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Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Brent Bozell :: Townhall.com Columnist
CNN's Slanted Slice of America
by Brent Bozell
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What was the biggest suprise of Election Day?



Every four years, journalists present themselves as objective questioners in presidential debates only to be roundly, and correctly, denounced by conservatives for being anything but. When, oh when, we ask, will America be able to enjoy a candidate forum free from liberal reporters inserting their slanted worldviews into the discussion? When, oh when, we ask ourselves, will they get out of the way?

It looks like we should be very careful what we ask for.

On Tuesday night, CNN did this -- or at least said it was doing this. The network teamed up with the video site YouTube to host a debate of the Democratic contenders and pretenders in South Carolina. This time, the primary questioners were amateur video-makers who submitted their questions to YouTube, competing for CNN airtime like a political version of "American Idol." CNN puffed itself up as "groundbreaking" for this effort, suggesting it was offering "real questions from real people."

The questioners CNN presented may have given the debate a different flavor, but what the consumer was really left with was the aftertaste of too much soda bubbles and syrup. It was a dumbed-down debate, with center stage dedicated to bouts of silliness, shameless attention-seeking and emotionally manipulative questions.

Rather than an objective discussion about gay "rights," there was the question from two lesbians wondering why they couldn't get married. Rather than a factual question about Iraq, there was the angry plea from the grieving father of a fallen soldier that we withdraw before he lost another son. This kind of "moderation" might be enjoyable to view as an alternative to the norm -- like watching the heart-wrenching or embarrassing tryouts of "Idol" wannabes -- but it wasn't exactly the highfaluting rebirth of Athens.

These interviewers wanted to be taken seriously, but many were just buffoons who made fools of the network that likes to bill itself as "the most trusted name in news." CNN selected hammy Tennessee hillbillies looking like "Hee Haw" rejects and a cartoon snowman speaking in a falsetto voice about global warming as presidential candidate questioners, along with several lame musical interludes where the inquirers displayed their questions on crudely written cue cards.

Is this really the state of affairs in our democratic experiment, circa 2007? If so, God help us all.

There was a more serious concern for the public watching this CNN spectacle. Every time "objective" networks claim to seek the voice of the American people, they seem to think that 75 percent or 80 percent of Americans are squarely on the political left of the spectrum, people who think Dennis Kucinich is in the mainstream. Questions from the left dominated the CNN proceedings, lamenting the Democrats' slowness on Iraq withdrawal, honoring "gay marriage" and scrapping everything George W. Bush ever proposed.

Some questions consisted of tired, and thoroughly false, liberal attack lines that would warm a Democrat's heart, as in asking how race and class skewed the response to Hurricane Katrina, with the insulting assumption that President Bush said: "Oh, it's just black people. Take your time responding." Predictably, this insulting question drew an equally truth-challenged response from Sen. Chris Dodd: "The American president had almost no response whatsoever to the people of that city, New Orleans." Where were the CNN fact-checkers? Bush signed a $51 billion aid package within 10 days.

Some might say we shouldn't be shocked by these loaded inquiries because it was, after all, a debate among and for partisan Democrats. But if so, CNN shouldn't pretend this to be the collective voice of America. It simply can't have it both ways. But CNN never admitted that slant. CNN might claim that there's a left-wing tilt in the number of submissions that they received because of the partisan interest. But that's no excuse for CNN to skew the proceedings so dramatically and leave the impression that "the people" out there think Ted Kennedy's way too conservative.

CNN tipped viewers off to its ideological direction when it continuously praised all the "passionate" and "thoughtful" submissions in preview segments leading up to the debate. When CNN aired environmental questions, they came from parents holding children panicking about the global-warming menace. When it aired health-care questions, the questioners wanted to know why government subsidies are so inadequate. When it aired "faith" questions, they were from people scandalized by too much old-time religion in our politics.

The Republicans will also subject themselves to the CNN-YouTube bubble machine on a Monday night in September. They will be foolish to expect a similar treatment. It's rare for the liberal TV news networks to conduct a town-hall presidential debate that even splits the questions down the middle ideologically. Charlie Gibson did it in the second Bush-Kerry debate in 2004. Now that debate, with its simple one-for-you and one-for-you, seemed strangely groundbreaking.

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About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
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©Creators Syndicate
CNN hardly Liberal
Arby writes: "Many of us are not interested in gay marriage, and no one I know is interested in reparation for slavery."

Most African Americans are not interested in Gay marriage, but are very interested in reparations for slavery. White Americans own most of the real property in America, owns most of the businesses, have stock portfolios and command the best jobs. They have benefited from the GI Bill, Social security, defined pensions plans. Now the eltites are changing the game of the economy and we are increasingly dividing the country into the haves and the have-nots.

The right wing conservatives seem mean spirited and would allow a company to pollute the environment even if their own family's health was affected. To them it seems all about money. Not very Christ like to me. Warmongers. Not very Christ like. Never a hand out to the poor but worship the rich. Not very Christlike.
Lie and cheat to gain advantage. Not very Christ like.

Response from YouTube debate questioner
Mr. Bozell,
I am the YouTube viewer that submitted the question in regards to how race and class impacted the recovery efforts in New Orleans.

As a recent graduate of Tulane University in New
Orleans, where I double-majored in Sociology and
Marketing, not only would I argue that it was not my debate question that was insulting, but rather, your subsequent narrow-minded and judgmental response is clearly the "insulting assumption."

You assume, that because I ask a question about race and class that I'm liberal. You assume that you know what was going through the mind of President Bush prior to and post-Katrina. I did not assume, as you so falsely claim, that President Bush's thought process was: "Oh, it's just black people. Take your time responding." However, since you're putting words in my mouth, let's just say that was my belief. If it were,would the fact that it took President Bush until Friday, September 2nd, a full FIVE days after the storm hit to even take an AERIAL tour of New Orleans be compelling enough to support that logic? Or, how about the fact that the day Katrina made landfall, August 29th, 2005, President Bush was busy taking photos at a discussion on prescription drugs for seniors? Still not enough? The day after the storm hit, instead of making the city of New Orleans a priority, Bush appeared in Coronado, CA for a VJ Day Commemoration.

Now, juxtapose that logic with these statistics: 67% of the New Orleans population prior to Katrina was made up of African Americans, 28% of New Orleanians were living below the poverty line, and over 100,000 New Orleans residents did not have access to the private transportation needed to evacuate the city prior to the storm. FEMA and The Department of Homeland Security conducted a study in 2003 of "Hurricane Pam," which predicted exactly what would happen should a category-3 storm directly hit New Orleans. The report outlined that there was a population of over 100,000 residents that would be left behind as a result of lack of transportation, yet, because the funding for this program was cut before the study concluded, many key responsibilities that were to be delegated were instead left "To Be Determined." Much of the reason for this cut in funding was due to the war in Iraq. So when it comes down to it, I'll ask you... do you think I would be able to support my thinking if in fact I did believe that President Bush said "Oh, it's just black people.Take your time responding."

Sometimes I wonder if people like you would better be able to empathize if you spent one day in someone else's shoes. As trite as it may be, that's really the only way to truly test whether you in actuality believe that race and class had nothing to do with the FAILURE of a response in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina.

Thank you for your time,
Morgan Griffith

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