--
Part One of Two
#1. "Why McCain Is Running Against the News Media"
Headline of story written by Peter A. Brown for this morning's Wall
Street Journal.
# 2. "MSNBC
is removing
Keith Olbermann and
Chris Matthews as the anchors of live political
events, bowing to growing criticism that they are too opinionated to be
seen as neutral in the heat of the presidential campaign."
From "MSNBC Drops Olbermann, Matthews as News Anchors," written by the
Washington Post's
Howard Kurtz.
#3.
Meet the Press host Tom Brokaw, asking pro-abortion Democratic vice
presidential nominee Sen. Joseph Biden about the speech given last week
by pro-life Republican vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin:
Brokaw:
Who was the first person you called after the speech?
Biden:
After my speech?
Brokaw:
After her speech.
Biden: I didn't call
anybody. I didn't--I happened to be--I didn't get her--I didn't see her
speech, I saw part of it. I--we were, we were flying to--from Florida to
Virginia, and I caught the tail end of it. And--oh, I guess I--actually,
I called my wife. I called my wife.
And
probably sobbed when he did. For someone, like me, who both scribbles
for a livelihood and works for an organization routinely bashed by
scribes of the "mainstream media," it doesn't get much better than
watching them squirm.
With
growing anger, Americans have watched the usual suspects work over
pro-life Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. Brass knuckles, blackjacks, and
assorted other weaponry have been the order of the day.
But a
funny thing happened on the way to the Republican National Convention.
Gov. Palin refused to buckle, refused to be intimidated, and refused to
let the Keith Olbermanns, Chris Matthewes, and Andrea Mitchells get away
with the vicious caricatures they drew of Palin and her entire family.
Her
calm display of grace while under siege energized the convention and,
for that matter, anyone and everyone who believes in fair play. The
subsequent response to the joint appearances of pro-life Sen. John
McCain and Gov. Palin--the numbers of people, the enthusiasm, and the
instant bond--instantly brings to mind the response to pro-abortion Sen.
Barack Obama during his heyday.
Three
quick points.
First,
Peter Brown is a fine analyst and an excellent writer. But there is a
strong suggestion in his piece in today's Journal that the McCain
campaign is inflating the media bias McCain and Palin have endured just
to motivate the troops. I can only shake my head in disbelief. It's been
a feeding frenzy like nothing I have ever seen.
As the story written
by the
Washington Post's
Howard Kurtz illustrates, the worst offenders--MSNBC's Keith
Olbermann and Chris Matthews--have been demoted, or transferred
laterally, if you want to take the most benign view. While taking the
anchor spots away from them for "live political events" is unmistakable
evidence of their grotesque one-sidedness, it is also true that they
will stay on as "commentators." My guess is that freed from even an
afterthought of impartiality, they will be even more vicious than ever.
Second,
a front page story in this morning's USA Today carries the
headline "McCain, GOP get a bounce in poll." We learn in the second
paragraph that McCain leads Obama 50% to 46% "among registered voters."
He had "lagged by 7 percentage points" just before the Republican
convention began last week. We also learn the "enthusiasm gap" has
almost completely vanished.
Oh, by
the way, buried in the second half of the story in one sentence is this
nugget: "Among those seen as most likely to vote, McCain lead Obama by
54% to 44%"--an advantage of not 4% but 10%.
And
third, pro-abortion Sen. Joe Biden's response to Tom Brokaw on Meet
the Press Sunday is indicative, I believe, of just how flummoxed the
Obama campaign is by the resurgence of Sen. McCain. There is an old
adage--"if you strike the King (or in this case, the Queen), you must
kill the King"--that applies perfectly.
The
Obama campaign and its allies in the mainstream media and the sleazier blogs assumed that if they hurdled enough muck and injected enough
poisonous lies, Palin would be neutralized, if not turned into a drag on
the ticket. But that was always risky for the simple reason, as Brown
delicately points out, "[T]he public already has grave doubts about the
news media." People not only easily intuited the blatantly unfairness,
they also took an instant shine to the brilliant, articulate, and folksy
governor.
Please
take a few minutes to read Part Two, in which I talk about Biden's foray
into the historic position of the Catholic Church on abortion. It was so
painfully wrong that I felt a twinge of embarrassment on his behalf.
Please
send me your comments at
daveandrusko@hotmail.com.