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Fox News Doctors Photos

Posted Jul 4th 2008 1:31AM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, Video, Fox News

Who can take these guys seriously anymore? No Fox News "reporter" or "news anchor" should ever be hired in a real news station anymore. You don't agree, then watch this:



They've become a self-parody. "Fair and balanced" has become a synonym for "we do the exact opposite of what we claim."

Watch the Best Web Show Here and Best You Tube Channel Here

Russian Dissenters Erased — Literally

Posted Jun 4th 2008 5:25PM by Ada Calhoun
Filed under: TV, Russia

The New York Times yesterday ran a shocking article about how freedom of the press simply doesn't exist when it comes to Russian television.

This photo, from the article, shows a pundit who was digitally removed (that's his disembodied hand and leg next to the microphone guy) from a broadcast because his opinion was not Putin-approved.

It makes you appreciate the U.S., doesn't it?

NYT Exposes Pentagon Propaganda Aimed at the US Population

Posted Apr 22nd 2008 10:52PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, Military, Video

The New York Times has a terrific new article that explains how the Pentagon used former military commanders as puppets to fill the airwaves with pro-Bush propaganda. It sounds unbelievable but it makes perfect sense when you read it because the military analysts needed the access to the Pentagon to make money as lobbyists and advisers to defense contractors. They set up the perfect scheme for everyone get what they want, except for the American people, who were purposely misled and deceived by the people they trusted the most.

It's an absolute must read. Click here for a link to the article.

Below is my very brief summary of the article:




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Sex Scandal at the New York Times

Posted Feb 24th 2008 7:18PM by Dinesh D'Souza
Filed under: Scandal, John McCain, New York Times, Sex

Imagine reading an article that began like this: "The New York Times has been rocked by reports that its coverage of the 2008 election has been sorely compromised by an alleged homosexual relationship between executive editor Bill Keller and liberal columnist Paul Krugman.

"Waves of anxiety have swept through Times staffers who have been concerned about Krugman routinely showing up by Keller's side. Convinced that the relationship had become romantic, some senior staff at the paper have been trying to keep the two apart. These staffers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said they warned Keller not to keep his office door closed especially when Krugman was inside.

"Concerns that Krugman's strong support for the Democrats have shaped New York Times coverage of the upcoming election underscore a paradox. The newspaper is widely suspected of tailoring its news coverage to support its political ideology--'all the news that fits'--even though the Times likes to portray itself as objective: 'all the news that's fit to print.'

"Both Keller and Krugman have denied the allegations although such denials are to be expected in such situations. Now some staffers are worried that Keller's coverage of the election may be influenced by his feelings for Krugman. 'We're worried that Krugman is threatening to break it off,' one reporter noted, 'if Keller doesn't give favorable treatment to his candidate and stick it to the Republicans.'"

Incredible? Absurd? Actually, this fictitious article is very, very similar to the actual article that the New York Times ran on John McCain. The key phrases in my made-up account are directly lifted from the Times' actual account. In that story, the newspaper alleged that McCain was having an affair with a 40-year-old lobbyist, naming her as Vicki Iseman. The Times also suggested that McCain gave special treatment to Iseman's clients.

What evidence that the newspaper produce for these explosive allegations? None, and this is after months of investigation by a whole team of reporters. It cited unnamed McCain staffers who said they had become concerned about appearances of impropriety. (None alleged any actual impropriety.) It cited two former McCain staffers who were by their own admission disenchanted with McCain, although even they refused to give their names.

Stung by criticism that followed this irresponsible piece, Keller told the public editor of The Times, "If the point of the story was to allege that McCain had an affair with a lobbyist, we'd have owed readers more compelling evidence than the conviction of senior staff members. But that was not the point of the story. The point of the story was that his close aides felt the relationship constituted reckless behavior and feared it would ruin his career."

