#79 January/February 2006
The Washington Free Press Washington's Independent Journal of News, Ideas & Culture
Home  |  Subscribe |  Back Issues |  The Organization |  Volunteer 

TOP STORIES

The Aborted Voyage
No Gilligan's Island and no warm welcome back for real deckhands
by John Merriam

Appreciating the Bitter
part 1: Should the poor orphan child really be saved by a miracle?
by Doug Collins

Inside Syria
For now it's safe, but the Hariri assassination looms
by Joel Hanson

FREE THOUGHTS

NORTHWEST & BEYOND compiled by Sharlynn Cobaugh
Hatchery fish same as wild?; Dousing wilderness with pesticides; Open-source software movement growing; Department of Peace proposed in Senate; Genetically modified alfalfa deregulated; Biotech industry seeks to reverse local bans on GE crops

READER MAIL
Bush's personal agenda; Don't forget the high gas prices of last year; Migration across the southern border; Victims of divorce court, unite!

In Memoriam
John Glansbeek, 1945-2005
by Doug Collins

MEDIA BEAT by Norman Solomon
Congratulations to the worst media performances of the year

CONTACTS/ACTIVISM

NORTHWEST NEIGHBORS
contact list of subscribers who like to talk with you

DO SOMETHING! CALENDAR
Northwest activist events

POLITICS

Lessons for Political Reformers
Campaign finance reform is a start, but the big obstacle is winner-take-all voting
by Steven Hill

The Coming Year
by Don Monkerud

HEALTH CARE

Seattle Votes for a Right to Health Care
Will other cities do it too?
by Brian King

Illegal Immigrants Not a Burden on Health Care
by Domenico Maceri

WORKPLACE

Temp World
part 2 (conclusion)
by Margie M. Mitchell

Worker's Rights are Human Rights
photo and caption by David Bacon

RIGHTS

China On the Rise?
Recent media event calls attention to problems the world cannot ignore
by Hannah Lee

'Extraordinary Rendition' of Innocent Man
CIA named in lawsuit along with companies that operated airplanes used in kidnapping
from the ACLU

ENVIRONMENT

Trash Talk Contest Winner!
...plus wacky and wonderful conservation tips
various contributors

NASA Plutonium Launch; Seattle, Portland Safer for Pedestrians
various contributors

WAR

White House Refuses to Comply with Request for Pre-war Intelligence
by David Swanson

RIGHT BRAIN

The Wanderings and Thoughts of Kip Kellogg
by Vincent Spada

PUMPKIN EDDIE'S LIGHTNING POEMSby Vincent Spada
Dry bones sittin' by the road

BOOKS

MY FAVORITE BOOK
The Continuum Concept by Jean Liedloff
review by Doug Collins

BOOK NOTICE
Towards Understanding by Lillian Brummet

name of regular

by Norman Solomon

Announcing the P.U.-litzer Prizes for 2005

More than a dozen years ago, I joined with Jeff Cohen (founder of the media watch group FAIR) to establish the PU-litzer Prizes. Ever since then, the annual awards have given recognition to the stinkiest media performances of the year.

It is regrettable that only a few journalists can win a PU-litzer. In 2005, a large volume of strong competitors made the selection process very difficult.

And now, the fourteenth annual PU-litzer Prizes, for the foulest media performances of 2005:


"FIRST DO SOME HARM" AWARD--Radio reporter Michael Linder

Linder, a correspondent for KNX Radio in Los Angeles, was a media observer at the December 13 execution of Stanley Tookie Williams by lethal injection. In a report that aired on a national NPR newscast, Linder said: "The first hint that it would be a difficult medical procedure came as they tried to insert the needle into his right arm." Medical procedure? During his brief report, Linder used the phrase twice as he described the execution. George Orwell's ears must have been burning.


