For general discussion and debate. Possible talking point: George W. Bush greets returning troops from Iraq. Try to get through this without shedding a tear: Thoughts?
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Open Thread: George W. Bush Greets Troops at DFW
For general discussion and debate. Possible talking point: George W. Bush greets returning troops from Iraq. Try to get through this without shedding a tear: Thoughts?
Continue reading here:
Open Thread: George W. Bush Greets Troops at DFW
Posted in Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bennyhollywood, Breaking News, celeb news, general-discussion, george w. bush, get-through, politics, talking-point
Jennifer Aniston appeared on Thursday’s Good Morning America and slammed Bill O’Reilly for “insulting women.” The actress, promoting “The Switch,” her new film about being a single mother, complained about remarks by the Fox News host. Aniston derided, “[The comments were] also saying something – insulting women that are out there doing this on their own. I was raised by – my mother was single. You know? ” [MP3 audio here .] In fact, O’Reilly, on his August 11 program , did not “insult” single mothers. He went out of his way to respect such moms: “I want to be fair about this, because there have- there are many- there are millions of single mothers who do a great job raising their kids.” What the FNC anchor did do was praise the importance of fathers: “Aniston can hire a battery of people to help her, but she cannot hire a dad…And Dads bring a psychology to children that is, in this society, I believe, under emphasized. I think men get hosed all day long in the parental arena.” He added, “…She’s throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds, okay, that, hey, you don’t need a guy.” Stephanopoulos never challenged Aniston on her assertions. He only offered softball questions, such as wondering, “But usually you don’t respond to this kind of thing. Why did you decide to respond?” In fact, he ended up agreeing with Aniston’s assessment: “And you’re right. The movie is a celebration of family.” The ABC host only laughed at her snarky remark, “I was actually glorifying 12-year-olds going out there and getting knocked up and doing it by themselves. ‘Cause that’s what I like to preach.” A transcript of Aniston’s comments on the August 19 Good Morning America: 8:15 GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: You caught the attention of Bill O’Reilly. Could you ever believe that was going to happen? He said you were glorifying- JENNIFER ANISTON: I never actually thought that my name and that name would ever be in one sentence, I must say. STEPHANOPOULOS: He basically said you were glorifying single motherhood and- ANISTON: I was actually glorifying 12-year-olds going out there and getting knocked up and doing it by themselves. ‘Cause that’s what I like to preach. That was one- STEPHANOPOULOS: [laughs] But usually you don’t respond to this kind of thing. Why did you decide to respond? ANISTON: I just felt it needed, it was begging for a response. It was just such an unfair statement that he made against me. And you know, people say things about me all the time, and you just kind of go “Oh, whatever.” But this was not just about me. It was also saying something – insulting women that are out there doing this on their own. I was raised by – my mother was single. You know? It doesn’t always start off that way. But sort of, life happens. STEPHANOPOULOS: And you’re right. The movie is a celebration of family. ANISTON: It is. It’s family. Here is a partial transcript of O’Reilly’s actual comments from the August 11, 2010 edition of the O’Reilly Factor: BILL O’REILLY: I want to be fair about this, because there have — there are many — there are millions of single mothers who do a great job raising their kids. MARGARET HOOVER: Do a great job. O’REILLY: And they’re abandoned and they’re all kinds — and they do. It’s possible. But it’s not optimum, and that’s where Ms. Aniston makes her mistake. That she’s throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds, OK, that, hey, you don’t need a guy. You don’t need a Dad. Dad, ah, you know. That’s destructive to our society. GRETCHEN CARLSON: Because it’s — it’s tough to be a parent. I know. I have two kids at home, and trust me, I’m glad every day that I have a husband to help me with the hard work of being a parent. However, here’s the alarming statistic: 36 percent of all babies born in the U.S. now are born to single mothers. O’REILLY: Yes. They don’t — right. CARLSON: Thirty-six percent. But — and young people, you’re right. They do not have the cognitive ability… O’REILLY: I don’t like this trend. CARLSON: … to know the difference of a 40-year-old woman who’s financially stable having a child… O’REILLY: Yes. CARLSON: … and a 16-year-old girl. O’REILLY: Aniston can hire a battery of people to help her, but she cannot hire a dad. OK? And Dads bring a psychology to children that is, in this society, I believe, under emphasized. I think men get hosed all day long in the parental arena. HOOVER: Do you think they’ve earned it? Because I’ve got to tell you, of the 30 percent of single families, a full two thirds of them — no, I’m sorry, a full 80 percent of them are single families that are run by mothers, not fathers. O’REILLY: And any man who leaves their children is not a man. CARLSON: Well… O’REILLY: OK? Let’s make that perfectly clear. But the fathers who do try hard are underappreciated and diminished by people like Jennifer Aniston. HOOVER: Well, I think Jennifer Aniston is simply making a point. I agree she’s glamorizing single parenthood. O’REILLY: Diminishing — no. HOOVER: She’s glamorizing single parenthood, diminishing two-parent households. O’REILLY: Diminishing the role of the dad. CARLSON: She is.

