Fox News Sunday Dishonestly Cuts Up Obama’s “Acts Of Terror” Speech

Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace aired a deceptively edited video of President Obama’s September 12 Rose Garden address to advance the Mitt Romney lie that Obama waited 2 weeks before calling the attack on a U.S. Consulate in Libya an act of terror.

In the days since Romney falsely claimed that Obama did not immediately call the deadly September 11 attack in Benghazi at act of terror, Fox has aggressively tried to muddle the conversation and introduce false ambiguity in Obama’s initial comments.

Wallace claimed he was going to show “what actually happened” when Obama first addressed the attack. He then aired a video that clearly fast forwarded through portions of the speech.

Here is Obama’s September 12 speech as aired by Fox:

Yesterday, four of these extraordinary Americans were killed in an attack on our diplomatic post in Benghazi …. We reject all efforts to denigrate the religious beliefs of others …. Of course, yesterday was already a painful day for our nation as we marked the solemn memory of the 9/11 attacks …. No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation.

Wallace claimed that Fox excised portions of the speech “to show that there was quite a gap between various things that he was discussing.”

But what Fox edited out of the tape is critical to understanding that Obama was very clearly discussing the Consulate attack when he said that “no acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation.” In fact, the very next sentence in Obama’s speech discussed the victims of the Consulate attack, which he called “this terrible act.”

This is what Obama actually said, with the portion aired by Wallace in bold:

Of course, yesterday was already a painful day for our nation as we marked the solemn memory of the 9/11 attacks.  We mourned with the families who were lost on that day.  I visited the graves of troops who made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan at the hallowed grounds of Arlington Cemetery, and had the opportunity to say thank you and visit some of our wounded warriors at Walter Reed.  And then last night, we learned the news of this attack in Benghazi. 

As Americans, let us never, ever forget that our freedom is only sustained because there are people who are willing to fight for it, to stand up for it, and in some cases, lay down their lives for it.  Our country is only as strong as the character of our people and the service of those both civilian and military who represent us around the globe.

No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character, or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for.  Today we mourn four more Americans who represent the very best of the United States of America.  We will not waver in our commitment to see that justice is done for this terrible act.  And make no mistake, justice will be done.

It is only possible to pretend that there is any ambiguity over whether Obama was calling the Benghazi attack an act of terror if you edit the tape.

video at the source

theperplexedobserver:

President Obama And Democrats Want To Murder Christians Suggests Ad In Louisiana Newspaper
No, I didn’t make this up, it’s not an Onion piece and absolutely no satire is involved.
As reported by Think Progress:

The Daily Advertiser, a Gannett-owned paper serving central Louisiana, is standing by its decision to run an advertisement today in which a far-right extremist group suggests that President Obama and Democrats are conspiring to murder Catholics and Christians.
The ad shows a photograph of a Catholic priest who was shot and killed in Mexico in the 1920s, and suggests that President Obama and Democrats would do the same. It was posted by a user on Reddit this morning.

Related Articles:
Louisiana Newspaper Runs Ad Claiming Democrats Want to Murder Christians
Newspaper Ad Accuses Obama And Dems Of Christian Murder Conspiracy

WOW. This kind of shit REALLY needs to stop.

theperplexedobserver:

President Obama And Democrats Want To Murder Christians Suggests Ad In Louisiana Newspaper

No, I didn’t make this up, it’s not an Onion piece and absolutely no satire is involved.

As reported by Think Progress:

The Daily Advertiser, a Gannett-owned paper serving central Louisiana, is standing by its decision to run an advertisement today in which a far-right extremist group suggests that President Obama and Democrats are conspiring to murder Catholics and Christians.

The ad shows a photograph of a Catholic priest who was shot and killed in Mexico in the 1920s, and suggests that President Obama and Democrats would do the same. It was posted by a user on Reddit this morning.

Related Articles:

WOW. This kind of shit REALLY needs to stop.