I can testify from personal experience that this sort of weasel-behavior is entirely in keeping with the way the New York Times does business. Note that in the episode that follows I am giving actual names and not citing any anonymous sources.

Several years ago one of the paper's leading reporters Fox Butterfield did an article on The Dartmouth Review, which I edited as an undergraduate in the early 1980s. Seeking to discredit me, Butterfield quoted me as having written in the paper, "The question is not whether women should be educated at Dartmouth. The question is whether women should be educated at all."

A witty line, perhaps, only I didn't write it. The line was actually written by another student, Keeney Jones. When I called Butterfield to point this out, the man insisted, "No, you wrote it." So I demanded, "Where did I write it?" Butterfield pointed out that I had written an article about the Dartmouth Review in another magazine where I had quoted the line. I protested, "But I was merely citing controversial lines that had appeared in the student paper. How can you say I wrote that line when I made it very clear that Jones wrote it?"

To this Butterfield responded, "But by quoting it you have made it your line." I was dumbstruck. The best I could say to him was, "And I guess that since you have now quoted the line yourself, it has now become your line." The important point here is that we are dealing not with some dimwit but with a Pulitzer-prize winning reporter for America's leading newspaper. Yet apparently such dishonesty is the way they operate at the Times.

Some critics have been calling for Keller to be fired but I suspect that a much wider fumigation is required to clean house over there. The Times has long become a liberal rag and as incidents like these pile up, more and more people will recognize that the New York Times is no longer the great newspaper it once was.

Mitt Romney Has to be the Sickest Man in America

Posted Feb 22nd 2008 1:37AM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, John McCain, Video, Mitt Romney

Mitt Romney spent so much money to try to become president and if the New York Times had just released the McCain story when they first had it in December, he might have pulled it off. He has to be the sickest man in America.

Watch this short video to find out how much Romney spent on the campaign and how much it cots him per delegate:




Watch TYT Here

NY Times Held McCain Story Because of Republican Intimidation

Posted Feb 21st 2008 1:32PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, John McCain, New York Times

Conservatives are trying to spin the latest McCain scandal -- which by the way has a lot more to do with his hypocrisy on campaign finance reform than it has to with the possible sexual infidelity -- as a NYT hit job on McCain.

That's ridiculous on so many counts. First, the New York Times endorsed John McCain. Second, they couldn't have released it at a better time for him -- after he has basically won the nomination but many long months before the general election. Third, it's just not supported by the facts. In fact, the opposite conclusion is true -- they were intimidated by McCain's campaign into holding the story for as long as they did.

They would have never held this story if it was a Democratic nominee. They would have went to the presses instantly. But they're scared of conservatives because of decades of right-wing whining about the "liberal media."

In this article on our website, I detail three different instances when the New York Times held stories that would have hurt Republican candidates because of political considerations. They only run the stories after the elections or if a rival paper is about to out the story, as happened in this case.

The New York Times and the rest of the media has to find the courage to get beyond this constant belly-aching by the right-wing. If you have a story you believe is true and that you have the facts to back up, it's crazy to get bullied into not running it. The right time to print a story is the minute you have it confirmed. Holding the story makes your actions more political, not less.

To paraphrase Nike: Just run it!

Watch Young Turks Here

Want Evidence of Media Bias? Look No Further

Posted Sep 20th 2007 6:07AM by Dinesh D'Souza
Filed under: Iraq, Media, Controversy

Imagine if the New York Times gave half-price ad space to the National Right to Life Committee or the National Rifle Association. It would never happen, of course, but if it did, you can envision the left-wing clamor. Liberal groups would be demanding that the Times extend to them the same discounts.

