Vol 1. No. 25.Baltimore, MD  Fri July 30th 2010GIVING YOU THE NEWS THE MSM IGNORES 
Our Contributors:
Comments:
Categories
  General
  ACLU
  Media
  Iraq
  celebrities
  science
  sports
  education
  entertainment
  My Essays
  funny
  politics
  Middle East
  economy
  religion
  local news
  environment
  terrorism
  world news
  Thought for the Day!
  lies of liberalism
  judicial
  neat stuff
  immigration
  liberals
  The Opinion Pole
  Second Amendment
  Abortion
  culture
  Islam
  Moonbats
  attacks on Christianity
  academic freedom
  media lies
  Obama
  Socialism
  How the Democrats and MSM will get us killed
  liberal attacks on free speech
  health care
  why I oppose liberalism
  Tea Party
  Treason
  facism
  Threats to Democracy
  Abuses by Obama
  The Biased Media
  Biased Media
  ACORN
  war on terrorism
  free speech
  Local GOP Candidates the MSM Ignores
  NEA
  Conservativism
  The Housing Collapse
  Obama’s Radicals
  democrat voter fraud
  Your Representation in MD
  climate change fraud
  unions
  bad foreign policy
  Obama’s Character
  How the Dems hurt the economy
  Democratic Corruption:
  Hyperinflation/Debt
  Debt
  Obama’s Real Values
  Democratic weakness in Defense and the War on Terror
  Educational Indoctrination
  Obama’s Incompetence
  GOP Mistakes
  Reverse Racism/ The Race Card
   Making the Left Pay
  The GOP
  GOP
  Democrats
  How Liberalism Destroys the Family and Society
  Obama Lies
  Obama’s Socialism
  Democrat Attacks on Capitalism
  Democrat Attacks on Democracy
  music


O's big day ends with an extra-inning win
O's big day ends with an extra-inning win

Orioles hire Showalter to be next manager
Orioles hire Showalter to be next manager

Return of Bell major reason for Tejada trade
Return of Bell major reason for Tejada trade

Samuel pondering future after Showalter hire
Samuel pondering future after Showalter hire

Guthrie's start spoiled by no-show offense
Guthrie's start spoiled by no-show offense

CRIME SCENES Police apologize to injured boy
Alvin Williams' summer is pretty much over. The 5-year-old can't run around with his friends. Instead, he sits in a folding chair on the front porch of his grandfather's house off York Road in North Baltimore, his broken right leg wrapped in a cast and propped up on another chair. His leg was broken when a Baltimore police cruiser ran over it last week. This week, a top department officer paid Alvin a visit. Lt. Col. Michael J. Andrew brought chocolate cake, Adam Jones and Matt Wieters bobbleheads, a patch that made the child an honorary police officer and the promise of tickets to an Orioles game.




A close brush with violence
Stabbing of her brother 8 years ago colors mayor's view of issue

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake rarely speaks of the day eight years ago when the city's dangers literally fell through her front door. But her brother's stabbing shaped the way she views violent crime and has deepened her empathy for victims and their families.




In Westminster, businesses welcome Ravens, their fans
In challenging economy, annual training session offers 'more than a little bit' of help

Amid challenging economy, annual training session offers 'more than a little bit' of help




HEALTHKEY University of Maryland discovery may open door to 'smart pill'
Scientists make link between brain acid and cognition

Scientists link brain compound to cognition, potentially opening door to development of drug that could aid learning in healthy people, those with disorders such as Alzheimer's




In apparent reversal, O'Malley praises prosecutor Jessamy
Sparring had dominated relations; now governor may need help

She won the appointment to Baltimore state's attorney that he wanted in 1995. Later, as mayor, he famously called for her to "get off her ass" and prosecute a case. She said he was "hoodwinking" the public into thinking his crime-fighting strategies were effective.




Task force to deliver report on animal cruelty to mayor today




Western Md. copter crash that killed 4 was accident, NTSB says
The National Transportation Safety Board has ruled that a helicopter crash that killed four people along Interstate 70 near Boonsboro last summer was accidental.




Police investigate fatal shooting of man, 36, in Northwest Baltimore
A 36-year-old man died after he was shot in the head early Friday in Northwest Baltimore, and the death of a man that stumped police last week has been ruled a homicide by the state medical examiner's office, according to city police.



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


I love your blog

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.

