Showing posts with label Media Bias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media Bias. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2008

Who has the correct information

Today's Houston Chronicle has a couple of interesting items in an article it published on Janet Napolitano's potential nomination of director the Dept. of Homeland Security.  The Houston paper says one thing, and the NYT says something else.

Also, the Chronicle continues to find ways to be much less than objective about immigration issues.  They quote Mark Krikorian from Center for Immigration Studies without saying that group is considered extremely anti-immigrant and very entrenched in Lou Dobb's cabal of those who say all undocumented people are disease ridden.

The City of Houston is under a lot of pressure these days.  Hurricane Ike made our lives very difficult.  Focusing on mis-information or emphasizing the worst doesn't help us to get along.  The Chronicle's recent articles on crime and immigration state that immigrants are underrepresented in criminal statistics (yes its Americans that generally commit the crimes), yet the dramatic headlines of rapists and murders being somewhere lost among our population*, and that Governor Perry wants them all rounded up -  leads readers to believe that every undocumented immigrant they see might want to kill them.
--

Houston Chronicle, Nov. 21:
She favors border fence
Napolitano remains a strong supporter of guest worker programs and a pathway to citizenship for most of those people illegally residing in the U.S. — positions embraced by both 2008 presidential candidates.

But immigration hard-liners are likely to applaud the governor's past support for expanded fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Napolitano has called new barriers "an interim step" toward comprehensive reform. Along with Arizona Sen. John McCain, she has been a backer of the concept of a "virtual" fence in the Sonoran Desert. But she has ridiculed Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff for the technological glitches that have delayed the project, recently calling the project "virtually missing."

New York Times, Nov. 21
While Mr. Chertoff has pushed hard to comply with a Congressional mandate to build nearly 700 miles of new fencing along the United States-Mexico border by the end of the year -- even waiving some environmental laws to get it done -- Ms. Napolitano has shown little enthusiasm for the project.

If you build a 50-foot-high wall, somebody will find a 51-foot ladder, she has often said in speeches and news conferences, while criticizing the Department of Homeland Security for persistent delays in deploying a ''virtual fence'' of cameras, sensors and other technology.


*I am totally for incarcerating or deporting people who commit serious crimes, but the tone of the article implied that all undocumented people are criminals, which is clearly not true.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Question of Media Bias

Media bias is something that could be written about forever and ever.  For one thing, being that reporters are human, nothing they say, no matter how hard they try could be totally objective.  Even so...  sometimes they could make more effort... like in letting people know that Obama is a Christian, and that it's not a bad thing to be Muslim...

See Why McCain is getting hosed in the press
Politico.com October 29, 2008

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/15081.html

Reader Responses Overflow After Story

When Politico editors John F. Harris and Jim VandeHei tackled the subject of media bias Tuesday, they knew they were venturing into controversial territory.

Still, they hadn't predicted the most intense reader response Politico has ever received, with hundreds of e-mails pouring into their inboxes within hours of the story hitting the web.

Some of the messages were downright hostile.

"Keep up the crappy work and your rationalization for it," one reader wrote.

"John," another commenter wrote to Harris, "I bet you['re] glad that the Wellstone Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 passed as it assures you and your associates proper treatment for the delusional state [you] are in regarding media bias and the Obama campaign."

Some readers were more articulate in challenging the article's contention that much of the rough treatment Sen. John McCain's campaign has received has stemmed from his campaign's unsteady performance, rather than ideological bias.

For some readers, that explanation misses the point. It's not just that reporters are relaying McCain's missteps, they say. It's that they're scrutinizing his tactics and policies more carefully than Obama's.

"Politico devotes zero serious investigative reporting or analysis of Obama's relationships with Ayers, Rezko, Wright, et al.; produces half a dozen stories on the personal life of Joe the Plumber," one reader charged, "obsesses over the cost of Palin's wardrobe yet buries Biden's numerous controversial statements including his prediction that Obama's election will produce foreign crises."

Politico has in fact devoted substantial coverage to Obama's controversial associations, and managing editor Bill Nichols just produced an extended analysis of Biden's lack of discipline. Still, this reader wasn't alone in his complaint that the press in general, and Politico in particular, has been more inclined to turn a skeptical eye to the GOP than to the Dems.

"Sometimes not saying something is just as damning as what you do say," one reader wrote. "I am disturbed by the fact that one part[y]'s VP has had more backgrou[n]d reported on them than the opposite party's lead candidate."

"McCain's campaign, especially Palin, has gotten a lot more criticism from the media on these investigative pieces, where they dig into Palin's past," another said. "Despite there being glaring gaps in the biography of Obama regarding his upbringing, his state senate activity, his academic writings and lectures, his legal clients, his tactics, associations, and advocacies as a community organizer, none of this seems to have been investigated by the mainstream media."

This reader added: "I personally think that one of the reasons these fringe, right-wing conspiracies about Obama being a Muslim, socialist, foreigner, etc. are flourishing because the media has not documented Obama's history well enough to disprove the crazy theories."
more

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Novak speaks in half truths

"There seems to be no way Clinton can overtake Obama in delegates and the popular vote" Robert Novak

Politics has always been a nasty business.

Robert Novak, the journalist who outed Valerie Plame, is telling everyone today (in his WP article) that Obama is in trouble. Of course he would be looking for the negative - that is the way Novak usually writes, he is a conservative with a mean streak.

