Posted on 11/12/2015 7:33:20 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Dr. Ben Carson, we're told, has been inducted into the "big leagues" of presidential front-runners, where the press is equally assiduous in vetting each candidate. Politico parsed Carson's imprecise public and written statements about receiving a full scholarship to West Point (actually his ROTC supervisors said they could get him an appointment to the school). The article's new headline no longer hits Carson with a charge of admitting to a fabrication, and it bears an editor's note sort of apologizing for its initially imprecise reporting.
This week's media investigations into Carson also covered his views on Egyptian pyramids and whether he attempted to stab someone in his childhood --the accusation being that he did not, as he claims, try to stab someone, not that he did try to stab someone. Writing for the Washington Post, Janell Ross concludes that Carson's campaign perpetuates the stabbing story in order to appeal to white voters by reaffirming their conception of black America. Never mind that his mother confirmed the stabbing incident in 1997.
NBC's Meet the Press team, however, assures us that this level of scrutiny is normal: "If you can't deal with media scrutiny as a candidate, you won't be able to handle it as president." They write:
We found a combined 165 New York Times and Washington Post articles that were all (or partially) about Barack Obama and Jeremiah Wright between the time Obama first launched his presidential bid (Feb. 2007) and his 2008 victory (Nov. 2008). During that same time period, we found an additional 41 New York Times and Washington Post pieces on Obama and Bill Ayers.
Except the number of articles containing those key words matters much less than the narrative the Times and the Post cumulatively created in their coverage of those relationships.
The substantial body of the Times articles on Obama and Bill Ayers, co-founder of the Weather Underground, the Communist revolutionary group that bombed public buildings, avoided suggesting that their relationship raised any questions of importance for Obama's candidacy. The angle of many news articles on the subject was simply to report Republican attacks over their association. The Times covered John McCain ads slamming Obama on Ayers, emphasized that the two weren't close and that their relationship had been exaggerated, blogged about reasons to defend Bill Ayers, reported the Obama campaign's own defense and Obama's denouncement of the attacks as "out of touch," and turned Fox News coverage of Obama's ties into a story.
The first article in which the Post mentions Obama's relationship to Ayers is headlined "âSoft' Press Sharpens Its Focus on Obama" --i.e., the story isn't actually the story but how the story is being covered --and it notes that news of their connection "involves recycled reporting that didn't get much traction the first time around." A month later, the Post informed us of Ayers that the "Former '60s Radical Is Now Considered Mainstream in Chicago." In the piece, Peter Slevin writes, "Nearly 30 years after surrendering to police, Ayers and Dohrn, both in their 60s, are tenured university professors whose work on school reform and juvenile justice have won them bipartisan respect." Implication: The past is past.
The Post's coverage took the same tone in reporting on Obama's relationship with Reverend Wright. Peter Slevin also wrote what seemed to be the most straight-shooting piece the paper ran on Wright during Obama's campaign. The piece leads with the news that Wright "is no longer affiliated with Sen. Barack Obama's presidential race" and fills the rest of the story with Obama's quotes denouncing Wright's controversial statements.
While acknowledging the need for Obama to clear the air about Wright in a speech to be delivered that day, a Post editorial laments, "We long for a return to a vigorous debate about kitchen-table issues facing the nation."
Let's apply this sentiment to Ben Carson and see what happens.
--Celina Durgin is a Collegiate Network fellow at National Review.
MSM was so busy regurgitating the tome about his absent father that they neglected to investigate the wealth of his mother’s family.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2930400/posts
Of course such claims don’t stand up - Obama faced NO media scrutiny.
If they mean calling anyone who questioned their Messiah as racist, they were like attack dogs.
Pray America wakes
After all this time we still don’t know who 0bama is.
Dems are terrified that a true “black” man in the position
of POTUS would only amplify the lie that is Obama, the
half-white wunderkind.
You couldn’t use the muslim’s middle name without them throwing a hissy fit.
Yep, I’m betting we know what classes Carson took and that he’d release his admissions records and transcripts if asked.
I heard they have located a few of his former classmates from Harvard Law School, none of whom have any recollections of attending class with him or even working together on the Harvard Law Review.
. . . and that was just John McCain.
Obama wasn’t vetted in any way shape or form.
He was a know-nothing nine year old child that didn’t do anything in Illinois as a Senater, then graduated to the U. S. Senate to do the same thing, not doing anything.
Comparing anyone to him is silly.
I particularly like the MSM tearing apart Obama’s college transcripts. Oh wait...that didn’t happen, did it?
And I'd bet he can show a genuine birth certificate.
I recall former classmate of Barry’s, at Harvard, worked at The Review with him and, I believe ,succeeded him. She said he was lazy and worthless. He let everyone else do his work which seems to be his pattern.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.