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AP FRIDAY NIGHT CLARIFICATION ON BUSH/KATRINA VIDEO ('OVERTOPPED' NOT 'BREACHED')
The AP via The Drudge Report ^ | March 3, 2006

Posted on 03/03/2006 4:51:36 PM PST by new yorker 77

Clarification: Katrina-Video story ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP) _ In a March 1 story, The Associated Press reported that federal disaster officials warned President Bush and his homeland security chief before Hurricane Katrina struck that the storm could breach levees in New Orleans, citing confidential video footage of an Aug. 28 briefing among U.S. officials.

The Army Corps of Engineers considers a breach a hole developing in a levee rather than an overrun. The story should have made clear that Bush was warned about floodwaters overrunning the levees, rather than the levees breaking.

The day before the storm hit, Bush was told there were grave concerns that the levees could be overrun. It wasn't until the next morning, as the storm was hitting, that Michael Brown, then head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said Bush had inquired about reports of breaches. Bush did not participate in that briefing.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: abuseofpower; ap; apbias; associatedpress; bullzogby; bush; communisttrick; dnctalkingpoints; drivebymedia; fakebutaccurate; fifthcolumn; hitpiece; howcanwefoolemtoday; katrina; katrinavideo; levees; lyingliars; mediabias; moveon; moveondotorg; msmfakesnews; naginisanidiot; nola; powerghraib; smearcampaign; toolittletoolate; zogbyism
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To: pissant

Yes it is our job, and I am more than happy to do it


41 posted on 03/03/2006 5:08:37 PM PST by scratcher
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To: hole_n_one

Olbermann is hated at ESPN.


42 posted on 03/03/2006 5:08:42 PM PST by new yorker 77 (FAKE POLLS DO NOT TRANSLATE INTO REAL VOTERS!)
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To: Gordongekko909; meanie monster

Thankyou. But post 28 takes the cake. ROFL!!!


43 posted on 03/03/2006 5:09:48 PM PST by pissant
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To: hole_n_one
I have been dishonored.


44 posted on 03/03/2006 5:10:17 PM PST by Gordongekko909 (I know. Let's cut his WHOLE BODY off.)
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To: new yorker 77

The AP is getting to be as bad as SeeBS...or is it the other way 'round?? :)


45 posted on 03/03/2006 5:10:18 PM PST by Keith in Iowa (New SeeBS-News promo theme: If the facts don't fit, we'll make up sh*t.)
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overtopped
46 posted on 03/03/2006 5:10:58 PM PST by ForYourInformation
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To: pissant

I get pics from pookie18's toons!


47 posted on 03/03/2006 5:11:22 PM PST by meanie monster (http://guptonator.myvideochat.net)
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To: new yorker 77
Does anyone else besides me remember some of the first reports out that hurricane Katrina missed most of N.O. and the people were revelling and carrying on on Bourbon St? Some bars never closed. If my memory serves me correctly,my first impressions of reports were that N.O. was spared?

I was glued to the tv in the days preceding as they had this one pegged as a cat5.

48 posted on 03/03/2006 5:12:37 PM PST by MadelineZapeezda (If you right click on Madeline Albright's image, my name should show up!)
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To: All

MSNBC Versus NBC: Bush Caught in Lie
or Vindicated by Video?

MSNBC versus NBC News. MSNBC's David Shuster, at the top of Thursday's Hardball, and NBC's Lisa Myers at the start of the NBC Nightly News, played the identical soundbites from Max Mayfield of the National Hurricane Center warning, on Sunday August 28, about his "grave concern" the levees in New Orleans could be "topped," and a clip of President Bush four days later maintaining that "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees." But they used the soundbites to prove opposite assessments. Shuster contended that Mayfield's video "seems to contradict what President Bush said about Katrina" since Mayfield's warning "clearly" means that "the President's team did anticipate the breach."

Lisa Myers, however, recognized the meaning of words and how water flowing over a levee, topping it, is not the same thing as a breaching, the collapse of a levee, which is what occurred. Myers explained: "Today Mayfield told NBC News that he warned only that the levees might be topped, not breached, and that on the many conference calls he monitored, 'nobody talked about the possibility of a levee breach or failure until after it happened.'"

[This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To post your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ]

Shuster's story first ran at the start of the 5pm EST airing of Hardball, which MSNBC re-ran on tape at 7pm EST. In the Washington, DC market, where the NBC Nightly News runs at 7pm, that meant the two stories ran at the exact same time.