The NYT is following his lead... I saw the word "struggle" written at least three times in articles associated with Obama, including the title of an article on the candidate.

The same is occurring on "This Week" -- Cokie Roberts (who I used to respect) and others keep saying over and over that Obama is having a bad week, doesn't have a chance, etc. etc.

It is not so much that I am for Obama - I have my moments when I do think he is right for the job and other times, despite her lying, that I think Hillary might be better. It is that I'm seeing a clear trajectory here. The media is guiding what they hope will be the outcome of the election.

This problem also represents what has always been so common - and these days it is easy to do add up the negative words, it is a clear demographic fact.

Non-minorities can repeatedly exhibit unethical behavior (nice way for calling them liars) but are encouraged and promoted, but people of color, esp. a black guy from Harvard who is running for President - are labeled by the media as being in trouble -despite that he is solidly winning so far.

If you don't believe words can make a difference, take a look at the book Brown Tide Rising by Otto Santa Ana.

-----
Trouble Ahead for Obama

By Robert D. Novak
Washington Post
Thursday, April 24, 2008; A21

When Pennsylvania exit polls came out late Tuesday afternoon showing a lead of 3.6 points for Hillary Clinton over Barack Obama, Democratic leaders who desperately wanted her to end her candidacy were not cheered. They were sure that this puny lead overstated Obama's strength, as exit polls nearly always have in diverse states with large urban populations. How is it possible, then, that Clinton, given up for dead by her party's establishment, won Pennsylvania in a 10-point landslide? The answer is the dreaded "Bradley effect."

Prominent Democrats only whisper when they compare Obama's experience, the first African American with a serious chance to be president, with what happened to Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley a quarter-century ago. In 1982, exit polls showed Bradley, who was black, ahead in the race for governor of California, but he ultimately lost to Republican George Deukmejian. Pollster John Zogby (who predicted Clinton's double-digit win Tuesday) said what practicing Democrats would not: "I think voters face to face are not willing to say they would oppose an African American candidate."

If there really is a Bradley effect in 2008, Zogby sees November peril for Obama in blue states. John McCain could win not only in Pennsylvania but also in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, and he can retain Ohio for the Republicans. There seems to be no way Clinton can overtake Obama in delegates and the popular vote. For unelected superdelegates to deprive Obama of the nomination would so depress African American general election voting that the nomination would be worthless for her. In a year when all normal political indicators point to Republican defeat on all fronts, the Democratic Party faces deepening difficulties whether Obama is nominated or rejected.

for complete WP article click here


Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Imitating Dobbs may not be such a good idea for Katie Couric

Perhaps Katie Couric's new anti-immigration stance won't help her after all...

A few days ago she started a new anti-immigrant series that made her look like she was competing with Lou Dobbs. According to Howard Kurtzs' WP article, her new stance may not be enough to save her position.

----

Katie Couric's Future as CBS Anchor Under Discussion
Unless Ratings Rise, She May Leave After Election

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, April 10, 2008; C01

Katie Couric and CBS News are talking for the first time about her giving up the anchor chair after the November election if her ratings don't improve, a course that could result in her leaving the network, sources familiar with the situation say.

These sources say the network's top executives believe Couric is doing an excellent job on the "CBS Evening News," but that both sides have grown frustrated with a situation in which she seems mired in third place and unable to use the range of talents that made her a superstar in morning television. They stress that a final decision won't be made until late summer at the earliest.

If Couric is eased out as anchor, CBS plans to offer her either a syndicated talk show or a full-time role on "60 Minutes." Otherwise, executives have signaled they would release her from her contract to seek a better deal elsewhere.

The discussions are described as amicable but suffused by a sense that CBS's five-year, $75 million gamble on the former "Today" co-host is not paying off, at least according to the cold, hard Nielsen ratings numbers on which advertising is sold. The executives involved recognize that a significant improvement in the ratings is unlikely. The sources, both within and outside CBS, described the situation on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive personnel issues involved.

If Couric were to leave, it would mean new turmoil for a news division that was rocked by the 2005 ouster of Dan Rather after CBS retracted his story about President Bush's National Guard service. She succeeded interim anchor Bob Schieffer in September 2006 on a wave of intense publicity but drove away some viewers with a feature-heavy format while also alienating a number of CBS journalists.

Couric admitted last week that the constricted nature of the 22-minute format had left little room for the humor and freewheeling approach that once defined her style. "It's really hard to show that side of my personality on the evening news, and that's a frustration for me," she said.

The internal discussions were first reported last night on the Wall Street Journal's Web site. In a statement, CBS said: "We are very proud of the 'CBS Evening News,' particularly our political coverage, and we have no plans for any changes regarding Katie or the broadcast." Couric said in a separate statement that she is "working hard and having fun" and "very proud of the show we put on every day."

For the season, "NBC Nightly News" with Brian Williams has averaged 9 million viewers and ABC's "World News" with Charlie Gibson 8.8 million. Couric's broadcast trails with 6.7 million.

CBS Chairman Les Moonves and CBS News President Sean McManus, who courted Couric when she was at NBC, have been involved in the discussions. While they believe the "Evening News" has improved in quality since a new executive producer, Rick Kaplan, adopted a more traditional hard-news format, they are not sure what else can be done to close the ratings gap.

