There was real emotion in his voice when ABC News anchor Charles Gibson used Friday night's newscast to stand up for little-guy McCain against online-fundraising-powerhouse Barack Obama. By opting out of public financing, Gibson intoned, the Democrat could obtain "two times, three times, four times, as much money as John McCain."
"Let me ask you a question about basic fairness," Gibson implored of chief Washington correspondent George Stephanopoulos. "People in this country like to believe that people play on a level playing field and that a campaign will be about ideas and personality; if you start with that much more money, is it basically fair?"
It was more a statement than a question, like Brit Hume anchoring at Fox. (ABC has gone Fox-like in crusading over "Obama's Switch" and "Back Flip" and "Flip-Flop" on public financing.)
Gibson's egalitarian "fretting" about fairness was too much for right-wing media critic Brent Baker, who belittled the anchor AND McCain: "If Obama can raise more than his opponent, it just reflects greater enthusiasm for him. And there's hardly any nobility in taking taxpayer money when you know you'll be challenged to raise a larger amount voluntarily."
To me, the good news is that a network anchor was giving prominence to the plight of underfinanced candidates.
The bad news is that it's taken years to see an anchor make such a stand. And that Gibson (like other media voices in recent days) is making his stand for "fairness" against a candidate who has attracted 3 million contributions from 1.5 million donors giving an average donation of $91. In other words, against a candidate who is arguably less beholden to big-moneyed interests than McCain. (The Gibson clip is at Crooks and Liars.)
I have mixed emotions about big media's newfound concern for under-funded candidates. Beginning in 1992, Norman Solomon and I used our nationally-syndicated column to criticize mainstream media for their failure to focus on campaign spending inequities and the elite funders of corporate-friendly politicians.
Days after the 1992 election, we wrote that "national media seemed almost clueless to explain the triumph" of endangered U.S. Senate incumbents -- with the New York Times blandly noting that many incumbents "somehow managed to survive." We mentioned several narrowly victorious Senators like corporate-backed sex-harasser Bob Packwood of Oregon, who outspent his Democratic challenger by more than 3 to 1. And ethically-challenged Al D'Amato of New York, who outspent his liberal opponent 2 to 1. Our column -- titled "We Need Term Limits for Political Pundits" -- concluded that "big bucks special interests dominating Washington are almost a taboo subject."
In that column and others, we urged political journalists to calculate and report which candidates won more "votes per dollar spent" -- arguing that the "VPDS count would make it clear that many incumbents would have been defeated if not for their advantage in dollars."
So here we are in 2008, and we're witnessing an apparent flip-flop in mainstream news -- with bleeding-heart appeals to "fairness" on behalf of the less-funded McCain enough to make a right-winger cringe. From the same outlets that spent decades worshipping a politician's corporate fundraising prowess as a sign of that candidate's strength, seriousness, viability.
When longtime media lapdogs on campaign inequities transform into fierce watchdogs in the face of Obama's online fundraising clout, the public is wise to be suspicious. Are these elite voices truly upset because Obama shifted his position? Are they upset all of a sudden that one candidate has a financial advantage over another?
Or is this just the fear and loathing of the Netroots resurfacing -- like when establishment pundits went hysterical as Joe Lieberman lost the Democratic primary in 2006?
Here is a fresh, outsider candidate -- like Dean in 2003 -- with a powerful grassroots funding base that goes way beyond the corporate sponsors of the nightly news. To the old-line media establishment, that's scary.
If network anchors want to be taken seriously on campaign "fairness," they might propose common-sense reforms. For starters: free TV and radio airtime to candidates.
Jeff Cohen is the director of the Park Center for Independent Media at Ithaca College. In 1986, he founded the progressive media watch group FAIR.
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44 Comments so far
Show AllBob K, the popular vote counts for nothing in the presidential election, as Al Gore well knows, even if Nader could magically get 33 percent of it. Electoral votes are what elect a president in this country under our current system.
Last I checked, neither Ralph Nader nor Cynthia McKinney were on the ballot in enough states to provide them with the over 270 electoral votes they'd need to be elected, which means they have absolutely zero chance of winning the presidency.