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George Stephanopoulos Ignores Attack by Jennifer Aniston That O’Reilly ‘Insulted’ Single Mothers
CNN’s T. J. Holmes brought back Time’s Bobby Ghosh on Friday’s Newsroom for more promotion of his “Islamophobia” cover story , and added two Muslim guests who largely agreed with his thesis that anti-Islamic sentiment was “coming into the mainstream,” and how this was apparently a “reason for alarm.” Holmes asked softball questions, and no one with an opposing viewpoint appeared during the segment. The anchor had the three on for a panel discussion at the bottom of the 10 am Eastern hour about Ghosh’s “Is America Islamophobic?” article, as well the controversy over the planned mosque near Ground Zero in New York City. Before introducing his guests, Holmes held up two examples of apparent “Islamophobia” in the country and seemed to sympathize with the apparent plight of Muslims in the U.S.: HOLMES: Two-and-a-half million Muslims live, work and pray in America- not always easy. Case in point: protests in California – check that out- marching against a proposed mosque in their area, holding signs with slogans such as, ‘Muslims danced for joy on 9/11’ – or how about the planned Islamic center and mosque near New York’s Ground Zero? More than 60 percent of Americans are opposed to that center being built. But the scope is bigger than that, according to a Time magazine poll. More than 3 in 10 Americans would say no to a mosque in their neighborhood. Then there are statements like this one from evangelical leader Franklin Graham. REV. FRANKLIN GRAHAM (from August 18, 2010 CNN’s “John King USA”): To hate the Jew, to hate the Christian, to kill them- their goal is world domination. And for the Muslim, peace means when all of the other nations are subject to Islam- then we are at peace. The world will be at peace when the entire world is under Islam. Well, I don’t agree with the teachings of Islam – The CNN anchor then introduced Ghosh, as well as Mayor Mohammed Hameeduddi of Teaneck, New Jersey, “a New York suburb just 20 miles from Ground Zero,” and Reza Aslan of The Daily Beast. Holmes first let the Time deputy international editor explain his “Islamophobia” accusation: ” There are far too many people…like Franklin Graham- who have made it their business to project Islam in the most negative possible light …. there is a lot of Islamophobia about in this country, and it’s growing and becoming more vicious , and, with this latest mosque controversies- not one, but several controversies around the country- it’s coming into the mainstream, and that is reason for alarm .” Moments later, Aslan, who once denied that there was “no such thing as sharia” law , endorsed and expanded upon Ghosh’s point: ASLAN: Look, t here have always been pockets in this country that have had a real problem with Islam, that have seen Islam as violent, as bigoted, and that have brushed all Muslims with the exact same brush as they use to describe al Qaeda . The difference now is how mainstream it’s become. I mean, when the leading GOP candidate for president, Newt Gingrich, openly and repeatedly compares al Qaeda to American Muslims , repeating- just referring to both of them as simply ‘they,’ as in ‘they attacked us and now they wanted build a mosque,’ you’re starting to realize how just- sort of, part of the regular political discussion overtly anti-Islamic sentiment has become. That’s what is different now. It’s always been there, but its now part of the mainstream dialogue. Gingrich is the “leading GOP candidate for president”? That’s news to a lot of people, conservatives and liberals alike. According to CNN’s own poll on August 13 , Mitt Romney had the most support, followed by Sarah Palin. Gingrich was in third. Mayor Hameeduddi, a Democrat, actually partially blamed the media for the apparent “Islamophobia:” HAMEEDUDDI: I hate to use – you know, make the media the scapegoat on this, but we consistently see things- Muslims portrayed in very negative lights on TV , and you don’t necessarily see- like, if you look at Times Square in December, where they did an ad campaign about- you know, ‘I’m Muslim, I’m an American.’ It was doctors, lawyers, fireman, policemen, people of all sorts- people of all- of American society being put on the billboard. And I think that the discussion- we need to raise the content in the form of our discourse. Are there problems and are there protests? Yes. But in my town- you know, when we went before the zoning board to get the expansion for our mosque- our masjid, it was done in one night and it was a 9-0 unanimous vote. Towards the end of the segment, Holmes deferred to his guests by asking what could be labeled as leading/softball questions that helped advance their viewpoint. Aslan actually laid much of the blame for the spread of “Islamophobia” at the feet of- you guessed it- Fox News (maybe he’ll appear on Rick Sanchez’s show soon): HOLMES: …The dialogue- the discourse has not necessarily been civil in a lot of ways. Are we missing an opportunity here now with this controversy going on in New York about this proposed Islamic center and mosque- are we missing an opportunity to have a discussion, to educate people a little bit more about Muslims? GHOSH: I worry that we are missing the opportunity. I think the window is still open. It hasn’t closed yet, but there is so much anger and there is so much noise- there’s screaming that is taking place from one side of this discussion- that I worry that there will be no calm, composed, rational