Kevin Dayhoff



Awards and Rankings:

Voted one of the best local blogs:
Baltimore Examiner: 2006



Voted Top 10 most influential blog in Maryland in 2007.
Blog Net News



ElseWhere
Other sites I write for:
Flopping Aces
and Red Maryland

Want to help?
Baltimore Reporter is looking for writers to help counter the biased media. Email us if interested.

My Count Since 10/11/07
~ 5208 ~
Site Meter

.

   

10/27/2009

A Good Question.
Filed under: — Robert Farrow @ 10:38 pm

What if Bush had done that?

A four-hour stop in New Orleans, on his way to a $3 million fundraiser.

Snubbing the Dalai Lama.

Signing off on a secret deal with drug makers.

Freezing out a TV network.

Doing more fundraisers than the last president. More golf, too.

President Barack Obama has done all of those things — and more.

What’s remarkable is what hasn’t happened. These episodes haven’t become metaphors for Obama’s personal and political character — or consuming controversies that sidetracked the rest of his agenda.

It’s a sign that the media’s echo chamber can be a funny thing, prone to the vagaries of news judgment, and an illustration that, in politics, context is everything.

Conservatives look on with a mix of indignation and amazement and ask: Imagine the fuss if George W. Bush had done these things?

And quickly add, with a hint of jealousy: How does Obama get away with it?

“We have a joke about it. We’re going to start a website: IfBushHadDoneThat.com,” former Bush counselor Ed Gillespie said. “The watchdogs are curled up around his feet, sleeping soundly. … There are countless examples: some silly, some serious.”

Indeed, Bush got grief for secret meetings with the oil industry, politicizing the White House and spending too much time on his beloved bike. But it’s not just Republicans who notice. Media observers note that the president often gets kid-glove treatment from the press, fellow Democrats and, particularly, interest groups on the left — Bush’s loudest critics, Obama’s biggest backers.

But others say there’s a larger phenomenon at work — in the story line the media wrote about Obama’s presidency. For Bush, the theme was that of a Big Business Republican who rode the family name to the White House, so stories about secret energy meetings and a certain laziness, intellectual and otherwise, fit neatly into the theme, to be replayed over and over again.

Obama’s story line was more positive from the start: historic newcomer coming to shake up Washington. So the negatives that sprung up around Obama — like a sense that he was more flash than substance — track what negative coverage he’s received, captured in a recent “Saturday Night Live” skit that made fun of his lack of accomplishments in office.

“There may well be almost an unconscious effort on the part of the media to give Obama a bit more slack because he is more likable, because he is the first African-American president. That plays into it,” said Sherry Bebitch Jeffe, a political analyst at the University of Southern California.

Democrats find the complaints of Obama “getting a pass” hard to stomach in light of the way the press treated Bush — particularly on the single biggest mistake of his presidency, relying on the faulty intelligence leading up to the war in Iraq. Now, Obama’s aides say, the positive coverage simply reflects the fact that their efforts are succeeding.

“As our administration makes progress on the agenda that Washington has ignored for too long, we expect we’ll get some news coverage of that progress that we like and some tough coverage that we don’t,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. “It’s not unlike the New Orleans Saints, who are getting lots of good coverage of their perfect record so far — certainly better coverage than the [2-5] Redskins — but it doesn’t mean the Saints have liked every story that’s been written about them since training camp. It goes with the territory.”

There are signs the friendly tone toward Obama is ebbing. Case in point: a front-page story in The New York Times noting that Obama’s all-male basketball games drew fire from the head of the National Organization for Women, who called the games “troubling.”

But here are other stories in which Obama seems to have gotten a pass:

New Orleans

As a candidate, Obama railed against the Bush administration for abandoning and then neglecting the people of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. He made five campaign trips to the city.

But as president, Obama waited almost nine months before visiting the Big Easy, spent less than four hours on the ground there and then jetted to San Francisco for a $3 million Democratic fundraiser.

“Don’t judge anybody on the amount of time that they’ve spent there. Judge only what this administration promised that they would do, what they’ve done every day and what they’re continuing to work on,” press secretary Robert Gibbs said, pointing to positive reviews of the federal government’s efforts under Obama.

For their part, Democrats can’t see how Bush officials can muster much umbrage over anything related to New Orleans, given how the Republican administration handled the initial response to Katrina.

Managing the press

When the Obama administration moved in recent weeks to isolate and disparage Fox News as a wing of the Republican Party, there were few immediate howls of outrage — even from Fox’s fellow journalists in the media.

