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Newsweek put US flag in trash on foreign cover (arrghhh!)
World Net Daily ^ | May 23, 2005

Posted on 05/23/2005 9:40:59 AM PDT by FeeinTennessee

FLUSH TO JUDGMENT Newsweek put U.S. flag in trash on foreign cover New allegations of anti-Americanism hit mag reeling from Quran scandal

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Posted: May 23, 2005 1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

With Newsweek still reeling from its forced retraction of the Quran-in-the-toilet story, the magazine is now under fire for publishing what some see as staunchly anti-American covers in foreign editions.

International edition of Feb. 2 Newsweek

For instance, while a Japanese edition of Newsweek dated Feb. 2 published a cover story featuring an American flag in a trash can under the headline, "The day America died," and the international edition featured a photo of President Bush with the headline, "America Leads ... But Is Anyone Following?," the U.S. edition cover story was an "Oscar Confidential" featuring Hilary Swank, Jamie Foxx and Leonardo DiCaprio.

The cover story in the foreign editions, titled, "Dream on, America," about what Newsweek characterized as "the world's rejection of the American way of life," did not run in the U.S. edition of the magazine.

Japanese edition of Feb. 2 Newsweek

The Japanese edition of the magazine is raising the ire of bloggers for its illustration of a dirtied American flag, its staff broken and discarded in a trash can.

"I think they have crossed the line into outright treason," wrote one blogger yesterday. "It's time to see some of these enemy propagandists hanging from the end of a rope."

U.S. edition of Feb. 2 Newsweek

Some Newsweek international readers noticed that the story didn't run in the U.S.

"Why didn't this fine story run in my U.S. edition?" wrote one letter writer in the March 14 edition.

The Japanese cover story was noted on the blogsite Riding Sun, produced by "a New Yorker living in Tokyo."

"Newsweek's false, retracted story about American guards flushing the Quran down a toilet at Guantanamo doesn't necessarily mean the magazine's staff hates America or Bush, or wants us to lose in Iraq," wrote Rising Sun. "To be charitable, let's just chalk that one up to sloppy journalism. But I'm at a loss to explain this."

Both the Japanese and international editions featured cover stories by Andrew Moravcsik. But that piece did not run in the U.S. edition.

"It's one thing for Newsweek to actively promote the notion that America is a 'dead,' 'rotting' country overseas," wrote Rising Sun. "But it's quite another thing indeed to hide those efforts from its American readers. If Newsweek really think America is dead, and our flag belongs in the trash, why won't it tell us?"


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fifthcolum; flagdesecration; liberalmedia; newsweek; oldglory
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If you have Newsweek subscriptions, time to get rid of them! You may wanna send them your thoughts on this!

Newsweek 251 W 57th Street, New York, NY 10019 Phone: 212-445-4000 Fax: 212-445-5068 E-mail: letters@newsweek.com

Or via this link: http://www.capwiz.com/townhall/dbq/media/

1 posted on 05/23/2005 9:41:02 AM PDT by FeeinTennessee
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To: FeeinTennessee

They are cowards.


2 posted on 05/23/2005 9:42:40 AM PDT by RushCrush (Never give in. Never, never, never, never!)
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To: FeeinTennessee

For your amusement, another atrocity committed by Newsweek.

Newsweek Lutefisk Story Sparks Fury Across Volatile Midwest
Decorah, IA

The debris-strewn streets of this remote Midwestern hamlet remain under a tense 24-hour curfew tonight, following weekend demonstrations by rock- and figurine-throwing Lutheran farm wives that left over 200 people injured and leveled the Whippy Dip dairy freeze. The rioting appeared to be prompted, in part, by a report in Newsweek magazine claiming military guards at Spirit Lake’s notorious Okoboji internment center had flushed lutefisk down prison toilets. Newsweek’s late announcement of a retraction seems to have done little to quell the inflamed passions of Lutheran insurgents in the region, as outbreaks of violent mailbox bashings and cow tippings have been reported from Bowbells, North Dakota to Pekin, Illinois.

Whether the violence was triggered by Newsweek’s report of lutefisk desecration or frustration over chronic shortages of Beanie Babies and Old Style, one thing seems certain – occupying U.S. troops face a steep road to reestablish trust in this tinderbox of ancient hatreds and delicious dairy products. Some analysts say the latest outbreak represents the most vexing challenge to US strategy since its invasion the region three years ago.

“It could be months before we get the area back under control,” said Brigadier Gen. Glen Hastings of the US Army’s Southern Minnesota Command. “We’re hoping the tractor pull and swap meet seasons will help calm down some of the violent elements.”

‘Campground of Evil’

Military efforts to stabilize the violent ethnic Protestantism of the region have had a mixed record of success. U.S. paratroopers first landed along the Iowa/Minnesota border in early 2002 to root out extremist Uff Da militants, followers of the charismatic Lutheran cleric Pastor Duane Gunderson. Despite fears of being bogged down in the harsh Mankato winter, troops encountered little resistance, save sporadic eggings from ill-equipped insurgents atop the grain elevators of local cornlords. U.S. forces achieved swift success, taking as many as 1,500 Lutheran rebels into custody and bringing a momentary measure of stability to what has long been considered a dangerous Scandinavian backwater.