Network executives are unsure whether Couric's difficulties are based in part on viewers' discomfort with the first solo female anchor of such a broadcast, sentiment that her personality is better suited to morning television or some other explanation. But they and Couric belatedly recognize that what they are doing is not working, the sources said.

CBS considers Couric, 51, a valuable franchise, whether she remains as anchor or not, but economics will be a factor. Network executives could not justify Couric's $15 million annual salary through 2011 if her only role were at "60 Minutes," and Couric has indicated she wants to ensure a successful launch if she assumes a new role, the sources said.

Couric had lunch earlier this year with CNN President Jon Klein, a former CBS executive, prompting speculation that he might be eyeing her as a potential successor to Larry King. But another source said the two are friends and that there are no plans to replace King, 74.

CBS executives have been considering possible anchor candidates for 2009 if Couric moves on, but such discussions have not moved beyond the talking stage.


for link to WP article click the title of this post

Friday, March 28, 2008

An open letter to the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times

It is reprehensible that you, as the most important newspaper media outlets in the country have not been informing the American people about the S.A.V.E. ACT (HB 4088) - that is currently being discussed in Congress.

There is no legitimate excuse for keeping this information a secret. Is your concern that if you publicize this, the nation will react with numerous protest marches (again)? Are you not wanting to receive the thousands of emails and phone calls from irate Americans who want all undocumented immigrants sent back to their home countries? Or are you worried about more death threats like the ones you received when you covered the congressional discussion on immigration last summer (2007)?

It is clear that one of the best ways to get an unethical bill passed is to keep it secret. You still have a chance to redeem yourself. Congress goes back into session in a few days - there is still time to send out your reporters. Just remember, if you let the S.A.V.E. ACT happen, you could get arrested for giving your babysitter a ride home.

Marie Theresa Hernandez

More on the Secret S.A.V.E. ACT

Congress goes back into session in three days -

Concerned about the lack of media coverage of the S.A.V.E. ACT - the pending immigration bill that would make U.S. citizens vulnerable to prison sentences if they gave an undocumented person a ride in their car --

I looked up the S.A.V.E. ACT and HB 4088 in Lexus Nexus* - under newspapers, blogs, newscasts and web publications - using the last month as a time-line. The small article below from a newswire service is the only thing I found. Interesting that Lexus Nexus didn't mention "The Road to Dystopia" published in the NYT on March 13, 2008. See our post from that date: "The Frightening Thought of HB 4088"

___


DRAKE FILES DISCHARGE PETITION ON S.A.V.E. ACT BIPARTISAN BILL WOULD ENHANCE BORDER SECURITY AND ENFORCEMENT


States News Service
March 12, 2008
WASHINGTON

The following information was released by the office of Virginia Rep. Thelma Drake:

U.S. Representative Thelma Drake (R-Va.) today filed a discharge petition aimed at bringing the Secure America with Verification and Enforcement (SAVE) Act to the House floor for a vote. Once 218 Members sign the discharge petition, the bill will be brought directly to the floor for a vote. The SAVE Act is a bipartisan bill that will secure America's borders by adding 8,000 new Border Patrol agents and utilizing new technology and infrastructure at the border. The SAVE Act also makes the E-Verify system mandatory for employers to ensure that new workers are compliant with U.S. immigration laws and enhances interior enforcement by increasing the investigative abilities of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Finally, the SAVE Act calls for DHS, in consultation with the heads of other Federal agencies, as well as state, local and tribal governments, to create one national strategy to secure our nation's borders. The SAVE Act has strong bipartisan support; the bill has over 140 co-sponsors, including 93 Republicans and 48 Democrats.

"I call on all of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to join me in supporting a vote on the SAVE Act," said Rep. Drake. "The SAVE Act is a bipartisan bill that offers concrete solutions to stop the flow of illegal aliens through our borders. It is time for Congress to put aside partisan politics and start addressing the national security problems posed by our porous borders."


http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.lib.uh.edu/us/lnacademic/search/homesubmitForm.do
accessed March 28, 2008

* Lexus Nexus, which focuses on media coverage is a search engine used by academics and university students.



Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Saving the U.S. from the S.A.V.E. Act - part I

There is still very little information out on HB 4088 the impending immigration bill - As mentioned before it would be an arbitrary law - that appears draconian in every way. Today I checked the NYT, and the Washington Post - there was nothing published on the bill. In order to make HB4088 - the S.A.V.E. act less secret - I will be posting information from the Thomas Congressional Report.


from the S.A.V.E. ACT:

SEC. 307. MEDIA CAMPAIGN.