SELF-PRAISE STEALTH PRIZE--William Kristol and Charles Krauthammer

Effusive with praise for George W. Bush's second inaugural address on January 20 of last year, Kristol told Fox News viewers that they'd just watched "a very eloquent speech ... one of the most powerful speeches, one of the most impressive speeches, I think I've seen an American president give." Appearing on the same network, Krauthammer was no less enthusiastic as he likened Bush to John F. Kennedy and called the speech "revolutionary." But neither pundit mentioned that they'd been advisers who helped to write the speech.


PUT THEM IN CHAINS AWARD--Bill O'Reilly

"You must know the difference between dissent from the Iraq war and the war on terror and undermining it," O'Reilly told his national audience on June 20. "And any American that undermines that war, with our soldiers in the field, or undermines the war on terror, with 3,000 dead on 9/11, is a traitor. Everybody got it? Dissent, fine; undermining, you're a traitor. Got it? So, all those clowns over at the liberal radio network, we could incarcerate them immediately.

Will you have that done, please? Send over the FBI and just put them in chains, because they, you know, they're undermining everything and they don't care, couldn't care less."

MICKEY MOUSE JOURNALISM PRIZE--Correspondent Mike Barz and ABC

During a September 12 report that aired on ABC's Good Morning America, Barz explained: "Based on all the smiles on all the faces of the children ... it looks like the magic of Disney is taking hold in China." It was a very upbeat report about a new Disney-owned theme park--on a TV network owned by Disney.


OUTSOURCED TO THE PENTAGON AWARD--New York Times reporter Judith Miller

In October, after pressure built for Miller to explain her prewar reliance on dubious sources while frequently reporting that Saddam Hussein's regime had weapons of mass destruction, she agreed to be interviewed by the Times. The newspaper's October 16 edition quoted her as saying: "WMD--I got it totally wrong. The analysts, the experts and the journalists who covered them--we were all wrong. If your sources are wrong, you are wrong." But easily available sources were not "all wrong." Many experts--including weapons inspectors Mohamed El-Baradei, Hans Blix and Scott Ritter--rebutted key White House claims about WMDs month after month before the invasion.

It deserves mention too that top editors at the New York Times for more than a year held onto vital information about domestic spying by the National Security Agency before publishing it, jettisoning basic journalistic principles to the benefit of the Bush administration.


ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MAN PRIZE--Bob Woodward

During a November 21 appearance on CNN's Larry King Live, the famous Washington Post journalist struggled to explain why--for more than two years--he didn't disclose that a government official told him the wife of Bush war-policy critic Joe Wilson was undercover CIA employee Valerie Plame. Even after the Plame leaks turned into a big scandal rocking the Bush administration, Woodward failed to tell any Post editor about his own involvement--though he may have been the first journalist to receive one of those leaks. What's more, in TV and radio appearances, he disparaged the investigation by Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald.


PRIME SLIME NEWS AWARD--Nancy Grace and CNN Headline News

Since debuting in late February, the hour-long nightly Nancy Grace program has broken new ground with salacious prime-time programming on a so-called news channel. Promoted as "one of TV's most experienced and passionate legal analysts ... drawing on her unique perspective as a former violent crimes prosecutor and as a crime victim herself," the host has taken prime-time "news" to new cesspools of prurience and exploitation of human suffering. "This is no script, no made-for-TV drama, it's the real thing," Grace promises, "real people with real stories." On a typical evening, the show led with these stories: "Tonight, breaking news. Human bones, human teeth--police come across a gruesome scene at a Wisconsin car salvage yard, where they say it looks like somebody may have burned a body.... Plus, a husband in court today for spiking his wife's Gatorade with anti-freeze, enough to kill her."

Norman Solomon is the author of the new book War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. For information, go to www.WarMadeEasy.com.


The Washington Free Press
PMB #178, 1463 E Republican ST, Seattle WA 98112
wafreepress@gmail.com

Donate free food
Google
Search the Free Press archive:

WWW
Washington Free Press
Home |  Subscribe |  Back Issues |  The Organization |  Volunteer |  Do Something Directory