Vol 1. No. 25.Baltimore, MD  Wed September 08th 2010GIVING YOU THE NEWS THE MSM IGNORES 
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O's chance at sweep in Bronx slips away
O's chance at sweep in Bronx slips away

Bell doesn't hide awe at Yankee Stadium
Bell doesn't hide awe at Yankee Stadium

Innings piling up, Arrieta remains strong
Innings piling up, Arrieta remains strong

Durable Albers key to O's bullpen
Durable Albers key to O's bullpen

Arrieta baffles Yanks, topping Sabathia
Arrieta baffles Yanks, topping Sabathia

Jones back for O's after injury swarm
Jones back for O's after injury swarm

Yes, it was a hot one
The temperature at BWI-Marshall Airport reached 91 degrees Tuesday, setting a record for the most 90-degree days in a calendar year and topping off more than eight months of weather extremes in Maryland. Since last winter's blizzards and record accumulations, 2010 has brought drought, crop losses, rising numbers of heat-related deaths and the hottest summer on record for Baltimore. Above, Kelly West tried to beat the heat in July with an egg custard snowball on North Bethel Street in East Baltimore.




U.S. Senate to hold rape hearing
Hearing spurred in part by Sun reporting on cases in city

Concerned that police departments nationwide fail to fully investigate rapes, a congressional committee will examine the issue next week at a hearing spurred partly by a Baltimore Sun examination of the systemic underreporting of sex crimes.




Board upholds license suspension against doctor in abortion injury
State panel grants continuance to lawyers for second physician

State panel grants lawyers for second physician in case a continuance




HealthKey: Inflammatory bowel disease on the rise in kids
The reason more children being diagnosed with 'adult' disease is a mystery

For 10-year-old Jacob Krause, getting ready for the new school year wasn't a simple matter of back-to-school shopping. It also involved working out logistics for getting to the bathroom as many as 20 times during a single school day.




Mikulski: Plans to burn Quran 'disgraceful,' 'un-American'




Police: W.Va. man killed during drug deal in S.W. Baltimore
Victim found in Edmondson Village neighborhood

A 35-year-old West Virginia man was fatally shot Tuesday night in Southwest Baltimore during what police said was a drug transaction.




Critically injured Columbia man charged in fire, ex-wife's death
Damon Willie White, 34, is in critical condition at Maryland Shock Trauma

A Columbia man has been charged with murder and arson in the death of his ex-wife and subsequent apartment fire, according to Howard County police.




Philip Carroll of Ellicott City family, Doughoregan Manor dies
Carroll was buried Tuesday in a simple graveside service on estate

Philip Carroll, the 86-year-old patriarch of historic Doughoregan Manor in Ellicott City, died Saturday and was buried Tuesday at what was called a simple graveside service for less than two dozen people at the nearly three-century-old Carroll family estate.




Baltimore School for the Arts leader to depart at end of year
Leslie Shepard to leave school after 32 years

Leslie Shepard, director of the Baltimore School for the Arts who has worked at the prestigious school since it opened, will leave her post after this academic year, officials announced Wednesday.



Comments about Baltimore Reporter:

Perhaps the best part of blogging or the internet in general is the occasional discovery of something unexpected.Over on Baltimore Reporter and Conservative Thoughts is a great and thought provoking article by Robert Farrow.I hope you will follow this link and read this great post.

from conservativecontracts.com


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Once again - as happens so often - I have been positioned here on the living room couch, immersed in your blog. You are better than Fox News.

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10/22/2009

Thuggery in the White House. Obama Continues to Try to Control The Media, and the MSM Continues to Cover for Him.
Filed under: — Robert Farrow @ 11:22 pm

This past Sunday, David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel made unprecedented statements on the Sunday morning shows. They both echoed the same two talking points which were essentially:

1. Fox News is not really a legitimate news source because it has a ‘point of view’ and
2. We encourage all legitimate news networks to stop treating them as if they are legitimate.

The ACORN press conference and new video have been news for over 24 hours, and as of now, the networks’ coverage is as follows:
Fox News – ran a story within an hour of the press conference and duplicated coverage on their web page
NBC – nothing
MSNBC – nothing
CNN – nothing
AP ran a story late yesterday.
CBS – has only re-run the AP story
ABC – has only re-run the AP story

I’m just wondering… do you think the networks got the White House’s message?

The American Thinker goes farther.

Obama Manipulates Media to Expel Fox

By Jan LaRue

Whether the White House’s “war” against Fox News is a ruse to divert attention from President Barack Obama’s plummeting poll numbers and unfavorable policies, or an all-out attack to exclude Fox News from the White House press pool, the self-proclaimed government “watch dogs” are virtually AWOL or turncoats.

The leading exception, ABC News senior White House correspondent Jake Tapper, had the following exchange with White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs on Oct. 20:

Tapper: It’s escaped none of our notice that the White House has decided in the last few weeks to declare one of our sister organizations “not a news organization” and to tell the rest of us not to treat them like a news organization. Can you explain why it’s appropriate for the White House to decide that a news organization is not one -

(Crosstalk)

Gibbs: Jake, we render, we render an opinion based on some of their coverage and the fairness that, the fairness of that coverage.

Tapper: But that’s a pretty sweeping declaration that they are “not a news organization.” How are they any different from, say -

Gibbs: ABC -

Tapper: ABC. MSNBC. Univision. I mean how are they any different?

Gibbs: You and I should watch sometime around 9 o’clock tonight. Or 5 o’clock this afternoon.

