Posted on 10/26/2003 7:27:03 AM PST by Oldeconomybuyer
Despite a muscle tear a couple of years ago that curtailed his tennis playing, Walter Cronkite, who turns 87 next week, is still going strong. The former CBS anchor now writes a syndicated newspaper column, in which he has criticized the war in Iraq and other Bush Administration policies. TIME's Richard Zoglin talked with the man once dubbed the most trusted in America.
![]() COURTESY OF WALTER CRONKITE
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Sunday, Oct. 26, 2003
You have basically come out and said you're a liberal. How do you respond when critics say, "Aha, I knew reporters were liberal, and this is why the media is biased"? I do not consider a liberal necessarily to be a leftist. A liberal to me is one whoand it suits some of the dictionary definitionsis unbeholden to any specific belief or party or group or person, but makes up his or her mind on the basis of the facts and the presentation of those facts at the time. That defines what I am. I have never voted a party line. I vote on the individual and the issues.
Was there ever a time when you were anchoring that it was difficult for you to hold in your feelings? Oh, yeah, that was about daily, I think. But that's not unusual or extraordinary. That's what all of us who work for the front page do. That is part of our training. We learn to put our personal feelings behind us and try to write the facts as nearly as we can come to them as honestly as we can report them.
Do you believe most reporters are liberal? I think they're on the humane side, and that would appear to many to be on the liberal side. A lot of newspaper peopleand to a lesser degree today, the TV peoplecome up through the ranks, through the police-reporting side, and they see the problems of their fellow man, beginning with their low salarieswhich newspaper people used to have anywayand right on through their domestic quarrels, their living conditions. The meaner side of life is made visible to most young reporters. I think it affects their sentimental feeling toward their fellow man and that is interpreted by some less-sensitive people as being liberal.
How do you rate George W. Bush as president? He's been the most adventuresome and in many senses the most revolutionary President since at least Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He has shaken up our foreign policy to an almost unrecognizable state.
[snip]
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
Yeah, let's make up definitions now. What a jackass!
Liar. Typical liberal response...when caught just change the terms of the debate or the definition of the terms. Liar
Living in the UN...now we know.
What a lying, deluded sack of $hit!
Typical elitist liberal. Can't see what a total hypocrite he is.
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