Yet there has been no general outcry over the revelation that the New York Times gave a full page of ad space in the front section to the liberal activist group Moveon.org for a mere $65,000. That's about one-third of the Times' listed rate for a full-page ad. When blogger Jake Tapper asked the newspaper to account for this favorable treatment, Times spokesperson Catherine Mathis went into gobbledygook mode, saying that the Times has multiple rates which depend on multiple factors and in any case the paper has a policy against saying what any particular group has been charged. This has all the coherence of a typical New York Times editorial. Certainly if the Times were to offer a package discount to its regular advertisers (say 30 percent off if you buy five ads, or five ads for the price of four) then differential pricing makes sense. But none of this applies to Moveon.org, which was buying a one-time ad for a distinct political purpose.

And what was that purpose? To accuse General David Petraeus of being General Betray Us. Someone at Moveon.org obviously thought this an extremely witty play on words. Moveon.org went on to accuse Petraeus of cooking the books and manipulating the facts to back up Bush's surge and his Iraq policy more generally. Did Moveon.org uncover any evidence that Petraeus was guilty of rigging the data? No, but apparently Moveon.org has no qualms about making unsubstantiated accusations.

Clearly the editors of the New York Times wanted to help Moveon.org in its goal of smearing General Petraeus, so that their own ongoing campaign against Bush's policies could be given a boost. Now I don't care if the editorial writers of the Times blast Bush on the opinion page. That's their prerogative. What is shameful here is that a newspaper that pretends to be the paper of record--"all the news that fits"--has been using its front page and its news pages to wage a war against the war. Even this is not enough: the Times also sees fit to charge one advertising rate to left-wing groups and another to everyone else. Isn't this a clear example of how biased some media outlets like the New York Times are? I'd like to hear what you have to say.

All The News That Fits

Posted Jul 18th 2007 6:22PM by Dinesh D'Souza
Filed under: George Bush, Media, Terrorism

To read today's lead New York Times headline pictured below, you would conclude the following: 1) The war with Al Qaeda is being lost, 2) The blame lies with the Bush administration, and c) the Bush people recognize this.

Read the story, however, and the following becomes clear. 1) The article deals solely with the rise of Al Qaeda's strength in a single country, Pakistan, 2) If there is blame to be assigned, it falls primarily on the Pakistani dictator, General Pervez Musharraf, and c) the Bush people sensibly recognize there is a problem over there that they have to deal with.

Since many more people read headlines than read entire news stories, we can be sure that a greater number were misled by this coverage than enlightened by it. I recognize that all newspapers have space constraints with their headlines, but somehow at The Times things always seem to work to the detriment of the Bush administration. Why doesn't this newspaper carry out its war against Bush's foreign policy on its editorial page instead of also extending it to the front page?

New York City Edition | National Edition

frontpage

The Surge is Not Working

Posted Jun 5th 2007 4:58AM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Iraq, Young Turks, Military, Video



Here is the New York Times article we are referencing above. Read it for yourself. If you still think the surge is going to work, you are seriously delusional. Get some help.

Devastating excerpts from the article below:

We Torture People

Posted Jun 4th 2007 4:35AM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: George Bush, Young Turks, Terrorism, Dick Cheney

We torture people. I keep repeating this because we were brought up to believe the United States of America is a force of good in the world and we would never do anything like torture. I used to believe this because it used to be true. That is until Dick Cheney came into office.

Read this article by the New York Times explaining what we do to our detainees. Here's an excerpt:

"A. B. Krongard, who was the executive director of the C.I.A., the No. 3 post at the agency, from 2001 to 2004, agreed with that assessment but acknowledged that the agency had to create an interrogation program from scratch in 2002.


He said officers quickly consulted counterparts in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Israel and other countries to compile a 'catalog' of techniques said to be effective against Arab and Muslim prisoners. They added other methods drawn from those that American troops were trained to withstand in case of capture."


Gee, I wonder what we learned from the Egyptians and the Saudis about how to interrogate detainees. And as the rest of the article explains, we "reverse engineered" CIA programs meant to resist Soviet torture techniques to apply those same techniques against our own detainees. So, we adopted old Soviet torture techniques as our own. Makes you proud.

