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No hero
Front Page Mag ^ | 6-2-05 | Lowell Ponte

Posted on 06/02/2005 7:53:15 PM PDT by Chieftain

"Deep Throat," as we learned this week, helped the Washington Post carry out a coup d'etat against overwhelmingly-reelected President Richard M. Nixon out of motives as sordid as those of the pornographic movie that was the source of his nickname.

(Excerpt) Read more at discoverthenetwork.org ...


TOPICS: Politics
KEYWORDS: bernstein; deepthroat; fbi; feltgate; lowellponte; markfelt; nixon; watergate; woodward
* One of two reporters who broke Watergate story that led to President Richard Nixon's resignation * Red diaper baby whose parents were Communists * Role model was Communist fellow-traveler and then New Left journalist I.F. Stone * "Deep Throat" was not in first draft of co-authored book All The President's Men

"Deep Throat," as we learned this week, helped the Washington Post carry out a coup d'etat against overwhelmingly-reelected President Richard M. Nixon out of motives as sordid as those of the pornographic movie that was the source of his nickname.

FBI Deputy Director W. Mark Felt, passed over by President Nixon for promotion to succeed the late J. Edgar Hoover as head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, violated professional ethics and his oath of secrecy in an apparent fit of anger, vengence and a desire to win favors from the liberal press and perhaps a future Democratic President. Felt became the secret support on which Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein constructed the gallows with which the media and Democrats in control of Congress and the courts were able to lynch Mr. Nixon for crimes no greater than those committed by recent Democratic presidents.

This week's revelation that Felt, now 91, was "Deep Throat" came from Felt's family, which made it clear that their motive was money. Woodward and Bernstein had made millions as media stars of the Watergate coup, and Felt's children were eager to cash in before their father died, leaving Woodward and Bernstein to pocket millions more from a book confirming his identity.

Woodward, despite being preempted, is now rushing into print his already-written book about "Deep Throat" to grab this lucrative opportunity. Bernstein, who this week initially refused to verify that Felt was "Deep Throat," ironically is a Contributing Editor at Vanity Fair Magazine, that paid the family for and broke this story.

Oh, and the family wanted their lawbreaking, unethical father to be honored as a hero who saved the nation from Richard Nixon.

The coup that overthrew President Nixon was largely orchestrated by Senator Edward Kennedy to reverse the left-repudiating 1972 election and serve Kennedy's presidential ambitions. This coup led to Communist victory in Vietnam, toppling dominoes in Southeast Asia, and encouragement to left revolutionary movements worldwide. It also allowed Kennedy and his liberal media allies to identify the tragic Vietnam War not with President John F. Kennedy, who committed the first 17,000 armed troops there, but with Republican President Nixon.

But this coup also had unexpected consequences. It led to the election of Democratic President Jimmy Carter in 1976. Carter withdrew support from America's key ally the Shah of Iran, which led to a medieval Islamist dictatorship in Iran, the 500,000+ deaths of the Iran-Iraq War, the militarization of Saddam Hussein, the destabilization of the Middle East and Islamic world, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the creation of Al Qaeda under terror mastermind Osama bin Laden, and bin Laden's eventual attacks of 9-11 on the Pentagon and World Trade Center. All this and more has come from the media coup that removed an overwhelmingly-reelected President Nixon.

Felt's identity as "Deep Throat" had been revealed by Carl Bernstein's son, as documented in Bernstein's profile posted last February at the launch of DiscoverTheNetworks.org. This profile revealed many shocking facts about this red-diaper baby reporter whose anonymous source Americans were misled into trusting. As we consider the consequences of what the establishment media asks us to believe, we ought to examine what the Washington Post knew but neglected to tell its readers about the background and ideology of Carl Bernstein.

Carl Bernstein, currently a Contributing Editor at Vanity Fair Magazine, is best known as half of Woodward & Bernstein (a.k.a. "Woodstein"), the pair of Washington Post investigative reporters who broke the Watergate story that led to Republican President Richard M. Nixon's resignation. For this reporting he shared a 1973 Pulitzer Prize with Bob Woodward.

