Posted on 07/18/2012 7:09:10 PM PDT by Kaslin
When Barack Obama insulted job creators everywhere, last Friday, by charging: "If you've got a business, you didn't build that, somebody else made that happen," the Big Three (ABC, CBS, NBC) networks didnt pounce on the politically damaging remark. It took five full days and Romney making it the centerpiece of his speech on Tuesday before the first network mention - by Peter Alexander on last evenings NBC Nightly News. In fact, Obamas soundbite was ran exactly once, in the aforementioned Alexander report. Neither CBS or ABC ran Obamas actual quote.
However, when former New Hampshire Governor John Sununu, on Tuesday, said he wished Obama "would learn how to be an American" NBC jumped to report the story on the very same day on that evenings Nightly News. CBS got to the Sununu remark on Wednesdays This Morning. ABCs World News and Good Morning America have yet to mention the Sununu statement.
Both NBC and CBS used Sununu to bury Romneys attack on Obamas "you didnt build that" charge. After Alexander relayed Romneys criticisms of Obama, he reported: "The Romney campaign is fighting to redirect the debate, away from his tax returns and tenure at Bain Capital" with "Romney surrogate John Sununu briefly" changing the subject "but not the way he intended." After playing a clip of Sununu saying, "I wish this president would learn how to be an American," Alexander noted he was forced "to clarify" his statement then included a dig from an Team Obama: "An Obama campaign spokeswoman weighed in writing, The Romney campaign has officially gone off the deep end."
On this mornings Today show Alexander reported on "a fiery Mitt Romney" accusing the president of "being anti-entrepreneur" but then later noted: "Romney surrogate John Sununu tried to hammer the President on the same theme...but Sununu may have overshot his target."
Over on Wednesdays CBS This Morning, Dean Reynolds noted: "Romney tried to turn the conversation back to the economy, saying it's hurting because of what he suggested was the President's hostility to business." After playing a soundbite from Romney, Reynolds undercut the GOP challengers argument: "But his point was overshadowed all day, after Romney supporter and former New Hampshire Governor John Sununu tried to push the argument with words that questioned Mr. Obama's patriotism." After the Sununu soundbite Reynolds slammed: "It was the kind of statement usually emanating from the political fringe, and Sununu apologized within hours. But it was another off-message distraction, as Romney struggled to gain the upper hand, turn the spotlight on Mr. Obama, and talk about something other than how much or little he paid in taxes."
ABC has yet to run a clip of Obamas anti-business rant. Instead Josh Elliott, on Wednesdays Good Morning America, could only offer this vague recounting of the most recent campaign fight: "The latest attacks between the two stem from the President's comments that business owners alone are not responsible for their successes. Romney called that an insult. Meantime, Romney is under increasing pressure to release more of his tax returns amidst relentless questioning about his financial dealings."
The following are the relevant transcripts from ABC, NBC and CBS evening and morning shows:
NBCNightly News
July 17, 2012
PETER ALEXANDER: An unusually animated Mitt Romney today seized on some of President Obama's own words, charging that they reveal an anti-business bias.
MITT ROMNEY: If you want to understand why his policies have failed, why what he has done has not created jobs or rising incomes in America, you can look at what he said.
ALEXANDER: What did the President say? While outlining his vision of American progress as a partnership between business and government last Friday, he included this line.
BARACK OBAMA: If you've got a business, you didn't build that, somebody else made that happen.
ALEXANDER: With both sides angling for any advantage, Romney today pounced.
ROMNEY: To say something like that is not just foolishness, it's insulting to every entrepreneur, every innovator in America, and it's wrong.
ALEXANDER: And he added this about the President's view of the role of government services in economic development.
ROMNEY: We pay for those things, alright? The taxpayers pay for government.
ALEXANDER: The Romney campaign is fighting to redirect the debate, away from his tax returns and tenure at Bain Capital.
NARRATOR [OBAMA AD]: Tax havens, offshore accounts, carried interest. Mitt Romney has used every trick in the book.
ALEXANDER: Romney surrogate John Sununu briefly changed the subject today, but not the way he intended.
JOHN SUNUNU: I wish this president would learn how to be an American.
ALEXANDER: Challenged by reporters, Sununu later tried to clarify.
SUNUNU: The president has to learn the American formula for creating business.