An amendment that would legalize the use of propaganda on American audiences is being inserted into the latest defense authorization bill. The bi-partisan amendment is sponsored by Rep. Mark Thornberry from Texas and Rep. Adam Smith from Washington State.

An amendment that would legalize the use of propaganda on American audiences is being inserted into the latest defense authorization bill, BuzzFeed has learned.

The amendment would “strike the current ban on domestic dissemination” of propaganda material produced by the State Department and the Pentagon, according to the summary of the law at the House Rules Committee’s official website.

The tweak to the bill would essentially neutralize two previous acts—the Smith-Mundt Act of 1948 and Foreign Relations Authorization Act in 1987—that had been passed to protect U.S. audiences from our own government’s misinformation campaigns.

The bi-partisan amendment is sponsored by Rep. Mark Thornberry from Texas and Rep. Adam Smith from Washington State.

In a little noticed press release earlier in the week — buried beneath the other high-profile issues in the $642 billion defense bill, including indefinite detention and a prohibition on gay marriage at military installations — Thornberry warned that in the Internet age, the current law “ties the hands of America’s diplomatic officials, military, and others by inhibiting our ability to effectively communicate in a credible way.”

read more

USA Today reporters subjected to secretive negative propaganda campaign after reporting on Pentagon PsyOps operation.

When Tom Vanden Brook and his editor Ray Locker researched a story about the astronomical sums being spent by military propaganda campaigns, one of their first stops was the Pentagon.

Published in February, their story outlines a massive propaganda effort costing U.S. taxpayers hundreds-of-millions-of-dollars a year that produced dubious returns in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The investigation prompted a federal investigation into one of the “information operations” contractors that had $4 million in unpaid federal taxes and liens against them.

Maybe the team expected that, but what Vanden Brook and Locker did not expect was to be personally attacked online by a sophisticated team of Internet assailants.

Gregory Korte at USA Today reports that following their story the pair noticed websites, Wikipedia entries, and fake Twitter accounts appearing in their names publishing false information and attempting to disparage the unblemished record of them both (via The Military Times).

From the Military Times:

The activity is the work of what online reputation expert Andy Beal calls a “determined detractor.” “It’s like a machine gun approach. They’re trying to generate as much online content as they can,” he said. “The person who’s behind this, we can give them a lot of credit here and assume they’re very sophisticated about reputation attacks.”

“This is the work of somebody who knows what they’re doing. They have some experience of covering their tracks. This is probably not the first time they’ve done something like this,” said Beal, CEO of Trackur, an online reputation tracking service.

The attackers took great pains to cover their tracks, employing proxy servers and various measure to keep their identity hidden, but both journalists remain undeterred.

If they thought it would deter me from writing about this, they’re wrong,” Vanden Brook said.

And Locker agrees, “This is a clear attempt at intimidation that has failed.”

Read More

What a single tweet can tell you about Fox New’s psycho-manipulation tactics.

full resolution

What a single tweet can tell you about Fox New’s psycho-manipulation tactics.

full resolution

Bush Administration ‘planted fake news stories on American TV’

Federal authorities are actively investigating dozens of American television stations for broadcasting items produced by the Bush administration and major corporations, and passing them off as normal news. Some of the fake news segments talked up success in the war in Iraq, or promoted the companies’ products.

Investigators from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) are seeking information about stations across the country after a report produced by a campaign group detailed the extraordinary extent of the use of such items.

The report, by the non-profit group Centre for Media and Democracy, found that over a 10-month period at least 77 television stations were making use of the faux news broadcasts, known as Video News Releases (VNRs). Not one told viewers who had produced the items.

read more

Fox News: The Alternate Knowledge System

politicsbreak.com

The GOP saw what happened last time progressive policies pulled us out of a depression—50 years of prosperity and the birth of the great American middle-class. That’s a lesson that right wing conspiracy against you and me wants to refuse to let anyone ever learn, again.

The Right-Wing Conspiracy Against Me

by Pete Nicely | a2politico.com

I see it in the way people who should know better are preaching the selfish gospel of Ron Paul.

