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Glenn Beck (2 Viewers)

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You claim that you don't watch these shows, "know nothing" about Beck, so how would you know that "they're all partisan shills not interested in legitimate debate? Is this shtick? The more I think about it, I'm probably being fished; no one can argue that they don't even pay attention yet are somehow more informed to render an opinion than those who follow the debates on a nightly basis.

Throwing Glenn Beck in the same "ilk" as Rachel Maddow is akin to equating Curtis Enis to Adrian Peterson.
I don't watch these shows, have never watched an entire show, but I have seen outtakes on youtube and such. I think I can identify Beck, Olbermann, Rush, Madow, et al out of a lineup. You don't really have to listen long to know that this ilk is pushing a viewpoint and is not interested in honest debate. I have seen enough of them to know that. Are you claiming this to be false?You are right, it is absurd because Curtis Enis was probably a better RB than Adrian Peterson(Chi), formerly of Georgia Southern. :confused:

 
Has this been posted yet?

http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5330485n

The problem I have with Beck in this interview is that he runs from all of his histrionics and defends none of it.
In the first 17 minutes(no time for the 40+ minutes) of this, he comes across as more reasonable than her.
Beck in this interview is trying desperately to distance himself from his over-the-top fear mongering TV and radio shows and someone pretend as if he's been this apolitical libertarian stalwart for years. It's laughable. You can't have it both ways, Glenn. Own your comments or shut up. Beck's defense seems to be that he was just as tough on Bush as he is on Obama. Objectively, that's false. Plain and simple. If we are to believe that Beck is some kind of consistent libertarian (which seems to be his claim throughout this interview), you wouldn't be able to find all kinds of comments from him about how scary the world is and how much the government needs to protect us. He tells Couric that he was against the Patriot Act when there are numerous clips of him saying precisely the opposite.

And this mess about him being an equal opportunity basher is just insulting to anyone paying attention. His diatribes are completely incoherent and lack any kind of logic whatsoever. Did you see that little clip of Beck connecting the warning label on a tin of Copenhagen ("May cause cancer") to Obama's trip to Copenhagen in support of Chicago's Olympic bid? It's garbage like that that just makes sensible people barf, especially when he titles his new book about how to argue with idiots. Rich stuff.

When Couric presses him about some of his more inflammatory comments about Obama being racist and hating white culture, Beck just balks entirely. Sure, give him his own show with no rules and he'll espouse about Obama being a racist and socialist for hours on end, but when asked to merely clarify what he meant, he whines about this being "gotcha" or reducing things to soundbites. It's the hypocrisy that people immediately spot and mock, not his politics.

At the end, Beck goes on this weird rant about how he spends too much time thinking and talking about politics when we all know he has ratings because of his loony soliloquies. Who can take him serious for even a moment? It's puzzling. He's totally out of his element during one of these serious interviews. Just has no idea what he's doing. Even someone like O'Reilly would do better than this. Beck is an intellectual lightweight that creates his own reality and whines when someone challenges it. He doesn't even take the invitation to clarify what he really means. To me that's a pretty big sign of weakness. There's a reason he doesn't do these types of interviews. He's out of his element and has no control. He also looks ill-prepared and fairly dumb.

This isnt' about political views. There are many many conservative voices that make infinitely more sense than Beck. Even Liz Cheney has a better handle on things than this guy. I get the ratings and why people watch/listen to him, but I don't get why anyone would allow him to be the champion of conservatism. Makes less than zero sense.
Damn. That was awesome.:subscribe:
:confused: :subscribe:

 
You claim that you don't watch these shows, "know nothing" about Beck, so how would you know that "they're all partisan shills not interested in legitimate debate? Is this shtick? The more I think about it, I'm probably being fished; no one can argue that they don't even pay attention yet are somehow more informed to render an opinion than those who follow the debates on a nightly basis.

Throwing Glenn Beck in the same "ilk" as Rachel Maddow is akin to equating Curtis Enis to Adrian Peterson.

Rachel Maddow is the talking head equivalent of Adrian Peterson?

Interesting. Of all the talking heads on MSNBC, I can watch Maddow. Matthews, Schulz and Olbermann are tough to watch. But I don;t like O'Reilly or Hannity's shows either.

I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.

 
You claim that you don't watch these shows, "know nothing" about Beck, so how would you know that "they're all partisan shills not interested in legitimate debate? Is this shtick? The more I think about it, I'm probably being fished; no one can argue that they don't even pay attention yet are somehow more informed to render an opinion than those who follow the debates on a nightly basis.

Throwing Glenn Beck in the same "ilk" as Rachel Maddow is akin to equating Curtis Enis to Adrian Peterson.
Rachel Maddow is the talking head equivalent of Adrian Peterson?

Interesting. Of all the talking heads on MSNBC, I can watch Maddow. Matthews, Schulz and Olbermann are tough to watch. But I don;t like O'Reilly or Hannity's shows either.

I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Only in TG's world.
 
I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often.Olbermann is actually a pretty gifted writer (he had an hour-long special comment tonight that was quite well done and from the heart), but his show is nothing but one buddy (Jonathan Alter, Richard Wolffe, Lawrence O'Donnell, etc.) with the same point of view after another. He's never even feigned interest in talking to anyone with a divergent perspective.Matthews has an encyclopedic knowledge about political history and the best vocabulary on TV, but he does too much shouting and cutting people off. He will have balanced voices on his show which isn't a bad thing. He editorializes a lot which isn't bad, but it kind of undermines some of the balance that he claims to strive for.Russert was better than any of them because you felt as though the guy was interested in exposing peoples' motivations and true opinions... no matter what they were. He was universally considered to be tough but fair. That's a nearly impossible achievement these days.
 
