When the AP takes sides

In March, at a conference of the nation’s newspaper editors, two of the Associated Press’ top political reporters greeted John McCain with a box of Dunkin’ Donuts. One of the reporters was careful to get McCain his favorite kind — “Oh, yes, with sprinkles!” he said — and then passed McCain a cup. “A little coffee with a little cream and a little sugar,” the AP’s Liz Sidoti said.

Shortly thereafter, at the same conference, AP Chairman Dean Singleton quizzed Barack Obama about whether he would send more troops to Afghanistan, where “Obama bin Laden is still at large.” In other words, the AP gives McCain tasty treats, and confuses Obama’s name with the 9/11 mastermind.

Since then, I can’t help but notice that the AP hasn’t exactly been neutral. A month ago, the AP ran an article about the “people who might complicate Obama’s campaign,” including Tony Rezko and Jeremiah Wright. The piece not only read like a slam job, it actually resembled an RNC oppo dump, which for all I know, it was.

Two weeks ago, the same reporter who made sure McCain had coffee to go with his donuts wrote a scathing, 900-word reprimand of Obama’s decision to bypass the public financing system in the general election. It was filled with errors of fact and judgment, and ignored the fact that McCain has illegally played fast and loose with the public-financing system this year.

And then this week, the AP’s David Espo wrote a hagiographic, 1,200-word piece, praising McCain’s record of reaching across the aisle. Reading it, one was unsure if maybe the AP had accidentally stuck a byline on a McCain campaign press release — Espo went so far as to laud McCain’s “singular brand of combative bipartisanship.”

For more than a decade, on tobacco, health care, immigration, judicial nominees, creation of a commission to investigate the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks and more, McCain has championed high-profile legislation opposed by President Bush or others in his own party.

His record of accomplishment is mixed, yet he has made his willingness to cross the political aisle a central theme in his campaign for the White House in an era when voters are plainly tired of partisan gridlock in the nation’s capital.

Wait, it gets worse.

In this midst of this sycophantic fluff piece, Espo slams Obama, too.

Obama, McCain’s Democratic rival in the race for the White House, also lists bipartisanship as a congressional credential. A recent Associated Press-Yahoo News poll showed about 40 percent of the electorate believes both men would work across party lines.
Even so, none of the examples cited by Obama’s aides, beginning with a bill to secure nuclear weapons in the former Soviet Union, placed the Illinois lawmaker at odds with the leaders of his own party or gave significant offense to outside interest groups aligned with Democrats.

Not so, McCain.

You see, if a policy maker reaches across the aisle to work with rivals on policies of national significance, it doesn’t really count as bipartisanship unless the policy maker’s party disagrees with the policy. Who came up with this rule? Apparently, the AP did.

And just to add insult to injury, the AP praises McCain’s record of bipartisanship on issues like tobacco and immigration reform, without noting that McCain completely reversed course and no longer believes in the position the AP is touting.

The Associated Press is one of the most widely read, if not the most read, sources of news in print journalism in the U.S. If it could at least pretend to be objective in the presidential campaign, I’m sure we’d all appreciate it.

Point 6 of the 14 points of fascism:

A controlled mass media. Under some of the regimes, the mass media were under strict direct control and could be relied upon never to stray from the party line. Other regimes exercised more subtle power to ensure media orthodoxy. Methods included the control of licensing and access to resources, economic pressure, appeals to patriotism, and implied threats. The leaders of the mass media were often politically compatible with the power elite. The result was usually success in keeping the general public unaware of the regimes’ excesses

  • put aside “objective;” would it be asking too much for a news organization to, you know, get its basic facts straight?

    i often think that one of the biggest problems we have with political journalism today is that a lot of not very well-informed (and perhaps not even very bright) people are filling the jobs.

  • I saw those articles too and it gave me a pee ring. Who but the MSM can possible call the AP on this? It ain’t gonna happen “my fiends”. It’s too late. The neo’s did it. Once the A.P. goes down the road we are truly fucked. Nauseating…

  • I normally would agree with c_p @1, but I think AP is seeing the writing on the wall; a choice between being ‘Axis Press,” or “Archaic Press.” Personally, I think it’s going to be the latter path for them—they know that an Obama presidency brings with it a new vision of just about everything, including media function and delivery constructs that they (AP) just won’t fit into any more. Good gods, al Jazeerah gets more news scoops than AP does these days—as does Reuters, BBC, all of the cable news networks (FOX included), and pretty much most of the blogosphere. I can find things online today that AP won’t pick up on until tomorrow, and I can find things that AP won’t even load onto their wire feed. Their ability to be ‘at the forefront” by controlling what we see has evaporated. They are becoming a powerless entity—and they know it.