    (a) In General- The Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall develop strategies to inform the public of changes in immigration policies created by provisions in this legislation.
    (b) Notification of Changes to Employment Verification Process- The Secretary of Labor shall employ, at his or her discretion, a combination of print, television, internet, and radio media to notify employers of changes to the employment verification process. These multilingual media campaigns should be targeted toward non-citizen communities and those most likely to employ non-citizens. Announcements should encourage compliance with new legislation and should explain penalties for noncompliance with provisions within this Act.
    (c) Multilingual Media Campaign- The Secretary of Homeland Security shall also develop a multilingual media campaign explaining the extent of this legislation, the timelines therein, and the penalties for noncompliance with this Act. Announcements should be targeted toward undocumented aliens and should emphasize--
      (1) provisions in this Act that enhance border security and interior enforcement;
      (2) the benefits of voluntary removal of undocumented aliens;
      (3) punishment for apprehension and forced removal of undocumented aliens; and
      (4) legal methods of reentering the United States, including temporary work visas.
    (d) Cooperation With Other Governments- The Secretary of Homeland Security shall make all reasonable attempts to cooperate with the Governments of Mexico and the countries of Central America in implementing a media campaign that raises awareness of the issues in paragraph (2).


for link to Library of Congress/Thomas web page click the title of this post

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

The Evolution of Our Consciousness

Ways of Seeing by John Berger








This post is in reference to December 9, 2007 "Survival of the Richest"

The NYT decided to run an image with an article on a book about the "evolution of economics" (so to speak). It shows the evolution of man, in terms of his/her financial wealth. Unfortunately, they chose to make the images black, and half looked like apes (see the post below)

I have questions about the NYT publishing black images of man´s evolution... the cave man walk really stands out. The NYT would probably deny any subtle meaning to the image. Yet, the "black/white" polemic continues. Don't the people who decide what images go into the NYT know which are offensive and which are not? Well, they may say it wasn't a conscious decision to choose a figure of a black man looking like an ape... but I can't imagine that the most important newspaper in the world has people that know so little about the interpretation of images.

The evolution of our consciousness is about people becoming aware of what their statements and behaviors represent. Some people call this "looking too deep" - yet, could that be an excuse from not having to think about what you say and do?

When I was studying photography, one of my professors (Carol Vuchetich) used to say that it was really important to think about the symbolism of the image. Photographers (and editors) are often drawn to an image that is striking and will catch the eye. For a certain type of photography, especially journalism, this is very important... yet she said it was just as necessary to portray any persons in the image in a respectful way --- not saying ideal, saying realistic- an image that does not enhance negative stereotypes. This is because whatever image we choose (modernist or conceptual) will send a message. The image sent with the NYT article is the long time assumption that blacks are primitive, or "like animals." This was recently emphasized when Noble Prize winner James Watson said that whites are on a higher scale of evolution than blacks. It doesn't help when an "expert" says something totally wrong. Since we have a tendency to follow the experts (i.e. whoever shows up on Larry King, or worse, the anti-Christ who represents the anti-immigration movement, expert Lou Dobbs).

John Berger's book titled Ways of Seeingis agreat place to learn about the power and influence of images. If you are not into reading, there is also a BBC documentary on John Berger and the book.

-----

Carol Vuchetich and George Krause were my photography professors. You can see a few of my photographs at mythologyandreality.blogspot.com






http://images.google.com/images?client=safari&rls=en-us&q=%22john+berger%22+way+of+seeing&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&um=1&sa=N&tab=wi

Saturday, December 1, 2007

UK Immigration: Fear, Mis-Information, and Nativism

The saying about learning a lot when you travel is true - at least for me. In the kind of work that I do, I have to travel fairly often. The last few years I have been working on a research project in Europe - Immigration is something you are faced with constantly if you are visiting the European Union and either watch TV news or read the papers.

As I am riding the subway to the archives or to conduct an interview with another scholar, I see people from many countries, and I think about immigration.

As soon as I walk out of the apartment I’m staying at, I see four restaurants – from Turkey, India, Pakistan, and Spain. I go to an internet café and a young man asks me if I’ll speak English to him – He has immigrated here from Southeast Asia. I see a hand painted poster that says “Pakistan’s Disaster.”

There is talk (mostly on TV) that this neighborhood is full of people who lack good hygiene (that they urinate and defecate in the street). I assume this is true; I do smell urine, kind of like what I smell when I walk around Lower East Side in Manhattan. The place has a gritty feel while it is also chic - in some ways Madrid is so New York.

There are people here from all over the world. All different colors and languages. Yet the only out of control drunks I have seen are local people (not immigrants).

There is a neighborhood initiative to clean things up - stop the crime, not use the sidewalks as restrooms, not leaving trash and beer cans around the plaza. Today I started seeing small black and white posters that are trying to discourage these behaviors.

This neighborhood initiative for safety and cleanliness brings to mind when I moved into the East End Neighborhood in Houston. People from the other side of town would ask me why would I want to live there. Some (so-called) friends made faces when they drove up to my house. My mother wanted me to build a 9 foot fence that encompassed my yard. Everyone got me so paranoid I even stopped a police officer once and asked his opinion on the barrio’s safety. He said it has some problems, but was basically ok.

The paranoia I was experiencing was not new. I believed the negative descriptions of the neighborhood that I would see on TV. It was like a dark continent for me. When I first moved there I would go to the stores and marvel at how everyone spoke Spanish all the time. It seemed so foreign.

But the decision to move there was very logical for me. The mortgage was very affordable, it was in center of the city and It was 1.4 miles to my job. I was tired of commuting. I wanted to live somewhere that I could walk to work if I needed to. People thought that was impossible in Houston – unless you are so rich you can live anywhere.

So, I found a white house with a big front porch. It had some type of artificial siding over clapboard. The deed says it was built in 1920. I think it is older.

And yes, on Sunday afternoons (and many weekend nights) there is very loud music – banda, mariachi, salsa… anything in Spanish. I got some noise reduction head phones for the days its really really loud.

