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CNN expunged "don't ask, don't tell" question and answers in rebroadcasts of debate
mediamatters.org ^ | Nov. 29, 2007

Posted on 11/29/2007 4:48:05 PM PST by AuntB

Summary: Rebroadcasts of the CNN/YouTube debate for Republican presidential candidates omitted a question from a retired brigadier general about the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, as well as the candidates' answers to the question. CNN did not note the omission.

In rebroadcasts of the November 28 CNN/YouTube debate for Republican presidential candidates, CNN expunged, without disclosure, a segment in which retired Brig. Gen. Keith Kerr asked the candidates to address "why you think that American men and women in uniform are not professional enough to serve with gays and lesbians." Kerr is a member of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Americans for Hillary Clinton steering committee and a co-chairman of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-NY) Veterans and Military Retirees for Hillary Committee. In rebroadcasts of the debate at midnight ET and 3 a.m. ET on November 29, CNN omitted the Kerr question, as well as the candidates' answers to his question.

University of Southern California professor Marty Kaplan noted the omission in a blog entry on The Huffington Post, writing:

MORNING AFTER PILL UPDATE V: When CNN rebroadcast the debate, according to commenter AdamDek, the don't-ask-don't-tell question from Brig. Gen. (ret.) Keith Kerr was edited out of the program. Gone! Just like that.

In a statement published in a November 29 post on CNN's Political Ticker blog, CNN senior vice president David Bohrman, the executive producer of the debate, apologized for selecting Kerr's question, given his campaign affiliation: "We regret this, and apologize to the Republican candidates. We never would have used the General's question had we known that he was connected to any presidential candidate."

On the November 29 edition of American Morning, co-host John Roberts interviewed Kerr and asked, "Now, did anyone from Hillary Clinton's campaign or from the steering committee or anyone else associated with a political organization put you up to the idea of asking this question?" Kerr responded: "Absolutely not. This was a private initiative on my own."

From the November 29 edition of CNN's American Morning:

ROBERTS: There were questions this morning about one of last night's questioners. It turns out that a retired general had links to the Clinton campaign. Here's his question, as submitted on YouTube.

KERR [video clip]: My name is Keith Kerr, of Santa Rosa, California. I'm a retired brigadier general with 43 years of service. And I'm a graduate of the Special Forces Officer Course, the Command and General Staff Course, and the Army War College, and I'm an openly gay man. I want to know why you think that American men and women in uniform are not professional enough to serve with gays and lesbians.

ROBERTS: So there's the question, and retired Army Brigadier General Keith Kerr joins me now this morning. We discovered after the debate last night that you are, in fact, a member of Hillary Clinton's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered steering committee. We did not -- we did a background check, and we found that you have not made any campaign contributions to any candidate. Does that still stand?

KERR: That's correct.

ROBERTS: OK. Well, let me ask you about your position on this steering committee. What does that entail, and have you, in fact, done any work for Hillary Clinton's campaign?

KERR: I have not done any work. Several friends asked me if I would allow my name to be listed, and I agreed because she is such a strong advocate of gay and lesbian rights.

ROBERTS: So this really hasn't required anything on your part other than lending your name to it?

KERR: Correct.

ROBERTS: Now, did anyone from Hillary Clinton's campaign or from the steering committee or anyone else associated with a political organization put you up to the idea of asking this question?

KERR: Absolutely not. This was a private initiative on my own.

From the original airing of the November 28 CNN/YouTube Republican presidential candidates debate:

KERR: My name is Keith Kerr, of Santa Rosa, California. I'm a retired brigadier general with 43 years of service. And I'm a graduate of the Special Forces Officer Course, the Command and General Staff Course, and the Army War College, and I'm an openly gay man. I want to know why you think that American men and women in uniform are not professional enough to serve with gays and lesbians.

COOPER: I want to point out that Brigadier General Keith Kerr is here with us tonight. Glad you're here. Again, the question to Congressman [Duncan] Hunter [CA].

HUNTER: Yeah. General, thanks for your service, but I believe in what [former Secretary of State and retired Army Gen.] Colin Powell said when he said that having openly homosexual people serving in the ranks would be bad for unit cohesion. And the reason for that, even though people point to the Israelis and point to the Brits and point to other people as having homosexuals serve, is that most Americans, most kids who leave that breakfast table and go out and serve in the military and make that corporate decision with their family, most of them are conservatives. And they have conservative values, and they have Judeo-Christian values. And to force those people to work in a small, tight unit with somebody who is openly homosexual, who goes against what they believe to be their principles -- and it is their principles -- is I think a disservice to them. And I agree with Colin Powell that it would be bad for unit cohesion.

COOPER: I want to direct this to [former Arkansas] Governor [Mike] Huckabee. Thirty seconds.