    AP is destined for the trash heap of informational mediocrity—a self-inflicted extinction event of their own making….

  • The result was usually success in keeping the general public unaware of the regimes’ excesses.
    I still haven’t gotten over the NYT’s sitting on the NSA warrantless wiretap story until after the 2004 election because “it might have influenced the outcome.” No shit. The ongoing hagiography of McCain coupled with the continual trumpeting of Obama’s failure to wear an American flag lapel pin, terrorist fist bumps, etc., convinces me that some outcomes are to be influenced more than others.
    A Free Press is so pre-911.

  • Then they ask themselves WHY readership of newspapers is DOWN? I guess there are not too many Johns left(except McCain) for them to ply their “trade with” ,now that so many are seeking the “services” of that upstart newcomer-the Internet. The AP is all alone under the lamplight,and is VERY grateful to its old customers.

  • You see, if a policy maker reaches across the aisle to work with rivals on policies of national significance, it doesn’t really count as bipartisanship unless the policy maker’s party disagrees with the policy. Who came up with this rule? Apparently, the AP did.

    This is not just AP. NPR did it too yesterday, with Mara Liasson’s bit of hagiography of how McCain has been “bipartisan” on the hard ones, while Obama has only been bipartisan on the easy ones.

    In fact, reviewing her report, and considering her report from the day previous about Obama’s support for faith-based initiatives, one is struck by how closely she hews to the AP report on the same topics.

    It may well be that AP is setting the tone and putting out the talking points for the rest of the MSM. If true, given what is pointed out here, this is definitely not good news.

  • Rupert Murdoch is now on the Board of the AP, for a month or so now…any more questions?

  • I’m sure the fact that Rupert Murdoch sits on the AP Board has nothing to do with their bias.

  • Obama could come out in violent support of Roe v. Wade – even shoot a doctor who performs abortions – and it still wouldn’t be “bipartisan” enough for the clowns in the GOP OR their lickspittles in the AP.

  • Well look who was just added to the ap’s board recently, that says it all.
    Corporate news is running for the hills and using mccain as its battering ram.

  • It may well be that AP is setting the tone and putting out the talking points for the rest of the MSM. If true, given what is pointed out here, this is definitely not good news.

    I think that the decline of the press had its genesis back in the Clinton years. That was when, rather than reporting the facts and allowing readers to draw their own conclusions, the press began writing narratives. Anything that doesn’t fit the narrative is omitted or ignored. Thus, McCain is a steely-eyed, steadfast, mavericky War Hero while Obama is the untested, untrustworthy Other who will do G*d Knows What to our country.

  • I would say the AP is on its way out of the journalism business. For me, I started noticing this whenever I would see articles written about the Democratic Presidential candidates by one Nedra Pickler.

    In many ways, AP nowadays reminds me of Faux.

    Going forward, I would treat them (AP) just like Politico, GE/NBC-Universal, CBS-Paramount, Disney/ABC or Faux – and not trust what comes out from them as objective, accurate, or even honest.

    Steve/C.B: be careful using them as a source. I would also advise caution using any of the other corporate media as sources.

    I know – it’s almost an impossible task. It’s a lot harder because they are sourced just about everywhere by almost everyone.

    What the worlds needs is an objective, indepednent, news organization.

  • The media wants this to be a close race. It shouldn’t be. I hope Obama wins by a LOT, so that he can have some political capital to spend (as long as he doesn’t specifically mention that like Bush did).

    Then hopefully the Republicans will go back to the drawing board: chuck the Religious Right, chuck the neocon warmongers, and go back to that fiscally responsible brand. That would be a good balance with the Democrats, to help control spending.

  • AP also had a misleading and inaccurate story about Obama’s speech on his faith-based charity initiative that falsely stated that they could discriminate in hiring. They walked it back a little, but still had it wrong, and this is partly where there was an outcry in some quarters about the initiatiave (which you, Steve, cleared up very well). Thnye also were threwatening cbloggers who linked to their stories with brief clips.

    Maybe the AP’s problem is that the top people only read their own stories and so they have about as good an idea of how the political landscape is changing as GW Bush. I’d think that unfair coverage during the election might just make Obama more in favor of reversing media consolidation and opening things up, though.

