Archive for August, 2006

MORE FAUXTOGRAPHY: Katie Couric gets a touchup. Okay, it’s more than just a touchup. But you can trust her and CBS to present the unvarnished truth on the air!

UPDATE: More here.

ANOTHER UPDATE: And here’s more confidence-inspiring journalism from CBS.

MORE: But see this.

“HOW DARE HE DEMAND WE TELL THE TRUTH!”

Australia’s Foreign Minister Alexander Downer has criticized “dishonest” media coverage of the conflict in Lebanon.

In an address to the National Newspaper Publishers Conference, Downer denied media claims his ministry had been slow in providing assistance to thousands of Lebanese-Australian passport holders, The Australian newspaper reported.

“What concerns me greatly is the evidence of dishonesty in the reporting out of Lebanon,” he said. He gave as examples the case of photographs of the results of Israeli air strikes being altered and the “tendency to report every casualty on the Lebanese side of the conflict as a civilian casualty, despite indisputable evidence that many of the injured from the Israeli offensive were Hezbollah combatants,” Downer said.

The secretary of the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance, Chris Warren, says Downer’s remarks showed an unfortunate but increasing trait of governments to try and dictate conflict reporting.

If any other industry were doing as much public harm by producing a similarly substandard product, the press would be screaming for the government to take action.

UPDATE: More here.

SECRET SENATOR UPDATE: Andy Roth has a poll letting readers vote on their top suspect in the “secret hold” case. At the moment, Ted Stevens enjoys a slim lead. Well, maybe not enjoys, exactly.

HOWARD KURTZ: “Will every anchor, correspondent and producer who shamelessly hyped the John Mark Karr story now apologize for taking the country for a ride? Don’t hold your breath. . . . Karr was a fake, and the media caravan moves on. But I don’t think the public forgets. They should teach this one in journalism schools for a long time.”

I’m not expecting much in the way of apologies for the Plame story, either.

UPDATE: Heh. This photo says it all.

A YEAR LATER, Hurricane-blogger Brendan Loy looks back at Katrina, and talks about what we’ve learned.

UPDATE: Bob Owens says we shouldn’t be rebuilding New Orleans: “We should have learned; you don’t build a major city in a hole in a swamp surrounded by the Mighty Mississippi on the one side and the Gulf of Mexico on the other and expect it to last.”

THE POLITICS OF THE WAR: Bill Stuntz, writing in the Weekly Standard, says that voter dissatisfaction with the war stems as much from a sense that Bush isn’t fighting hard enough as from a sense that it’s going badly: “Voters may indeed want America either to win or get out of Iraq. But I bet they’d prefer winning to getting out. The real problem is that we aren’t doing either.” Michael Barone, however, sees some spine-stiffening among the electorate.

Meanwhile, Mickey Kaus looks at reports from Iraq and comments: “One wonders if the Washington players are now so locked into the hell-in-a-handbasket Iraq story line–in large part because the polls support it–that they are incapable of grokking a promising trend in the news.”

MARY KATHARINE HAM authors a memo to the press: “Why we don’t believe you.” Various bogus-journalism incidents are invoked.

Related post here. But who could believe that Reuters would fake a photo?

porkbustersnewsm.jpgPORKBUSTERS UPDATE: The “Secret Senator” story got addressed by Brit Hume on Fox News today.

You can see the video at Hot Air.

Meanwhile, TPM Muckraker reports that the number of Senators denying that they’re behind the “secret hold” has risen to 58.

The circle continues to close! Some readers wonder what happens if the secret-hold Senator just lies about it? Well, if we get to 100 denials, it’s going to be pretty embarrassing for the Senate, which has already had about all the embarrassment it should want in an election year. But I don’t think that will happen.

UPDATE: Tom Maguire has more.

STILL MORE DISASTER PREPAREDNESS: A somewhat snarky post over at KnoxViews gradually turned into a fairly useful discussion of disaster preparedness for people who are poor, sick, or disabled. (Bizgrrl’s actually very nice; she was just a bit overwrought.)

Here’s a blog post on that very topic, “disaster preparedness $5 at a time.” Anybody interested should join the conversation with their own suggestions.