debate. Now, to the mayor’s point, I’m delighted that in Teaneck, when they expanded the mosque, this was done without any real rancor. H owever, in California, in Tehmecula- California, a blue state- people who are protesting the mosque, turned up to Friday prayers with dogs- now, knowing full well that that would be considered deeply offensive to the people . We have gone to a point where people opposing each other are now looking specifically for ways to offend the other, and that suggests to me that a calm, rational discussion at this very moment seems impossible. HOLMES: Well, you all help me wrap this up . Reza, and to you- and we can do this quickly. Reza, who can help in this conversation? You heard the mayor mention kind of the media doesn’t help sometimes, but who can help? Who can step out there and lead the conversation- somebody that people will listen to, a Muslim leader, whether that’s a great communicator, whether that’s a politician- who can step out there and help bridge this divide that clearly is there, according- certainly, of the polls and some of these pictures we see at some of these protests? ASLAN: Well, it’s supposed to be our political and religious leaders, but they’re doing the opposite. They’re either running away from this or openly espousing religious bigotry as a political platform. And then, of course, we have an entire cable news broadcast- Fox News, I have to say- that is essentially turning this into a way of economic gain . So, I really don’t have a lot of faith that the people who we should rely on to bring everybody down and make sure that the values of American pluralism are ascendant- that they’ll actually do that. HOLMES: And quickly if you can, same question, Mr. Mayor- and also, I know you were in the room last Friday when the President made his statement that kind of sparked the controversy over the weekend about the mosque- the proposed mosque and Islamic center in New York. Has the President helped in the statement he made? Can he be the one? Who can help us in this conversation? HAMEEDUDDI: Well- I mean, the statement that he made was one of a constitutional argument, which- you know, I swore to uphold the Constitution, and I think the President did also. So that’s where he was coming from. But, as a Muslim, when we talk about- you know, the Islamophobia, we have the power within ourselves to either be bitter or be better. And if we’re bitter, we don’t help our society around us. But if we become better, we can uplift the society, and that’s where our challenge faces us in the next years to come. And, as Reza was saying- yeah, it is up to politicians like me. On September 4th, I’m having a conversation at a synagogue- you know, ‘from Rosh Hashana to Ramadan.’ And these are the things that need to happen on a local level- on an interfaith level- that you’ll see these things blossom all over the country. I think that- right now, it’s a very trying time, and I think that this issue with the mosque doesn’t help anything in New York, but it is an opportunity to build on- understanding of what Muslim Americans really believe in America. HOLMES: Well, that is the point right there, Mr. Mayor. We appreciate you being here. Reza, we appreciate you as well. And again, Bobby Ghosh- again, the article is coming out- going to be hitting newsstands I believe soon- I don’t think it’s out yet- but Bobby Ghosh- coming out Monday, I’m just told now. But Bobby, a lot of people need to check out- GHOSH: Should be on newsstands over the weekend. HOLMES: Over the weekend! All right. Make sure we get that in and know exactly when it’s going to be. But Bobby, I thank you as well. Wow, it seems that political correctness has seeped into controversies surrounding Islam to the point that bringing your dog to a protest against a mosque is some kind of act of bigotry.

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CNN Continues to Promote ‘Islamophobia’ Accusation From Time
Editor’s Note: For the list of NewsBusters T-shirt contest winners, skip to the end of this post. All good things must come to an end, and so it is with Five for Five . In our final installment, we look at the Top Five Outrageous Outbursts by liberal media journalists and/or celebrities over the past five years. We start with an honorable mention we just couldn’t let pass without notice: Ted Turner from April 2008 predicting that global warming would lead to mass cannibalism. You can view that video below the page break. And now for the top five: Rosie O’Donnell outs herself as a 9/11 Truther , insisting that fire couldn’t possibly melt steel [March 29, 2007] Actress Sandra Bernhard warns Sarah Palin to avoid New York City unless she wants to be gang-raped by black men [September 19, 2008] Bryant Gumbel simultaneously insults black Republicans and black Winter Olympians [February 16, 2006] Bill Maher buys into the conspiracy theory that Trig Palin is really Sarah Palin’s grandson, not her son [September 6, 2008] Keith Olbermann trashes conservative blogger Michelle Malkin as a “mashed-up bag of meat with lipstick” [October 13, 2009] And finally, as promised, the fifth round of winners in our 5th anniversary T-shirt giveaway . Congratulations to: Lee J. of Claymont, Del. Mike T. of Wichita, Kan. Dale K. of El Dorado,Calif. Kenneth F. of Corona, Calif. Mark S. of Greenwood, Ind. Paul E. of Smithsburg, Md. Anonymous of Bristol, Wisc. Rich S. of Fergus Falls, Minn. Charlie G. of Mesa, Ariz. Karen P. of Chugiak, Alaska For those of you who didn’t win, we have plenty for sale at MRCStore.org .