Carl Bernstein was born in February 1944, the red diaper son of a radical labor union lawyer and activist mother. "I went with my mother, and I was on a lot of those picket lines as a kid," he told an interviewer in 2002. "I did not like the fact that my parents were of the left. There was a period there that I didn't like it at all. And I was pretty rebellious about it."

In his 1989 book Loyalties: A Son's Memoir (Simon & Schuster), Bernstein describes how he rebelled against his father Alfred's atheism by insisting on being Bar Mitzvahed. "You don't want me to be Jewish," he recounted telling his parents. "This has to do with your politics. And it's not right. And you don't really believe in freedom. It's communism…."

Bernstein acknowledged in this memoir that both his parents were secret members of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA), two of thousands brought by the Party to Washington, D.C. during Democratic President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal.

"You're going to prove [anti-Communist U.S. Senator Joseph] McCarthy was right," Bernstein quotes his father telling him when he was writing his memoir, "because all he was saying is that the system was loaded with Communists. And he was right…. I'm worried about the kind of book you're going to write and about cleaning up McCarthy. The problem is that everybody said he was a liar; you're saying he was right…. I agree that the [Communist] Party was a force in the country."

In 1960 Bernstein, then 16, began working as a copy boy at the Washington Star, which he later described as "a great newspaper…a better newspaper than the Washington Post at the time." In November 1963 Bernstein transcribed then-Star (later Post) reporter David Broder's telephoned story from Dallas, Texas in 1963 on the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.

Bernstein entered the University of Maryland but dropped out in 1965 to work full-time as a reporter for the Elizabeth Journal in New Jersey.

In 1966 Bernstein was hired by the Washington Post to cover police, court and city hall beats. In 2002 he described the Post he joined as biased. "At the time, the Washington Post had, deservedly so, a reputation to some extent for slanting stories, and it did." By contrast, its rival the Star, he said, "really had the best of old-fashioned journalistic, play-it-straight values." The Star, Bernstein said, also had "great reporters as well as some real characters straight out of [the play] The Front Page," while the Post was much more sterile, rigid and conformist. "When I went to work at the Washington Post," he wrote, "I thought I was going to work for an insurance company. I really did."

In June 1972 one of Post Metro Division's newest reporters, Bob Woodward, was assigned to cover a petty burglary of the Democratic Party's headquarters at the Watergate complex. After doing a sidebar piece to Woodward's story, Bernstein persuaded editors to assign him to cover it as well. The two reporters used marginally ethical methods, including unnamed sources and confidential telephone and credit card records to link the arrested burglars to the Committee to Re-elect the President (called by them "CREEP").

During the presidential election season, then into the fall and winter of 1972-73, Bernstein and Woodward with the approval of liberal Post editors investigated the burglars' connections to President Nixon.

The Democratic Party that controlled Congress and its investigating committees soon exploited the Post's reporting as a pretext to launch political fishing expeditions against the incumbent Republican President re-elected by a landslide in 1972. But in their eagerness to bring down President Nixon, Bernstein and Woodward continued to transgress ethical and legal lines - talking privately with members of a Grand Jury, making a false report of what had been testified before a Grand Jury, and leaking confidential congressional information.

"The reporters [Bernstein and Woodward] apparently believed the government was so corrupted by the President's power that the press could justify morally dubious means to right the balance," wrote liberal historian Doris Kearns [Goodwin]. (Kearns was a close friend of President Lyndon Baines Johnson who later married Richard Goodwin, an operative and speechwriter for Robert F. Kennedy.)

In his book Chief Counsel, Samuel Dash, the Democratic Counsel to the Senate Select Committee chaired by Senator Sam Ervin (D.-North Carolina) that investigated Watergate-related issues, wrote that Bernstein and Woodward's reporting degenerated into what he called "hit and run" journalism based on committee leaks that jeopardized the legal system's ability to convict and punish the guilty.

One of Woodward's confidential sources of information (so secret that Woodward refused to divulge his identity even to Post editors) was code-named "Deep Throat" (after a 1972 pornographic movie of the same name). Woodward and Bernstein's book about how they covered this story, All The President's Men (Simon & Schuster, 1974), and the movie leftwing actor-director Robert Redford made from it in which he played Woodward and Dustin Hoffman played Bernstein, made much of "Deep Throat," portrayed in the movie by Hal Holbrook.