The only third party candidate that has even a ghost of a chance in 2008 is the Libertarian Party's Bob Barr. At least the LP are on the ballot in a sufficient number of states to win.
kitty_tc, I said why I won't vote for Obama in the post that you questioned. Why don't YOU get it? What good will it do to continue the Reagan/Bush/Cheney agenda under Democratic color?
To all the busy-bees buzzing their "No Chance" mantra: Pro-wrestler/movie-actor Jesse Ventura had "no chance" of becoming Minnesota governor until he received more than 33% of the vote in a three-way race. He defeated Rep. Norm Coleman and Dem. Skip Humphrey. He was then Governor Ventura. That's an empirical fact. A REAL empirical fact. Not the defective opinion some here claim is empirical fact.
If all the "No Chance" bees would simply vote their consciences, we'd easily have more than 33% of the vote. How does President Nader sound?
"ps Or just a freight train coming our way?"
Could be, but I think we will do well before its over.
We've got some Dem's I'd trust like Webb and Testor (?) but none have been there long.
Conservatives are split right now, but we are split even more. Radical Left, Leftists, Progressives, Liberals....heck I'm not sure which is which any more. If we ever got together and pulled in Conservatives that are much like us, there would be no contest.
Thomas More June 23rd, 2008 11:49 am
"And I have absolutely no respect for them at this time."
Good points. I understand being realistic. Our thinking then isn't that far apart. If those of us "Dem haters" could build up a third party enough to give them a "realistic" chance it might be possible for progressives to unite under them if "realistic" voters only shun 3rd parties because they don't have a realistic chance not because they don't recognize they are superior candidates. Light at the end of the tunnel?
But, the argument may be circular in the sense that they are not viable because we don't vote for them. We don't vote for them because they are not viable. If not now, then when, if ever?
ps Or just a freight train coming our way?
If a candidate is for sale, it isn't democracy -- regardless of the amount of the average customer purchase.
Reading and listening to Obama's defenders is disheartening. It strains credulity to process an argument that says taking more private money from more individual contributors somehow changes the relationship between donor and candidate. Grassroots? Give us a break. Wal-Mart, by this logic, can claim it is a "grassroots" company, since the average price they charge is lower than their competition. The point of public financing is to reduce the influence of money on the electoral process. Mr. Obama has nailed one of the last nails in the coffin of fair elections.
Actually I'm not a Democrat. And I have absolutely no respect for them at this time. Pelosi, Reid, Feinstein and others like them are contemptible liars. They aren't in Bush league status yet, but they are heading that way. So if you got the idea I was defending them, forget it.
Obamas simply another politician. McCain and I disagree on almost everything, but my votes not placed yet.
"ps One basic argument may be enough for the simple-minded. Do you have anything better than lesseroftwoevilisms? Take the challenge Thomas More."
I'll take the challenge. But, I of course wouldn't call it simple minded, I'd simply call it realistic. But thats exactly what it is so far, the lesser of two evils. I don't know of any other argument. I think my principels can withstand any challanges.
Thomas More June 23rd, 2008 10:58 am
"Obama or McCain is your choice and all the hand wringing in the world won’t change it."
Exactly, and people like you ensure that that never changes. No matter how despicable the Democrats become. You are in their pocket. Pocket "change".
The apologist argument is very unprincipled. The apologist rationale allows the Republicans to mover ever rightward with the Democrats tracking ever so slightly to their "left". One enables the other. Without one you couldn't have the other. Your Democrats are so utterly disgraced, discredited, sold out and bent over that for one to defend them as you do is unbelievable.
Thomas More I say to you what I said to Kitty, take my challenge. Go ahead, make my day.
ps One basic argument may be enough for the simple-minded. Do you have anything better than lesseroftwoevilisms? Take the challenge Thomas More.
I love it that Gibson can sit there with a straight face talking about the big issues of the day... like how the Republicans would like a level playing field or why flag pins are the sign of a true patriot. He's funnier than Desperate Housewives and has almost as much substance.
One basic argument should be quite enough. It will be a Democrat or a Republican in the White House for the foreseeable future.