The MRC's Brad Wilmouth provided transcripts of the relevant portion of Shuster's piece and the entirety of the Myers story:

# MSNBC's Hardball, March 2. David Shuster:
"It's a videotape that seems to contradict what President Bush said about Katrina. Four days after the storm hit, with most of New Orleans underwater and thousands of people stranded at the Convention Center, the President scrambled to defend the federal government's response."
George W. Bush at the White House, on ABC's Good Morning America, September 1: "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees."
Shuster: "But clearly the President's team did anticipate the breach. This teleconference video from the day before the storm reached New Orleans shows the President was warned the breach was possible, and the tape shows the President's team openly worried about the outcome. Max Mayfield, a leading hurricane expert, warned of massive devastation [brief inaudible sound of Mayfield]. Then, Mayfield directly addressed the reliability of the levees."
Max Mayfield, National Hurricane Center, during August 28 video conference: "I don't think anyone can tell you with any confidence right now whether the levees will be topped or not, but that's obviously a very, very grave concern."
Shuster: "From his Texas ranch, President Bush tried to reassure local officials that the federal government was ready."
Bush, from his Texas ranch, by video: "I want to assure the folks at the state level that we are fully prepared to not only help you during the storm, but we will move in whatever resources and assets we have at our disposal after the storm."...


# NBC Nightly News, March 2. Anchor Campbell Brown led:
"Good evening. Tonight, a reality check. We are taking 'A Closer Look' at those tapes of meetings between top government officials, both before and after Hurricane Katrina made landfall. With all the finger pointing going on now, it is worth asking whose statements really hold up. NBC News today obtained a new videotape of the conversations that were going on behind the scenes among state and federal officials the day Katrina hit. The tape shows some contradictions between what former FEMA director Michael Brown was saying at the time and what Brown told Brian Williams in a recent interview. We will speak with Brown again in a moment, but first here's NBC's senior investigative correspondent Lisa Myers."

Lisa Myers began: "NBC News has now obtained the videotape of a key private meeting between federal and state officials on Monday, August 29, the day Katrina hit. Though Michael Brown has been critical of the President, the tape shows Brown praising the President that day, saying they'd already talked twice."
Michael Brown, audio: "He's asking questions about reports of breaches. He's asking about hospitals. He's really engaged asking a lot of really good questions."
Myers: "Yet, Brown told Brian Williams last week that he repeatedly and emphatically warned how bad Katrina would be, but no one listened."
Brown, in February 24 interview: "I want to jam up supply lines. I want to cut the bureaucratic red tape. I want it 'balls to the wall,' was the phrase that I used, in doing everything we could."
Myers: "Tapes and transcripts don't reflect that colorful expression, but Brown does repeatedly sound the alarm and push for action. Sunday:"
Brown, video from August 28: "My gut tells me, I told you guys my gut was that this is a bad one and a big one."
Myers: "Monday:"
Brown, audio from August 29: "I want everyone to recognize, and I know I'm preaching to the choir of everybody here, how serious the situation remains."
Myers: "As for the President, on Thursday, September 1st, four days after Katrina hit, he said this:"
George W. Bush, on the September 1 Good Morning America: "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees."
Myers: "On a conference call, which President Bush participated in as Katrina approached, hurricane expert Max Mayfield said this:"
Max Mayfield, by video in the August 28 video conference: "I don't think anybody can tell you with any confidence right now whether the levees will be topped or not, but that's obviously a very, very grave concern."
Myers: "Today Mayfield told NBC News that he warned only that the levees might be topped, not breached, and that on the many conference calls he monitored, 'nobody talked about the possibility of a levee breach or failure until after it happened.' In the new tape obtained by NBC from Bush supporters, a senior White House official asked Louisiana Governor Blanco how the levees are holding up."
Governor Kathleen Blanco (D-LA), audio from August 29: "We keep getting reports in some places that maybe water is coming over the levees. We've heard a report unconfirmed. I think we've heard that we have not breached the levee. We have not breached the levee at this point in time."
Myers: "We now know that an hour before Blanco's assessment, a FEMA official alerted superiors to reports that at least one levee had failed, information which didn't reach the White House until almost midnight. Lisa Myers, NBC News, New Orleans."

http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2006/cyb20060303.asp#1


49 posted on 03/03/2006 5:15:04 PM PST by new yorker 77 (FAKE POLLS DO NOT TRANSLATE INTO REAL VOTERS!)
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To: MadelineZapeezda
Does anyone else besides me remember some of the first reports out that hurricane Katrina missed most of N.O. and the people were revelling and carrying on on Bourbon St? Some bars never closed.