Tapper: I’m not talking about their opinion programming or issues you have with certain reports. I’m talking about saying thousands of individuals who work for a media organization, do not work for a “news organization” — why is that appropriate for the White House to say?

Gibbs: That’s our opinion.

Fox News responded to the Tapper/Gibbs exchange Oct. 20:

The White House also appeared to stand by its effort to urge other networks to isolate and alienate the channel. Gibbs said Tuesday that it’s up to the White House Correspondents Association to decide whether Fox News should continue to be part of the White House pool which covers President Obama.

“I’m not going to delineate for the White House Correspondents Association how the pool is conducted. That’s not my job,” he said.

While the attack on Fox has escaped none of the media’s notice, they are either silent or focusing solely on the negative consequences for Obama rather than any threat to freedom of the press by the administration. Also missing is acknowledgement that the media as a whole lean left, sometimes rabidly so.

Newsweek columnist Jacob Weisberg is playing “ethical” lead shark for Obama by ratcheting up the attack: “Fox News isn’t just bad. It’s un-American.”

Whether the White House engages with Fox is a tactical political question. Whether we journalists continue to do so is an ethical one. By appearing on Fox, reporters validate its propaganda values and help to undermine the role of legitimate news organizations. Respectable journalists-I’m talking to you, Mara Liasson-should stop appearing on its programs. A boycott would make Ailes too happy, so let’s try just ignoring Fox, shall we? And no, I don’t want to come on The O’Reilly Factor to discuss it.

U.S. News & World Report columnist Doug Heye apparently sees the attack on Fox as a subterfuge but not a threat to journalists. He opined on Oct. 13, that “Attacking Fox News Won’t Help the White House with Depressed Liberals.”

The most senior White House correspondent, Helen Thomas, advised the White House to “End Fox Fight,” according to Tony Romm writing for The Hill’s Blog Briefing Room. Thomas sees it as a no win for Obama rather than a loss for the First Amendment: “They can only take you down. You can’t kill the messenger.”

Washington Post columnist Helen Marcus says it’s bad for Obama while taking a cheap shot at Fox’s Glenn Beck:

The Obama administration’s war on Fox News is dumb on multiple levels. It makes the White House look weak, unable to take Harry Truman’s advice and just deal with the heat. It makes the White House look small, dragged down to the level of Glenn Beck. It makes the White House look childish and petty at best, and it has a distinct Nixonian — Agnewesque? — aroma at worst. It is a self-defeating trifecta: it distracts attention from the Obama administration’s substantive message; it serves to help Fox, not punish it, by driving up ratings; and it deprives the White House, to the extent it refuses to provide administration officials to appear on the cable network, of access to an audience that is, in fact, broader than hard-core Obama haters.

Marcus does note the glaring media silence: “Where the White House has gone way overboard is in its decision to treat Fox as an outright enemy and to go public with the assault. Imagine the outcry if the Bush administration had pulled a similar hissy fit with MSNBC.”

Eric Etheridge writing for The New York Times “The Opinionator” sees no win for Obama: “But if the White House is playing this as an effort to correct erroneous stories, most everyone else sees it as war on Fox. And a wide range of observers are having a hard time seeing any upside for the president.”

Mike Madden at Salon.com slammed Fox: “There’s certainly no question that Fox has gone out of its way to attack the White House on a daily basis. Republicans, in turn, frequently pick up the various crackpot theories the network peddles and run with them themselves. It may be that the Fox coverage of the administration simply can’t get any worse — or Fox could decide to get even more over the top in reaction.”

The Nation’s Ari Melbar calls it a war on Fox but provides no defense for Fox or criticism of the White House attacks.

Why aren’t “sister organizations” joining Tapper by asking how Obama’s attack on Fox can be reconciled with his sham statement in honor of “World Press Freedom Day” on May 1, 2009:

Today, I lend my voice of support and admiration to all those brave men and women of the press who labor to expose truth and enhance accountability around the world. In so doing, I recall the words of Thomas Jefferson: “The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”

Maybe some journalist other than Tapper could further refresh Obama’s recollection of Jefferson’s words about the need for public servants to attend to “public duties” while leaving the press to the “punishment of public indignation”:

I had laid it down as a law to myself to take no notice of the thousand calumnies issued against me, but to trust my character to my own conduct and the good sense and candor of my fellow citizens.

During the course of [my] administration [as President], and in order to disturb it, the artillery of the press has been leveled against us, charged with whatsoever its licentiousness could devise or dare. These abuses of an institution so important to freedom and science are deeply to be regretted, inasmuch as they tend to lessen its usefulness and to sap its safety; they might, indeed, have been corrected by the wholesome punishments reserved and provided by the laws of the several States against falsehood and defamation; but public duties more urgent press on the time of public servants, and the offenders have therefore been left to find their punishment in the public indignation.

The National Press Club Web site is silent on the attack on Fox; however, on Oct. 18, it issued a press release criticizing the U.S. military for barring “embedded reporters in Afghanistan from publishing photographs of U.S. military personnel injured or killed in action.”

The release includes this statement:

“In a democracy, the news media serve a critical watchdog role on the three branches of government. When government seeks to control the media, it weakens that independence and devalues the information released to the press and the public.”

Is Obama’s attempt to indirectly control the media too subtle for the press corps? Thus far, the watchdogs are neutered lapdogs with neither bark nor bite.

One thing is certain. We need this Fox in the hen house.

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