HUCKABEE: The Uniform Code of Military Justice is probably the best rule, and it has to do with conduct. People have a right to have whatever feelings, whatever attitudes they wish, but when their conduct could put at risk the morale, or put at risk even the cohesion that Duncan Hunter spoke of, I think that's what is at issue. And that's why our policy is what it is.

COOPER: [Former Massachusetts] Governor [Mitt] Romney, you said in 1994 that you looked forward to the day when gays and lesbians could serve, and I quote, "openly and honestly in our nation's military." Do you stand by that?

ROMNEY: This isn't that time. This is not that time. We're in the middle of a war. The people who have watched --

COOPER: Do you look forward to that time, though, one day?

ROMNEY: I'm going to listen to the people who run the military to see what the circumstances are like, and my view is that, at this stage, this is not the time for us to make that kind of a change.

COOPER: Is that a change in your position from --

ROMNEY: Yeah, I didn't think it would work. I didn't think "don't ask, don't tell" would work. That was my -- I didn't think that would work. I thought that was a policy -- when I heard about it, I laughed. I said, "That doesn't make any sense to me." And you know what? It's been there now for, what, 15 years? It seems to have worked.

COOPER: So, just so I'm clear, at this point, do you still look forward to a day when gays can serve openly in the military or no longer?

ROMNEY: I look forward to hearing from the military exactly what they believe is the right way to have the right kind of cohesion and support in our troops, and I'll listen to what they have to say.

COOPER: All right. General Kerr is -- as I said, is here. Please stand up, General. Thank you very much for being with us. Did you feel you got an answer to your question?

KERR: With all due respect, I did not get an answer from the candidates.

COOPER: What do you -- what do you feel you did not --

KERR: American men and women in the military are professional enough to serve with gays and lesbians. For 42 years, I wore the Army uniform on active duty, in the Reserve, and also for the state of California. I revealed I was a gay man after I retired. Today, "don't ask, don't tell" is destructive to our military policy. Every day, the Department of Defense discharges two people, not for misconduct, not for the unit cohesion --

COOPER: Wait, the mike is -- you've lost -- is the microphone not working? All right. Please, just finish your -- what is your question?

KERR: Not for the unit cohesion that Congressman Hunter is talking about, but simply because they happen to be gay.

COOPER: OK. Senator [John] McCain [AZ].

KERR: And we're talking about doctors, nurses, pilots, and the surgeon who sews somebody up when they're taken from the battlefield.

COOPER: I appreciate your comment. Senator McCain, I want to give you 30 seconds. You served in the military.

McCAIN: General, I thank you for your service to our nation. I respect it. All the time, I talk to our military leaders, beginning with our joint chiefs of staff and the leaders in the field, such as General [David] Petraeus and General [Raymond] Odierno and others who are designated leaders with the responsibility of the safety of the men and women under their command and their security and protect them as best they can. Almost unanimously, they tell me that this present policy is working, that we have the best military in history, that we have the bravest, most professional, best prepared, and that this policy ought to be continued because it's working.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: andiamagaygeneral; buttcommandos; cnn; debate; dontaskdonttell; duncanhunter; enemedia; gopdebates; hilarydirtytricks; hillary; homosexualagenda; howtostealanelection; mynameiskeith; purge; queenykeith; rearadmiralkerr; revisionisthistory; sneakycommies; stalinisttactics; swishysoldier; thebuttbrigade; thejigisup
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To: GATOR NAVY; torchthemummy

Isn’t that punishable?


41 posted on 11/29/2007 6:56:24 PM PST by abigailsmybaby (I was born with nothing. So far I have most of it left.)
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To: firebrand
I think they expunged it because the general was not the cool,charming,good-looking,physically fit,smooth,eloquent and bright person that the homosexual community prefers to use as representative of homosexuals.

Instead he was an old,disheveled,gravelly voiced,unattractive,inarticulate,grand standing bozo that asked a nonsensical question.

Furthermore,Cooper chose to prolong this poor speciman's minutes of "face time" by giving him the mike after the question had been dealt with quite adequately and the old coot went blithering on. I bet every gay and gay sympathizer got word to CNN to deep six the whole encounter.

If he had been appealing,they would have let it stand and toughed it out. As it was,it was to the Republicans benefit had they kept it. If Republicans were smart they would demand that it be put back in.

If I were a Democrat or a homosexual I would demand that Cooper be fired for making such a dumb,transparent move and aiding the enemy so to speak.

42 posted on 11/29/2007 6:57:35 PM PST by saradippity
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To: torchthemummy

When Kerr read his bio/don’t-ask-don’t-tell question, I remember smelling BS but when Anderson Cooper went back to Kerr and asked whether his question had been answered that’s when my radar really went up. You don’t let the questioner get the last word. The questioner gets to ask a question and then shuts up. To do otherwise would require the same follow-up opportunity being afforded to all the other questioners (ie. plants!)