But the original Bernstein-Woodward manuscript for All The President's Men never mentioned "Deep Throat," according to their literary agent David Obst (who as a young left-wing underground news service editor launched the career of another radical journalist Seymour "Sy" Hersh.) Obst believes "Deep Throat" is a fictional character, a composite drawn from several different people. As recently as 2004 Bernstein denied this, declaring that he will reveal the identity of the real "Deep Throat" after this person dies. Bernstein's son , who was around age nine when Watergate happened, has reputedly said that "Deep Throat" is former FBI agent Mark Felt.

Because of Bernstein's and Woodward's Washington Post reports, based largely on such anonymous sources, and because of a concerted effort by congressional Democrats led by Edward Kennedy and the establishment media to bring him down, President Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974.

The left, which had always hated Nixon and wanted to pull American troops from Vietnam, rejoiced. As a member of Congress Nixon had first earned this hatred by producing evidence that FDR diplomat and accused spy Alger Hiss had been a secret Communist Party member. (The Venona intercepts later added to the evidence that Hiss had been a communist agent operating under the control of East German military intelligence.) Nixon's success as an anti-Communist had made him a target for hatred and revenge by Communists, including Bernstein's parents.

Carl Bernstein has always maintained that his motivation in obsessively pursuing Nixon, was purely journalistic. But he has said that growing up under the influence of his parents' leftwing values "has informed my beliefs about what is important," and that one of his most important role models is the radical journalist I.F. Stone. In fact, Bernstein shared the views of the anti-Vietnam movement which spear-headed the efforts to bring Nixon down.

Bernstein has written that anti-Communists such as Nixon and McCarthy unleashed a "reign of terror" in America. This is absurd. The only Communists McCarthy sent to jail were those who were held in contempt of congress for invoking the First Amendment (instead of the Fifth) in refusing to answer questions. They did so on orders of the Communist Party which hoped to make them martyrs in the process.

In 1950 Alfred Bernstein lost his job coaching clandestine Communists how to lie to government investigators. He lost his income as part of the ruling elite of the Communist-controlled United Federal Workers of America, through which he had worked since 1937 to unionize government employees and thereby seize control of the government. But Al Bernstein went on to "make a good living by developing of a chain of Laundromats." In his later years this Marxist-Atheist served "as vice president for development with the National Conference of Christians and Jews and the Eleanor Roosevelt Institute for Cancer Research." He died in 2003.

Carl Bernstein has said he informed Post editors of his family's Communist Party background. This raises important questions about the journalistic ethics of the Washington Post as well as Bernstein.

"A case can be made that [Bernstein] should have disclosed the conflict of interest he brought to his Watergate exposes," wrote New York media consultant Sidney Goldberg in 2003. "After all, he was brought up as a Nixon hater and readers might have been told that his family regarded Nixon as vile, as an enemy. If he were doing a story on IBM and came from a family that was dedicated to the destruction of IBM, wouldn't we want to know that?"

The Post continued to publish Bernstein's reporting about Nixon without informing its readers of their reporter's ideological background. (During the 1950s Nixon had accused the Washington Post of having Communist sympathies, a claim that Bernstein's Post witch-hunt against him might have resurrected.) Post editors knew that Bernstein's reporting was pushing the Republican President towards impeachment or resignation, and they knew that most of Bernstein's reporting was based on anonymous, unnamed sources. As scientists often say about UFO and psychic claims, extraordinary hypotheses require extraordinary proof. But the Post continued to publish Bernstein while keeping secret from its readers information about his family background that would have cast doubt on his anti-Nixon reporting.

Bernstein and Woodward were "asking us for blind trust," wrote former New York Times Executive Editor Max Lerner. "Not only must they have 'relations of trust' (as they put it) with their sources, but also they expect the reader to trust their assessments of the trustworthiness of the sources. It may have been the only way this particular kind of book [their sequel to All The President's Men titled The Final Days (Simon & Schuster, 1976)] could have been written, but the leap of faith it asks for is more of a jump than most of us can make." The same must be said for their newspaper reporting, as well as for much that both authors have written since.