We all do.

50 posted on 03/03/2006 5:15:30 PM PST by hole_n_one
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To: hole_n_one

NBC's Myers Torpedoes Olbermann's Bush
Attack, But He's Oblivious

On Thursday, for the second consecutive night, MSNBC's Keith Olbermann, citing recently released videotape of Bush administration officials meeting before Hurricane Katrina struck, questioned the honesty of Bush's September statement that nobody "anticipated the breach of the levees," claiming that the possibility of a "breach" had been talked about during the videotaped meeting. But also on this second night, the Countdown host ran a story filed by NBC's Lisa Myers (which early aired on NBC Nightly News, see item #1 above) in which she torpedoed Olbermann's claim, citing meteorologist Max Mayfield's recollection that "nobody talked about the possibility of levee breach or failure until after it happened." Olbermann, evidently not noticing this, continued as if her report had supported his attack on Bush rather than disproved it. Guest Dana Milbank of the Washington Post even followed up by directly referring to Myers' report as evidence of Bush's "credibility" being undermined, even though Myers clearly argued in her piece that Bush's version of the story was supported by her investigation. Milbank: "It undermines the President's credibility, and now people are getting at this question of his honesty and his secrecy."

[This item, by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth, was posted Friday morning on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your opinions, go to: newsbusters.org ]

On the Wednesday, March 1 Countdown, Olbermann teased the show: "Video of the government-wide Katrina briefing, the one from August 28th, the day before the hurricane hit New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, the one in which the President is warned that the levees could be breached four days before he told the American public no one could have anticipated that the levees could be breached."

Olbermann opened the show trumpeting the fresh evidence the Countdown host believed contradicted Bush's public statements: "Good evening. Six months to the day after Hurricane Katrina roared ashore, half a year in which the White House has claimed repeatedly that no one could have anticipated how bad it would be, a wealth of evidence, much of it caught on tape, now revealing that President Bush was indeed fully briefed about the storm's potential and all of the damage it might do."

After hearkening back to the "Nixon tapes," dubbing these the "Bush tapes," Olbermann continued: "The tapes revealing that Mr. Bush and his Homeland Security secretary were warned in no uncertain terms before Katrina hit shore that the storm could breach levees, could risk lives in the New Orleans Superdome, could overwhelm rescuers."

Olbermann then brought aboard Richard Wolffe of Newsweek to further discuss the tapes. The Countdown host couldn't resist another Nixon reference as he concluded the interview wondering if Bush's dishonesty was as bad as the "actual malfeasance or misfeasance": "And again, as we said, as Richard Nixon always said, you can be excused for almost any crime, if you will, or failure or error of omission or commission, but if there is tape of you not doing the job and then afterwards boasting that you have done everything that you could do, that's almost as bad as the actual malfeasance or misfeasance, is it not?"

On the Thursday March 2 Countdown show, Olbermann ran a story by NBC's Lisa Myers, which had already run earlier on the NBC Nightly News, in which Myers played a clip of meteorologist Maxfield warning administration officials that flood waters from Katrina posed a risk of the levees being "topped," which Myers accurately distinguished from a "breach" through further discussion with Mayfield: "Today Mayfield told NBC News that he warned only that the levees might be topped, not breached, and that on the many conference calls he monitored, nobody talked about the possibility of a levee breach or failure until after it happened."

Not only did Olbermann fail to correct his own previous confusion of the concepts of "breaching" and "topping" of levees, but later, during an interview with the Washington Post's Dana Milbank, the Countdown host continued on his same theme of Bush being dishonest by posing the question: "Why try to get away with something that, as you point out, clearly was not true when sophisticated tapes existed and were just, sort of, waiting to come out like the new release of network on DVD?"

Even more oddly, Milbank actually cited Myers' report as evidence of two things Bush said publicly not being true, even though Myers explicitly argued that Bush's statement on the levees breaching was not contradictory. Milbank: "It undermines the President's credibility, and now people are getting at this question of his honesty and his secrecy. It appears that two things, as Lisa pointed out, that he said very publicly, turned out not to be true, and he apparently should have clearly from the meeting known that they were not true."