  • I have been reading Scott McClellan’s book “What Happened” and the thing that stood out for me was on page 71. Here he talks about “The Art of War” a book by Sun Tzu which was recommended to him by a political strategist. The book states that “all warfare in based on deception.” Scott says that the Sun Tzu approach – deception – has become the norm in politics.

    In regards to the Associated Press, they are a large corporation. Most large corporations have done well under the Bush administration. And the people who work for AP are not dummies. They know what they are doing. They are purposely deceiving people in order to continue to policies of the Bush administration. It is obvious that they are fearful of an Obama administration which will base its policies on a bottom-up agenda and which will promote transparency in all sectors of government.

    This fear of an Obama presidency was evident in the major networks when they distorted General Clark’s words to make it appear that Clark was dishonoring McCain’s military record.

    The campaign of deception is on. Don’t be surprised to see more of it from the corporate media in the weeks to come.

  • NPR had a similarly troubling report by Mara Liasson that leaned heavily toward McCain’s version of bipartisanship.

  • Obama could come out in violent support of Roe v. Wade – even shoot a doctor who performs abortions – and it still wouldn’t be “bipartisan” enough for the clowns in the GOP OR their lickspittles in the AP.

    Agreed Slappy. On the other hand, he could perform an abortion on Michelle live and in color on YouTube, and still not meet the pissy requirements of some of the half-ass supporters here.

  • It’s because McCain is so open and approachable with the media whereas Obama really limits access. McCain has used this “trick” for decades and knows the payoff is favorable reporting. The AP reporter knows that McCain is better for his pocketbook in that the access he gets from McCain and possibly could get from President McCain will pay off in greater access and better stories. It’s a mutually beneficial arrangement McCain and the Press have come to and it’s not about to change any time soon.

    Obama can’t let the press in close because they are looking to sink him, whereas any gaffes McCain makes in front of the press are played down or outright overlooked.

  • Going forward, I would treat them (AP) just like Politico, GE/NBC-Universal, CBS-Paramount, Disney/ABC or Faux – and not trust what comes out from them as objective, accurate, or even honest.

    Unfortunately, one needs to add NPR to that list. They may not be corporate, but they know which side the bread is buttered on.

  • Since then, I can’t help but notice that the AP hasn’t exactly been neutral.

    This idea of a neutral press is just so pre-911. How can you disseminate your propaganda and get your wars promoted if people get picky about this neutrality business?

  • McCain has tended to buck Republican interests and cross party lines when has been safe for him politically, mainly in years when he is not running for reelection. But, when the votes really count, closer to election day, McCain has voted more toward the party line.

    Part of this myth making in the press is a backlash against the partisanship shown by the baby boom generation in Washington. There are some old timers like David Broder who have been making this case for the greatest generation. And I think that some of the younger, post baby boom, reporters may be accepting this argument. McCain seems to fall somewhere between the greatest generation and the baby boomers, but he seems to get the mileage heaped upon the greatest generation with inoculation from the mess they handed the baby boomers, who I must admit have done a pretty good job of messing the mess. But, I don’t see how McCain gets the exemption from being a part of the baby boom generation in Washington.

    And don’t forget too, that some of the greatest clusterfucks have been bipartisan. I need not remind you of the Iraq vote.

  • Send the clown an email at:

    despo@ap.org

    Or call him at AP’s DC bureau at:

    202-641-9490

    Seriously … that’s his info. Just be kind.

    I plan on being respectful and all — just want to know why he didn’t note McCain’s reversal on immigration and tobacco, and wondering why the AP spends more time ensuring they have McCain’s favorite pastries, but have yet to note McCain is breaking the law he helped to write.

    Doubt I’ll get a reply, but it’s worth a shot.

  • NPR had a similarly troubling report by Mara Liasson that leaned heavily toward McCain’s version of bipartisanship.

    Liasson is a worthless hack — in 2006, she referred to John Kerry — in a hard news story, mind you — as “that windsurfing flip-flopper.”

    NPR won’t get another dime from me until she’s fired. Granted, Nice Polite Republicans may not “need” by $100 a year, but if more people stood up to their slacking standards, maybe it’d change.

    **shrugs shoulders**

  • NPR had a similarly troubling report by Mara Liasson that leaned heavily toward McCain’s version of bipartisanship.

    There is a damn good reason why Liasson is a long time front-line contributor on FOX. For NPR to hold her up as some kind of objective or neutral political voice on their network is a joke. All you have to do is watch her on FOX and you know where her personal loyalties lie.

