Soldier4Christ
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« Reply #1 on: April 13, 2007, 01:54:25 PM » |
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Glenn Beck, who hosts a syndicated radio show as well as a TV show on CNN Headline News, was singled out for calling Rosie O'Donnell, co-host of ABC's "The View," a "fat witch" who had "blubber ... just pouring out of her eyes. He allegedly asked, "Do you know how many oil lamps we could keep burning just on Rosie O'Donnell fat?" Later on the March 23 edition of his radio show, Beck said, "I'm a little ashamed" for calling O'Donnell "a fat witch" then added, "But she's so fat."
Beck's other offenses, according to Media Matters, include:
On March 15, he said: "Hillary Clinton cannot be elected president because ... there's something about her vocal range." He went on to say, "There's something about her voice that just drives me it's not what she says, it's how she says it," adding, "She is like the stereotypical excuse the expression, but this is the way to she's the stereotypical b, you know what I mean?" Beck later qualified his statement: "I never said that Hillary Clinton was a b. I said she sounded like one."
On Nov. 14, on his CNN show, Beck said to Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., the first Muslim ever elected to Congress: "OK. No offense, and I know Muslims. I like Muslims. ... With that being said, you are a Democrat. You are saying, 'Let's cut and run.' And I have to tell you, I have been nervous about this interview with you, because what I feel like saying is, 'Sir, prove to me that you are not working with our enemies.'"
On Sept 5 on CNN, Beck warned that if "Muslims and Arabs" don't "act now" by "step[ping] to the plate" to condemn terrorism, they "will be looking through a razor wire fence at the West."
On April 27, 2006, Beck said there are three reasons an illegal immigrant "comes across the border in the middle of the night" "one, they're terrorists; two, they're escaping the law; or three, they're hungry. They can't make a living in their own dirtbag country."
On May 17, 2005, Beck said he was "thinking about killing (filmmaker) Michael Moore and wondered out loud whether "I could kill him myself, or if I would need to hire somebody to do it." He concluded: "No, I think I could. I think he could be looking me in the eye, you know, and I could just be choking the life out is this wrong?"
Bill O'Reilly, host of the No. 1 cable TV show, Fox News Channel's "The O'Reilly Factor," is also a syndicated radio host. Media Matters challenged his right to the airwaves for the following alleged indiscretions:
On April 6 O'Reilly said that Virginia Beach Mayor Meyera Oberndorf "should be baking pies, not running a major city."
On April 2, while discussing the British soldiers captured by the Iranian government, Nancy Soderberg, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, stated that "the Arab Sunnis are uniting against Iran" and said: "t's going to be the Arab world against the Persian world. And that's a fight we don't want to have played out in Iraq." O'Reilly responded: "Well, I'd like to see that fight with us out of it. That's what I'd like to see." O'Reilly continued: "I want let them kill each other."
On Dec. 13, O'Reilly dismissed a report on same-sex parenting by asserting, "Nature dictates that a dad and a mom is the optimum" form of child-rearing. O'Reilly asked "why," if children suffer no psychosocial deficit from being raised by same-sex parents, "wouldn't nature then make it that anybody could get pregnant by eating a cupcake?" O'Reilly declared that by arguing in favor of same-sex couples' right to raise children, "you're taking Mother Nature and you're throwing it right out the window, and I just think it's crazy."
Syndicated radio host Neal Boortz faced the following indictment:
On July 19, Boortz claimed that "at its core," Islam is a "violent, violent religion," and said, "[T]his Muhammad guy is just a phony rag-picker." Boortz asserted that "t is perfectly legitimate, perhaps even praiseworthy, to recognize Islam as a religion of vicious, violent, bloodthirsty cretins."
On March 31, 2006, then-Rep. Cynthia McKinney, D-GA, "looks like a ghetto slut." He was commenting on a March 29 incident in which McKinney allegedly struck a police officer at a Capitol Hill security checkpoint. Boortz said that McKinney's "new hair-do" makes her look "like a ghetto slut," like "an explosion at a Brillo pad factory," like "Tina Turner peeing on an electric fence," and like "a shih tzu."
On March 27, 2006, Boortz suggested the U.S. government should "store 11 million Hispanics" who entered the country illegally in the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans before deporting them to their home countries.
Michael Smerconish was next on the hit list. While sitting in for O'Reilly on radio April 4, Smerconish repeatedly discussed "the sissification of America," claiming that political correctness has made the United States "a nation of sissies." Smerconish also claimed, several times, that this "sissification" and "limp-wristedness" is "compromising our ability to win the war on terror."
Lastly, Fox News Channel host and syndicated radio talker John Gibson crossed the line May 11, according to Media Matters, for advising viewers of "The Big Story" to "[d]o your duty. Make more babies." He then cited a May 10 article, which reported that nearly half of all children under the age of 5 in the U.S. are minorities. Gibson added: "By far, the greatest number [of children under 5] are Hispanic. You know what that means? Twenty-five years and the majority of the population is Hispanic." Gibson later claimed: "To put it bluntly, we need more babies." Then, referring to Russia's projected decline in population, Gibson claimed: "So far, we are doing our part here in America but Hispanics can't carry the whole load. The rest of you, get busy. Make babies, or put another way a slogan for our times: 'procreation not recreation.'"
CBS fired Don Imus from his radio program yesterday, a day after MSNBC announced it was discontinuing a simulcast of the show on cable TV. Imus initially was given a two-week suspension for calling the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy-headed hos" on the air last week.
"There has been much discussion of the effect language like this has on our young people, particularly young women of color trying to make their way in this society," CBS President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie Moonves said in announcing the decision. "That consideration has weighed most heavily on our minds as we made our decision."
Imus, once named one of the 25 Most Influential People in America by Time magazine and a member of the National Broadcasters Hall of Fame, issued repeated apologies as protests intensified.
Brock's Media Matters was "developed" with help from the Center for American Progress, funded by billionaire George Soros, a major financial backer of the Democratic Party and allied groups such as MoveOn.org.
Brock, formerly of the conservative American Spectator, is backing a "Renew the Fairness Doctrine" campaign to have the Federal Communications Commission monitor and regulate talk radio. His group is "dedicated to correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media."
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