Lots of people walk by everyday. I actually know many of my neighbors. We talk all the time. The gangs don’t bother me – I hear they usually only harm each other. I did get a big black Lab mix., she is a nice dog, but sometimes scares the kids when they walk home from school. One thing I did as soon as I bought the house was put a fence all around the property. I found that people respect fences, even if gates aren’t locked (the chain link fence is only 4 feet tall - most anyone can jump over it, even me). The neighbors say that a fence and a big dog make people respect your property – its a way to "mark your territory" - the boundary can be easily crossed, but that's not the point. It's about respect --- so most everybody’s house has a fence and a dog.

Nothing has been stolen from our yard. The cars haven’t been broken into. The house has remained safe. The neighborhood residents have a real sense of community. They call me "the teacher." The only people that I’m wary of are the skinny white guys who don’t work and seem to be on drugs. The immigrants basically work all the time. Their entertainment is to play loud music while they barbeque and have a beer in the back yard.

The narratives about danger and filth were imaginary… is what they say about this immigrant neighborhood in Madrid the same?



The phantom hordes
Beware scare stories of UK overpopulation: in future we may need all the people we can get

Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah
Thursday November 29, 2007
The Guardian (London)

Having already experienced unprecedented immigration in recent years, the UK should, apparently, be bracing itself for millions more in coming decades. Almost all of the coverage of the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) projections has focused on how more immigration could lead to a doubling of the UK population by 2081. But this frenzy is unwarranted and could distract us from far more fundamental challenges.

For a start, there has been little coverage of the huge range in the projections. Look carefully and the total population could be anywhere between 64 and 108 million by 2081, depending on how many children we have, how long we live and how much immigration exceeds emigration. Dig deeper, and you'll see the population could actually fall to 50 million, with no net immigration and no improvements in life expectancy.

We have no reliable way of knowing where in this range we will be in seven decades' time. In 1965, the ONS's predecessor predicted a UK population of 75 million by 2000. Given how far off this proved, we should instead be talking about how to respond to the drivers that will shape population change.

One key factor is an ageing population. The UK-born workforce actually fell last year; this year we will see more pensioners than children in the UK. If we are not careful, there will come a time where there will not be enough British workers doing British jobs to pay for public services and pensions. Even in a full-employment scenario, migrants will need to complement the domestic workforce. It is the composition, not the size, of the population that matters.

The oft-evoked image of hordes of hungry migrants clambering to get into the UK also misunderstands the future drivers of migration. The patterns show that future migrants are more likely be besuited bankers than famished farmers. Indeed, far from trying to limit immigration, there is a good chance the UK will have to compete hard with other developed countries to attract the best and brightest from around the world.

Other potential drivers - global economic inequalities, climate change and war - are unlikely to result in vast numbers coming to the UK. Instead, if improvements in border controls and technology continue, the impacts of such displacement will be felt more by the neighbours of war-torn, poor or environmentally-devastated countries. Uganda will bear the brunt of problems in Rwanda; India will pay the price of flooding in Bangladesh. The developed world, now home to only around one in five of the world's refugees, is unlikely to provide shelter.

The debate about overpopulation also ignores perhaps the most important migration trend in the UK: emigration. Last year, IPPR estimated that there were around 5.5 million British nationals living abroad - more than there are foreigners here. Countries like Australia, home to more than a million Brits, actively scour the world for new migrants. Meanwhile, many in the UK seem not to want to accept this reality.

Perhaps the most worrying assumption is that future migrants will behave like past migrants. While many of those who came to the UK in the 1960s stayed permanently, this is unlikely for today's Poles, in the vanguard of a new generation of circular migrants. In an increasingly mobile world, projections based on old assumptions may be little short of useless.

The more we obsess about how many more people will be crammed into these islands, the greater the risk of us ending up with far fewer people: lonely souls struggling to cope in a brave new world.

· Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah is director of research policy at the Institute for Public Policy Research

ippr.org


http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2218600,00.html

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Why Isn't Lou Dobbs Accused of Mistakes?














The Houston Chronicle joined the bandwagon in criticizing MoveOn.org for the Petraeus ad in the New York Times. They also think Dan Rather was wrong in suing CBS for being fired due to an inaccurate story on Bush and his supposed time in the National Guard.

They chastized the GOP for immigrant bating, which is great since few media outlets have criticized this.

But I think they really missed the most important "media legend." Where is Lou Dobbs in all of this? Without his constant harping on immigration issues day after day, we might not be in such a mess with immigration reform; the DREAM ACT would probably pass; the state of Virginia wouldn't be considering building a detention facility for immigrants.

The way Lou Dobbs repeatedly gives out mis-information (lies) is unfortunate. It reminds me of this guy from Sevilla I read about who was an important character in the Spanish Inquisition. I believe his name was Ferrer. He was a priest. One Sunday in June, 1391 he gave a Lou Dobbs type of sermon at mass. He told his audience that Jews were terrible and should be eliminated. The congregation got really excited and ran out of the church. Others joined them and by the end of the day 5,000 Jews were killed. The massacre also forced thousands of Jewish families to flee, mostly going to Portugal.

Would you believe the church made him a saint?

This is a true story.

Its kind of the same thing that Dobbs is doing. He is inciting people to hate immigrants. His diatribes are broadcast every evening at 5 pm on CNN. He has a chance to get almost everybody in the U.S. excited about explusing undocumented immigrants. He has been successful. There is a lot more hate in the air since he began his mission.