There is no argument that gives a snowballs chance for a Radical platform or a candidate like Nader or the Green Party lady. They have no chance. None.
Obama or McCain is your choice and all the hand wringing in the world won't change it. So its true that a vote for Nader or any of the others is a vote for McCain. Nader cost Al Gore the presidency last time and thats an empirical fact.
kitty_tc (4:03 am) writes, “And all people like you do is help elect Republicans.â€
The contradictions of Democratic thinking are illuminated by the fact that their apologists (like kitty_tc & DD) have only one basic argument why you should vote for Democrats: that the Dem is not a Republican.
At the same time, the Dems help Republicans to confirm all their appointments, to pass all their legislation, & to protect Republican criminals from impeachment. The Democrats are the best friends Republicans ever had -- indeed, the R's couldn't stay out of prison without them.
kitty_tc June 23rd, 2008 4:03 am
"And all people like you do is help elect Republicans."
Dear Kitty,
The Republicans have a secret weapon they plan to use this fall: the Democrats.
Are you up for a challenge Kitty?
1)Please make a list of all the grand accomplishments of the Democrats in say, the last 12 years, no, how about the last 2+ since they have been in charge of the Congress.
2) Make a list of the reasons to vote for Democrats that aren't reasons to not vote for Republicans.
3) Please explain why the Democrats say impeachment is off the table when many legal experts believe Bush has broken the law and violated the Constitution.
4) Explain why the Democrats continue to fund the illegal occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
5) Explain why Democrats just helped grant Bush and the Telecoms immunity for breaking the law.
6) Explain why Bush is allowed to redefine torture and continues it.
7) Explain why the White House leaked the name of Valerie Plame as a CIA operative and George Bush and Dick Cheney are not in jail.
8) Explain why the defense budget exceeds that of the rest of the civilized world put together and the Democrats rubber stamp it.
If you can answer even one of the above I will be amazed. When given this challenge most Democratic Party apologists will side-step and weasel. They can't back up what they advocate. And that's the truth!
Now that small money is bigger than big money we can have our democracy back. Thank you Howard Dean.
Bob K:
Why don't you just pull the lever for McCain and skip the middle man?
I don't know if you have actually sold out to the Republican party or not, but you might as well have. You couldn't help them more if you tried.
"Some Republicans aren't worried about Barr's candidacy. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said voting for Barr is the same as voting for Democrat Barack Obama, and said he's confident most GOP voters will understand that.
"No reasonable conservative is going to vote for anyone except McCain," Gingrich said."
The other side gets it. Why don't you?
Charles Gibson is both a corporate whore AND dumb-as-a-bag-of-hammers. (Like George W. Bush.)
RichM has the rest of the story correct.
To those here still apologizing for Obama and fantasizing that he's (even slightly) progressive: bullshit. I've posted his Senate voting record here in these threads a dozen times. It's far to the right of Hillary Clinton's voting record. (He's to the right of Gore and Kerry as well.) Obama is a corrupt, lying, old-school, Chicago-style politician. His primary campaign rhetoric is completely contradicted by his actual voting record, and now by his appointments as well. Like his hero, Ronald Reagan, Obama is really nothing more than a corporate mouthpiece, without conscience or ethics, perfectly willing to lie, cheat, grin, bully and charm his way into the White House.
Look out, when the sixth Reagan term is headed by a Democrat.
I'll be voting for Nader.
I'm no dreamer. I voted for the socialist party candidate James DeBerry in 64, Eldrich Cleaver in 68, McGovern in 72, finally got a winner in 76 with Carter, then forcing my Dr Stangelove's dark hand to pull the democratic lever, reluctantly voted for all those patsy candidates like Mondale, & Dukakis, then held my progressive nose and voted for Slick Willy twice and watched his republican lite politics kill off progressive hopes.
This election cycle my ponies were: 1) Kuchinich, 2) Gore, 3) Edwards, 4) Obama and was so thankful I didn't have to drop down to my 5th (or was it 50th) choice of Hillary.
So I'm agreeing with all the "real politics" above, that he's what we have, lets work with him and on him and be thankful we don't have a more overt fascist with a swastika on his/her hat.