For a complete transcript of Olbermann's March 1 coverage of the videotape story, use the link above to the NewsBusters posting of this item. A complete rundown of Olbermann's March 2 coverage:
"Good evening. To our knowledge, there is nobody actually named Katrina Bush, nobody, at least, famous enough to pop up through a cursory search. But if she's out there, what marketing possibilities there are for her tonight. Our fifth story in the Countdown, Katrina Bush: More shocking video. Tonight, reaction from the two men other than the President, who can be heard speaking on the tapes, outrage on Capitol Hill and a new video. But for those who may have missed it, we begin with another look at the original tape from August 28th of last year, uncovered again yesterday, the one that kicked off the controversy: What did President Bush know of the storm and when did he know it?"
Michael Brown, former FEMA Director: "Everyone, let's go ahead and get started. It's noon, and we have a lot of business to cover today."
Bush, in video conference: "I do want to thank the good folks in the offices of Louisiana and Alabama and Mississippi for listening to these warnings and preparing your citizens for this huge storm. I want to assure the folks at the state level that we are fully prepared to not only help you during the storm, but we will move in whatever resources and assets we have at our disposal after the storm to help you deal with the loss of property, and we pray for no loss of life, of course."
Max Mayfield, National Hurricane Center: "So if the really strong winds clip Lake Pontchartrain that's going to pile some of that water from Lake Pontchartrain over on the south side of the lake. I don't think anybody can tell you with any confidence right now whether the levees will be topped or not, but that's obviously a very, very grave concern."
Brown clip #2: "My gut tells me, I told you guys, my gut was that this is a bad one and a big one, and you heard Max's comments. I still feel that way today."
Brown clip #3: "I also heard there's no [audio gap], mandatory evacuations are not taking patients out of hospitals, getting prisoners out of prisons and they're leaving hotels open in downtown New Orleans, so I'm very concerned about that."
Brown clip #4: "As you may or may not know, the Superdome is about 12 feet below sea level, so I don't know what the heck [audio gap], and I also learned about that roof. I don't know whether that roof is designed to withstand a cat 5 hurricane."
Brown clip #5: "Kind of gross here, but I'm concerned about NDMS and medical and demort assets and their ability to respond to a catastrophe within a catastrophe. If I could get some sort of insight into what's going on in that Superdome, I think it would be very, very helpful."
Olbermann: "The President has yet to comment on the tapes, though they've been out there now for more than 24 hours. He is safely removed from this controversy by a distance of some 7,500 miles. He's in India tonight. Not so, the Democrats on Capitol Hill. The minority leaders of both chambers expressing their outrage."
Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader: "They have systematically misled the American people to hide the basic incompetence of the recovery and the response. And as a result of this, it's made America less safe, not more safe."
Nancy Pelosi, House Minority Leader clip #1: "That video further points to the need for an independent commission."
Pelosi, clip #2: "The video is an eloquent statement, speaks very clearly to the fact that there was a predictable tragedy that was about to befall the people of that region, and the administration's response was inadequate."
Olbermann: "And then there is the man with the most to benefit apparently from these tapes, former FEMA director Michael Brown, who seems, at least on videotape to have done if not a heck of a job, at least a pretty good one after all. Tonight, Mr. Brown telling NBC News that the tapes speak for themselves."
Brown: "My criticism has always been to what was occurring prior to Katrina making landfall. I couldn't get anyone's attention about how serious this disaster was going to be, and I think the tapes are clear that I was expressing that warning from at least 72 hours before it made landfall."
Olbermann: "Oddly enough, after months of video silence, tapes are coming out of the wood work like a previously-owned sale at a Blockbuster. Within hours of the news of the Associated Press collection from the day before Katrina hit, there were transcripts. Newsweek says they came from Bush administration officials of the meetings the day that it did hit, ones that made the President look much better. And this morning the videotapes of those August 29th meetings mysteriously appeared after months of being unavailable or not known to exist or sorry, somebody else has rented them. In a moment, Dana Milbank of the Washington Post reviews the first-season video release and today's conveniently timed follow-up second-season release. First, the special 'making of the video' video from our chief investigative correspondent Lisa Myers."