WHEN THE LEVEE BROKE: Paul at Wizbang says that it was bound to go soon.

MY EARLIER POST linking to Stanley Kurtz’s “Fallout Shelter Future” article generated a lot of emails like this one from reader James Ivers:

Dean Ing, in the 1970s published a series of articles called “Gimme Shelter” in a series of paperbacks edited by Jerry Pournelle in which he listed a largish number of things an individual could do independently to survive attacks by what we now call WMD. I think I possibly still have copies of many of them.

He lists simple things like having a bicycle generator and a bike to charge up low-power radios and such, and how to radiation-proof (at least a little usefully) your basement for the 3-4 days of maximum danger from fallout, etc. How to use rolls of toilet paper and other stuff to build a servicable air filter quickly.

Anyhow, it looks like someone should look into updating this sort of stuff. Many people I knew at the time were convinced that in case of nuclear attack we’d all die. Ing said, “not so,” and explained how those even a little distance from the blast effects could increase their chances of survival. Same for CBW attacks.

I think we’re a long way (er, well, at least a medium way) from needing to prepare in Cold War fashion. But I remember the Dean Ing articles, and I believe they’re collected in Pulling Through, which is still available.

Something that we did in the 1950s and 1960s that would be worth redoing now, though, is stocking public buildings (as the designated “fallout shelters” were) with water, food, and emergency supplies, which would be useful against all sorts of disasters, natural or manmade. As we learned in Katrina, evacuations don’t get everyone out, and the people who remain are often those least able to take care of themselves or prepare for emergencies.

UPDATE: Reader John Lynch emails:

The king of the DIY nuclear survival books is Cresson Kearny’s Nuclear War Survival Skills. On Amazon, but NOT copyrighted (intentionally) and available for download legally. For obvious reasons, I’d rather have a bound copy around than one on my hard- drive.

The book is full of exact instructions on how to build a fallout shelter, how to store food, how to build your own geiger counter from a coffee can ( really ) and it has all been tested by the Oak Ridge lab. They even had some families test it out. Very readable and very useful.

Yes, I believe Kearny’s work was the basis for Dean Ing’s articles, but I’d forgotten this book if I ever knew about it. I’m not sure that this stuff is really called for, though I suspect that most of what passed for even basic nuclear-survival knowledge in the Cold War has been forgotten by nearly everyone. A basic public-education effort on duck-and-cover lines would do some good at relatively low cost.

ALLAH says that the NYT photo being questioned on Drudge isn’t photoshopped.

TPM MUCKRAKER has joined in the hunt for the missing Senator behind the secret hold on earmark reform legislation.

UPDATE: Fifty Senators are accounted for. The circle is closing: The anonymous Senator had better come clean!

CALIFORNIA KABUKI:

On August 16th, the California Senate became the first state legislative body in America to vote to turn over redistricting powers to an independent agency. Although it was hailed by hopeful reform advocates, it was an illusion. It was all part of a kabuki play launched last year when the Democratic leaders of California’s legislature promised to do redistricting reform “the right way” … if only voters went along with them in defeating Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s redistricting reform initiative, which they did. . . .

Meanwhile, after this extraordinarily laughable episode, with the press clearly not buying the explanations of Democratic legislative leaders, it’s obvious that only public pressure and the intervention of the governor will get the entrenched political class to honor its promises. What else is new?

Didn’t Kaus predict exactly this?

TERROR TV: A look at Al Manar television, over at Hot Air.

DEAN ESMAY ON THE SENATE’S SECRET HOLD: “It’s sort of telling that the government can’t keep its mouth shut about secret terrorist wiretaps and secret terrorist financial tracking programs, but somehow this information manages to stay under wraps despite public pressure.”

UPDATE: Er, Dave Price, not Dean Esmay. The dreaded co-blogger confusion strikes again!

MORE FAKE NEWS.

“DUMB ECONOMIC POPULISM:” Sebastian Mallaby writes: “By beating up Wal-Mart and forcing it to focus on public relations rather than opening new stores, Democrats are harming the poor Americans they claim to speak for.”

A DIGITAL CAMERA customer satisfaction survey, from J.D. Power. (Thanks to reader Paul Engel for the link).