In a review of Bernstein's memoir, fellow red diaper baby David Horowitz, who became an anti-Communist conservative, addressed Bernstein's hypocrisy in claiming that America was a repressive country. After Bernstein told his Post bosses about his Communist family background, wrote Horowitz: "In anti-communist, paranoid America, home of the reign of terror, the editor of the most politically powerful media organ in the nation told you to get on with the job of removing a president in the middle of an anti-communist war. And what did you learn from that experience? Exactly nothing."

Bernstein left the Washington Post in 1977 to pursue other career opportunities. He worked for a time as ABC Bureau Chief in Washington, D.C. and later as its correspondent. In addition to Loyalties, he co-authored with Marco Politi His Holiness: John Paul II and the Hidden History of Our Time (Doubleday, 1996).

Bernstein's second wife, Nora Ephron, described their marriage in her 1983 novel and 1986 movie (starring Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson), both titled Heartburn. (Ephron also famously captured the then-knee jerk liberalism of the New York Post decades ago with a hypothetical Post headline: "Record Cold Weather: Jews, Blacks Suffer Most.")

As Bernstein once told the British socialist newspaper The Guardian in reference to Richard Nixon: "You can't divorce a man's personal life from his public behavior."

"The lowest form of popular culture - lack of information, misinformation, misinformation, and a contempt for the truth or the reality of most people's lives - has overrun real journalism," Carl Bernstein has said. "Today, ordinary Americans are being stuffed with garbage."

1 posted on 06/02/2005 7:53:16 PM PDT by Chieftain
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To: Recovering Ex-hippie

Here's your article.


2 posted on 06/02/2005 7:54:08 PM PDT by Chieftain (Thanks to the Swift Boat Veterans, Vietnam Veterans, and POW's for Truth for standing tall.)
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To: Chieftain

He is no friggin hero to me., the liberals can claim him.


3 posted on 06/02/2005 7:57:58 PM PDT by Americanexpat (A strong democracy through citizen oversight.)
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To: Chieftain

Hey, thanks for posting the article.As always, ask a Marine..and the job gets done !


4 posted on 06/02/2005 8:07:43 PM PDT by Recovering Ex-hippie (Everything I need to know about Islam I learned on 9-11!)
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To: Chieftain

Food for �thought. Thanks for posting this.


5 posted on 06/02/2005 8:30:19 PM PDT by syriacus (MSM isn't idolizing Felt 100%. They must be afraid that some Liberal rocks will be turned over.)
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To: Chieftain
Felt at ninety-one seeks remuneration....from whom? The reporters at the Washington Post who cashed in on his treachery?

Woodward and Bernstein aren't going to cough up a dime. If they had previously paid for information from Felt, they're guilty of bribing a Federal Agent; if so, where did the funds come from......Ben Bradley and the Washington Post? It sure didn't come from their pocket change.

Or did Felt violate his oath out of rancor over being passed over for the Directorship and divulged investigative material to the press?

Woodward said Felt said "Follow the money" (trite!). I say "Follow the money" in this case.

Good to hear from you Gunny!

6 posted on 06/02/2005 8:48:27 PM PDT by BIGLOOK (I once opposed keelhauling but recently have come to my senses.)
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To: Chieftain

"No hero"

Beautiful presentation.


7 posted on 06/02/2005 10:26:58 PM PDT by melt (A slimy Michael Moore "film" sticks to you like grime.)
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To: Chieftain

If this guy is such a hero, why were they originally waiting until he died to reveal his name?


8 posted on 06/03/2005 4:11:07 AM PDT by FDNYRHEROES (Make welfare as hard to get as a building permit)
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To: Chieftain

Frankly, I'm a little disappointed it turned out to be this Felt guy. I thought for sure in my heart and soul (felt?) that the real Deep Throat was none other than Hal Holbrook.


9 posted on 06/03/2005 4:14:06 AM PDT by FDNYRHEROES (Make welfare as hard to get as a building permit)
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

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