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Top Five Outrageous Outbursts by Liberal Journalists or Celebrities | Round 5 of T-Shirt Winners
Posted in Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged Bristol, busters-t-shirt, eyeblast-tv, mashed-up-bag, politics, possibly-melt, security-guard, the-mosque, were-able
There are three important things going on in “The Tillman Story” (in selected theatres today), two of which almost make the conspiracy-mongering documentary worth your time. The first and best is the opportunity to get to know better the extraordinary and extraordinarily complicated and interesting Pat Tillman. In the best sense of the word, this was a fierce and fiercely passionate man – fierce on the football field, fierce on the battlefield, and fierce in his personal beliefs. This was also a man who only ever dated one woman, the woman he would marry the same week he enlisted; and my guess is that Tillman was the kind of man and husband who found leaving the fame of professional football much easier than leaving his young bride. You also meet Tillman’s family; his parents, brother and wife – a decent, loving, inconsolable group dealing with the terrible loss of someone they obviously loved and miss very much. This is a family furious with a United States government who didn’t know all the facts before they told the story of Tillman’s death to them, and to the American people. And as far as that goes, they are right to be angry. Unfortunately, you also witness a partisan filmmaker attempting to prop up the absurd anti-Bush conspiracy theory that it wasn’t the ever-reliable incompetence of government bureaucracy that caused what was probably the second worst day in this family’s life – the day they were told Tillman had been killed in a friendly fire incident, but rather a sinister plot hatched by the Administration and the Pentagon to use Tillman’s death as a flag-waving symbol to bolster military recruitment and support for the war. The Tillman family agrees wholeheartedly with this conspiracy, believes that the memory of their heroic son was maliciously abused in this way. But with all due respect to them (and they are due our respect), neither logic nor facts come close to making that case. As far as addressing the specific details surrounding the film’s specific charges, using his military experience and keen mind, Kurt Schlichter has already taken much of the film’s case completely apart, piece by piece, and I urge you to read his review . My review will remain focused solely within the context of the documentary itself, a documentary no intellectually honest person can respect, much less champion. To director Amir Bar-Lev’s credit, the most important fact of this entire case is not left out of what basically plays like an overlong “60 Minutes” segment. But this important fact is glossed over and presented so early on that – probably by design – you might forget all about it during the third act as circumstantial evidence is laid out hot and heavy with the help of foreboding camera moves – such as the one that slowly rises though a mob chart of Administration “bad guys” until ominously arriving at the smiling face of one President George W. Bush. It’s just too bad for Bar-Lev that the melodramatic use of a camera crane doesn’t equal damning facts. On May 3rd, 2004, a memorial for Pat Tillman took place in San Jose’s Municipal Rose Garden. Tillman was posthumously awarded the Silver Star and both his family and the whole world believed he had been killed in a Taliban ambush during a brave attempt to draw their fire in order to save his own men. Just a few weeks later, the Army would come forward to acknowledge that this narrative was wrong and that Tillman had been killed by friendly fire. At this point, the question that came to my mind was why would the Pentagon and the Bush Administration voluntarily come forward and uncover their own conspiracy? The film makes no mention of any outside pressure on the Pentagon from the Tillman family or even the media to get the bottom of anything. Meaning that at this point everyone believed the initial report and apparently all the Administration and military had to do to keep us all believing was to keep their mouths shut. So the question is: If the idea was to use Tillman’s death for nefarious pro-war purposes, why just a few weeks after the memorial service would those with the most to lose from doing so, voluntarily kick over a political hornets’ nest by telling the truth? Why not milk the situation for as long as possible and for as much propaganda as possible, especially with a presidential election just five months off? At the very least, why not save all the political heartache and fallout this revelation was sure to bring (and did) and stall until after Bush is reelected? A producer once told me that whenever you have a film character open a refrigerator door you either have to show them close it or include the sound effect of the door closing, or else the audience will get unsettled thinking the door has been left open. Bar-Lev’s refusal to address or explain why a supposed-group of conspirators would of their own volition blow the whistle on their own supposed conspiracy leaves that door open. And no fancy camera move or sinister scoring is going to close it. As the film moves towards its climax, an August of 2007 Congressional hearing, the conspiracy becomes even less convincing. Democrat Rep. Henry Waxman brought together all the players, including Donald Rumsfeld and General Richard Myers, to testify under oath and before the television cameras about what they knew and when they knew it. You get the sense that Bar-Lev actually wants us to believe that Henry Waxman, one of the most extreme Bush haters in all of Congress, was – at best – less than enthused at this opportunity or maybe even in on the alleged cover up. Bar-Lev’s sin of omission is not giving the audience any background on Waxman’s investigative crusades to bring Bush down , which would go a long way towards giving this Congressional hearing looking into the Tillman case credibility. But that kind of knowledge would also work against the filmmaker’s obvious political agenda. No one wanted Bush’s scalp more than Henry Waxman. Instead, however, all we see are shots of the Congressman looking indifferent and bored. To anyone who’s even a tenth the independent thinker Pat Tillman was, this documentary looking into his death never rises above the level of left-wing propaganda. Pat Tillman was a patriot and an American hero, and the truth of what happened that terrible day changes none of that. As far as Pat Tillman’s family, there is nothing they deserve more than whatever emotional closure one can have in such a situation. I do hope they find it. But where they’re looking for it now, it simply doesn’t exist. Crossposted at Big Hollywood