Remember FDR didn't run on a very liberal platform, but the times, people, circumstances and fate dictated his move to the left.
tailcap:
And all people like you do is help elect Republicans. Thanks a whole fucking lot for that. When they do the postmortem on this country decades from now, your ilk and the circular firing squad you've helped create on the left is going to be a leading cause of death. I hope you're happy with your results. The blood is on your hands as well as Bush. You put him there just as surely as the faithful Republican voters. Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter love you, you do their jobs for them.
The only traitors to the cause here is you. You help the enemy. This is fact. Face them already.
MichaelPDA June 22nd, 2008 10:14 pm
"...what are you doing to spur on change for the better?"
I will tell you I don't sit in ivory towers and that what I do may make the world different because I was important in the life of children. I am a teacher.
I am as tired of you Democratic Party Establishment apologists as you are of us "purist". Your argument is as tired as it is predictable. Most of the apologist argument boils down to the lesseroftwoevilisms.
You apologist are like frogs. You sit in the warming waters and refuse to move. You eventually cook because you refuse to reject the unacceptable. No matter how badly the Democrats sell us out:
Refusing to uphold the law and impeach Bush
Refusing to end the murderous illegal war for the plunder and rape of Iraq
Authorizing Bush and the Telecoms to break the law......ect the Democrats can always count on MichaelPDA.
Time to say to hell with the traitors! To hell with the Democrats.
ps Oh, just in case you didn't know MichaelPDA, the Democrats actually did win both elections you mentioned they just didn't have the balls to not roll over!
MichaelPDA wrote:
"As Howard Zinn says, and I paraphrase, the election is important enough only for the length of time it takes to go in and pull the lever for the Democratic nominee and then progressives must go out and continue the work to build the movement for change."
Well, maybe that's not such cogent advice, as we experience and learn more about the way Democrats operate. Lesser-evilism voting is comfy because it aims to give us a vague improvement in the short term, some details here and there, but the system doesn't change. Doing that entails forgoing quick, insubstantial reward, greater commitment to change, greater uncertainty, and the likelihood of greater pain in the short and intermediate term.
We need a progressive party - that is very clear. To make that happen, it looks like we need to apply the stick to the Democrats, until their backsides are masses of suppurating welts, if necessary.
And we need to make them know why we're doing it. Sadly, everyone will suffer. This is the fruit of the horribly broken system, participated in by amoral people, that we have.
MichaelPDA,
Correct. Gibson is a hack. He is not a reporter; he's a repeater. He does not report the news he repeats what corporations and the government tell him.
Pathetic.
Fanman, maybe because Jeff Cohen, the founder of F.A.I.R and former insider in MSM, is exposing Gibson for the hack he is. It seems a justified and reasonable thing to do to me, particularly by someone who watches and critiques the meida. And it is a well-written piece too. Not sure what about it got your undies all bunched up and made you attack him as you did.
Message to Jeff Cohen: FUCK YOU!
Are you so completely at a loss for anything constructive to say that you have to devote a piece to the likes of POS Charlie Gibson?? The one and same who thought a national debate on issues was actually a forum to discuss the etiquette of lapel flag pins???
After such a shameless display how can any serious minded person actually include such a buffoon in a column of serious issues?
Those attacking Norm Solomon and Jeff Cohen above should ask themselves--was the difference between Bush II and Al Gore enough to warrant working for the latter; or was the difference between Bush II and John Kerry enough to again work for the latter? In spite of their many shortcomings, only a fool would think that it made no difference whatsoever.
The reality is in this system, as bad as it is, either Obama or McCain will be president in 2009. For progressives, Obama is nowhere near where he should be on the issues, but the alternative--even if only for the fact of the Supreme Court most likely having two open seats in the next for years--being a McCain presidency is toxic.
As Howard Zinn says, and I paraphrase, the election is important enough only for the length of time it takes to go in and pull the lever for the Democratic nominee and then progressives must go out and continue the work to build the movement for change.
To throw up ones hands as holding the purist position of saying the difference between the candidates doesn't matter is the position of a jilted lover wanting all to wallow in the misery of rejection.
My question for those complaining about Cohen and Solomon is other than complaining about others motives, what are you doing to spur on change for the better?