43 posted on 11/29/2007 7:01:52 PM PST by torchthemummy ("A Tagline Presidential Endorsement Forfeits A Presumption Of Objectivity")
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To: AuntB

Morning after pill ... LOL. More likely CNN engaged in a little retroactive abortion, though.


44 posted on 11/29/2007 7:03:48 PM PST by NonValueAdded (Fred Dalton Thompson for President)
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To: tgslTakoma
"We are trying to focus mostly on questions where there are differences among these candidates."

The scary thing about CNN is they believe they are unbiased.

45 posted on 11/29/2007 7:06:05 PM PST by alrea (Surveillance for national security: bad. Surveillance for election: good)
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To: tgslTakoma

Yep, your statement nails it, that is the outrage.


46 posted on 11/29/2007 7:06:28 PM PST by NonValueAdded (Fred Dalton Thompson for President)
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To: WalterSkinner

A clear admission one rugmuncher concert master was had by another rump ranger. It was the modus operandi of Clinton operative. Cooper did what he was told. The Republicans should never set foot on a cnn set again.


47 posted on 11/29/2007 7:06:32 PM PST by Texas Songwriter
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To: saradippity

You are absolutely right.


48 posted on 11/29/2007 7:10:19 PM PST by khnyny (Although prepared for martyrdom, I preferred that it be postponed. Winston Churchill)
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To: AuntB

Whaddaya expect from the Clinton Necromancy Nematodes?


49 posted on 11/29/2007 7:15:07 PM PST by editor-surveyor (Turning the general election into a second Democrat primary is not a winning strategy.)
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To: AuntB

I downloaded the two .wmv debate videos from CNN.com, and spent a long time trying to find this moment by fast-forwarding the video - now I know why I missed it. CNN took it out of the videos on cnn.com as well.


50 posted on 11/29/2007 7:25:31 PM PST by Quackattack
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To: saradippity

“If Republicans were smart they would demand that it be put back in.”

I’m sure that footage of the bumbling old queen will appear in future campaign materials, on the Republican side.

The farcical old fruit might become the Willie (pardon the pun) Horton of 2008.


51 posted on 11/29/2007 7:27:55 PM PST by Palladin ("How do we beat The Bitch?"--John McCain Supporter)
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To: AuntB

Down the memory hole! Time for some Victory gin....


52 posted on 11/29/2007 7:29:56 PM PST by clintonh8r
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To: AuntB
"Regarding the "plant", retired Brig. Gen. Keith H. Kerr"

The plant? More like the fruit!

53 posted on 11/29/2007 7:31:43 PM PST by MSF BU (++)
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To: Candor7

Hunter had the right answer, Romney had not a clue but that’s understandable. He had no time to serve, except in France.


54 posted on 11/29/2007 7:32:54 PM PST by MSF BU (++)
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To: Max Friedman

That’s not to mention that under the Reagan “We Ask, Don’t Join” he had to have lied about it when he was asked.


55 posted on 11/29/2007 7:34:52 PM PST by MSF BU (++)
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To: TN4Liberty

I don’t think it was the Repulican party; In the past both Romney and Guiliani have embraced normalizing sodomy. You can see the Romney gay rights enthusiasms on You Tube.


56 posted on 11/29/2007 7:37:09 PM PST by MSF BU (++)
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To: AuntB
Did CNN also leave out the part where the "general dude" lectured our guys? That was really offensive.

We're tired of hearing our debates run by liberals, questions chosen by liberals, asked by liberals for the benefit of ginning up liberal donations...

Are Republican candidates so pu-_y whipped they allow themselves to be played for fools by every liberal news organization?

Backbone guys, show some backbone.

57 posted on 11/29/2007 7:47:14 PM PST by GOPJ ("Imagine the Outrage if FOX had Fixed a “debate” like this??" Freeper bray -- "CNN Sucks" - GOPJ)
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To: Rb ver. 2.0

Turns out the “general” is an honorary title only. He retired as a Colonel.


58 posted on 11/29/2007 7:54:00 PM PST by Just Lori (There is nothing democrat-"ic" about democrats.)
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To: abigailsmybaby

Yes, and it probably would have been if he had been caught early in his career. He could probably even be brought up on charges now if they really wanted to. Won’t happen though. Too political.


59 posted on 11/29/2007 7:57:58 PM PST by GATOR NAVY
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To: abigailsmybaby

So this guy was really a California National Guard Colonel. Another great job by CNN’s Anderson Pooper!


60 posted on 11/29/2007 8:03:19 PM PST by Plains Drifter (If guns kill people, wouldn't there be a lot of dead people at gun shows?)
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