"I admit it -- the liberal media were never that powerful, and the whole thing was often used as an excuse by conservatives for conservative failures."
William Kristol, as reported by the New Yorker, 5/22/95
Shamed believes in the liberal media, and he can’t believe that I don’t see it. He admits that the press was biased against Gore, but does not concede that this was a de facto bias in favor of Bush. I find that a little puzzling. I doubt that he would extend the same benefit of the doubt to the press if it was his candidate getting unfairly trashed. I can’t see him saying that the press was biased against Dole, while in no way being pro-Clinton. But no matter.
Here’s my take on “liberal” media bias, unoriginal as it may be: The media is a huge, amorphous beast, pumping out far more content than any human being can take in. It’s full of bias, to the left and the right, and there’s so much of it that cherry-picking is easy and fun. We all do it, but I wouldn’t try to point to (say) Howard Fineman’s
tongue-baths of Bush, declare “conservative media”, and expect to be taken seriously. He’s got on red-colored glasses, and I’ve got on blue-colored glasses, and a fair judge shouldn’t really trust either one of us as an impartial judge of bias.
However, conservatives have made the “liberal media” part of the party line, and they are deliberate and aggressive at picking out left-wing bias. There is no proportional pressure from the left to avoid right-wing bias. It seems to me that when editors constantly have to watch their left, they inexorably move to the right. I’m reminded of an (unlinkable, sorry) editorial in the Houston Chronicle. The editor wrote a column addressing allegations of bias in the editorial page, which he vehemently denied. He said that they often got charges of liberal bias, but it wasn’t true. As evidence, he asserted that the Chronicle hadn’t endorsed a Democratic presidential candidate since Johnson. Case closed. The obvious counter-argument, that this implies a conservative bias, seemed to never occur to him.
Looking at the press in the aggregate, bias is a little easier to see. And it sure ain’t left-wing.
According to this page, 138 papers endorsed Bush, while 52 endorsed Gore. What kind of liberal media endorses the conservative candidate 70% of the time?
Did you see the study that
FAIR did about the choice of guests on Fox News and the bad ol’ Clinton News Network last summer? It turns out that “left-wing” CNN talked to 57% Republicans on Wolf Blitzer Reports, while Fox talked to 89% Republicans on Special Report with Brit Hume. What would be the appropriate, non-slanted proportional representation of elected officials? 75% Republican?
I’m not the first to shake my head at charges of “liberal bias” after the press spent years tearing down Clinton. Al Franken once said something like, “I guess CNN is liberally biased because it only spends 23 ½ hours a day covering Monica Lewinsky.” I have to wonder about a liberal media that would breathlessly cover the Bush White House story about the Clinton team’s trashing of the White House, without a single photo or on-the-record quote. When they had to admit that the vandalism story was a fabrication, that story got printed deep inside. When it came to Clinton and especially Gore scandals, this happened over and over and over again. The right just threw pile after pile of crap at them, without worrying about whether it was true or not, and right wing pundits kept citing “scandals” that had long since been discredited. How many times did you see some dumbass pundit use non-stories like “Love Canal” or “Love Story” to prove that Gore was a Big Fat Liar? (In the case of the "Love Canal" story, the liberal media went so far as to
change Gore's quote, from "That was the one that started it all," to "I was the one who started it all.") How many times did you hear Clinton called a "draft-dodger"? How many times did you hear it reported that Bush
actually went AWOL in 1972-1973, skipping 18 months of his National Service duty? If you're being fair, I think you'll admit the answers are "a lot" and "not very often". Does anyone remember when the New York Times printed the "Clinton's black baby" story, based on an entirely false story in the Drudge Report? Are we reading the same media?
"Based on its recent direct-mail campaign, one of the [Leadership Institute's] primary fund- raising strategies is to convince conservative donors that its graduates can neutralize what it regards as left-leaning news media.
"Liberal media bias is out of control," said the letter, which was mailed over [Rep. J.C.] Watts's signature, but which [the institute's founder and president] Mr. Blackwell said was written at the institute. "It's indecent. It's time you and I did something about it."
When asked for examples of how bias by news organizations was undermining the presidency of George W. Bush, Mr. Blackwell complained about what he described as excessive press attention paid to Mr. Bush's critics, like Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona.
An alumna of the institute, who was recommended by Mr. Blackwell, found it difficult to cite cases of "out of control" liberal bias in recent news coverage.
"I have been in local TV newsrooms in Phoenix, Seattle and Pittsburgh, and I don't think there is bias, either liberal or conservative," said the alumna, Tallee Whitehorn, 27, an assistant news director at WTAE- TV, an ABC affiliate in Pittsburgh. "This is not really a place for it, unless I wanted to get a lot of hate mail, which I don't."
The young people in Mr. Montini's class were also hard-pressed to come up with examples of the news- media bias mentioned in Mr. Watts's fund-raising letter.
Mr. Tietz said he had been sensitized to such matters in recent months by reading conservative books, including Whitaker Chambers's "Witness." That book, Mr. Tietz said, "explains the deep-down meanness of the left."
But as for seeing that meanness in coverage of President Bush, Mr. Tietz said, "Honestly, I haven't noticed it one way or another."
from a June 11, 2001 New York Times article on the Leadership Institute (a training camp for conservative journalists) titled "In Virginia, Young Conservatives Learn How to Develop and Use Their Political Voices"
Shamed also asks if I can find an example of disgusting rhetoric from conservatives, like the shameful quote he cites where somebody wishes for the death of Clarence Thomas. Shamed, I’ve got a day job, but I could pull quotes all day.