I get a bit tired of hearing the "purists" stand in their ivory towers and bemoan the fact that no one is as pure as they are. Better to get out in the trenches and do something about it. Solomon and Cohen are doing something. What are you doing other than blogging rants against those who have continually fought to improve the system?
"Here is a fresh, outsider candidate."..right.
He is such an outsider he's easily capable of rolling in more money than even the party of Big Business, the wealthy, the Republicans.
"To the old-line media establishment, that’s scary."
He's such a fresh outsider the establishment is backing him to the hilt. The establishment is more behind him than even the two for one DNC Clintons. He's flush with money and endorsements.
To me Obama is McCain Lite. Having said that, why the hell should Obama level the playing field for his opponent. Would a Republican level the field for his opponent? The thought is laughable.
Saying Obama is an anti-establishment outsider would be like calling Tiger Woods a long-shot, rookie upstart. Please.
What nitwits. There is nothing preventing them, except their corporate masters, from providing fair and balanced coverage to Ralph Nader.
The public debate now should be between Nader and Obama. McCain is a nobody.
Well, Meet The Press spent the first 15 minutes of their show this morning discussing Obama's decision... with Lindsay Graham just appalled at what a horrible thing that was.
Apparently when it comes to important issues of the day, this outranks the war in Iraq, the economy, home foreclosures, flooding in the midwest and a few other things I would have thought more important. But then, what do I know?
"Unfortunately, those Southern (and my own CA Senator, Feinsshit) whack-jobs are still holding us back from progress. See almost all recent votes where the Reactionary Southern Dems gave us a lessening of civil rights and a general erosion of freedom."
---------------
Uh, you do know that Obama has just SUPPORTED the recent telecom bill? Are you admitting that Obama is pretty much just the same thing as the "Reactionary Southern Dems"?
Obama Supports FISA Legislation, Angering Left
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/06/20/obama_supports_fisa_...
To be fair, accepting the same amount of public finance would not put Obama and McCain on a level playing field. Conservative Special Interest groups have always been able to spend an almost limitless amount on supporting the Republican candidate. Special Interest groups coming out in support of the Democrat have never been able to match it.
.
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?cycle=2008&cid=N00009638
OBAMA TOP CONTRIBUTORS
†You gotta dance with the one who brung ya â€
.
"To be fair, accepting the same amount of public finance would not put Obama and McCain on a level playing field. Conservative Special Interest groups have always been able to spend an almost limitless amount on supporting the Republican candidate. Special Interest groups coming out in support of the Democrat have never been able to match it."
That's so dated.
Look at the money flowing this year. There's big bucks behind the Democrats and the Republicans are struggling for money. That's what's happening this year.
The corporate money has shifted. They now seem to think the Dems offer the best option for continuing to get what they want. This happens every once in awhile when the Republicans wear out their welcome and the Dems have to step in and hold the fort for awhile until the Republicans can fix their image. Just like in the 90's.
Obama isn't getting his money from Goldman Sachs, that figure comes from the people that say they are employed by them.
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contrib.php?id=N00009638&cycle=2008
Even at 35,000 employees, it's only under 600k. Those top 20 still only represent about 5 mil, out of 270 mil. If he's going to go where the money is, the majority of the money is coming from the "we the people" it's supposed to be coming from.
I say let it go. Consider it an equalizer from the unfair previous 2 elections, like a hockey team playing with 1 less player as a penalty to balance an unfairness.
In the top 20 are 4 universities.
Oooo, smell the coruption.
1 energy company, quite a few investment firms, and law firms.
No arms manufacturers, or nation infrastructure firms.
After an admin with ties to arms manufacturing, oil, and haliburton, you'd think there'd be a bit of relief.
I really hope in your lifetime that you see your utopian ideals manifest, but I'm willing to bet that it won't turn to a political world uninfluenced by the economic world.
Couple of fund raisers, Google has a lot of employee donors and that's worth complaining about, when bush was flying around in the Enron jet, and kenny lay had an office at the white house?
jesus christ.....