I'm surprised that the Houston Chronicle did not comment on Lou Dobbs and the harm he has brought to our nation.

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Sept. 24, 2007, 10:01PM
Mistakes
Political forces on the left and the right and a media legend diminish themselves
Houston Chronicle
While the American public faces important and consequential questions of public policy, the news media have found time to focus on three relatively minor mistakes. Though small, each mistake has cast a large shadow on the person or persons who made it:

• The left-leaning MoveOn.org erred when it placed a cut-rate advertisement in The New York Times implying that Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq, might have betrayed the American people. First, Petraeus did not deserve such a jibe, and second, MoveOn.org destroyed its credibility so that its legitimate message — progress in bringing stability to Iraq has been uneven and insignificant — was lost in the well-provoked response to the ad.

• On the right, Republican candidates for president are mistaken to spurn candidate forums put on by minority organizations. Blacks and Hispanics might not be large forces in GOP primaries, but the GOP presidential nominee will need substantial minority support in November 2008 to win.

Beyond the presidency, Republican influence in Congress and at the state level is waning, not only because of diminished support for the war, but also because of many conservatives' unhelpful and off-putting clamor against illegal immigrants. Without offering a solution to the problem of illegal immigration, the rhetoric tends to alienate naturalized citizens and native voters of Hispanic dissent, without which the Republican Party cannot prosper.

• Finally, former CBS News anchor Dan Rather, who got his start in Houston, wrote a sad footnote to his mostly distinguished career when he sued his old employers for $70 million. The suit alleges that CBS made Rather a scapegoat for an inaccurate story about George W. Bush's service in the Texas Air National Guard. Whatever the network executives' sins, they don't deserve to be punished to that degree after paying Rather millions per year long after he had passed his prime.

Rather's suit, while presenting a weak case against CBS, makes a wounding case against his own prowess as a broadcast journalist. Despite the fact that Rather bore the title of managing editor of CBS News, he alleges in his suit that he bore no responsibility for the content or accuracy of his broadcasts: The mighty network anchor is revealed for what he or she is, merely a familiar face reading from a teleprompter reports he or she had nothing to do with preparing.



For link to editorial click title of this post

photo: http://www.voteraction.org/video/stills/dobbs-bw.jpg

Friday, September 7, 2007

Inflammatory Headlines: Making It Look Like What the Right Wing Says True

Earlier this morning I saw this article and debated whether to post it. The idea of a plot is absolutely ridiculous. Yes there are lots of bad feelings, but please! Its kind of like DHS raising the terrorist threat level to boost Bush's ratings... I'm really surprised that the Wash. Post would put in a title like this.... someone warning of a plot ----? to say it like that makes it sounds real. And It IS NOT Real.

Good journalism does not state "warn of plot" if they don't have a fairly good idea the its true... I thought the W.P. knew better.

I almost listed the article without its title. Instead I didn't put in the farfetched remarks about a "reconquista." If you want to read them look it up in the Washington Post.

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Anti-Immigration Forces Warn of Plot
By TRAVIS LOLLER and PETER PRENGAMAN
The Associated Press
Friday, September 7, 2007; 2:06 PM


LOS ANGELES -- On the far fringes of the pro-immigration movement, some Hispanic activists openly yearn for the day when immigrants rise up and retake the American Southwest, more than 150 years after the U.S. annexed it.

"If somebody steals your car, how much of it do you want back? Just the tires? The seats?" asks Olin Tezcatlipoca of the Los Angeles-based Mexica Movement.

Mainstream immigration advocacy groups _ as well as academics and experts on nearly all sides of the illegal immigration issue _ dismiss these "reconquista" notions as rhetorical, not to be taken seriously.


...Aztec folklore puts Aztlan in northern Mexico, possibly along its western coast. Other accounts place it farther north in what is now Arizona, Colorado or New Mexico.

Mexico's huge territorial losses were a result of defeat in the Mexican-American War. The 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ceded what are now California, Utah and Nevada, and parts of present-day Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming, to the United States.

...Cecilia Munoz, senior vice president for La Raza, said the accusations of a radical separatist agenda are "a little like accusing the NAACP of being the Black Panthers."

"We've been trying to play by the rules and have a polite policy debate about how to reform immigration," she said. "And everybody else has got their gloves off and is hitting below the belt."

for complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/07/AR2007090701511_2.html

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

The Media Again: Incorrect and Inflammatory Only in Softer Tones

The Washington Post Speaks With Fork Tongue

Robert Samuelson is trying to rival Lou Dobbs, only he speaks a little softer. In an editorial this morning, he writes that its really poverty that creates the immigration problem...that the poverty is coming from the outside, we are not creating it.
That our southern neighbors are sending so many poor people they are ruining us.

He brings up the usual- immigrants don't have health insurance (of course, how can they with the jobs they have), they cost us too much money in education and social services (he forgets about all those juicy contracts U.S. companies are getting), the U.S. is getting too many low skilled workers and need needs high skilled workers instead (here are those bad people again who are coming into our country, we need better people). He says that the immigrants are affecting African American wages (a little inflamatory speech please) and has the audacity to say that our media/government (aren't they the same?) are not "truthful" about how much the this immigrating poverty is affecting us.