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In ‘Tillman Story,’ Anti-Bush Conspiracy Just Doesn’t Add Up
Twenty-two states are now in the process of drafting or seeking to pass legislation similar to Arizona’s law against illegal immigration. This is occurring despite the fact that the Obama administration has filed a lawsuit against the Arizona law and a federal judge has ruled against portions of that law – a ruling that is now being appealed. Next month, two Rhode Island state lawmakers, a Democrat and a Republican, will travel to Arizona to speak with Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, local sheriffs, and other officials about how to better craft their own bipartisan immigration bill for Rhode Island, which already has been enforcing some federal immigration laws. Meanwhile, 11 Republican state lawmakers from Colorado traveled to Arizona this week to meet with officials there on how to craft legislation for the Mile High state. In addition, Alabama House Republicans announced this week that they would seek to “push an illegal immigration bill similar to the recently approved Arizona law.” This law would “create a new criminal trespass statute that allows local law enforcement to arrest illegal immigrants for simply setting foot in Alabama,” said Alabama’s House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard. In Florida, proposed legislation against illegal immigration has been retooled to address some concerns raised by a federal judge who blocked the proposed bill, though it would still allow Florida state police to enforce immigration law. In all, there are 22 states considering copycat legislation from the Arizona law against illegal immigration, according to the Americans for Legal Immigration Political Action Committee (ALIPAC), a group that advocates for stricter immigration enforcement. These illegal immigrants, deported to Mexico on Wednesday, July 28, 2010, are shown near the Nogales Port of Entry in Sonora, Mexico. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)Arizona’s law mirrors federal law. It requires local law enforcement officers during a lawful stop to determine the immigration status of an individual by asking the person to show identification that residents are already required to carry by law; and it authorizes law enforcement to securely transfer verified illegal aliens to federal custody. The law prohibits racial profiling and gives state residents the right to sue local agencies for not complying with the state law. In the lawsuit challenging the Arizona law, the Obama administration said the United States should not have a “patchwork” of 50 different immigration laws. In late July, U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton ruled against most of the major elements of the Arizona law, halting their implementation. That ruling is now in the appeals process. “We do not expand on federal law,” Florida state Rep. William Snyder, the sponsor of the bill in his state, told CNSNews.com. “We do not change penalties. The goal is not to create a new immigration framework at the state level.” Snyder, the chairman of the Florida House Criminal Justice Committee, said his staff attorneys have taken the decision by U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton into consideration in re-crafting their bill for the next state legislative session. Snyder said the office of state Attorney General Bill McCollum has reviewed the legislation, as have committee attorneys, and they believe it will withstand a potential legal challenge from the Obama administration. McCollum, a GOP candidate for governor, supports the legislation. However, Gov. Charlie Crist, a Republican-turned-Independent candidate for U.S. Senate, opposes the proposal. Alfredo Salas, 28, shows his license Thursday shortly after being pulled over and let off with a warning for a cracked windshield by the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office during a crime and immigration sweep. (AP Photo/Amanda Lee Myers)”We will continue to work with the language,” Snyder said. In Rhode Island, a bill that was introduced late in the session last year, and thus never reached a vote, is expected to be reintroduced in the 2011 session. Its two lead co-sponsors hope to have a bipartisan bill that will withstand a legal challenge after they meet with Arizona officials. “It exactly mirrors the Arizona law,” Rhode Island state Rep. Peter Palumbo, a Democrat, told CNSNews.com. “We will tweak the bill.” Palumbo will be going to Arizona with Rhode Island state Rep. Joseph Trillo, a Republican. Their legislation would essentially codify an existing executive order signed in 2008 by Gov. Donald Carcieri, a Republican, mandating immigration checks on all new state workers and ordering state police to assist federal immigration officials. This is Carcieri’s final year in office, so Palumbo said it is important to put the force of law behind what has already been Rhode Island policy. State troopers report illegal immigrants they encounter for speeding and other offenses to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office. Because of the executive order in 2008, corruption was discovered in the Department of Motor Vehicles, with drivers licenses being sold to illegal aliens, Palumbo said. In New Jersey, state Rep. Allison Little McHose, a Republican, introduced a series of proposals that focused primarily on requiring employers to verify the legality of workers, and preventing state benefits from going to illegal aliens. “New Jersey continues to be a sanctuary state for illegals because they know they can come to the state and receive many free benefits, like medical care,” McHose said in a statement. “The benefits may be free for those receiving them, but not the rest of the public because these costs are borne by the taxpayers.” Other states with proposals that mirror the Arizona law are Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Utah. “We are very pleased to announce 22 states are now following Arizona’s lead to pass versions of a law that has the support of 60 percent to 81 percent of Americans according to polls,” said ALIPAC President William Gheen in a statement. “State and federal candidates are rushing to display their support for Arizona’s law and immigration enforcement. We will not stop until all American states are protected from this invasion as mandated by the Constitution of the United States.” Crossposted at NB sister site CNS News
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Nearly Half of United States Considering Arizona-Style Immigration Legislation
The Media Research Center interviewed New Yorkers about their thoughts on the proposed Ground Zero Mosque located just two blocks away from the World Trade Center site. Overall, 63% of Americans oppose the mosque– here is what local residents have to say.