If the dems take the white house, and a bit more in congress and you see a decade similar to the 90s except with an economy based on green tech as apposed to the internet and PCs, and socialized medicine, prosecutions of the previous admin (provided we're not all overwhelmed by natural catastrophes or world war 3 from israel preemptively bombing iran or another neighbor) you guys promise to apologize and admit you don't know what your talking about, and refrain from stating anything without the disclaimer of "I really am known for getting things horribly wrong, so take my statements with a grain of salt"?
He's no Kucinich, we get it. He's no Nader. I wish he was, but he's 1000 times farther away from the current admin than the aforementioned.
His and Hilary's speech in front of Aipac was appalling, I know, and he's a tough pill to swallow, but he may keep this country and the global community from collapsing into something that made the depressions of the the first third of last century look like a picnic.
Perseverance in the face of corruption and insanity requires a sense of humor. Gibson provided my good laugh of the day.
This is not complicated. Obama pledged to take public financing and then broke his word. Big deal. He only shows that he's just another politician. Not above it all or different.
Its a political mistake I believe, but who thought he was that different anyway except some young folks.
It says a lot about where the corporate money is going this year when the Republicans accept public financing and the Dems refuse.
green tech ... you'll see little showboat ideas going that way. But remember, Obama counts nuclear as 'green tech', so guess where the money's really going.
socialized medicine... back in the primaries when he pretended to be on the left, he still had the most limited health care proposals. We know he was lying on everything from foreign policy to NAFTA, but he wouldn't even lie and promise this to get electd.
prosecutions of previous admin ... ain't gonna happen. This is the same bunch that's been blocking impeachment for the last two years. Why would you think they'll do this. This is the same bunch that keeps passing retroactive immunity for Bush and his cronies and the corporations that help him. Nope, what you are going to hear is some pretty words about 'looking to the future, not the past' and how 'lets not be divisive' (already an Obama fave) and 'we must work together going forward'. What you won't see is big prosecutions and investigations.
Democrats are dreaming. Even during his phony-lefty phase Obama wasn't promising this stuff. Yet they have this fantasy version of Obama in their heads that no amount of reality can shake. Even in a week where Obama supports telecom immunity and expanded warrantless spying and disavowals any nasty things he might have said about NAFTA and the Dems in the Congress vote to make sure the wars continue ... even then there's some Democrats that just won't open their eyes and see the truth.
Gibson has been a republi-flunkey since he got the 6.30 gig, and does such a fine job parrotting Republican-Disney talking points he could have written them himself.
No, if Gibson is complaining, we know the world is doing the right thing.
Isn't Gibson the jerk who asked Obama "Who is more patriotic, you or your pastor?" at the last debate with Hillary? His main agenda seemed to be, if I remember, keeping capital gains taxes away from his own portfolio.
Little Brother - "Gibson is no Tim Russert", which we all can agree is a good thing. One Media Russert was one too many.
RichM - "Obama is NOT a “fresh, outsider candidate,â€" - Obama and Dean were/are slightly outside the Dem mainstream. They try slightly enough to seem "outside" but not enough to shock the southern whack-job Dems that hold us back. Unfortunately, those Southern (and my own CA Senator, Feinsshit) whack-jobs are still holding us back from progress. See almost all recent votes where the Reactionary Southern Dems gave us a lessening of civil rights and a general erosion of freedom.
"Barack . . . . is sucking up to AIPAC" - I was also disgusted by this pandering. What a disappointment . . . . .
Vote Obama, a slight change for the better. Not a very good reason to be motivated.
RichM states the problem here trenchantly. Gibson is the ABC equivalent of Cavuto or Hume on Faux News. They don't come any more devoted to establishmentarianism. But it's the "fresh, outsider candidate" description Cohen gives of Obama that stuck in my craw, as much as I've respected Cohen's reporting and commentary for years. Solomon's too.
Jeff and Norm are speaking from the same "realism" podium most progressive/liberal/leftists are blackmailed into doing every four years: lesser evilism, so go whole hog to insure it regains power. I see their point clearly, and often find myself embracing the argument in exactly the same way. Next day, I read or hear something about the Dem L.E. that turns me around again with fierce conviction I'll be voting for Nader (third time) or McKinney because I refuse to be hoodwinked ever again.
