The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change

The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change



Alexis de Toqueville

The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.
Alexis de Tocqueville

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The United States Capitol Building

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The Constitutional Convention

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George Washington at Valley Forge

George Washington at Valley Forge


Friday, October 22, 2010

NPR's World Of Make-Believe

From The American Spectator:

Special Report


NPR's World of Make-Believe

By Andrew Cline on 10.22.10 @ 6:08AM



The great institutions of the political left -- government, academia, and the arts -- are realms of fantasy and self-delusion. They exist to provide a refuge from -- or a tool with which to reshape -- reality. They are massive, expanding universes of make-believe. This week, NPR news analyst Juan Williams -- a man who spent his entire career dealing in facts -- found himself a victim of the creeping ether of fantasy generated by these institutions.



On Monday, Williams said publicly, "When I get on a plane, I gotta tell ya, if I see people in Muslim garb, and I think, you know, they're identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims. I get worried. I get nervous."



For that, NPR summarily canceled his contract. Williams said he was told he had made "bigoted statements."



That's curious phrasing because no one believes Juan Williams is a bigot. A Washington reporter respected on both the left and the right for his honesty, integrity and professionalism, Williams has built a national reputation as a thoughtful, considerate journalist. He has written eloquently on race relations in America (he's for them), and he is known for presenting opposing views fairly and accurately. Bigotry? Utterly unbelievable.



NPR doesn't even claim Williams was fired for being a bigot. The term Williams used when relaying the conversation with his superior was "a bigoted statement." Welcome to Fantasy Island.



Either Williams is a bigot or he isn't. If NPR thinks he is, it could easily say so and terminate his contract. The trouble is, he isn't. And that's demonstrable. In addition to his entire body of work, Williams is exonerated by words he uttered on the same national television program on which he spoke his offending (to NPR) statement. On the same show, he said that Americans shouldn't stereotype Muslims. Obviously, the comments for which he was fired were not intended to advocate or justify stereotyping Muslims.



So why fire a non-bigot for making a non-bigoted statement? Perception and spin.



Council on American-Islamic Relations National Executive Director Nihad Awad released a statement: "NPR should address the fact that one of its news analysts seems to believe that all airline passengers who are perceived to be Muslim can legitimately be viewed as security threats."



But of course that isn't what Williams said. He simply stated that he feels worried when he sees self-identified Muslims on board airplanes. He wasn't saying people should feel that way. He didn't say he was proud of feeling that way. He just said it was a reality that he has that reaction.



At NPR, there is tolerance for a cornucopia of viewpoints and perspectives. But reality? There is no tolerance for that.



CAIR pretended that the comment expressed support for treating all Muslims as terrorists. NPR, in turn, pretended to agree, even though Williams categorically and convincingly disavowed such a view on the very same program and afterward. In the world of make-believe, the actual thoughts expressed by one's words are meaningless; their meaning is determined by the thoughts, feelings and perceptions others form -- or pretend to form -- in response.



To NPR, the actual human being named Juan Williams, with whom the executives and staff have worked for years, is unimportant. With that one statement, Juan Williams transformed himself from man to symbol. To NPR, he was no longer Juan Williams, colleague, but Juan Williams, symbol of intolerance and bigotry.



What really sealed Williams' fate was that he made his comment not on NPR, but on FOX News, and worse, on The O'Reilly Factor. NPR took Williams' comment out of the context of the conversation in which it was said, but in the context of the company in which he said it.



Since Williams became a FOX News contributor in 1997, he has become, in the words of an NPR executive, a "lightning rod." Many NPR listeners view Williams as a collaborator with the enemy. It doesn't matter that he expresses a generally liberal viewpoint on that network. What matters is that he gives it legitimacy by merely appearing on it. Williams pained many NPR listeners by shattering their delusion that FOX News was purely a right-wing hate factory. Others feared that his presence would give non-liberals the perception that FOX News is a credible news network. They, without even watching it, knew that it wasn't.



