LAUREL —
“These acts of violence against innocents violate the fundamental tenets of the Islamic faith, and it’s important for my fellow Americans to understand that.” – President George W. Bush, at the Islamic Center of Washington, September 17, 2001
They’ve finally made it official. Although you’re not likely to see it reported on Fox News, media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., parent company of Fox, the Wall Street Journal, New York Post, etc. recently donated a cool $1 million (that’s $1,000,000) to the Republican Governors Association. While corporate donations to political parties are common, media conglomerates are normally careful to give to both parties for appearance’s sake.
Not Murdoch, however. Any questions?
Conflicts of interest don’t come much more obvious. Appearances be damned; Fox News is a partisan propaganda outlet. Actually, as Media Matters columnist Erich Boehlert has recently suggested, the GOP isn’t so much running Fox News as Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and a host of talk radio ranters are stampeding the party.
Back in the bad old days of the Soviet Union, Russians had a cynical proverb describing their country’s party-line press. Playing upon the names of the two main newspapers Pravda (”truth”) and Izvestia (”news”), the joke was that there was no Truth in the News, and no News in the Truth.
We’re not there yet, but not for lack of trying. Rushing to fill the power void on the right after the Democrats’ 2008 takeover of Congress and the White House, Fox News and its allies have grown ever bolder and more irresponsible since President Obama’s inauguration, dropping all but the thinnest pretext of professionalism, and often enabled by the “mainstream” media’s institutional cowardice.
This has rarely been more apparent than during the recent controversy over the so-called “Ground Zero Mosque.” Seizing upon public ignorance about the project, its location and the motives of those proposing it, Fox News propagandists, its politician/employees, and their talk radio allies have generated a perfect storm of bigotry and ethnic hatred.
What began as an exercise in ecumenical outreach and religious tolerance is now described as “a recruiting tool for domestic extremists” (Limbaugh), and a facility “to train and recruit Sharia law advocates who become terrorists” (Dick Morris on “Fox News and Friends”).
Night after night, Fox News commentator Sean Hannity hammers away, distorting the words of a religious leader whose entire career has been spent building bridges between Muslims, Christians and Jews. Bob Somerby has documented the carnage on his dailyhowler.com website.
“I want to move a little bit into the area of the imam who’s spearheading this.” Hannity announced on a recent program. “He wants America, he said in his book, to be more Sharia compliant. ... But what is Sharia law, you know, where women are stoned to death, where women don’t have rights ... where you see that if a woman claims rape they need four male eyewitnesses to prove rape. Women can’t drive, women can’t go to school, women in Saudi Arabia can’t be seen in public with a male that they’re not related to. He says America should be Sharia compliant. Don’t you think we need to know what he means by that?”
In reality, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf’s 2004 book, “What’s Right With Islam Is What’s Right With America,” condemns such practices as barbaric relics of tribalism. He has unequivocally condemned terrorism. “The truth is that killing innocent people is always wrong,” he wrote “and no argument or excuse, no matter how deeply believed, can ever make it right. No religion on earth condones the killing of innocent people, no faith tradition tolerates the random killing of our brothers and sisters on this earth ... Islamic law is clearly against terrorism.”
Indeed Rauf’s book expands upon his belief that the United States has been “Sharia compliant” since the Declaration of Independence. He’s given State Department-sponsored lectures in the Middle East under both the Bush and Obama administrations arguing that America’s commitment to religious freedom makes it the best country in the world for Muslims.
Invited to speak at a 2003 synagogue service for Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter murdered by Islamist fanatics in Pakistan, Imam Rauf addressed himself to the victim’s father. “Not only today I am a Jew,” he said “I have always been one, Mr. Pearl.” Also, he explained, a Christian and a Muslim, invoking “the moral equivalency of our Abrahamic faiths.”
To portray such a man as a terrorist is beyond dishonest. Calling all Muslims terrorists is the equivalent of calling all Christians snake-handlers; all Jews Christ-killers. It’s KKK-style hate-mongering, a rejection of the basic premises of Americanism, and a propaganda gift to the lunatic cultists of al-Qaida such as they could never achieve on their own.
It’s no longer enough simply to set the record straight. Journalists have an affirmative duty to defend their own profession’s honor, what little remains of it.
You can e-mail Arkansas Democrat-Gazette columnist Gene Lyons at eugenelyons2@yahoo.com.
Columns
To all real journalists: Stop being such cowards
- Columns
-
-
Slowly but Surely
How was your Super Bowl Weekend? Mallorie and I had a full schedule as we attended the “Krewe of Docs” hosted by Oncologics to benefit the American Cancer Society Saturday night. The event was held here in Downtown Laurel and everyone did a great job. The Cowboy Blues Band played the night away and fun was had by all. We got geared up again Sunday night for Super Bowl festivities. After our Saints fell short against the 49ers, I was less than excited about this year’s big game. I picked a favorite anyway and my allegiance fell on the shoulders of Eli and the Giants. It was a great game to watch as a football fan and as always the commercials were pretty great too.
-
Economic Chaos Ahead
Let’s think about the kind of mess that we’re in. Federal 2010 Medicare and Medicaid expenditures totaled $800 billion. The projected annual growth of both programs is about 7 percent. Social Security expenditures are more than $700 billion a year. According to the 2009 Social Security and Medicare trustees reports, by 2030, 49 percent of federal revenues will go for Social Security and Medicare payments. The unfunded liability of both programs is already $106 trillion.
-
Are people really retiring later?
True or false? You may have heard this claim before (or something like it): “Many Americans are being forced to retire later because their savings and investments took a hit in the Great Recession.”
-
Dead Mice Tell No Tales
“What’s that smell?” Sue asked from the front hall. “Is that a dead mouse?”
Sometimes I cannot help myself. “Is it?” I said. “I just thought you were cooking dinner.” Some people cannot take a joke. My shoulder still hurts. -
Around It or Through It
Recently, I had an irritation and wanted to go around it, but that is not how the story goes. I had a huge ulcer in my cheek; I was miserable and asked a doctor to help my pain. Instead of giving me a cure, He told me that I would be fine in a couple of weeks. That was not what I wanted to hear; I was in pain and a couple of weeks sounded like an eternity!
-
Northeast Jones grads doing well in sports world
Justin Cooley was approved Monday night by the Smith County school board as the new head football coach at Raleigh High School.
-
Health Care Trust Fund headed to a zero balance
A new Republican governor and new Republican legislative leadership now face the same task that has confounded their Democratic colleagues when they had the reins of state government – finding a way to pay for Mississippi’s massive Medicaid program.
-
Running as a businessman could be Romney’s curse
Mitt Romney has based nearly his entire presidential campaign on his experience as a businessman. “I spent my career in the private sector,” Romney told Fox News in late November. “I think that’s what the country needs right now.”
-
Reducing state teen pregnancy
In his State of the State address, Gov. Phil Bryant set out as a policy for his administration to tackle the issue of teen pregnancy — a formidable goal.
-
Sexes’ Differences Good for Valentine’s Day
Get this: men and women are different.
Italian researchers made this “groundbreaking” discovery in a recent study. - More Columns Headlines
-







