February 14, 2006
Cheney Clown Journalism, While Muslims Murder Free
Speech
By
Michelle Malkin
Journalists around the world are
being targeted by suicide bombers, threatened with
"hate crimes" prosecutions and thrown in jail for
defending a free press from crazed Islamists.
You wouldn't know it from the
circus-show antics of the American media.
Vice President Dick Cheney, as you
all are aware from the Beltway press corps' incessant
flapping and yapping, was involved in an
accidental shooting during a weekend quail hunting
trip in Texas. The victim is recovering.
It's the me-me-media
hyperventilators who need intensive care.
Peacock Network News correspondent
David Gregory, whose self-absorption rivals the leading
brand of paper towels, threw a snit fit over the 18-hour
delay in public disclosure of the incident. His
exchange on Monday with White House press secretary
Scott McClellan was a
walking advertisement for beta blockers.
McClellan: "David, hold on, the cameras aren't on right
now. You can do this later."
Gregory: "Don't accuse me of trying to pose to the
cameras. Don't be a jerk to me personally when I'm
asking you a serious question."
McClellan: "You don't have to yell."
Gregory: "I will yell! If you want to use that podium to
try to take shots at me personally, which I don't
appreciate, then I will raise my voice, because that's
wrong!"
McClellan: "Calm down, Dave, calm down."
Gregory: "I'll calm down when I feel like calming down!"
Funny thing is, I can't recall the
mainstream media melting down over the 30-hour
delay—presided over by Hillary Clinton, according to
internal records—in releasing the late White House
counsel
Vincent Foster's suicide note to authorities and her
own husband. Can you?
News anchors who couldn't find the
Second Amendment in the Bill of Rights if you put it
under klieg lights pontificated about 28-gauge shotguns
and hunting etiquette. CNN personality Kyra Phillips, in
a rare moment of cable news humility, giggled
self-consciously as she asked a correspondent to explain
the difference between birdshot and bullets. "I think
I might sound stupid," I heard her say.
Yes, but at least she didn't look
stupid.
On that front, Washington Post
reporter Dana Milbank outdid them all. Appearing on
MSNBC to provide his fair and balanced analysis of the
political fallout from Cheney's accident, Milbank donned
a
blaze orange stocking hat and matching reflective vest.
Emulating a hunter in danger of being shot by Cheney,
Milbank looked more like a
Hooters parking attendant. Or a colorblind
"Where's Waldo?" wannabe. Or a fugitive from a
prison crew assigned to pick up roadside trash on
Interstate 495.
"Lighten up," you say. Okay.
I suggest the Washington Post run a large color
photo of the costumed Dana Milbank with his bylined
pieces from now on. That way, all readers may enjoy the
hilarity every time Milbank's work as
"Washington Post National Political Reporter" is
published as objective news.
The bad joke of American journalism
is made all the more odious by the plight of endangered
defenders of press freedom abroad. Last week, Abdel
Halim Akram Sabra, editor of the independent weekly
Al-Hurriya, journalist Yahya Al Aabed and editor of
the Yemen Observer Mohammed Al Asaadi, were
arrested for publishing the Mohammed
Cartoons—something most of our right-to-know poseurs in
the U.S. media
still refuse to do.
The arrested journalists'
newspapers, along with another publication, Al Rai Al
Aam, have all been shut down for printing the
cartoons, which were
first published by the Jyllands-Posten in
Denmark five months ago to underscore the chilling
effect of Islamism on European artists. In Johannesburg,
South Africa, the
high court allowed a Muslim group to pre-emptively
block the publication of the cartoons by the nation's
leading weekly, the Sunday Times.
In Calgary, Canada, the publishers
of the
Jewish Free Press and Western Standard magazine face
civil lawsuits by
local Muslims for publishing the cartoons. In Jordan
and Algeria, a total of four other journalists face
trial for publishing the cartoons. The original
cartoonists have been targeted by Islamic terrorist
groups and are in hiding.
Yet, here we are, as embassies
blaze and editors cower in fear and radical imams
ululate against the West, watching our esteemed media go
Looney Tunes over an isolated hunting accident.
Who do you think will have the last
laugh?
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.