Rather’s trite contriteness

CBS news anchor Dan Rather appeared on BBC a few nights ago and admitted that the patriotic climate post-9/11 prevented journalists from asking tough questions of its leaders, and compared the situation to South Africans during apartheid who would have burning tires placed around their necks if they dissented. I could have done without this apples to oranges analogy to South Africa (Rather himself said the comparison was “obscene” though that didn’t stop him from using it), but I was bothered more by the interview itself, and the implication that somehow Rather was taking the high-road.

Rather, you might remember, stirred some controversy when he was interviewed on CNN back on September 22, 2001 and said that he didn’t “feel right” wearing an American flag pin on his jacket lapel as was quick becoming the de rigeur display of patriotism among TV talking heads after September 11th. But he also said that “I have absolutely no argument with anyone else who feels differently,” and in fact he did wear a flag pin on his nightly broadcasts. And, in the same CNN interview, he said that “What I want to do, I want to fulfill my role as a decent human member of the community and a decent and patriotic American. And therefore, I am willing to give the government, the President, and the military the benefit of any doubt here in the beginning.” (Emphasis mine) And lest we forget, this is the same Dan Rather who several times on national tv offered himself for national service: “If [Bush] needs me in uniform, tell me when and where — I’m there.” (He also said more or less the same thing in this recent interview: “”I would willingly die for my country at a moment’s notice and on the command of my president.”)

And look at this statement from the BBC interview: “[Self-censorship] starts with a feeling of patriotism within oneself. It carries through with a certain knowledge that the country as a whole – and for all the right reasons – felt and continues to feel this surge of patriotism within themselves. And one finds oneself saying: ‘I know the right question, but you know what? This is not exactly the right time to ask it.‘” (Again my emphasis). I’m curious what Rather thought were the “right questions,” let alone when this supposed “right time” would have been, since he had already unquestioningly allowed that the prevailing patriotic mood was for “all the right reasons.”

So forgive me if I’m feeling a little underwhelmed at Rather’s admonishment of the media for self-censorship, himself included. If you ask me, he — and just about every other mainstream journalist — checked his credibility at the door the day he decided he would be willing to give Bush the benefit of any doubt, for any period of time. How safe for Rather to now speak up about “patriotism run amok” 8 months later, from the safe vantage point of time and the ever so slight tarnishing of Bush’s image among the American people. And is it a coincidence that Rather is now speaking up at the very same time that the media is falling over themselves en masse to determine what Bush knew about terrorist threats before 9/11, seizing the moment to collectively don their muck-raking hats that have been collecting dust in closets since September 11, 2001?

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Rather has long been the poster-child for what conservatives like to think is the liberal bias of today’s media, and so I was curious to see what RatherBiased.com — a site dedicated to “documenting America’s most politicized journalist” that I discovered in the days post-9/11 — would make of these recent admissions by Rather. However, I’m sad to report that the site effectively closed down last December. It must have been tiring grinding that old saw of the media’s liberal bias! At any rate, there are plenty of other groups and societies for “responsible journalism” (read conservative bias) that are wagging their I-told-you-so fingers at Rather’s recent admissions.

Blogging anti-arab sentiment

Perhaps I’m just reading the wrong blogs, but I must say that I’m quite dismayed at how many of them seem obsessed with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and seem to take a vehemently pro-Israel anti-Arab/Islam/Palestinian (invariably and indistinguishly lumped together as one) stance. (This is NOT to say that I take the opposite stance, for I don’t. In fact I find the issue much too complicated and quite frankly I feel a bit too removed from it to take any stance other than a seemingly vain longing for peace).

Just to take one very mild by comparison quote at random, “Coupled with massive immigration from Middle Eastern countries, we are seeing either the beginning of the fall of Europe, or, as I believe, a rebellion against the fall of Europe.” (My italics added). This sentence is actually from a post about Pim Fortuyn and the recent Dutch parlimentary elections, a not coincidental association if you ask me.

At any rate, I’m fast growing tired of reading terms like “Islamofacism” or “Islamocreeps” thrown around freely on these sites. A site like Little Green Footballs, which rates high mentions on many blogs I’ve come across, I find particularly odoriferous, especially if one is brave and starts to read the user comments as well as the posts.

Bin Laden still alive, according to Omar

This Reuters wire story (via a mention at Cursor) notes that a recent interview of Mullah Mohammad Omar, the Taliban leader on the run since November, has been published by the Arab newspaper Ashraq al-Awsat (based in London). The crux of the story is that according to Omar, Osama Bin Laden is still alive.

So while the media makes hay about the recent revelations that the Bush administration had warnings about Bin Laden and terrorists enrolling in flight schools from the CIA and FBI pre-9/11, the fact of the matter that seems to recede further each day from the public consciousness is that Bin Laden and Omar are still at large, and that whether they’re “dead or alive”, the US military (oh excuse me, the “allied effort”) has no fucking clue.

Incidentally, I noted with some amusement this bit from the above-mentioned Reuters story: “[…] the article would also be published on what it called the official Internet site of the Taliban. It did not carry the address for the site.” A quick Google search brought up this Wired article from last October about the mysterious site, which was at www.afghanistan-ie.com until just after the 9/11 terrorist attacks when it mysteriously vanished off the face of the Internet. As mentioned in the article, WHOIS still shows the domain registered to Pakistan’s largest ISP Brain.net, and lists the “administrative contact” as the “Taliban Govt Web Page”. The Internet Archive Wayback Machine shows us what the site looked like as of July 2001.

(A fascinating tidbit gleaned from the Wired piece surrounding the background of Brain.net: it grew out of Brain Computers in Lahore, the owners of which wrote one of the world’s first computer viruses back in the early ’80’s.)

At any rate, I did more surfing and I think it’s safe to say that www.taliban.org is definitely not the Taliban’s official site, despite the spot-on cheesy design.