Obama isn't going to let them.

Mitt Romney isn't going to have an easy time defeating a president with Mr. Obama's advantages. A friendly press corps surpasses all wealth, sayeth the sages. The governor will stand a far better chance if he takes to heart the lesson of the past week, when he seems to have recognized, at last, that there are issues in addition to the economy—matters like foreign policy, Iran, America's stance in the world—that he must address. In the weeks that remain to this election, he will have to speak to those matters in depth and in unflinching terms that set him apart from his opponent. And he'll have to do it often.

ChumpDumper
09-18-2012, 04:08 PM
Willard is a terrible candidate. He fucked up trying to cash in on the consulate/embassy attacks.

A competent candidate would be ahead of Obama right now not matter what you think the media does.

DarrinS
09-18-2012, 04:10 PM
Willard is a terrible candidate. He fucked up trying to cash in on the consulate/embassy attacks.

A competent candidate would be ahead of Obama right now not matter what you think the media does.



Given that Mitt is a shitty candidate and the MSM carries the water for Obama, it is amazing that Obama is not further ahead in the polls.

ChumpDumper
09-18-2012, 04:15 PM
Given that Mitt is a shitty candidate and the MSM carries the water for Obama, it is amazing that Obama is not further ahead in the polls.lol given.

The conservative MSM (like the article you just posted from the Fox empire) is trying it's damndest to prop up the Romney campaign as well. It just isn't working because he's that bad and they are reduced to whining about "the media" in their media.

Clipper Nation
09-18-2012, 04:55 PM
:cry "I hate our controlled media, they won't censor their coverage of MY guy!" :cry

Typical status quo statists, all about ad hominems instead of self-responsibility....

Spurminator
09-18-2012, 05:06 PM
:cry

Spurminator
09-18-2012, 05:11 PM
The spectacle of those hordes of journalists in single-minded pursuit of the Romney story day after day—days that saw the killing of four Americans, embassies burned and trashed, mobs of the faithful running amok—shouldn't have been surprising either. It's the most dramatic indicator yet that in this election the pack journalism of four years ago is alive, and well, and in full cry again.

What's this about embassies? What is this guy talking about? I'm completely unaware of anything going on at embassies because the liberal media isn't reporting on that.

George Gervin's Afro
09-18-2012, 08:05 PM
What's this about embassies? What is this guy talking about? I'm completely unaware of anything going on at embassies because the liberal media isn't reporting on that.

the media should be hammering Obama about now... even though the govts that hosted the embassies couldn't protect them.. but Obama could have... so it's his fault

Winehole23
09-18-2012, 10:21 PM
if Romney had confined himself to to expressing concern over security issues for embassies that would have been completely valid. there does seem to be a legit controversy over whether the US received advance notice of a possible attack: Libya says they warned us, the US denies this.

also, the US denial that this was a terrorist attack rings false on two counts: (1) the timing; (2) the fact that the safe house in Benghazi was known to the attackers. At any rate, it was accurately shelled, with the US ambassador inside.

Blowback from killing Sheik al-Libi? Hard to tell, but it's surprising that the US was unprepared for an attack on 9/11, possibly with advance warning, inside Libya, close on the heels of the targeted killing of an Al Qaeda higher up there.

Jacob1983
09-19-2012, 12:01 AM
So it's still Bush's fault?

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 12:03 AM
beg pardon, are you addressing me? if not, who are you addressing?

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 12:14 AM
no one has blamed anything on Bush in this thread . . .

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 12:16 AM
maybe it was the reference to 9/11 that fooled you. the US embassy in Libya was attacked, and the US Ambassador killed, on September 11 of THIS YEAR . . .

Jacob1983
09-19-2012, 12:25 AM
I was making a joke. Sarcasm anyone?

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 12:28 AM
you chose your spot badly. doesn't really fit.

Jacob1983
09-19-2012, 12:31 AM
Thanks

Nbadan
09-19-2012, 12:48 AM
You can spot a wing-nut shill in the M$M when he tries to shift the conversation away from Romney's foot-in-mouth disease and toward the 'unraveling in the middle east' Obama policies have created...

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 01:02 AM
false dilemma. the shortcomings of both candidates can be discussed in the same thread.

Winehole23
09-19-2012, 08:52 AM
http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/09/contractors-benghazi/#more-91381

TeyshaBlue
09-19-2012, 09:53 AM
Blue Mountain and not Marines? Whoa.

boutons_deux
09-19-2012, 10:03 AM
Blue Mountain and not Marines? Whoa.

You don't like privatization of critical govt functions, probably at much higher costs?

TeyshaBlue
09-19-2012, 10:19 AM
Straw man much?

boutons_deux
09-19-2012, 10:48 AM
Straw man much?

TB :lol

TeyshaBlue
09-19-2012, 11:19 AM
I can't generate at cogent, original thought.

boutons_deux
09-19-2012, 11:25 AM
TB :lol

US privatizing Embassy security to FOREIGN mercenaries, a conservative for-profit wet dream, is perfectly on target for the thread.

TeyshaBlue
09-19-2012, 11:28 AM
Except nobody is championing this event except for the blue team fantasy play skittering around in that deranged sensorium of yours.

boutons_deux
09-19-2012, 11:30 AM
Romney Still Doing Well With Voters Who Have Never Heard Him Speak

Republican Presidential nominee Mitt Romney got a rare piece of good news today, as a new poll showed him faring well among voters who have never heard him speak.

According to the poll, which has a margin of error of three points, Mr. Romney garnered positive ratings among voters who agreed with the statement, “I have never seen Mitt Romney say or do anything.”

The poll showed Mr. Romney doing especially well among certain demographic groups, including people who had been trapped in a mine cave-in or who had recently awoken from a coma.

For Romney campaign manager Matt Rhoades, the poll results offer “an amazing opportunity” for the campaign: “We have to identify those voters who have never heard Mitt talk and make sure they never do.”

Read more http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/borowitzreport/2012/09/poll-romney-still-doing-well-with-voters-who-have-never-heard-him-speak.html#ixzz26vxrZPZd

LnGrrrR
09-19-2012, 01:29 PM
^ I chuckled :D