Press defenders and First Amendment advocates who jumped on the Bush administration for using military analysts to shape war coverage reacted with a yawn to the White House’s announcement that it had deemed Fox to be not a “legitimate news organization.”

“Had I said about MSNBC what the Obama White House said about Fox, the media uproar would still be going on,” said Ari Fleischer, who served as Bush’s press secretary until 2003. “I instinctively would have known … the media would have leapt to their feet to defend them. I’m shocked it’s not happening now.”

One press veteran agreed. “If George Bush had taken on MSNBC, what would have happened?” said Phil Bronstein, editor-at-large of the San Francisco Chronicle. “That’s one place you can point to a real difference in how I’d imagine Bush would be treated.”

Politicizing the White House

Throughout the Bush administration, liberal critics warned that the hand of Bush political adviser Karl Rove was spreading politics into all corners of government. Reporters were on alert for any sign that politics was infecting the work of federal agencies. One top appointee got in hot water for allegedly asking agency officials to work to “help our candidates” across the country.

So some Bush aides went nearly apoplectic earlier this month when they spotted Gibbs and Obama’s political guru, David Axelrod, in photos of a Situation Room meeting on Afghanistan policy.

“Oh, the howling and screaming that would have happened if Karl Rove was sitting in on even a deputies-level meeting where strategy was being hammered out. People would have just gone ballistic,” said Peter Feaver, a former White House aide for both Bush and Bill Clinton.

Also, in about nine months, Obama has already attended more than two dozen fundraising events, while Bush did only six in his first year in office, according to a tally by CBS’s Mark Knoller.

Gibbs said Obama had to do more to raise a similar amount of money, since the kinds of soft-money fundraisers Bush did early on were banned. “This president … doesn’t accept money from PACs or lobbyists and doesn’t allow lobbyists to give at fundraisers that he’s at, as well,” Gibbs added.

Dealing with business, in secret

Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney endured years of criticism and lawsuits that stretched all the way to the Supreme Court over secret meetings Cheney’s Energy Task Force held with oil and gas companies. When the policy emerged, critics said Cheney was carrying water for the industry.

Obama pledged to hash out health care reform live on C-SPAN and excoriated Bush for kowtowing to the drug industry. But aides signed off on the drug industry’s agreement to find $80 billion in savings to support reform. However, Obama aides didn’t disclose that the agreement involved the White House promising that current health legislation wouldn’t include further cuts or give the government the right to negotiate over drug prices.

Toning down human rights

During the campaign, Obama talked tough on China. While candidate Obama pushed Bush to take a hard line, President Obama hasn’t. Hoping to win China’s help on Iran and North Korea, Obama skipped a meeting with the Dalai Lama and said little when China undertook a violent crackdown in its largely Muslim Xinjiang region. The White House has pledged to meet with the Dalai Lama later.

And while candidate Obama warned Bush against a “reckless and cynical initiative [that] would reward a regime in Khartoum that has a record of failing to live up to its commitments,” President Obama’s envoy to Sudan, Scott Gration, seemed to lay out a similar incentive-driven approach.

“We’ve got to think about giving out cookies,” said Gration. “Kids, countries — they react to gold stars, smiley faces, handshakes, agreements, talk, engagement.” The White House backed away from Gration’s characterization of the strategy but did recently lay out a strategy of engaging with the Sudanese regime.

Traveling and recreating

In his campaign and as president, Bush was mocked for a lack of interest in all things foreign — seven minutes touring the Kremlin, 25 minutes at the Great Wall of China, before declaring, “Let’s go home.”

During a trip to Europe in June, Obama chastised German and French reporters for suggesting that he was snubbing those countries by making only brief stops in each. “There are only 24 hours in the day. And so there’s nothing to any of that speculation beyond us just trying to fit in what we could do on such a short trip,” he told reporters in Germany.

But after taking his wife out for an attention-grabbing date night, Obama promptly jetted back to Washington. Within about 90 minutes of arriving at the White House, the tightly scheduled president was on the move again — headed to Andrews Air Force Base to play nine holes of golf.

The link is here.

1 Comment »

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://www.baltimorereporter.com/wp-trackback.php?p=7018

  1. […] the way of censorship in these threads. I have always preferred the give and take of open debate. A Good Question. - baltimorereporter.com 10/28/2009 What if Bush had done that?A four-hour stop in New Orleans, on […]

    Pingback by COACHEP » Blog Archive » Posts about David Axelrod as of October 28, 2009 — 10/28/2009 @ 10:15 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)








Search

    What is RSS?
Baltimore Weather

Current Conditions:
Mostly Cloudy, 80 F
FACING UP TO THE
Nation's Finances
National Debt Clock

Foxworth out for year with knee injury (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth will miss the upcoming NFL season with a knee injury.