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Opinions: The Ground Zero Mosque
Posted in Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bennyhollywood, Breaking News, celeb news, Hollywood, House, media-research, mma, politics, stars, thoughts, two-blocks
NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams cited a “stunning number” from “a reputable pollster” (Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life and the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press) – which discovered “just under 20 percent of the American people believe the President is a Muslim” when “he is not” – to justify a full explanation from Chuck Todd on the mischaracterization of Barack Obama. “Look, let’s be clear,” NBC’s chief White House correspondent declared, “President Barack Obama was born in the United States and he is a Christian.” Without pointing out how confusion and ignorance about Obama’s religious affiliation extends beyond just Republicans and conservatives (41 percent of Democrats and 31 percent of liberals “don’t know” Obama’s religion), Todd fretted: “Ever since Mr. Obama became a national political figure, some of his political enemies have fanned the flames of religious prejudice by trying to make people believe the President is a Muslim.” Todd despaired that Obama’s focus on his job had left him vulnerable to abuse: During the campaign, Team Obama repeatedly refuted these charges with a special Web site they created called FightTheSmears. Well, when he took office, the anti-Obama campaign continued, but the White House tackled a slew of other issues, and efforts to refute those other attacks took a backseat. Completing his delivery of White House talking points, Todd asserted: “Ironically, Brian, during the campaign, some of the President’s political enemies attacked him for the way he practiced Christianity in Chicago where his minister – the Reverend Jeremiah Wright – was a controversial figure.” Over on FNC, however, Major Garrett noted that “while Mr. Obama’s political opponents are more likely to believe he’s a Muslim, uncertainty has seeped in the President’s political base.” In his piece for Special Report with Bret Baier, Garrett featured a soundbite from Alan Cooperman, the Associate Director of the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, who also appeared in Todd’s story. In the clip run on FNC, Cooperman observed: Less than half of Democrats say the President is a Christian [46%]. Less than half of African-Americans say the President is a Christian [43%]. Less than half of people who give Obama positive job approval ratings say he’s a Christian. Indeed, Pew’s report, “Growing Number of Americans Say Obama is a Muslim” ( Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life version; Pew Research Center for the People & the Press version) found: A new national survey by the Pew Research Center finds that nearly one-in-five Americans (18%) now say Obama is a Muslim, up from 11% in March 2009. Only about one-third of adults (34%) say Obama is a Christian, down sharply from 48% in 2009. Fully 43% say they do not know what Obama’s religion is…. Among Democrats, for instance, 46% say Obama is a Christian, down from 55% in March 2009. The belief that Obama is a Muslim has increased most sharply among Republicans (up 14 points since 2009), especially conservative Republicans (up 16 points). But the number of independents who say Obama is a Muslim has also increased significantly (up eight points). There has been little change in the number of Democrats who say Obama is a Muslim, but fewer Democrats today say he is a Christian (down nine points since 2009)…. But even among Democrats, fewer than half (46%) now identify his religion as Christian, down from 55% last year. On Thursday night, ABC’s World News skipped the poll numbers, but the CBS Evening News squeezed in a short item from Harry Smith in a newscast devoted almost entirely to Katie Couric in Afghanistan: The White House said today President Obama is a Christian and prays every day. A spokesman felt is necessary to make that clear after a poll came out showing a significant number of Americans believe the President is Muslim. 18 percent think so. That’s up from 11 percent last year. From the Thursday, August 19 NBC Nightly News: BRIAN WILLIAMS: A new opinion poll from a reputable pollster in this country just out today is getting a lot of attention tonight because it contains a stunning number. Just under 20 percent of the American people believe the President is a Muslim – he is not – on top of a growing number of people who believe he’s foreign-born – and he is not. We go behind these numbers tonight with our chief White House correspondent Chuck Todd who’s in our Washington newsroom. Chuck, good evening. CHUCK TODD: Good evening, Brian. Look, let’s be clear. President Barack Obama was born in the United States and he is a Christian. But ever since Mr. Obama became a national political figure, some of his political enemies have fanned the flames of religious prejudice by trying to make people believe the President is a Muslim. In fact, with some of these same political enemies who helped ignite another phony claim that the President wasn’t born in the United States. Well, during the campaign, Team Obama repeatedly refuted these charges with a special Web site they created called FightTheSmears. Well, when he took office, the anti-Obama campaign continued, but the White House tackled a slew of other issues, and efforts to refute those other attacks took a backseat. In March 2009, according to Pew Research, about half the country – 48 percent – correctly identified the President as a Christian, 11 percent believed he was a Muslim, and about a third – 34 percent – had no idea of his faith. Now these results are even more striking. Only 34 percent correctly told Pew pollsters that Mr. Obama is a Christian, while a whopping 18 percent – or nearly one in five Americans – say he is a Muslim, and 43 percent have no idea of his faith at all. Well, earlier today, I asked Alan Cooperman at Pew Research to explain why, in the face of clear evidence that the President is not a Muslim, that a growing number of Americans believe he is. ALAN COOPERMAN, PEW FORUM ON RELIGION AND PUBLIC LIFE: In the absence of information from the White House and from the President himself about his faith, about his faith life, about him going to church, messages from others – innuendo and rumor included – are able to maybe gain currency. TODD: Ironically, Brian, during the campaign, some of the President’s political enemies attacked him for the way he practiced Christianity in Chicago where his minister – the Reverend Jeremiah Wright – was a controversial figure. Now, today the White House said the President is a, quote, “committed Christian,” and prays every day. But aides said they were not surprised by the poll findings because, as one put it, quote, “The President doesn’t wear his religion on his sleeve,” Brian.