For NPR, Williams comment was the pretext for which it had been waiting. It canceled his contract without even giving him the chance to explain himself -- to the brass or the listeners. There would be no "teachable moment," as the president likes to say. Williams had to go back on FOX News -- that symbol of hatred and bigotry -- to air his defense.


As he explained, "It's not a bigoted statement. In fact, in the course of this conversation with Bill O'Reilly, I said we have an obligation as Americans to be careful to protect the constitutional rights of everyone in our country and to make sure that we don't have any outbreak of bigotry, but that there's a reality. You cannot ignore what happened on 9/11 and you cannot ignore the connection to Islamic radicalism, and you can't ignore the fact of what has even recently been said in court with regard to this is the first drop of blood in a Muslim war in America."




Williams, rather pathetically, was reduced to defending himself with facts, never realizing that the ordeal that ended his NPR career was never about facts. To NPR listeners, people whose views have been shaped by the fantasy-creating institutions of the left, he had long ago become a symbol, by his affiliation with FOX News, of bigotry and intolerance. Monday's statement merely gave them and NPR's management the cover with which to hide their preconceived biases while acting on them.



NPR and so many of its listeners continue to present themselves as champions of freedom, tolerance, and truth -- and FOX News by contrast as the primary force for intolerance, spin, and deception. Yet FOX News reacted to Williams' firing by immediately hiring him. NPR, operating in the fantasy world of symbolism and perception, lost an honest, accurate, and fair journalist. FOX News, operating in the real world, gained one.



Letter to the Editor


Andrew Cline is editorial page editor of the New Hampshire Union Leader. His Twitter ID is Drewhampshire.


And, this, related, from The American Spectator:
 
National Patronizing Radio


By Geoffrey Norman on 10.22.10 @ 6:09AM



Anna Christopher, who is "senior manager of media relations" at National Public Radio, spent yesterday doing some serious explaining. Most of us probably didn't know that NPR had any managers of media relations, much less a senior one, and certainly didn't care. NPR is free to waste money any way it chooses, even if some of the money does come from taxpayers.



Anyway, seems Ms. Christopher was called upon to manage the media regarding NPR's firing of Juan Williams for saying something inconsistent with the company line. The problem was what he said, Ms. Christopher insisted, not where he said it, which was on Fox TV.



What Williams said was that he gets nervous when he is on an airplane and notices some of his fellow passengers in Muslim garb. This, of course, simply will not do.



One wonders how Ms. Christopher and her co-workers at NPR would feel if they saw a couple of sunburned, tobacco chewing old boys in a pickup truck with a rifle racked over the seat coming down the street where they live. Most likely the strangers would not be dangerous; just a couple of bitter clinging deer hunters who got lost. Sort of people you should pity, not fear. But… you never know.



Anyway, Williams was fired and as if that were not punishment enough Vivian Schiller, Ms. Christopher's boss, the CEO of NPR, said he should have kept his feelings between himself and "his psychiatrist or his publicist."



Ms. Schiller got this nifty off while speaking to the Atlanta Press Club. One wonders:



(a) How her audience reacted?



(b) Why she felt compelled to send Ms. Christopher out to manage the media again, this time with an apology?



What the senior manager of media relations said was, "Vivian [Schiller] spoke hastily and apologized to Juan and others for her hasty remark."



Why apologize? After all, Schiller and her outfit had pretty much called Williams a racist already. Why not double down and say he's nuts, too? One suspects that it is a(nother) NPR taboo to in any way be perceived as making light of people who are mentally ill, emotionally disturbed, or suffering from any malady requiring the services of a psychiatrist. Ms. Schiller probably felt herself on the thinnest of PC ice and looking at a six-month stretch in sensitivity boot camp. So she sent Ms. Christopher out to do some managing of media relations.



You don't mock the therapeutic culture at NPR where they treat the audience as though it is in need of help and reassurance. How else explain the soft, modulated voices of the on-the-air talent and the implicit message of all those fund-raising campaigns, which comes down to, "We are the voice of sanity in an otherwise disturbed and disturbing world."



That would be the real world. The one Juan Williams was describing and which National Patronizing Radio elaborately pretends does not exist.



Letter to the Editor

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