Black Reporter Juan Williams fired from NPR for being fox contributer but npr reporter nina totenberg who wished jesse helms grand children get aids is given a raise
NPR takes taxpayer money out of the mouths of poverty stricken children to promote bigotry and bias
Date: 10/21/2010 11:44:54 PM ( 14 y ) ... viewed 23654 times NPR Nazi public radio has been applauded by montana democrat senator john tester and the rest of the democrat party that takes money from
fugitive criminal George Soros.
george soros h ordered npr to fire Juan Williams and more liason, both
npr reporters and fox contribute rs. npr ceo, a racist white liberal
went on to call Juan Williams mentally unstable.
Here is an approved comment by npr. npr reporter nina totenberg
npr's nina totenberg: jesse helms or his grandkids should get aids
(video)http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/5920144/nprs_nina_totenberg_jesse_helms_or.html
senators in the democrat party including our montana senators
John Tester and max baucus have supported such comments by
funding npr with tax payer money.
our local predominantly white liberal university of Montana said they
will continue to support and run npr. i called the university and was
treated rudely by an administrator
other democrat party supported comments include
1. totenberg on gen. boykin: “i hope he’s not long for this world”
eight years after npr’s nina totenberg, on inside washington, wished
death upon senator jesse helms (“if there is retributive justice,
he’ll get aids from a transfusion, or one of his grandchildren will
get it"), on the same show over the weekend she seemingly desired to
hasten the death of army general jerry boykin for having supposedly
expressed the view that the war on terrorism “is a christian crusade
against muslims.” totenberg hatefully advocated: “i hope he’s not long
for this world.”
2. npr’s bob edwards unloads on failures of bush’s foreign policy
on friday’s morning edition, npr anchor bob edwards, who in a speech
last april denounced bush policies from the left and decried the media
for being too soft on bush, put his personal views into npr news
coverage as he delivered this loaded set-up: “increasingly it seems
the bush administration’s foreign policy is running into trouble. the
post-war picture in iraq and afghanistan is highly unstable. the road
map to peace in the middle east is in tatters. there’s growing unease
over the possibility that north korea and iran are pursuing nuclear
weapons. friends of the united states are not supportive. overall, the
policies of the united states are still very unpopular around the
world. the bush doctrine, a preference for unilateral military action
and a disdain for multinational diplomacy, is under scrutiny more than
ever.”
3. abc’s health care series advocates “right” to “universal” care
any pretense anyone had that abc news might provide a fair and
balanced look at health care in their much-touted week-long series,
which carries the loaded title, “critical condition: heath care in
america,” should have been corrected on sunday night. abc anchor
carole simpson decried how the u.s. is not socialist enough: “even
though the u.s. spends twice as much per person as any other developed
country on health care, the u.s. is the only developed country that
fails to provide universal coverage for all its citizens.” dr. tim
johnson argued that “until all of us embrace the idea that health care
should be a right, not a privilege, our system cannot be glibly
described as, quote, 'the best in the world.’”
totenberg on gen. boykin: “i hope he’s
not long for this world”
npr's nina totenberg eight years after npr’s nina totenberg, on
inside washington, wished death upon senator jesse helms (“if there is
retributive justice, he’ll get aids from a transfusion, or one of his
grandchildren will get it"), on the same show over the weekend she
seemingly desired to hasten the death of army general jerry boykin for
having supposedly expressed the view that the war on terrorism “is a
christian crusade against muslims.” totenberg hatefully advocated: “i
hope he’s not long for this world.”
when the other panelists were taken aback by her wish (“you
putting a hit out on this guy or what?” and, “what is this, the
sopranos?”), she quickly backtracked: “in his job, in his job, in his
job, please, please, in his job.”
the relevant portion of the october 18 inside washington, a show
produced at washington, dc’s gannett-owned wusa-tv and shown
nationally on pbs stations:
nina totenberg of national public radio: “now they’ve got this
guy who’s head of the intelligence section in the defense department
who’s being quoted as telling various groups, while he’s in uniform,
that this is a christian crusade against muslims. i mean this is
terrible, this is seriously bad stuff.”
colbert king, washington post editorial writer: “the other thing
about boykin, he got it wrong. he said god put george bush in the
white house. the supreme court did it.”
totenberg: “the supreme court put george bush in the white house.”
charles krauthammer, syndicated columnist, joked: “it was 5,000
yentas in palm beach who couldn’t read the ballot. if that was not an
act of providence, nothing is.”
gordon peterson, host: “by the way, he was showing pictures of
somalia, mogadishu and there’s a black mark in the sky and he said
'these are demons who controlled this thing.’”
totenberg: “well, i hope he’s not long for this world because you
can imagine-”
several voices reacted in unison, drowning her out, including
peterson: “you putting a hit out on this guy or what?”
king: “are you reverend pat robertson?”
totenberg: “no, no, no, no, no, no!”
peterson: “what is this, the sopranos?”
totenberg: “in his job, in his job, in his job, please, please,
in his job.”
this wasn’t the first time totenberg’s mind jumped immediately to
offing someone whom she found offensive. back on the july 8, 1995
inside washington, totenberg had this reaction to senator jesse helms’
complaint that aids research was getting a disproportionate share of
federal research money. inside washington host tina gulland asked: "i
don’t think i have any jesse helms defenders here. nina?"
totenberg replied: "not me, i think he ought to be worried about
what’s going on in the good lord’s mind, because if there is
retributive justice, he’ll get aids from a transfusion, or one of his
grandchildren will get it."
that comment was a runner-up in the “i’m a compassionate liberal
but i wish you were all dead award (for media hatred of
conservatives)” category in mrc’s 1999 “dishonors awards” for the most
outrageous quotes of the decade. to view a realplayer clip of
totenberg in action: http://www.mediaresearch.org
for what boykin said months ago, and the hyperbolic media
reaction last week, see this item in the october 17 cyberalert: stop
the presses! a christian man has expressed christian views while
speaking inside some christian churches. a night after tom brokaw
labeled the comments as “divisive” as he trumpeted how “nbc news has
learned that a highly-decorated general has a history of outspoken and
divisive views on religion, islam in particular,” the other networks
piled on Thursday night, treating a few remarks made months ago by lt.
general jerry boykin as suddenly scandalous. abc and cbs put up a
“holy warrior” graphic as each teased their respective evening
newscasts. peter jennings touted: “the holy warrior in the american
army. god, he says, has revealed the enemy.” over on the cbs evening
news, dan rather teased: “god and the u.s. military: one of the
country's top generals embroiled in controversy for saying we are at
war with satan.” for details: http://www.mediaresearch.org
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