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NBC’s Todd Frets Obama’s Effort to ‘Tackle’ Nation’s Problems Allowed Enemies to Defame Him as Muslim
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Alan Grayson didn’t quite go Rosie-O’Donnell-fire-doesn’t-melt-steel demento , but he did his best . . . Appearing with guest-host Cenk Uygur on The Ed Show, the denatured Dem congressman from Florida, speaking of 9-11, claimed that Pres. George W. Bush “let it happen.” With Pres. Obama heading out to Martha’s Vineyard for his sixth vacation this year, Grayson, of all things, berated Bush for having gone on vacation in August. For good measure, the only way that Grayson referred to the Ground Zero mosque was as . . . an “athletic center” and a “health club.” Sit back, roll the video, and be entertained by the apparently nothing-left-to-lose Alan Grayson.
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Grayson On 9-11: Bush ‘Let It Happen’
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CNN’s American Morning and Newsroom programs on Thursday brought on Time magazine’s Bobby Ghosh to highlight his “Is America Islamophobic?” article and help promote his accusation that ” hate speech ” and ” bigotry ” have ” come out into the mainstream ” during the course of the debate over the proposed New York City mosque near Ground Zero. During his American Morning appearance, anchor Kiran Chetry hailed Ghosh’s article, which is the cover story of the upcoming August 30th issue of Time, as ” a very thoughtful piece .” Anchor Ali Velshi, who conducted the second interview of the Time deputy international editor, went further than his colleague: ” Okay, you’re American- Time magazine is required reading ….Bobby Ghosh… wrote the Islamophobia piece that I think everybody is going to have to read because if you are in this country, it’s part of the dialogue that we are involved in at this point .” But only days earlier, in an August 3 Time.com article about the imam behind the mosque, Ghosh stated that the “last legal hurdle to the proposed Islamic center near the site of the World Trade Center has been removed, but ignorance, bigotry and politics are more formidable obstacles …. Criticism [of the mosque] spans the gamut, from the ill-informed anguish of those who mistakenly view Islam as the malevolent force that brought down the towers to the ill-considered opportunism of right-wing politicians who see Islam as an easy target .” So the “thoughtful” Time editor whose latest is “required reading” even had the gall to criticize the families and the friends of those who died on 9/11, or who are generally emotionally-touched by the carnage of the attack. Ghosh didn’t speak so sharply during his two CNN appearance on Thursday, but he still went after what he labeled as “hate speech” in the controversy over the planned mosque. During the American Morning segment 15 minutes into the 8 am Eastern hour, Chetry first asked the editor, “Do you believe that this debate…typifies how people feel on larger scale about Muslims in America?” Ghosh seemed to walk back what he said on August 3: GHOSH: Well, let me clarify. You don’t have to be an Islamophobe to have reservations about this particular project. You don’t have to be prejudiced to have very genuine concerns about it . But what we have seen in the process of this debate and about mosques- not just here in New York, but all over this country- is that there has been a vicious- some very vicious hate speech has entered the mainstream of discussion in this country, and that is- certainly, we are seeing some Islamophobic views being expressed by people who we wouldn’t have expected it from – when you have legitimate political figures comparing the religion of Islam to Naziism. That is something on a scale that we have never seen before. The Time deputy editor pushed this point throughout this first interview: GHOSH: There are lots of people who feel- not unreasonably, they feel emotionally attached to that particular space. There are people who are concerned genuinely for the feelings of the families of the victims at the World Trade Center. There are people who have- as I said, perfectly legitimate reasons to have concerns. But what this debate has done is that has brought out- from previously, what was in the fringes into the mainstream, along with reasonable people- a lot of hate speech and a lot of very vicious hate speech that we haven’t heard before . CHETRY: And not just the mosque debate- the controversy over this one- but we’ve seen a bit of a change, many say, over the past few years. Any of it linked to the fact that we’ve seen more instances of either attempted or homegrown terror that we thought- I mean after 9/11, a lot of people said this is a problem the United States doesn’t have- what Europe has, problem with radicalization within our borders- and we have the Times Square bomber and a few other thwarted attempts or plots- has that added to this fear and feeling that Islam in America, perhaps, is radical in some way? GHOSH: Absolutely. There is certainly alarm that has grown in concern and suspicion. But there are also people who are taking advantage of this for political reasons- who are taking advantage of this concern- who are take advantage of the fact that a lot of Americans don’t know very much about Islam. It is a very small religion in this country, compared with some other places in the world. So many Americans- and we have a poll that shows this- we don’t really know that much about it. So- and now you have people, who for political reasons, are taking advantage of the combination of fear and lack of knowledge, and adding to this- this toxic language, and are spreading- sometimes, knowing full well- spreading lies and misrepresentations about the faith, and are tarring an entire community- an entire religion with the brush- that they are all from- that they’re all potentially terrorists . That your neighbor, who is an American citizen, and- by all polling, who’s proud to be an American citizen- happens to be a Muslim- may potentially be someone who’s plotting against us. Five and a half hours later, at the bottom of the 1 pm Eastern hour of CNN’s Newsroom, Ghosh repeated his main points, and even added an accusation of “racism” against the opponents of the mosque and other Islamic projects in the country: GHOSH: There’s a lot of Islamophobia growing in this country . It’s not as bad as some parts of Europe. There are no neo-Nazi thugs going around beating up American Muslims. But there is a lot of hate