I see it in how progressives purposely miss the best parts of ObamaCare.

I see it in the corporate media stuffing Mitt Romney down the Tea Party’s throat.

I see it in the upcoming rash of attacks on Internet freedom.

I know it’s behind Republicans refusing to close Guantanamo Bay.

I know it’s why they never want to ever end this so-called war on terror—or its older interminable brother, the so-called war on the drugs.

Everywhere I see the conspiracy that gave us George W. Bush, the conspiracy of making both sides look the same. That’s the only way Republicans can win national elections.

The GOP has to play up issues of economic security and national defense that put civil liberties and shared prosperity on the backburner to cast doubt on the progressive philosophy that built America’s middle class.

Karl Rove, Frank Luntz and Roget Ailes know for a fact that if people looked at the actual issues, Republicans would lose 43-48 percent of this country. America is, by and large, pro Medicare and Social Security, pro-policing Wall Street, pro-progressive taxation, pro-peace when possible. And when people feel as if they are safe to make a choice, they tend to elect progressives.

That’s why I can’t feel safe.

I’m not allowed to hear how the border is more secure than ever, crime is way down for the third straight year, the Iraq War is over, most of Al Qaeda are gone, the stimulus worked—despite Republicans laying off more than 500,000 public workers.

I can’t know that the only thing standing between me and a real recovery is a GOP that says defense spending creates jobs but any spending that helps people doesn’t.

I can’t know that 2.5 million Americans already have health care because of ObamaCare, and 30 million more are set to join them in 2014.

I can’t know that the GOP is still selling the trickledown snake oil/opium that made this country weaker, less equal and more beholden to the richest of the rich.

Every day, the right wing conspiracy against me becomes bigger, more putrid and more deceptive.

Conservatives betray the American people on a daily by saying the most successful government economic intervention since World War II didn’t work. They say we went to losing 800,000 jobs a month from Bush to creating millions of jobs because in April of 2009 people suddenly remembered the Bush tax breaks.

They do everything they can to make sure we don’t do what we know works. Screw 98 percent of the world’s climate scientists; we have Michele Bachmann on the case.

The GOP is back to its old trick: Both sides are just as bad. The song says, “The bad guy always says, both sides are the same.” And this is true in pro wrestling, soap operas and politics.

You know if a Republican president had put the Dow back over 12,000, stopped Qaddafi massacres and silenced bin Laden, he’d be on the dime, Rushmore and Nancy Reagan by now. Obama’s accomplishments from reforming student loans to saving Detroit are undeniable.

They know that the middle class doesn’t buy that this President is a radical or a socialist. So the right has to paint him as something worse than that: A Republican.

Dirty.

It’s the worst thing the right can say about a President who has reversed the descent of American led by Bush and Cheney in almost every possible way.

But they can’t let reality get in the way. Why? Because they HAVE to win in 2012.

Who “they?”

The one percent of the one percent, the billionaire polluters who fund the Christian big gun AM radio/FoxMax mega-mess.

[FULL STORY]

Jon Stewart rips Fox News on their reaction to Obama’s Thanksgiving address: “Not only is Barack Obama not the first president to leave God out of his Thanksgiving address, he didn’t even do that — but that doesn’t stop Fox from criticizing him.”

[EDIT] Here’s a link to the site with the video, it’s not playing for me on tumblr properly.

Offensive as fuck.

Offensive as fuck.

A Lonely Voice Of Reason Stands Up To Fox’s Smears Of Occupy Wall Street

by Andy Newbold | mediamatters.org

First the hosts condemned Jesse Jackson for comparing the Occupy Wall Street movement to the Civil Rights movement. Greg Gutfeld described Jackson’s comments as an example of “the usual suspects fading in relevance, salvaging careers, by exploiting class envy.” Williams responded by saying that Jackson was “absolutely right” and pointed out that all great examples of social change in America had come about because of protests:

WILLIAMS: Yeah, he’s absolutely right when you think about the idea that there’s very little change in our country and any society without struggle, without people putting themselves out. You know, Dr. King used to talk about the idea of creative struggle, creative tension. That you would create situations with marches and protests and some cases even break the law. That’s why King went to jail. You stop and think about things like the Vietnam War movement, you think about the feminist movement to get votes in this country.

