Posted on 09/21/2006 9:02:46 AM PDT by PajamaTruthMafia
Yesterday evening, I received a call from my column syndicate, Creators Syndicate. The Associated Press had phoned my editor to inform her that it would be sending a response to my column yesterday about detained AP photographer Bilal Hussein. (Funny how quickly they respond now. Where have they been the past five months? Oh, right: Busy covering up the news about Hussein's April 12 capture by the military at a Ramadi apartment with an alleged al Qaeda leader and a weapons cache.) The AP last night asked my editor to supply its corporate communications office with my newspaper client list so it could disseminate its response.
Well, I am happy to help out the AP by posting its statement right here on my blog (we'll also send it out in a bonus column to all my syndicate clients). The AP's non-response response is a very instructive, valuable, and revealing document that I'd like not just my newspaper readers, but also all of you, to see. It is as damning for what it says as for what it doesn't say. As you'll see, AP's statement abandons any attempt to address the key issues bloggers and my column have raised--its questionable journalistic judgement in suppressing news of Hussein's detention for five months (see LGF), its compromised neutrality (see Power Line), and its dangerous dependence on dubious local stringers embedded with the Iraqi insurgency (see Jawa Report, EU Referendum, Dan Riehl, and Democracy Project). Instead, AP has written a little policy brief that calls into question the news organization's ability to be fair and impartial in its reporting on the capture, detention, and interrogation of security detainees in Iraq and other fronts in the war on terror:
(Excerpt) Read more at michellemalkin.com ...
Wow! Hey AP better put some ice on that.
Watch her on Vent take on the AP (Associated with Terrorists Press)
http://hotair.com/archives/2006/09/21/the-associated-with-terrorists-press/
Not all AP reporters are biased. Some are of course but the real problem is AP management is without moral guidance. They tolerate and even encourage those few reporters who will actually support terrorists to get or create a story. I personally believe the entertainment nature of news creates this problem.
This is the beginning of the end for the AP. The jig is up, courtesy of the Pajamahadeen.
I'm grateful to Ms. Malkin for baiting them enough to get them to come out and show their true colors. But it was already clear that the AP was by and large an advocacy group. The only thing we leanr from their response is that they see nothing wrong with that.
AP is the propaganda wing of the DNC.
Hey, aren't there rules concerning Michelle, eh?? We're falling down on the job...
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus
Please FReepmail me if you would like to be added to, or removed from, the Michelle Malkin ping list...
The Keystone Cops (DUmocrats) long for the days when terrorism was just a "nuisance".
Tom Curley, President, CEO
450 W. 33rd Street
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212-621-7550
Fax: 212-621-1908
Email: tcurley@ap.org
Kathleen Carroll, Senior Vice President, Executive Editor
450 W. 33rd Street
New York, NY 10001
Phone: 212-621-1610
Email: kcarroll@ap.org
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