He must not read his own paper. Three days ago Andrew Cockburn published an article in the Washington Post that told of all the new business associated with what he calls "military-industrial national security system." Here are a few examples:

"In Stafford County, Va., a 50-man company called McQ has started work on a $100,000 contract to develop a "smart rock" for the Department of Homeland Security. McQ, whose motto is "Tough sensors for an insensitive planet," says that its rocks, embedded with acoustic and motions sensors, will be able to detect illegal immigrants and other miscreants sneaking across our borders.

The firm expects its contract for developing the rocks to grow to $1 million by fall -- a sure sign that while immigration "reform" bills may come and go, the threat of illegal immigration will continue to expand. This is a certainty not because of the state of the Mexican economy or because of government laxity here, but because border control is now an integral part of the military-industrial national security system, which has a long history of profiteering from purported dangers to our safety."

Samuelson must not know about globalization and the effects of NAFTA. We (the industrialized nations) are causing much of the poverty with our thirst for capital. Many immigrants who are poor come to the U.S. because they can't make enough money to live on - they can't substain small farming operations, or their wages at the maquiladora are too low to support a family (I mean REALLY low- a student of mine was telling me that his whole family was surviving on 20 Dollars a week in Mexico City).

It is understandable that the W.P. wants to publish the other side of the story, but misinformation and inflammatory speech don't sound appropriate or helpful.

P.S. Samuelson appears to be one of those "concerned citizens" that Juli mentions.

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Importing Poverty
By Robert J. Samuelson
Wednesday, September 5, 2007; Page A21


The government last week released its annual statistical report on poverty and household income. As usual, we -- meaning the public, the media and politicians -- missed a big part of the story. It is this: The stubborn persistence of poverty, at least as measured by the government, is increasingly a problem associated with immigration. As more poor Hispanics enter the country, poverty goes up. This is not complicated, but it is widely ignored.

The standard story is that poverty is stuck; superficially, the statistics support that. The poverty rate measures the share of Americans below the official poverty line, which in 2006 was $20,614 for a four-person household. Last year, the poverty rate was 12.3 percent, down slightly from 12.6 percent in 2005 but higher than the recent low, 11.3 percent in 2000. It was also higher than the 11.8 percent average for the 1970s. So the conventional wisdom seems amply corroborated.
It isn't. Look again at the numbers. In 2006, there were 36.5 million people in poverty. That's the figure that translates into the 12.3 percent poverty rate. In 1990, the population was smaller, and there were 33.6 million people in poverty, a rate of 13.5 percent. The increase from 1990 to 2006 was 2.9 million people (36.5 million minus 33.6 million). Hispanics accounted for all of the gain.

Consider: From 1990 to 2006, the number of poor Hispanics increased 3.2 million, from 6 million to 9.2 million. Meanwhile, the number of non-Hispanic whites in poverty fell from 16.6 million (poverty rate: 8.8 percent) in 1990 to 16 million (8.2 percent) in 2006. Among blacks, there was a decline from 9.8 million in 1990 (poverty rate: 31.9 percent) to 9 million (24.3 percent) in 2006. White and black poverty has risen somewhat since 2000 but is down over longer periods.

Only an act of willful denial can separate immigration and poverty. The increase among Hispanics must be concentrated among immigrants, legal and illegal, as well as their American-born children. Yet, this story goes largely untold. Government officials didn't say much about immigration when briefing on the poverty and income reports. The American Enterprise Institute, a conservative-leaning think tank, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal advocacy group for the poor, both held briefings. Immigration was a common no-show.

Why is it important to get this story straight?

One reason is truthfulness. It's usually held that we've made little, if any, progress against poverty. That's simply untrue. Among non-Hispanic whites, the poverty rate may be approaching some irreducible minimum: people whose personal habits, poor skills, family relations or bad luck condemn them to a marginal existence. Among blacks, the poverty rate remains abysmally high, but it has dropped sharply since the 1980s. Moreover, taking into account federal benefits (food stamps, the earned-income tax credit) that aren't counted as cash income would further reduce reported poverty.

We shouldn't think that our massive efforts to mitigate poverty have had no effect. Immigration hides our grudging progress.

A second reason is that immigration affects government policy. By default, our present policy is to import poor people. This imposes strains on local schools, public services and health care. From 2000 to 2006, 41 percent of the increase in people without health insurance occurred among Hispanics. Paradoxically, many Hispanics are advancing quite rapidly. But assimilation -- which should be our goal -- will be frustrated if we keep adding to the pool of poor. Newcomers will compete with earlier arrivals. In my view, though some economists disagree, competition from low-skilled Hispanics also hurts low-skilled blacks.

We need an immigration policy that makes sense. My oft-stated belief is that legal immigration should favor the high-skilled over the low-skilled. They will assimilate quickest and aid the economy the most. As for present illegal immigrants, we should give most of them legal status, both as a matter of practicality and fairness. Many have been here for years and have American children. At the same time, we should clamp down on new illegal immigration through tougher border controls and employer sanctions.

Whatever one's views, any sensible debate requires accurate information. There's the rub. Among many analysts, journalists and politicians, it's politically or psychologically discomforting to discuss these issues candidly. Robert Greenstein, head of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, says his group focuses on short-term trends, where immigration's role isn't so apparent. Conveniently, that avoids antagonizing some of the center's supporters.