When Gutfeld responded by calling Occupy Wall Street protesters “annoying,” Williams retorted that if Gutfeld had been in Birmingham in the ’60s, he would have labeled King a “northern agitator.”

Bolling also claimed Occupy Wall Street had no “overall message, that’s the problem.” Williams had to add another dose of sanity to the discussion after that, pointing out that the overall concern of Occupy Wall Street is “income inequality” and that is a message that “a good number of Americans embrace.”

Again, immediately after Williams finished his statement, he was attacked by his co-hosts for supporting violent people who, according to Gutfeld, are “reflective” of the overall movement.

Williams called out his fellow co-hosts for claiming that isolated events reflect the entire Occupy Wall Street movement:

WILLIAMS: I don’t think those people are reflective of Occupy Wall Street movements all over this country. I mean Atlanta, Baltimore, it goes on and on. And you guys pick out one specific place with one specific — and Kimberly talks about rapes and bad behavior as if you’re condemning the whole movement.

Later, co-host Kimberly Guilfoyle then tried to claim that Occupy Wall Street is a socialist movement and Bolling attacked the movement for supporting income redistribution. Williams responded:

WILLIAMS: You guys say: “You know what, what’s been going on in this country is just fine and dandy.” [Co-host] Dana [Perino] rightly says we need to have changes, and Dana has her own set of prescriptions. We might disagree, but she has policy prescriptions. If these are folks who say, “let’s have change; we’re tired of the big guys who control the politicians, control Wall Street, looking out for themselves and screwing everybody else,” you guys say: “Oh don’t raise a fuss. Don’t inconvenience us. Don’t block traffic.”

Gutfeld then interrupted to say Occupy Wall Street protesters should be more like the tea party who protested “peacefully with permits” adding “nobody got arrested, nobody got raped, nobody got assaulted.” 

Williams responded by pointing out the real reason why the other co-hosts were so eager to attack Occupy Wall Street:

WILLIAMS: The reasons you guys are so afraid of Occupy Wall Street is —

GUTFELD: Because they’re violent.

WILLIAMS: — because they have the power to change the national narrative and to elect not only Obama, but to elect Democrats in this country.

Bolling then claimed that Occupy Wall Street wanted to change the system away from capitalism. And Williams had to set him straight:

WILLIAMS: Nobody is suggesting there’s anything better than capitalism.

BOLLING: No, they all are.

WILLIAMS: I’m a big capitalist. You’re a capitalist, and those folks out there are capitalists.

BOLLING: Are not capitalists.

WILLIAMS: They are.

[crosstalk]

WILLIAMS: But let me tell you something. Those are capitalists. You know what?

BOLLING: Self-described non-capitalists.

WILLIAMS: Let me tell you something: There are some things like excesses to every structure. And when you have the bankers and the Wall Street guys gobbling at the trough like greedy pigs, then somebody should say something.

So, Fox again attempted to mocksmear, and vilify the Occupy Wall Street protesters in an effort to continue pushing the network’s political agenda. But at least this time, Williams was there to provide a dose of reality.

[SOURCE & VIDEO]

Meanwhile, in Fox News land.

Meanwhile, in Fox News land.

Oakland Police’s press release: would be right at home in the Syrian Information Ministry

occupywallstreet:

From last night’s press release from the Oakland Police Department:

Q. Did the Police deploy rubber bullets, flash-bag grenades?

A. No, the loud noises that were heard originated from M-80 explosives thrown at Police by protesters.

The San Francisco Chronicle begs to differ:

Protesters scattered in both directions on Broadway as the tear gas canisters and several flash-bang grenades went off. Regrouping, protesters tried to help one another and offered each other eye drops.