ALEXANDER: Still, an Obama campaign spokeswoman weighed in, writing, "The Romney campaign has officially gone off the deep end."
...
NBC
Today
July 18, 2012
PETER ALEXANDER: In Pennsylvania Tuesday, a fiery Mitt Romney accused the President of being anti-entrepreneur.
ROMNEY: To say that Steve Jobs didn't build Apple, that Henry Ford didn't build Ford Motor, that that Papa John didn't build Papa John pizza.
ALEXANDER: Romney surrogate John Sununu tried to hammer the President on the same theme.
JOHN SUNUNU: The men and women all over America who have worked hard to build these businesses...it is the American way.
ALEXANDER: But Sununu may have overshot his target.
SUNUNU: I wish this president would learn how to be an American.
ALEXANDER: Team Obama quickly pounced, writing, "The Romney campaign has officially gone off the deep end."
SUNUNU: I probably was a little bit too harsh there. That's not the best choice of words, but the message was clear. This President doesn't understand the American free enterprise system.
...
CBS
This Morning
July 18, 2012
DEAN REYNOLDS (voice-over): In Pennsylvania on Tuesday, Romney tried to turn the conversation back to the economy, saying it's hurting because of what he suggested was the President's hostility to business.
ROMNEY: Look, President Obama attacks success, and therefore, under President Obama, we have less success. And I will change that. (audience cheers and applauds)
REYNOLDS: But his point was overshadowed all day, after Romney supporter and former New Hampshire Governor John Sununu tried to push the argument with words that questioned Mr. Obama's patriotism.
JOHN SUNUNU, ROMNEY SENIOR ADVISOR: I wish this president would learn how to be an American.
REYNOLDS: It was the kind of statement usually emanating from the political fringe, and Sununu apologized within hours. But it was another off-message distraction, as Romney struggled to gain the upper hand, turn the spotlight on Mr. Obama, and talk about something other than how much or little he paid in taxes.
If a story won’t go away ABC, CBS, NBC come up with a white wash plan,but it’s not working.
Have become cheerleaders for him? They have been cheerleaders from the beginning. Especially Letterman
“...Sununu may have overshot his target.”
It is IMPOSSIBLE to ‘overshoot’ in condemning “O’s” idiotic statement about successful business owners.
Do the folks at NBC, CBS, and ABC ever wonder why the American people don't trust them?
Do the network news people understand that in 20 years - when most of the people who lived with an honest press are gone - that they'll be the punch line of jokes?
The press threw away so much for so little. For nothing.
The GOP is insane if they don't air commercials constantly beginning with the absurd statements, followed by a quote from the novel "1984."
Different quote from 1984 in each commercial.
The particularities of Newspeak make it impossible to translate most older English (oldspeak) texts into the language; the introduction of the Declaration of Independence, for instance, can be translated only into a single word: crimethink.
Spirits of totalitarians couldn't stop Orwell from writing 1984....nothing could stop him. Thank God.
Thanks for the link:
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/1984/section11.rhtml
These words are the official slogans of the Party, and are inscribed in massive letters on the white pyramid of the Ministry of Truth, as Winston observes in Book One, Chapter I. Because it is introduced so early in the novel, this creed serves as the readers first introduction to the idea of doublethink. By weakening the independence and strength of individuals minds and forcing them to live in a constant state of propaganda-induced fear, the Party is able to force its subjects to accept anything it decrees, even if it is entirely illogical for instance, the Ministry of Peace is in charge of waging war, the Ministry of Love is in charge of political torture, and the Ministry of Truth is in charge of doctoring history books to reflect the Partys ideology.
That the national slogan of Oceania is equally contradictory is an important testament to the power of the Partys mass campaign of psychological control. In theory, the Party is able to maintain that War Is Peace because having a common enemy keeps the people of Oceania united. Freedom Is Slavery because, according to the Party, the man who is independent is doomed to fail. By the same token, Slavery Is Freedom, because the man subjected to the collective will is free from danger and want. Ignorance Is Strength because the inability of the people to recognize these contradictions cements the power of the authoritarian regime.
Emphasis is mine.
The application to current events is scarily dead on.
"Freedom Is Slavery because, according to the Party, the man who is independent is doomed to fail."
But it just isnt in his nature.
That's because it's above his pay grade.
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