  • Journalism is nearly a lost art. You can count the number of real reporters in this country on one hand. All we have are point of view pundits trying to influence the news for idealogy and corporatocracy. McCain policies are the same as Bush, but even more troubling is that McCain has all the same charcter flaws as Bush.

  • So, the AP is in the tank with McCain. Same thing for NPR’s Mara Liasson.
    Ditto the Washington Post (Broder, Cilizza, Cohen, . . .). CNN puts out a load of the same, especially anyone on Lou Dobbs.

    Dang, if this isn’t a disturbing trend.

    Some of these guys (like Cohen) have serious man-crush on McCain. Others are lazy. Still other may want to keep the election close. OK, there are few bright spots, but I sure would like to see some high profile folks shining the light on the MSM’s glaring double standard.

  • Thanks for the contact info, Mark D. I just sent him an email — stern, but civil — and hope everyone else will too. We need to shame these people.

  • This is reason #14 why Obama had to opt out of public financing. He’ll need overwhelming resources to get the word out on McCain’s many downsides. This election could prove an interesting experiment to see which is more powerful, free or paid media.

  • And there was also this absolute gem from the AP earlier this week, as published at the Seattle P-I:

    Bush’s legacy includes bringing Tee Ball to the White House
    By BEN FELLER
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    WASHINGTON — Not every day at the White House is momentous. Some just have their moments.

    Here was President Bush in shirt sleeves, sweat-soaked, out on a summer’s day, doing one of his favorite things as leader of the country.

    Hosting Tee Ball.

    “Opening Day, 2008,” Bush proclaimed on the bottom of the South Lawn, delighting kids in bright uniforms and adults packed into makeshift bleachers.

    The backyard of the White House is still Bush’s turf. If he wants to turn it into a mini-ballfield for a while, who’s going to stop him?

    … Out here in the grass, there’s no talk of Bush’s record-low approval ratings, or depressing gas prices, or Iran. Bush had signed a bill just hours earlier to keep two wars running for the rest of his term. Somehow, it no longer even feels like the same day.

    Such is the nature of the presidency that Bush can shift from war to peace in one day.

    It just gets worse from there.

  • I say we flood the AP with nasty emails everytime they smear Obama or any other democrat. Also, praise them when they smear McBush.

  • NPR won’t get another dime from me until she’s fired. Granted, Nice Polite Republicans may not “need” by $100 a year, but if more people stood up to their slacking standards, maybe it’d change.

    I renew by mail, not by phone, and I add a note to tell them I’m pro-rating my family support ($65), reducing it by the amount of their broadcast day spent on non-BBC news.

    Hasn’t done anything yet, but one can hope.

  • AP is virtually pure republican propaganda on its editorial and opinion pieces. Their convenient omission of facts has become a trade mark. I feel sorry for those who have no internet access…they are truth deprived.

    How can they be objective when they suck up to candidates in order to gain favor and access. They care more for making a name for themselves than being objective or truthful and being on good terms with those who they want to make feel owe them favors for being so nice.

  • I don’t know if anyone noticed that the media is repeating the lie that Obama has flipped-flopped on Iraq. When in fact that that is not the case . These journalists are so lazy.

    I think the best way to combat this problem is to organize and contact the news organizations and their sponsors.

  • You can this from the AP’s Loven yesterday:
    Headline:
    Obama touts volunteerism, cribbing a Bush theme

    Lede:
    “COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Map, News) – In a bastion of the religious right, Barack Obama is talking up the importance of volunteerism, part of a flag-draped week focused on God, country, service, veterans and freedom – and on cribbing themes from the successful campaigns of President Bush.”

    Buried:
    “But to Obama, the problem is not that Americans are not willing. It’s that they have neither been asked nor given enough opportunities. In a clear slap to Bush, he decried that Americans ‘were asked to go shopping,’ instead of something larger, in the wake of the 2001 attacks.”

  • Until McCain is the official nominee, this bias may help to avoid a bait & switch by the thugs. After the conventions is the right time for MSM writers & commentators to turn the heat on McCain. There have to be many who definitely don’t want a third Bush term, but can only get in a few shots before corporate leans on them or redacts them, so maybe it is better that they wait til they can see the yellow of Jukebox John’s rheumy eyes.

  • Apparently the author has no problem with the rest of the mainstream media having a pro-Obama bias.