Some Cultures Are Better Than Others

Posted Apr 19th 2007 5:56PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Young Turks, Religion, Islam, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Christianity

I don't believe in cultural relativism. Some cultures are better than others.

Overall, it's obviously very hard to make definitive judgments on entire cultures, though sometimes people make it easy on you. But what is more doable is isolating what works and doesn't work in the different cultures throughout the world. First on the list of things that do not work is religious fundamentalism.

I believe we are not fighting a war on terror, instead we are fighting a war against fundamentalism. If you want my thoughts on this broader idea, then you can read this earlier piece on Huffington Post. By the way, I love you for caring enough to read it, if you did. If you didn't, since I'm not a religious fundamentalists, I love you anyway and promise not to stone you to death.

What's driven me into a rage today (yes, I understand that's a bit ironic since that rage is one of the big problems caused by fervent fundamentalism) is this article in the New York Times about Iran. I don't often do this -- please read it. It does such a great job of explaining what we're up against.

Iran allows Muslim vigilante groups to murder people for "moral corruption." That is beyond sick. That is wrong. A culture that allows that is wrong. There is no relativism. They killed a young engaged couple for walking together. They were engaged. They were walking together.

Iran's Supreme Court said their murder was perfectly acceptable. Screw relativism. We have to find a way to defeat that culture because it is a plague on this earth.

New York City Police Spy on Liberal Groups

Posted Mar 26th 2007 3:41PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Politics, Young Turks, Republicans, GOP, Religion



Read the New York Times article on this story here.

The Young Turks

Is It Possible to Have a Real Debate on the Internet?

Posted Mar 7th 2007 5:52PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Politics, Young Turks

I can't believe I got sucked back into this thing. I think the reason I am writing this post is because I can't quite believe that we don't even agree on basic facts in this case. If we disagreed after we established the facts, then that's very understandable. But if we can't even agree on facts, then the whole conversation becomes pointless.

I guess I want to see if there's any sense in having these discussions and debates anymore. That is why I'm taking one last stab at this thing.

Honestly, I was shaken by one of the reader's comments. He said that he doesn't believe anything I cite as evidence because it comes from the New York Times. The New York Times says they saw a videotape of how Padilla was handled in custody, and that the government gave this tape to the defense and that pictures from the tape are in the court file. If you don't believe that is a fact, then we can't really have a reasonable discussion because we won't have any tools with which to communicate.

If conservative readers only believe conservative commentators, and vice versa, then agreement becomes impossible. There have to be neutral arbiters of fact and we have to be able to agree on some things as clearly true.

Part One Rebuttal

Posted Mar 7th 2007 10:39AM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: Politics, Young Turks

Now, I see why people don't bother to debate conservative bloggers. They are impervious to proof. They will defend their position, no matter what evidence is presented. So, this grows a little tiresome. Nonetheless, it's hard to resist batting these things down because it's so easy.

Mirengoff instinctually believes the government, because why would they ever lie (like about weapons of mass destruction or Iraq connections to Al-Qaeda)? I, on the other hand, am more convinced by Padilla's lawyers in this case. Aha! They have me -- I am an enemy of the state. I dare side with the accused instead of the government.

Why do I believe Padilla's lawyers when they say Padilla was subjected to sensory deprivation? Because they have it on videotape. I guess the Mirengoff didn't bother to read the New York Times article I attached (ba humbug, journalists, what would they know?!). Here is the beginning of the article:

List of Hideous Offenses By the Bush Administration

Posted Mar 5th 2007 1:52PM by Cenk Uygur
Filed under: George Bush, Media, Young Turks, Republicans, GOP

The New York Times has a great editorial today outlining the list of horrific abuses by the Bush administration. This is not about Iraq, manipulation of intelligence, Hurricane Katrina response or any of the other myriad of problems for this team. It is only about core violations of American principles. It's a long list.

Read the NYT editorial here. It's good to see the press showing some courage again and pointing out the obvious.

The Young Turks

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