Lisa Myers, in taped story: "NBC News has now obtained the videotape of a key private meeting between federal and state officials on Monday, August 29th, the day Katrina hit. Though Michael Brown has been critical of the President, the tape shows Brown praising the President that day, saying they'd already talked twice."
Michael Brown: "He's asking questions about reports of breaches. He's asking about hospitals. He's really engaged asking a lot of really good questions."
Myers: "Yet, Brown told Brian Williams last week that he repeatedly and emphatically warned how bad Katrina would be, but no one listened."
Brown: "I want to jam up supply lines. I want to cut the bureaucratic red tape. I want it 'balls to the wall,' was the phrase that I used, in doing everything we could."
Myers: "Tapes and transcripts don't reflect that colorful expression, but Brown does repeatedly sound the alarm and push for action. Sunday:"
Brown: "My gut tells me, I told you guys my gut was that this is a bad one and a big one."
Myers: "Monday:"
Brown: "I want everyone to recognize, and I know I'm preaching to the choir of everybody here, how serious the situation remains."
Myers: "As for the President, on Thursday, September 1st, four days after Katrina hit, he said this:"
George W. Bush: "I don't think anybody anticipated the breach of the levees."
Myers: "On a conference call which President Bush participated in as Katrina approached, hurricane expert Max Mayfield said this:"
Max Mayfield: "I don't think anybody can tell you with any confidence right now whether the levees will be topped or not, but that's obviously a very, very grave concern."
Myers: "Today Mayfield told NBC News that he warned only that the levees might be topped, not breached, and that on the many conference calls he monitored [text on screen], 'nobody talked about the possibility of a levee breach or failure until after it happened.' In the new tape obtained by NBC from Bush supporters, a senior White House official asked Louisiana Governor Blanco how the levees are holding up."
Governor Kathleen Blanco (D-LA): "We keep getting reports in some places that maybe water is coming over the levees. We've heard a report unconfirmed. I think we've heard that we have not breached the levee. We have not breached the levee at this point in time."
Myers: "We now know that an hour before Blanco's assessment, a FEMA official alerted superiors to reports that at least one levee had failed, information which didn't reach the White House until almost midnight. Lisa Myers, NBC News, New Orleans."

Olbermann, back live: "There is a Kate Bush. Singer. For more now on the political impact of all this, time to call in the Washington Post's Dana Milbank. Good evening, Dana."
Dana Milbank, Washington Post: "Evening, Keith."
Olbermann: "It is a cliche of American politics that if things go toughly for presidents at home, they take a road trip, they travel as far abroad as they can go. This trip to India really seems obviously coincidental, but it seems like it could not have come at a better time. If you are in this White House, is there any hope that this will have all died down by the time the President gets back?"
Milbank: "Well, not really. I mean, people might stop chattering about this particular video. The problem is each one of these things really does its damage. It undermines the President's credibility, and now people are getting at this question of his honesty and his secrecy. It appears that two things, as Lisa pointed out, that he said very publicly, turned out not to be true, and he apparently should have clearly from the meeting known that they were not true. This is some of the things that have been depressing the President's numbers in the polls. You add to that the ports controversy, the trouble in Iraq. Each one of these things knocks him down a bit, and each time he gets up, another wave seems to knock him over."
Olbermann: "These are not the Nixon White House tapes, though. These are things that he should have known were there and had the prospect of coming out. Why try to get away with something that, as you point out, clearly was not true when sophisticated tapes existed and were just, sort of, waiting to come out like the new release of network on DVD?"
Milbank: "Keith, nobody could have anticipated the tapes would be released. They, certainly we didn't anticipate the tapes would be released. Certainly Tom Davis, who just did this exhaustive investigation, now looks a little embarrassed by this whole thing in the House of Representatives."
Olbermann: "But I don't, you know I never interrupt, but, Dana, that first tape from August 28th was sitting in the archives of most of the major news organizations. It had been sent out by FEMA to the Associated Press television service and was sitting in storage rooms at every network in this country."
Milbank: "That is a little embarrassing, isn't it? It's sort of the way the ports controversy exploded after people found out about it 90 days ago, and then it just blows up. Everybody's just waiting for the right moment."
Olbermann: "All right, the new tape, the one from August 29th, the day the storm hit, this is provided to NBC News today, as you heard Lisa Myers say, by supporters of Mr. Bush. It's remarkable how it turned up under the circumstances. What happened to the executive privilege that the White House told the Senate kept it from seeing these tapes or those transcripts from those tapes? Or did these just sort of get out sideways, and the administration knows nothing about it?"
Milbank: "Well, executive privilege is, the administration has defined it as, the privilege to do what the President wishes to do, of course, and that is that he can define whatever point he wants, whatever legal point he wants, but he can violate that if he chooses to. Same thing with the releasing of classified information. It's really up to the President here, and it was in his interest. Now, I don't know your source on this, but certainly when people say 'Republican sources,' that tends to indicate they might be Republicans who actually might even work in the White House."
Olbermann: "Let's say that the White House is 100 percent correct on the breadth of the blame here and that nobody could have anticipated the blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Six months out, things are still so bad along the Gulf Coast, is the administration really trying to make some sort of claim of competency at this point? Or is it an attempt to shift the focus back onto Michael Brown in hopes that it all sticks to him again when, in fact, it looks like his reputation has been rehabilitated to some degree?"
Milbank: "Yeah, the competence question is going to be very difficult in this case because it's ongoing. I mean, we learned today that in New Orleans they're starting again today to search for more dead bodies. 300 to 400 are still missing. They haven't even reclaimed the bodies down there. I don't think any of us thought that we would now be crediting Michael Brown of the Arabian Horse Federation with actually knowing that there were problems with the Superdome's roof, knowing that it was under sea level, warning about the evacuation possibilities and warning about the levees. He has, in a sense, rehabilitated himself, and that's something I think none of us expected."
Olbermann: "As Rodney Dangerfield said in that movie, you want to look thin, hang out with a bunch of fat people. If you want to look better, more competent, hang out with a bunch of people who aren't. Dana Milbank of the Washington Post, no one could have foreseen the release of these tapes, I hope that appears in an article soon."
Milbank: "It's not going to appear in one of mine. I'm keeping an eye out from the Ombudsman."
Olbermann: "Thank you kindly, sir, and best of luck on that."