I immediately thought of Jesse Helms declaration that his Commander-in-Chief needed a bodyguard to visit his state. I also thought of John Derbyshire, when he all but called for the
death of Chelsea Clinton, who isn't even a politician.
“Chelsea is a Clinton. She bears the taint; and though not prosecutable in law, in custom and nature the taint cannot be ignored. All the great despotisms of the past — I'm not arguing for despotism as a principle, but they sure knew how to deal with potential trouble — recognized that the families of objectionable citizens were a continuing threat. In Stalin's penal code it was a crime to be the wife or child of an "enemy of the people". The Nazis used the same principle, which they called Sippenhaft, "clan liability". In Imperial China, enemies of the state were punished "to the ninth degree": that is, everyone in the offender's own generation would be killed, and everyone related via four generations up, to the great-great-grandparents, and four generations down, to the great-great-grandchildren, would also be killed.”
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think that Derbyshire was disciplined in any way for this. He continues to write for the premiere journal of conservative opinion.
Can I use Ann Coulter as an example? She want to kill me, just as a precaution:
"They should take a few liberals out and shoot them in order to intimidate all the other liberals, because if you don’t intimidate them, they’ll turn traitor."
Here’s the incomparable bipartisan BS detector
SpinSanity on Ann Coulter:
“At the basic level, her columns often open with inflammatory attacks like calling Ted Kennedy an "adulterous drunk" (1/18) and joking that President Clinton had "crack pipes on the White House Christmas tree" …
Most name-calling, however, is directed at Clinton, who is mentioned in 17 of her 28 columns (that's 61% - I'll omit a links list). Coulter calls him, among other things, a "celebrated felon" (3/29), a "known" felon (5/24), a "pervert, liar and a felon" (6/21), a "criminal" (1/11), "a flim-flam artist" (1/11) and a "prominent" criminal (3/29). More extended cheap shots include a "Thai sex tour" joke (4/12), a reference to a Thai "sex emporium" named after him (2/19)…
Here's one example from a column on the controversy over Ted Olson's nomination to be Solicitor General: "Liberals are always wrapping their comically irrelevant charges in a haze of lies..." (5/24) Or consider this dark statement in the context of a discussion about Jesse Jackson's affair: "Liberals always get a lot of credit for suffering, while never actually being made to suffer." (1/25)
Coulter's world is cartoonish. Liberals are "terrorists" (1/11) and a "cult" (2/22) who "can never just make a principled argument" (3/22). Their arguments are portrayed as hysterical (2/9, 4/5, 6/15), screaming (1/18, 6/21) or starting political World War III (2/9, 3/8). Meanwhile, as Coulter depicts it, conservatives are being persecuted ceaselessly. For example, when The New York Times urged Bush to "crack down" on anti-abortion activists who threaten doctors, she wrote this: "[i]n their darkest fantasies, this is what liberals claim McCarthyism was." (4/19)”
"Throughout 2000, with less pretense of objectivity than ever, [Tim] Russert dutifully echoed the Republican theme that the Democratic nominee was “dishonest”. Week after week, the topic on Meet The Press was the “repeated lying” of Al Gore. One lowlight of Russert’s descent into shameless propagandist occurred when it was revealed that George W. Bush had been convicted of drunk driving in Maine, thereby proving that the Republican candidate had been deceitful when he was questioned about whether he had ever been arrested.
Russert’s immediate response on national television was, “The question on everybody’s mind is, ‘Did the Gore campaign have something to do with the release of this information?’” That was not the question on everybody’s mind; a poll taken immediately after the revelation showed that most Americans did not believe that Gore was involved.
It was, however, the question being faxed nationally by the Republicans in a memo circulated to their operatives who were responsible for diverting attention from the fact that their candidate was guilty of, for want of a better term, “repeated lying”.
During the 2000 presidential campaign, Russert established a link between Meet The Press and the G.O.P. opposition research team that was responsible for digging up dirt/manufacturing dirt on Al Gore. On election night, after conferring with Welch, Russert demanded that Gore quit the race before the legally mandated recount took place in Florida. The next morning, on the Today Show, he repeated the demand."
David Podvin article on Tim Russert
Am I cherry-picking? Sure I am. But I want to make the point that just because you didn't like something you saw in the New York Times, that doesn't prove a "liberal media."
UPDATE: I should have cited
this page, from which I got the long italicized quotes. I also just re-read it and noticed this little fair-and-balanced fact:"FAIR has documented that conservative or right-leaning "think" tanks (like Heritage, Cato, RAND or our favourite, the "Family Research" council) received more than 50% of media citations in 1998 and 1999, while left-wing and progressive think tanks overally received less than 13%." They also had a link to
this study, an examination of coverage of Election 2000. In their coverage, the most common theme in Gore's coverage was "scandal-tainted", and the most common theme in Bush's coverage ws "a different kind fo Republican."
If anyone decides to take this argument further, they're probably going to cite the study that showed that 89% of reporters voted for Clinton in 1992. Check out
this link, which contains a serious critique of the methodology of that study. They only got back 139 surveys out of 323 sent out, skipped conservative journals, and skewed heavily toward tiny regional newspapers.