Ravens CB Foxworth out for year with knee injury (AP)
Baltimore Ravens cornerback Domonique Foxworth will miss the season with a knee injury. The veteran was hurt Thursday during an informal practice period. Coach John Harbaugh said Friday that Foxworth tore his ACL without being touched. The Ravens already had two cornerbacks, Lardarius Webb and Fabian Washington, coming back from knee injuries.

Ravens Team Report (Yahoo! Sports)

Nose tackle Terrence Cody, a second-round pick, passed his conditioning test Wednesday and was cleared to practice with the team.

Cody said he weighs 350 pounds.

"I'll have to admit that I was surprised this morning when he passed the conditioning test," said coach John Harbaugh, who declined to say if the Ravens put a number on what they want Cody to weigh. "But we have it on tape that will verify the results of the test. Obviously, it shows you that he was in shape. He's a little heavy right now. He's got to lose little weight, but that will happen in training camp. But the fact that he's in shape is important. That shows you that he's done the work."

The hot topic surrounding Cody since the Ravens selected him has been his eating habits.

NFL Team Reports: AFC North (SportingNews.com)
Several times a week, The Trenches will present team reports from Sporting News' 32 NFL correspondents.

Belichick wants Patriots to focus on present (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Ty Warren was stunned when he saw the bare spots where pictures of former Patriots stars once hung. He and his teammates wondered what was going on.

College coach says Kindle fell down stairs because of narcolepsy (Yahoo! Sports)
Baltimore Ravens rookie linebacker Sergio Kindle was hospitalized last Thursday after falling down two flights...

Ravens rookie LB Kindle narcoleptic (Yahoo! Sports)
Baltimore Ravens rookie linebacker Sergio Kindle recently fell down two flights of stairs late one night in...

Poster latest show of NFL concussion reality (The Canadian Press)
The HBO cameras are rolling in New York, where this season's "Hard Knocks" could make a star out of Jets coach Rex Ryan — and send parents across the country scurrying for the mute button on the remote control.

Younger Patriots hope to find leader as camp opens (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - The New England Patriots faltered badly late last season without four veteran leaders who were gone before the opener.

Ravens DT Cody finally launches NFL career (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - A day late and quite short of breath, rookie defensive tackle Terrence Cody passed his conditioning test Wednesday and formally launched his NFL career with the Baltimore Ravens.

One day later, Ravens DT Cody launches NFL career (AP)
A day late and quite short of breath, rookie defensive tackle Terrence Cody passed his conditioning test Wednesday and formally launched his NFL career with the Baltimore Ravens. Cody, a 350-pounder out of Alabama, twice failed the test Tuesday. The drill consists of running 25 yards, doubling back, resting for 70 seconds and repeating it twice.

Younger QBs ready to carry torch (Yahoo! Sports)
Philip Rivers and Aaron Rodgers have helped erase a fear that there would be an eventual dropoff in QB play.

Patriots put Welker on unable to perform list (The Canadian Press)
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Star receiver Wes Welker was placed on the New England Patriots' active physically unable to perform list on Tuesday as he continued his strong recovery from knee surgery.

Cameron content to run potent Ravens offense (AP)
Cam Cameron might consider taking another crack at being an NFL head coach, if the right opportunity comes along. For now, however, he's content being Baltimore's offensive coordinator -- a job that became even more attractive after the Ravens' signed standout wide receivers Anquan Boldin and Donte' Stallworth.

Terrence Cody deemed too tubby for Ravens training camp (Yahoo! Sports)
Despite having first-round talent, but falling to the second round of the draft because of concerns about weight...

Ravens' rookie Cody flunks conditioning test (The Canadian Press)
WESTMINSTER, Md. - Baltimore Ravens second-round draft pick Terrence Cody failed his conditioning test Tuesday and was not permitted to participate in the team's first training camp practice.

Maryland News
Links To Others
Maryland Blogger Alliance

National News
Support the Baltimore Reporter. Buy a C.D.



Thank You












Supporters
ConsignmentBee! Auctions


Advertise with Us!
Baltimore Reporter is looking for advertisers to help keep this site going. Email us here.
]
Please ignore the screen cleaner!