The initial battlefield victories, however, have since proven to be only the beginning of the American struggle here. The subsequent occupation created a number of difficult challenges critics claim were overlooked by the White House’s top Midwest war planners. The tipping point seems to have been a 2004 incident at the now notorious Okoboji.

First constructed as a boredom punishment camp for Midwest dissident youth, the US Military Command converted the sprawling Arnold’s Park / Lake Okoboji area into an internment facility to house insurgent detainees. Almost immediately stories began to surface of prisoner mistreatment, including vivisections, anal probes by extraterrestrial strippers, and blackouts of Viking games.

American military spokesmen initially dismissed the stories, but several news organizations – led by Newsweek – obtained a series of shocking photos of a Texas Army Reservist, Tyffanie Cruddup, laughing as she humiliates a naked inmate by putting a Dallas Cowboys stocking hat on his head.

The photos sent the Lutheran street into riots as far as Rheinlander, Wisconsin, and sent shockwaves throughout the media world. The incident received heavy play on network and cable news, the New York Times, Washington Post, Le Monde, the Guardian, Packers Illustrated, and was the subject of over a dozen off-Broadway dramas during the 2004 season. For its part, Newsweek ran a record eight consecutive covers on Okoboji, along with a special commemorative November 3 collector’s issue with pull-out humiliation poster.

Luting and Looting

In the wake of the incident, American military spokespeople have taken pains to defend handling of prisoners at Okoboji. A series of new guidelines instruct guards to “respect the rituals and traditions of our valued Lutheran prison guests,” including “dietary needs, Wednesday Nite Bingo, and twice daily viewing of Wheel of Fortune.”

“It is important that we remember that Lutheranism is a religion of peace,” said Army spokesman Maj. Richard Lehrman. “And we need to remember to avoid insensitive behavior and remarks that will cause these peaceful Lutherans to go on another bloody killing rampage.”

Despite officials’ claims of intensified sensitivity, rumors have persisted of continued prisoner abuse at Okoboji, including lutefisk desecration – an especially heinous crime under Lutheran doctrine. Some analysts have viewed the rumors skeptically, pointing to the Uff Da insurgent training manual “How To Lie About Lutefisk Desecration By Infidels.” Still, dozens of news organizations continue to investigate the charges.

In its May 6 “Midwest Quagmire Wire” section, Newsweek appeared to have confirmed the lutefisk rumors. Bylined by Senior Correspondent Michael Isikoff, the magazine cited an unidentified source claiming that Okoboji guards had deliberately flushed an entire batch of the pungent cod-and-lye concoction that prisoners had been aging in a specially prepared commode. “The guard smelled it and thought it was prison burrito night,” the source was quoted as saying.

News of the desecration spread quickly from Iowa to the Dakotas to Minnesota and Wisconsin, fanned by radio soybean reports and Lutheran clerics in fiery pancake breakfast sermons. Soon, enraged farm wives, clad in their traditional sweater vests and Disney jackets, had taken to the streets and begun a wild spree of destruction, overturning hundreds of rusty Blazers and Pontiac Grand Ams and hurling flaming Lladro porcelain figurines. Decorah was particularly hard-hit, as a frenzied throng of ululating Iowa women were seen looting needlepoint geese and rabbit tchotchkes from a Victorian craft shop. In a chilling moment caught on Army night vision cameras, their plus-size leader urges the mob to attack the near-by Pamida.

“Ya, you betcha!” came the chant of her enraged coreligionist.

After battling back the women with volleys of teargas and Land’s End catalogs, a detachment of California reservists finally quelled the riot early Sunday morning, and attended to the injured.

Fake But Not Completely Implausible

As soldiers patrolled the streets of Decorah, Faribault and La Crosse Sunday, Newsweek Editor Mark Whitaker issued a surprising, terse clarification of the original story, saying that the magazine could “no longer vouch for every detail of the story, including the brand of lye used, the number of soldiers and prisoners present, or possibly whether any of it actually happened.”

Whitaker, however, declined to retract the story, saying that the magazine was “standing behind its essential plausibility.”

“Obviously, if it causes thousands of native gals go on a berserk looting rampage, there’s got to be something believable in there somewhere,” said Whitaker. “Obviously, it’s now up to the Administration and the DoD to disprove these charges, once they finish cleaning up the carnage.”

In a later and terser clarification, Whitaker said that the magazine’s anonymous source could no longer remember whether he had ever been to Iowa, was in the military, or knew how to pronounce ‘lutefisk.’ In a still-later, and yet-terser clarification, Whitaker finally retracted the story after revealing that its anonymous source was Kippy, Michael Isikoff’s imaginary childhood friend.

“This is a really unfortunate accident for everybody,” said Whitaker. “But let’s not forget the real victims here – Newsweek, Mike Isikoff, and especially Kippy.”

While retracting the Okoboji accusations, Whitaker said Newsweek stood by the original article’s final two sentences, “Boo-yah! In your FACE, Chimpy!”