But the two-party duopoly has us all by the political balls. We've shown no real capacity to organize a third party that isn't either ignored or ridiculed by both the corporate media AND liberal/pwogwessive groups who browbeat everyone into voting Democratic because TINA. Happens every time and will keep happening because we can't cooperate long enough to make third party options viable for more than the same shrinking minority that always vote for them if they've done all the leg work to get on the ballot, which is made nearly impossible by the concerted machinations of the reigning duoploy.
No matter what anyone tries, third parties never get much beyond tilting at the same windmills and getting 1% of the vote. Because as Little Brother says, it's all about the Benjamins, and third parties can never win simply because they can't raise the funds. Political power is bought, period, in our oligarchic, kleptocratic, plutocratic system. Gibson is determined to keep it that way, and even if Obama wins it will remain the same. Most of Wall St. is backing Obama: how the hell can he not be representing their interests?
So long as liberals consider fundamental challenges to capitalism to be dangerously toxic, the Right can neutralize them on every economic issue, and we'll never get anything but lesser evilism.
Where was this Gibson, holier than thou, fairness freak when Bush was planning to mount the unnecessary Iraqui war?
The media Gibson represents is slowly losing its clout because it has for far too long been remiss in its duty to act fairly in defence of what is right.
Nothing makes sense this year. First we have a Park Ridge cheerleader calling somebody else an elitist and now we have a conservative republican millionaire campaigning with public money and complaining that his opponent won't take public funds. Now I ask you, which one is promoting socialism?
Overseer in America is spelled: Ovursear. See? Spelling makes all the difference. BHO ISN'T an Overseer on Master's Plantation dedicated to the transfer of all wealth in America to the top 1/4 of 1 %. NOOO. BHO is an Ovursear on Master's Plantation dedicated to the transfer of all wealth in America to the top 1/4 of 1 %. That makes him "our guy". Savvy? Too muth Jack Sthparrow. I mean, Captain, Jack Sparrow.
Keep to the Code. "Take everything you can. Give nothing back." It's the American way...
RichM is on target. And no MSM fatmouth says anything worth hearing.
This piece is a bit tough to draw conclusions on, because certain assumptions that are almost invariably true, no longer hold true in this instance.
Usually, for example, you can take it to the bank that any position espoused by Charles Gibson will be reactionary, stupid & dishonest; while any position held by Norman Solomon & Jeff Cohen will be very progressive & relatively enlightened.
However, when push comes to shove, Solomon & Cohen line up with the Democratic Party, who, as we should all know by now, are the scum of the earth. Norm & Jeff are now firmly in Obama's camp (Norm is even an Obama delegate), even as ol' Barack (remember the supposedly "progressive" Barack from the primaries?) is sucking up to AIPAC, bashing Castro, recruiting economic & foreign policy advisors from the Bill Clinton administration, & supporting George W Bush's approach to FISA.
So Jeff & Norm go too far in defending Obama. Except in the most superficial sense, Obama is NOT a "fresh, outsider candidate," and neither was Dean in 2004. They are/were both typical Dem Party phonies, whose ideas are hard-core pro-Establishment, though in both cases this was camouflaged with a dollop of vaguely "oppositional" decoration. Also, it's not the case that Obama is getting the bulk of his donations from "the little guy." He is getting it from the likes of Goldman Sachs, et al.
Jeff & Norm are right to point out the blatant hypocrisy in Gibson's whining. But the whole piece is disfigured by their own close ties to the Dem Party & its fake candidates.
Well, Gibson is no Tim Russert, of course-- so don't expect him to be placed on the Vatican's Canonization Fast Trackâ„¢ for Express Sainthood.
Only a top-rank (emphasis on "rank") network anchor with finely-honed reporting skills like Gibson could courageously and selflessly dig deep enough to confirm what some of us have only suspected: Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison and Jay may still be on the marquee-- but for the past century or so, our political process is all about the Benjamins.
If Obama can raise more than his opponent, it just reflects greater enthusiasm for him.
The obvious question, of course, is where most of that "greater enthusiasm" is coming from. But I'm told that one should never belabor the obvious.