Journalists are also leery of making the connection. Fifty-four reporters signed up for the center's briefing last week. With one exception (me), none asked about immigration's effect on poverty or incomes. But the evidence is hiding in plain sight, and the facts won't vanish just because we ignore them.

for complete article: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/04/AR2007090401623.html?nav=hcmodule

cited article:
Andrew Cockburn
"The Border Boondogle"
Washington Post
September 2, 2007

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

The Power of Mis-Information in the Media

"Some members of Congress freely acknowledge that their information on the case comes from Dobbs"

The above is one of many bits of information provided in today's article in Salon.com on two border agents. Alex Koppelman has written an excellent (and very long article) on Ramos and Compean.

If that statement is true, what does it say about our way of making laws in this country? What was this about the rule of law?---you make laws from information you get from a journalist-entertainer?

Its really shameful. And I totally believe what Koppelman is saying. I watched the Senate hearings on immigration in spring and summer of this year... and I am very embarrassed that we have lawmakers that know so little and pontificate so much.

_____


The ballad of Ramos and Compean
By Alex Koppelman
Salon.com
September 4, 2007

Two years ago, in the Texas desert southeast of El Paso, two U.S. Border Patrol agents fired 15 bullets at a suspected drug dealer who was fleeing on foot toward the border. The man, a Mexican national, was hit once in the buttocks but made it across the Rio Grande. The agents who fired their weapons, Ignacio Ramos and Jose Compean, were sentenced to more than a decade in prison for firing on an unarmed man and then trying to cover up the crime.

For the prosecutors and the jury, the shooting of Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila near Fabens, Texas, was a clearly unlawful use of force. But the conviction of Ramos and Compean was just the beginning of the agents' story. Within months, they had become the center of a dubious political crusade that would energize the furthest reaches of the right, dominate one of CNN's most popular news programs, and persuade a quarter of the U.S. House of Representatives -- and one prominent Democratic senator -- to reject the findings of a federal court.


For complete article: http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/09/04/ramos_compean/index.html

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Do a Little Thinking

My father used to say that I should "do a little thinking" when he wanted me to figure something out for myself. This comes to mind as I see a gooey article from the Arizona Republic that tells us John MCain loves Mexican food and Michael Bloomberg thinks Latinos are nice people.

The following is something I wrote in response to reading about how Latinos also want the American Dream. Of course we do. Its unfortunate that many work so hard and can't get there...

-----Of the anti-immigrant crowd, the Minute Men are the loudest and seemingly least rational. Then there are the nice people who just love Mexican food but think undocumented students shouldn't go to college with in-state tuition because "they don't pay taxes."

The Tax issue has been stated over and over again, clarified, corrected, insisted upon, yet the nation still wants to believe that undocumented immigrants don't pay taxes. As for medical care, at a Congressional Hearing in 2006 I was present when the Harris County Judge stated that the pressure on the county's medical system was NOT from immigrants,but from all the U.S. citizens that are not insured.

The information is out there folks. Unfortunately the entertainer/tv journalist Lou Dobbs yells all the wrong statistics in our face day after day. Maybe people believe him because he speaks so loud. Although you would have to be locked in a cave not to know that a number of well respected organizations have called him on his inflamatory accusations about immigrants bringing tuberculosis and other diseases - He has been proven wrong. Yet he refuses to apologize and continues on his tirade.

It is understandable that many people in the U.S. are angry and feeling that they are losing out on the American Dream. There is also so much pressure from above- our presidential administration is the closest we've seen to fascism (that is no secret) - we are being watched, listened to, analyzed as me move through our daily routines. Our emails to Mom are probably being read too. While there is some movement to criticize the President, he continues to sound like he is out of touch with reality (Iran is politically stable at this time???) - and no one is stopping him. The new majority in Congress, our beloved Democrats have melted under the heat - and have led us to be watched even more intensely- among other problems. Is there no one out there to help us?

If you remember when you were about ten years old and there was a bully in the playground. He/she would hit other kids and call them names, especially those that were smaller or younger. You probably thought that the bully was just taking it out on the weaklings... I propose that we consider ourselves as that bully, all of us who are citizens - of all ethnic groups and races. Even those who are wanting compassionate immigration reform. If we stand by and see the Minute Men, Mitt Romney and the radio evangelists/newscasters verbally beat undocumented immigrants to a pulp - then we are responsible if we don't do anything.

Read up on the statistics. You'll find that someone without papers is paying for your grandmother's social security -- they are paying in and will never be able to use the benefits...

Read about the crime rate - yes, the young man who murdered the three in New Jersey was an immigrant. Otherwise - the crime rate among immigrants is miniscule compared to U.S. citizens. In our neighborhood, which is mainly immigrant, everyone shudders when the 20 something white guy rides by on his bike day after day at all hours. We wonder, does he work, or go to school, is he scouting out my house, does he sell drugs? He hangs out with guys known to be drug dealers- all U.S. citizens. In the meantime my other neighbors who mostly can't speak English (although they would love to learn if they could) get up at 5 am everyday and are gone before my husband takes our dogs for a walk at 6 am. They are burned by the sun, their muscles ache from the heavy work they perform, yet you don't see them just hanging around. They have the best American work ethic I have ever seen. I can't say much for the guy on the bicycle.

also posted on bornintheUSA2008.blogspot.com