Despite the Newsweek’s humiliating public retraction of the controversial lutefisk abuse charges, tensions remain high across the upper Midwest. Many here discount the retraction as being coerced by White House “crusaders,” and believe that other abuses are being covered up at Okoboji.

“Oh yahh, I tell ya what, dere’s a lotta bad stuff goin’ on in dat outfit over dere,” said a young Decorah cleric who identified himself only as ‘Pastor Doug.’ “I heard dem infidels are switchin’ da prisoner’s Leinies with Schlitz.”


3 posted on 05/23/2005 9:42:50 AM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: FeeinTennessee

Newsweek should be used as toilet paper...


4 posted on 05/23/2005 9:48:54 AM PDT by Born in a Rage
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To: Born in a Rage

Newsweek is dying, as are most organs of the MSM.


5 posted on 05/23/2005 9:53:28 AM PDT by Richard Axtell
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To: FeeinTennessee

picture at: Little Green Footballs

6 posted on 05/23/2005 9:55:25 AM PDT by wingnutx (Seabees Can Do!)
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To: FeeinTennessee

The enemy domestic


7 posted on 05/23/2005 10:00:51 AM PDT by joesnuffy (The generation that survived the depression and won WW2 proved poverty does not cause crime)
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To: lilylangtree

Not the Whippy Dip. Anything but the Whippy Dip. (Slogan: "We whip by day and we dip by night") - By the way, FOX news used the Japanese/Newsweak graphic today.


8 posted on 05/23/2005 10:01:34 AM PDT by Socratic (There are methods and meth-heads. Life is about choice.)
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To: Richard Axtell
Newsweek is dying, as are most organs of the MSM.

True, and I'm especially impressed with Newsweak's spectacular "kamikaze" outro. If you gotta go you may as well go out with a splash!

9 posted on 05/23/2005 10:02:22 AM PDT by randog (What the....?!)
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To: FeeinTennessee
The Japanese edition of the magazine is raising the ire of bloggers for its illustration of a dirtied American flag, its staff broken and discarded in a trash can.

I can imagine the Newsweek staff meeting:

"It's OK. Some Americans will be mad, but they'll just blog about it on the internet," says one executive. He pauses for effect, then continues, "It's not like they'll riot and then start kidnapping and beheading people."

The entire staff laughs, Bwahahaha!

Try to tell me that wouldn't happen.

10 posted on 05/23/2005 10:06:42 AM PDT by Tired of Taxes (News junkie here)
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To: FeeinTennessee; The_Eaglet; billbears; ValenB4

I wonder...

If Newsweek ran a story on the daily constitutional abuses committed by politicians, and used on its cover a picture of the Constitution in a garbage can, would that be called treason?

Perhaps "conservatives" should spend more time focusing on the blatant anti-Americanism in Washington than on the perceived "treason" of second-rate publications like Newsweek.



11 posted on 05/23/2005 10:12:26 AM PDT by sheltonmac ("The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance." -John Philpot Curran)
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To: Tired of Taxes

I can imagine the Newsweek staff meeting:

"It's OK. Some Americans will be mad, but they'll just blog about it on the internet," says one executive. He pauses for effect, then continues, "It's not like they'll riot and then start kidnapping and beheading people."

The entire staff laughs, Bwahahaha!

Try to tell me that wouldn't happen.



Maybe we should send them a message.... this is a sort of treason in my view.


12 posted on 05/23/2005 10:12:35 AM PDT by FeeinTennessee (Visit me @ peoplepolitical.org --Fee)
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To: FeeinTennessee

I've been off the internet for a couple of months (broken computer finally replaced). I haven't found the Red Cross statement about the Quran/Koran anywhere local, has it been talked about?


13 posted on 05/23/2005 10:41:07 AM PDT by Tim Baugh
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To: FeeinTennessee; Admin Moderator

This should be in Breaking News.


14 posted on 05/23/2005 10:53:30 AM PDT by Mixer
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To: FeeinTennessee
The Andrew Moravcsik article
15 posted on 05/23/2005 1:43:33 PM PDT by robomurph
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To: everyone

Cancel those subscriptions, and explain exactly why!

Can someone post a link?


16 posted on 05/23/2005 1:52:49 PM PDT by California Patriot
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To: FeeinTennessee

I've been writing to them throughout this mess. Newsweek doesn't annoy me as much as the New York Times or Dan Rather, but I still hate them.
Letters@newsweek.com


17 posted on 05/23/2005 1:56:46 PM PDT by mowkeka (They're not "insurgents." They're terrorists!)
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To: mowkeka

Thanks. I was about to post this address. Have just written them an angry e-mail.


18 posted on 05/23/2005 2:00:41 PM PDT by California Patriot
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To: California Patriot

I've written them about five angry emails.


19 posted on 05/23/2005 2:08:44 PM PDT by mowkeka (They're not "insurgents." They're terrorists!)
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To: mowkeka

A friend has e-mailed me: "I'd love to see protesters outside Newsweek's offices."

Amen. How about it, FReepers?


20 posted on 05/23/2005 2:26:08 PM PDT by California Patriot
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