Moar disinformation:

Q. Did the Police use tear gas?

A. Yes, the Police used a limited amount of tear gas for a small areas as a defense against protesters who were throwing various objects at Police Officers as they approached the area.

Or at protesters who were helping injured people. Or, for just hanging out in the streets, really. Take it away, IBT:

California police resorted to tear gas as many as five times Tuesday, attempting to force hundreds of Occupy Oakland protesters to disperse.

So was it used to make them disperse, or was it used in self-defense? Were flash-bangs used, or were they not used? The videos certainly seem to show that they were used in copious amounts.

This is nonsense. Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan must resign.

(via bluntlyblue)

Propaganda Techniques Used by Fox News

Panic Mongering

This goes one step beyond simple fear mongering. With panic mongering, there is never a break from the fear. The idea is to terrify and terrorize the audience during every waking moment. From Muslims to swine flu to recession to homosexuals to immigrants to the rapture itself, the belief over at Fox seems to be that if your fight-or-flight reflexes aren’t activated, you aren’t alive. This of course raises the question: why terrorize your own audience? Because it is the fastest way to bypasses the rational brain. In other words, when people are afraid, they don’t think rationally. And when they can’t think rationally, they’ll believe anything.

Character Assassination/Ad Hominem

Fox does not like to waste time debating the idea. Instead, they prefer a quicker route to dispensing with their opponents: go after the person’s credibility, motives, intelligence, character, or, if necessary, sanity. No category of character assassination is off the table and no offense is beneath them. Fox and like-minded media figures also use ad hominem attacks not just against individuals, but entire categories of people in an effort to discredit the ideas of every person who is seen to fall into that category, e.g. “liberals,” “hippies,” “progressives” etc. This form of argument – if it can be called that – leaves no room for genuine debate over ideas, so by definition, it is undemocratic. Not to mention just plain crass.

Projection/Flipping

This one is frustrating for the viewer who is trying to actually follow the argument. It involves taking whatever underhanded tactic you’re using and then accusing your opponent of doing it to you first. We see this frequently in the immigration discussion, where anti-racists are accused of racism, or in the climate change debate, where those who argue for human causes of the phenomenon are accused of not having science or facts on their side. It’s often called upon when the media host finds themselves on the ropes in the debate.

Rewriting History

This is another way of saying that propagandists make the facts fit their worldview. The Downing Street Memos on the Iraq war were a classic example of this on a massive scale, but it happens daily and over smaller issues as well. A recent case in point is Palin’s mangling of the Paul Revere ride, which Fox reporters have bent over backward to validate. Why lie about the historical facts, even when they can be demonstrated to be false? Well, because dogmatic minds actually find it easier to reject reality than to update their viewpoints. They will literally rewrite history if it serves their interests. And they’ll often speak with such authority that the casual viewer will be tempted to question what they knew as fact.

Scapegoating/Othering

This works best when people feel insecure or scared. It’s technically a form of both fear mongering and diversion, but it is so pervasive that it deserves its own category. The simple idea is that if you can find a group to blame for social or economic problems, you can then go on to a) justify violence/dehumanization of them, and b) subvert responsibility for any harm that may befall them as a result.

Conflating Violence With Power and Opposition to Violence With Weakness

This is more of what I’d call a “meta-frame” (a deeply held belief) than a media technique, but it is manifested in the ways news is reported constantly. For example, terms like “show of strength” are often used to describe acts of repression, such as those by the Iranian regime against the protesters in the summer of 2009. There are several concerning consequences of this form of conflation. First, it has the potential to make people feel falsely emboldened by shows of force – it can turn wars into sporting events. Secondly, especially in the context of American politics, displays of violence – whether manifested in war or debates about the Second Amendment – are seen as noble and (in an especially surreal irony) moral. Violence become synonymous with power, patriotism and piety.