  • Ha! Yeah, right, the AP is biased against Obama. Good grief!:

    “Barack Obama urged people Wednesday to look past the “bustle and busyness” of their everyday lives this Fourth of July weekend to find a way to help make the American dream real not just for themselves, but for all,” the Associated Press’s Jennifer Loven reports from Colorado Springs, Colo.:

    Obama talked in almost achingly intimate terms about the impact service had on him . . .

    Achingly intimate…is that kind of like having a thrill go up your leg when you hear Obamessiah speak?

    But you say the AP is in the tank for McCain!

  • This is great reporting. Organizations like ColorForChange, Moveon.org and Media Matters have been monitoring media bias against progressive politicians. We need to take it a step further and flood the AP’s email inbox with letters of protest. They must be put on notice.

  • It gets even worse when the BBC piles on. This morning my local NPR station (which airs the BBC Newshour at 9 a.m.) ran an extended piece highlighting the disappointment of Barack Obama’s supporters at his move to the center, and moves that could be called the “double-F word” — flipflop. There was NO analysis of McCain’s numerous policy reversals.

  • Well I’m grateful for your reporting – otherwise I wouldn’t have a clue about what AP is saying. I quit reading the mainstream media for useful (read true) reporting quite a few years back.

  • Haven’t they always? All the 70-odd years that I’ve been aware of politics, the AP was either openly or slyly supporting the Republican candidates.

  • My silly query for the holiday: “Why does Mara Liasson look like Bill-O in drag?”

  • Love these comments. During the primaries, Hillary supporters suspected that AP was in the tank for Obama. Guess they knew something that many of us have long suspected – Clinton would have been the stronger general election candidate against McCain.

    Meanwhile, for all you post- boomers, “turn-about is fair play”.

  • “Clinton would have been the stronger general election candidate against McCain.”

    Exactly. And it will only get worse after August. IMO, the press & McCain campaign are laying as low as possible until Obama officially get the nomination. It’s almost like they’re trying to appear incompetent to make us relax. After the convention, they will REALLY start campaigning.

    I am very concerned we’ve have backed the wrong horse. If the Dems blow this election I’m moving to Canada!

  • The AP and all news organization should stay neutral in campaigns. We, the people, should have a right to expect the people we depend on for reporting news to be fair and unbias. A lot of people who say they are supporting Obama will not vote for him in November — don’t forget New Hampshire. They are afraid of being characterized as ‘racist’ therefore pretend to support Obama but will definitely not vote for him in November. As much as we would like to think that America is ready for it’s first African American president only time will tell if we have actually progressed as much as a lot of us would like to think. Both candidates I believe are not as strong as they should be to be commander in chief — McCain is weak in domestic affairs and Obama is weak in foreign affairs. So we will just have to wait and see. The AP and all news organizations should not try and scare people into voting for one candidate over another, but in fact should just report the issues and let us decide. We are smart enough to do this.

  • Well, well, Ob supporters. You’re getting just a little taste of what Clinton supporters faced on a daily basis. It’s no fun when your candidate gets ‘biased’ reporting, is it?

    In this case, however, I cannot agree the reporting is biased. Obama has shifted positions on so many issues I cannot keep them all straight anymore. PLEASE research Sen. Obama’s record (if you can find his Illinois records…) and read up on the sad state of District 13 in Chicago before you so wholeheartedly back him. You might be shocked at what you find…

  • I can’t believe all the whining by Obama supporters on this issue of media bias!! You sure didn’t have any objections when Senator Clinton was being punched around!!!
    As for Mr Obama, he is inexperienced, corrupt, and has more baggage than United Airlines!
    I’d like to see the media step up to the plate and investigate the corruption issues surrounding The Fraud, Mr Obama!!

  • The NYTimes editorial today says it’s not surprising when, in the later stages of a presidential campaign, a candidate moves toward the center of the political spectrum. MSM, of course, benefits from a close race through increased viewings, etc. Maybe the AP spin is intended to make the race closer, but I think the effect has been to drive Obama to embrace the AIPAC agenda however that varies from time to time. So, for me, I no longer believe in his change and I don’t care a rat’s ass who wins the election.

    Aloha ~~~ Ozzie Maland ~~~ San Diego

  • I’ve noticed for more than a year that the AP was in the Republicans pocket, what took you so long to notice. Their slant is so blantant as are most cable news shows. Just listen to how they tout McCain and then ask how McCain can beat Obama. Then they will highlight everything that is wrong with Obama.

    The thing to remember is all the news is owned by corporations, they do not want Obama to be president. From this point forward understand that the main stream media are hostile to Obama. They will do anything and say anything to take him down. Question everything they say, as they cannot be trusted to give unbiased information.

