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To: All

Be sure to check out the Captain's Quarters blog...he makes a great point, the MSM now have to cover the resignation of a major news exec over a *scandal they had never reported to their viewers."

http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/

Coming on the heels of Howell Raines and Rathergate, this resignation certainly does confirm that a new day has dawned for the MSM...


700 posted on 02/11/2005 8:43:59 PM PST by GOPrincess
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To: GOPrincess

Excellent point the captain makes!


705 posted on 02/11/2005 8:54:40 PM PST by Enlightiator
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To: GOPrincess

Crossing The Jordan: What Comes Next After Eason Gets Eased Out?
http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/

Now that CNN has solved its Eason Jordan problem, at least for the moment, the next question we must ask is who takes his place. One of the candidates for Jordan's job, especially considering the importance of its international service, has to be Chris Cramer, currently president of CNN International. Jordan lured Cramer away from the BBC several years ago, and judging from Cramer's public statements, a shared revulsion of Western militaries formed part of the mutual attraction. Cramer may receive less scrutiny than Jordan, but his track record looks remarkably similar.

Several instances appear in my CNN category. For instance, Cramer gave this speech to the International News Safety Institute in November 2003, recommending in emotional terms a book by Nik Gowing called Dying To Tell The Story, a book which alleges a deliberate policy of assassinating journalists by the US military as a means of removing accountability from the battlefield. Cramer said this:

I want to commend to you the very sad, very traumatic and very important book which INSI has backed from the start.
It’s a first of its kind.

A detailed tribute to each and every one of our colleagues who died or went missing.

Important contributions from the freelance community.

From the security industry.

From Nik Gowing on the worrying trend of journalists who died at the hands of the coalition - in the crossfire - through screw ups - however you want to portray it.


"However you want to portray it" appears to be Cramer's motto for news management. Last September, in an interview with Businessworld India, Cramer continued his strange and completely unsupported allegations:

But the profession is in trouble. Around the world, there is scepticism about journalists. Some even want them killed. This year more than 60 journalists have died in Iraq and we are just into August. ...
There is no alchemy involved in accessing news. People can find it themselves. So what you offer them is your version. Plus, the Hutton Enquiry and some incidents in the US show bad journalism. So trust is down.


Cramer has a long and strange relationship with the British military as well. In 1980, a group of purportedly Iranian terrorists took over the Iranian embassy in London, capturing 23 hostages -- including BBC reporter Chris Cramer and his partner, soundman Sim Harris. Cramer faked a heart attack to get the terrorists to throw him out of the embassy the next day, but five days later the terrorists killed one of the remaining hostages. After the British commando team SAS debriefed Cramer, they stormed the embassy and killed all but one of the terrorists while saving 19 of the remaining 21 hostages. Operation Nimrod is widely considered one of the most successful counterterrorism operations in recent history.

Instead of being grateful for the SAS rescuing his partner -- who pointed out the sixth terrorist to the SAS as the Iranian/Iraqi attempted to hide among the freed hostages -- Cramer described the SAS in terms that sounds unsettlingly familiar to those who monitor radical leftists:

And I was released after 27 hours into the hands of the Metropolitan Police in London and two days later into a dreadful bunch of terrorists called the SAS, who were probably worse than the terrorists inside the Iranian embassy.
And four and a half days later, Maggie Thatcher, in one of her rare moments of triumph, deployed the SAS in broad daylight to storm the embassy and they rescued all but maybe one or two of the hostages. Two were murdered. The SAS conveniently took out five members of the terrorist group and forgot to take out the sixth. So that was my brief, humbling experience


Chris Cramer has just as much antipathy towards Western military organizations as Eason Jordan, and his public statements also show the same lack of restraint and substantiation as the erstwhile news chief. If CNN selects Cramer to succeed Jordan as president, then we have gained nothing. CNN needs to clean house at the highest levels and ask Cramer to follow Jordan out of CNN's executive offices.

We will watch their next move. We will not allow yet another serial slanderer to take charge of a major news organization without setting the record straight.


710 posted on 02/11/2005 9:15:16 PM PST by Valin (DARE to be average!)
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To: GOPrincess
Coming on the heels of Howell Raines and Rathergate, this resignation certainly does confirm that a new day has dawned for the MSM...

I think the MSM and the Hollywood Left no longer understand what the public Internet has done in regards to speed of news dissemination. Think about it: within hours the 60 Minutes II story about President Bush's Texas Air National Guard service was totally debunked; the showed that much of Senator Kerry's stories about his Vietnam experience was fiction; it severely damaged the reputation of several entertainment stars (read: Dixie Chicks); and now, it ended the career of Eason Jordan at CNN.

In many ways, it is also the penultimate trimph of de-massification of the media, as writer Alvin Toffler predicted 26 years ago in his book The Third Wave.

727 posted on 02/11/2005 11:13:25 PM PST by RayChuang88
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