Bullying

This is a favorite technique of several Fox commentators. That it continues to be employed demonstrates that it seems to have some efficacy. Bullying and yelling works best on people who come to the conversation with a lack of confidence, either in themselves or their grasp of the subject being discussed. The bully exploits this lack of confidence by berating the guest into submission or compliance. Often, less self-possessed people will feel shame and anxiety when being berated and the quickest way to end the immediate discomfort is to cede authority to the bully. The bully is then able to interpret that as a “win.”

Confusion

As with the preceding technique, this one works best on an audience that is less confident and self-possessed. The idea is to deliberately confuse the argument, but insist that the logic is airtight and imply that anyone who disagrees is either too dumb or too fanatical to follow along. Less independent minds will interpret the confusion technique as a form of sophisticated thinking, thereby giving the user’s claims veracity in the viewer’s mind.

Populism

This is especially popular in election years. The speakers identifies themselves as one of “the people” and the target of their ire as an enemy of the people. The opponent is always “elitist” or a “bureaucrat” or a “government insider” or some other category that is not the people. The idea is to make the opponent harder to relate to and harder to empathize with. It often goes hand in hand with scapegoating. A common logical fallacy with populism bias when used by the right is that accused “elitists” are almost always liberals – a category of political actors who, by definition, advocate for non-elite groups.

Invoking the Christian God

This is similar to othering and populism. With morality politics, the idea is to declare yourself and your allies as patriots, Christians and “real Americans” (those are inseparable categories in this line of thinking) and anyone who challenges them as not. Basically, God loves Fox and Republicans and America. And hates taxes and anyone who doesn’t love those other three things. Because the speaker has been benedicted by God to speak on behalf of all Americans, any challenge is perceived as immoral. It’s a cheap and easy technique used by all totalitarian entities from states to cults.

Saturation

There are three components to effective saturation: being repetitive, being ubiquitous and being consistent. The message must be repeated cover and over, it must be everywhere and it must be shared across commentators: e.g. “Saddam has WMD.” Veracity and hard data have no relationship to the efficacy of saturation. There is a psychological effect of being exposed to the same message over and over, regardless of whether it’s true or if it even makes sense, e.g., “Barack Obama wasn’t born in the United States.” If something is said enough times, by enough people, many will come to accept it as truth. Another example is Fox’s own slogan of “Fair and Balanced.”

Disparaging Education

There is an emerging and disturbing lack of reverence for education and intellectualism in many mainstream media discourses. In fact, in some circles (e.g. Fox), higher education is often disparaged as elitist. Having a university credential is perceived by these folks as not a sign of credibility, but of a lack of it. In fact, among some commentators, evidence of intellectual prowess is treated snidely and as anti-American. The disdain for education and other evidence of being trained in critical thinking are direct threats to a hive-mind mentality, which is why they are so viscerally demeaned.

Guilt by Association

This is a favorite of Glenn Beck and Andrew Breitbart, both of whom have used it to decimate the careers and lives of many good people. Here’s how it works: if your cousin’s college roommate’s uncle’s ex-wife attended a dinner party back in 1984 with Gorbachev’s niece’s ex-boyfriend’s sister, then you, by extension are a communist set on destroying America. Period.

Diversion

This is where, when on the ropes, the media commentator suddenly takes the debate in a weird but predictable direction to avoid accountability. This is the point in the discussion where most Fox anchors start comparing the opponent to Saul Alinsky or invoking ACORN or Media Matters, in a desperate attempt to win through guilt by association. Or they’ll talk about wanting to focus on “moving forward,” as though by analyzing the current state of things or God forbid, how we got to this state of things, you have no regard for the future. Any attempt to bring the discussion back to the issue at hand will likely be called deflection, an ironic use of the technique of projection/flipping.

Source: Contend copied and pasted from foxnewsboycott.com

This is a really good read and necessary to help understand why Fox news continues to have the grip it does on so many Americans.

Some choices are not okay…
(except they really are and it’s no one’s fucking business)

Some choices are not okay…

(except they really are and it’s no one’s fucking business)