  • I suggest we call Keith Olbermann and report them!!!!

    How dare they speak ill of his sweetie pie?

  • you’re mistaking a waiter for a journalist, and so is the AP

    these people are good at bringing coffee and donuts. they always bring the right kind of donuts, and they know how you like your coffee

    they’re FOOKIN WAITERS

    as journists, they don’t shine so much

    AP should let these people follow their true calling in the food service industry

  • “Shortly thereafter, at the same conference, AP Chairman Dean Singleton quizzed Barack Obama about whether he would send more troops to Afghanistan, where “Obama bin Laden is still at large.” In other words, the AP gives McCain tasty treats, and confuses Obama’s name with the 9/11 mastermind.”

    I don’t know why you all would be upset by this. Obama sycophant Ted Kennedy called him Osama bin Laden twice when introducing him.

    Now that your guy is getting some REAL scrutiny, you can’t take it. We had to watch the Obama-loving press AND Obama rip Hillary to shreds during the whole primary, while never questioning the outright lies, distortions and modes of distraction of the real issues, of your unqualified candidate. Suck it up, there’s a whole lot more to come. I suggest you research your candidate a lot better. Dirt, dirt, and more dirt.

  • McSenile is another TRAITOR to the USA like MURDERER Bush.

    And now he has TRAITOR Bush’s swiftboat “advisor”.

    The Democrats need to run ads shoing the FLIP-FLOPS of McLunatic, as well as:

    1. “Bomb Bomb Iran”
    2. “At least I don’t trowel my makeup on with a trowel, you cnut!!”

  • Well, well. Funny, when CNN, MSNBC, Huffington, etc., were corrupting the minds of Americans against Hillary Clinton… all the Obama supporters, including Obama and his camp were benefiting and happy. It was easy to hate Hillary, after all, what was said about her in the media was “downright dirty” news with an extraordinary vocabulary of sexist names for her. And, what did you all call us “Hillary supporters” when we complained???? Whining, female *****es, racists…blah, blah, blah.

    Well, it’s your turn. Now you’ll know what it is like to be constantly attacked by a one sided biased news source. Although, Hillary had almost the whole force including the NY Times, who by the way, endorsed her. tisk tisk

  • McLunatic says:

    “Bomb Bomb Iran” and calls his wife a “cnut”.

    And is a TRAITOR to the USA, despite his military service.

    He supports an ILLEGAL WAR of LIES, an AWOL coward and MURDERER named Bush, and the EXPOSING OF our CIA SPY who specialized in WMDs, which is TREASON.

    So, McLunatic is just another McTRAITOR to the USA, following in the tradition of

    70 YEARS of Bush Crime Family TREASON against the USA.

  • Greta, please crawl back under your rock you fucking BushCo loving troll.

  • In March, at a conference of the nation’s newspaper editors, two of the Associated Press’ top political reporters greeted John McCain with a box of Dunkin’ Donuts. One of the reporters was careful to get McCain his favorite kind — “Oh, yes, with sprinkles!” he said — and then passed McCain a cup. “A little coffee with a little cream and a little sugar,” the AP’s Liz Sidoti said.

    As a former reporter, I just can’t tell you how much this story makes me cringe with revulsion and shame. I feel like the black sergeant in A Soldiers Story, explaining why he killed one of his own soldiers:

    Sgt. Waters: They found this ignorant coloured soldier. Paid him to tie a tail to his ass and run around half-naked making monkey sounds. They put him on a big round table in the Cafe Napoleon. Put a reed in his hand, a crown on his head, a blanket on his shoulders and made him eat bananas in front of all them Frenchies. The white boys danced and passed out leaflets with his picture on it.Called him “Moonshine, King of the Monkeys.”When we slit his throat, you know that fool asked us? What he had done wrong.

    It’s basically what I would like to do to Ms.Sidoti and Mr. Fournier and the rest of the journalistic Uncle Toms at the AP.

  • Seems that privately owned AP is going the path that News Corp has gone. When ideologues get into ownership and management of the media stream, the public pays a bigger price; especially today when everything is so centralized and controlled.

  • Is Associated Press nuts. McCain is so out of touch and just the same old man at the top making decisions based on blind political self-serving senility. I’m shocked. I felt your news was always at least semi-intelligent and loyal to honest news. McCain is just a drifter with sideburns and a half-cocked cowboy hat. A mirror it turns out as a Bushman. What a dissapointment, boys.

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