speech, and it’s getting louder and more vicious . And in these mosque protests, not just the one here in the New York, but all over the country- in these mosque protests, we’ve seen that hate speech take on a new and more venomous tinge to it. And here’s the worst part: it’s now come out into the mainstream and we’re listening to figures- not fringe lunatics, if you pardon the expression- but we’re listening to people who are held in wide respect in this country, say things that, in other contexts, would be considered completely inappropriate . VELSHI: Have you been able to come up with contexts to give examples of where it would be appropriate- inappropriate? Where we wouldn’t use this kind of language to talk about another identifiable group? GHOSH: I don’t think any identifiable group but the Muslims in this country. I don’t think Newt Gingrich could say that- could compare them with Nazis. I think that would be considered- he- it would never occur to him. But as somebody who I spoke to during the story told me, Islamophobia is now the accepted form of racism in this country. Muslims feel that people are allowed in the public sphere to say whatever they want to say about Islam, and they can get away with it. The editor then gave an example of what he saw was “hate speech” against Islam and/or Muslims: GHOSH: Things did get quite a lot worse after 9/11. We weren’t paying that much attention because there was a war coming. There was enormous human tragedy in the city. And so, we didn’t pay that much attention when someone like Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell compared the prophet Muhammed to a terrorist, and somebody else said he was a pervert. But if you were a Muslim-American, you were paying attention . Then things did quiet down, and to a substantial degree, the credit goes to President Bush, who made it clear right from the get-go, from the 12th of September- VELSHI: Our war is not with Muslims- GHOSH: It’s not with Muslims. It’s a religion of peace. It’s just a small band of extremists that we are fighting. But then more terrorist acts took place- more recently, there have been acts committed by Muslim-Americans. America went to war in two Muslim countries. You started hearing about suicide bombings on television every day. So, a certain fear and sense of alarm crept in, which is all right- which is permissible. But then you have people who have made it their business to capitalize on that sense of alarm for political gains- who have stoked up this thing and sort of deliberately spread very poisonous lies about the religion and about the people who practice that religion, and put it out there into the public theater . So Robertson and Falwell’s historically-accurate assertion that Mohammed was a 7th century-version of a terrorist, particularly in his treatment towards the Jews of the Arabian peninsula , is “hate speech” in Ghosh’s book. Furthermore, it is completely legitimate to point out that Muhammad was a pervert according to many culture’s standards, as his wife Aisha was betrothed to him when she was six or seven years old, and their marriage was consummated when she was nine or ten, according to the very hadith writings held up by Islam . One might guess it’s “hate speech” to point that out as well. Velshi, who worried on Wednesday’s Newsroom that if a government helped moved the site of the planned mosque, other governments would ” entertain petitions of moving Catholic churches away from the Oklahoma bombing site ,” since Timothy McVeigh was baptized Catholic, actually helped forward some of the editor’s talking points later in the interview: GHOSH: Four in ten Americans have a negative view of Islam, and that’s a very dangerous proportion . And so, some of the challenge for the Muslim community is to communicate better, is to give a better sense of what Islam really is, is to persuade people that they’re not all to be tarred with one brush. And ironically, that is what the people behind Park 51, the cultural center here in New York- that’s what they’re trying to do. They’re trying to communicate that Islam is not what many Americans perceive . That it is a- VELSHI: Right-right. But every part of their message has been lost? GHOSH: At the moment, yes. VELSHI: The name Cordoba- some people are associating it with Muslim rule and bloody battles, when, in fact, Cordoba was one of the finest times in relations between the major religions . GHOSH: Exactly right- in interfaith discourse- VELSHI: Yeah- GHOSH: And the great mosque of Cordoba that people are talking about and that Newt Gingrich was talking about- the man who built it, the Muslim prince who built it, bought it from a Christian group- paid money for it and bought it from a Christian group. And there was not a lot of alarm and anger raised then. It’s- as I said, we- I’m afraid, at this point, no rational discussion seems possible- VELSHI: Right- it’s just too hot. GHOSH: It will take us a little while, and temperatures have to cool down. Maybe we have to wait for this election to get over (unintelligible)- VELSHI: What’s difficult- and I was going to say- what’s difficult is that it’s been difficult for people who would like to have a reasonable discussion about this to do so, because they are then lumped with being politically correct or things like- in fact, it’s hard. We’ve heard politicians who have come out in defense of letting this mosque be built sound like they are apologists or some sort. Now, everybody now is backing away from the positions that defend free speech. GHOSH: No less a person than the president of the United States, which, for many Muslims, is quite disappointing. It will take an act of statesmanship. Statesmanship is when you can rise above the public sentiment and bring people along with you. If we went with the majority, there would still be segregation in this country. If we went with the majority- VELSHI: Women wouldn’t vote in this country . GHOSH: Exactly- American Jews would still be- still not have all their rights. So, it’s time for leadership. It’s time for our politicians- and if it doesn’t come from politics, it may have to come from somewhere else- it’s time for Americans to step up and say, this will not be allowed in this country. This country was built on finer principles than this, and we are going- we’re not going to tolerate this kind of prejudice, this kind of bigotry, and this kind of Islamophobia.

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CNN and Time Promote Accusation That ‘Bigotry’ is Driving Mosque Debate