http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2006/cyb20060303.asp#2


51 posted on 03/03/2006 5:15:39 PM PST by new yorker 77 (FAKE POLLS DO NOT TRANSLATE INTO REAL VOTERS!)
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To: scratcher

Me too. And the stupid liberals I work with think the media is biased towards the right. I've converted a few, but the work is never ending.


52 posted on 03/03/2006 5:19:11 PM PST by pissant
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To: meanie monster

Is Pookie 18 a freeper?


53 posted on 03/03/2006 5:19:37 PM PST by pissant
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To: putupjob
I'm sure we all remember Hillary in the Pink dress on the Friday afternoon.

umm, well, no, I don't remember that one...

54 posted on 03/03/2006 5:19:46 PM PST by the invisib1e hand ("Who is it, really, making up your mind?")
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To: jdm

Thanks for the pic. I've been catching some of S and S on late-night TV recently and it's still very funny.


55 posted on 03/03/2006 5:20:13 PM PST by Socratic (Tell the libs: Beating a dead horse is not the same as tenderizing a steak.)
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To: meanie monster
ROFL ROFL ROFL!! All you need is Cheney with a shotgun and that pic would be a masterpiece!
56 posted on 03/03/2006 5:22:00 PM PST by KoRn
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To: new yorker 77
That movie Wall Street was good.

It was like "It's a Wonderful Life" compared to the real thing. Boiler Room is closer to the truth about retail.


57 posted on 03/03/2006 5:25:14 PM PST by the invisib1e hand ("Who is it, really, making up your mind?")
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To: iPod Shuffle

In other fake but accurate news this evening, Chris Matthews is reporting that "Bush snuck into Pakistan under cover of darkness".

I kid you not. MSNBC's resident idiot reported the landing of Air Force One in Pakistan as if it were some type of covert operation.

Matthews and David Gregory should both be sent to Gitmo for crimes against Truth.


58 posted on 03/03/2006 5:26:41 PM PST by Palladin ("Governor Lynn Swann."...it has a nice ring to it!)
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To: tomahawk
AP is a disgrace to the "profesion" of journalism

Journalism is a disgraceful profession. AP merely epitomizes it.

59 posted on 03/03/2006 5:26:50 PM PST by the invisib1e hand ("Who is it, really, making up your mind?")
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To: new yorker 77
This is the most non-retraction retraction I have ever seen. It is obfuscation to the extreme, and it still states "panic" due to topping the levies. The word "overrun" is very misleading, and was not used in the video.
60 posted on 03/03/2006 5:29:46 PM PST by norwaypinesavage
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