Can anyone link to Rachel Maddow being ridiculous?

I don't watch any news or news-type programs on TV, except the ones on Comedy Central. But I see YouTube clips of people like Beck and Olbermann being completely ridiculous. In the only clips I've seen of Maddow, she seems to be intelligent and reasonable.

If people are comparing her to Beck . . . maybe I just haven't seen the right clips?

 
Can anyone link to Rachel Maddow being ridiculous?

I don't watch any news or news-type programs on TV, except the ones on Comedy Central. But I see YouTube clips of people like Beck and Olbermann being completely ridiculous. In the only clips I've seen of Maddow, she seems to be intelligent and reasonable.

If people are comparing her to Beck . . . maybe I just haven't seen the right clips?
She doesn't have the same style as Beck...so in that way there is no comparison b/w the two. I saw her clip when she defended ACORN and it was brutally slanted.Here it is:

Link

Instead of reporting on the many facets of ACORNs accomplishments and shortcomings, she props up a strawman Republican and only regurgitates sound-bites of ACORN's positive activities, while ignoring their political ties and their long list of transgressions. In this piece, she comes across as a political shrill for the left without any semblance of balance.

 
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I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often.Olbermann is actually a pretty gifted writer (he had an hour-long special comment tonight that was quite well done and from the heart), but his show is nothing but one buddy (Jonathan Alter, Richard Wolffe, Lawrence O'Donnell, etc.) with the same point of view after another. He's never even feigned interest in talking to anyone with a divergent perspective.Matthews has an encyclopedic knowledge about political history and the best vocabulary on TV, but he does too much shouting and cutting people off. He will have balanced voices on his show which isn't a bad thing. He editorializes a lot which isn't bad, but it kind of undermines some of the balance that he claims to strive for.Russert was better than any of them because you felt as though the guy was interested in exposing peoples' motivations and true opinions... no matter what they were. He was universally considered to be tough but fair. That's a nearly impossible achievement these days.
:thumbup: I don't disagree with the vast majority of what you said.But the special comment tonight was not good in my opinion. I thought it was self serving and just par for the Olbermann course. I Keithworld everything is about him. I feel for him about his dad being sick but weaving a story about Pops Olbermann and healthcare reform was just silly to me. If you want to spell out why you support reform and make your agrument, I'm cool with that. If you want to rationally dismantle the arguments of those opposed to reform or the public option, again, I'm cool with that too.But that isnt what Olby does.On, Maddow. I think she's respectable. She has the educational chops and you can tell she does her homework even though she does on occasion take people out of context. She tries to play it straight. although I see her pound the righties alot more than the lefties.
 
I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often....
Mr. Pickles, does she lay into the left with equal vigor?
 
I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often....
Mr. Pickles, does she lay into the left with equal vigor?
Of course not. She's an unapologetic liberal. You know that going in.
 
I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often....
Mr. Pickles, does she lay into the left with equal vigor?
Of course not. She's an unapologetic liberal. You know that going in.
Yes, it seems pretty obvious...well, at least to most people. And it is probably why conservatives don't want to appear on her show.
 
I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often....
Mr. Pickles, does she lay into the left with equal vigor?
Of course not. She's an unapologetic liberal. You know that going in.
Yes, it seems pretty obvious...well, at least to most people. And it is probably why conservatives don't want to appear on her show.
Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
 
Matthews gets the best guests on a regular basis, he's respected by both sides in Washington and always gets Senators and Congressmen from either side of the isle. He's been more open about his liberal slant lately, but I think it's hard not to favor the democrats right now considering the current state of the republican party. Hardball is the daily political show for adults, IMO.

Maddow is the phenom though. She dumbs it down enough so that average Joes like me get the point, but you can really see her brilliance when she debates opposing viewpoints. Her ability to absolutely hammer people in a civil manner is reminiscent of Obama himself. Maddow is going to have a tough decision in a couple of years with regard to whether she wants to run for office and lead from the inside or if she feels she can have more of an impact through the media. Regardless, she'll succeed in a huge way.

 
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...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
 
...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Usually it's fairly easy to tell if someone is coming at a discussion from a particular political perspective. It's better if they just level with the audience. Maddow has said that she has liberal points of view and isn't trying to hide that fact. If you don't like that, don't watch.The distinction between a show like hers and someone like Beck's is that most of her commentary is well-researched and backed up. You may not agree with her targets or what she chooses to focus on, but at least you can count on her being somewhat reasonable. Does she use hyperbole? Sure. Does she take cheap shots? Yes. However, at the end of the day you're not like to watch her show and claim that she isn't informed and doesn't at least try to work within the confines of a fact-based argument.If you're watching any of these political commentary shows in the hopes of finding objective points of view, I would question why you're watching. That's not what they do or what they claim to do. I think many of them do consider themselves to be journalists, but it's clearly colored by their own personal perspective and slants. What I think viewers should be asking is whether they are at least coming at the topic reasonably and making salient points. I would say Maddow, though liberal, does that orders of magnitude more than Beck.
 
...

Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Usually it's fairly easy to tell if someone is coming at a discussion from a particular political perspective. It's better if they just level with the audience. Maddow has said that she has liberal points of view and isn't trying to hide that fact. If you don't like that, don't watch.The distinction between a show like hers and someone like Beck's is that most of her commentary is well-researched and backed up. You may not agree with her targets or what she chooses to focus on, but at least you can count on her being somewhat reasonable. Does she use hyperbole? Sure. Does she take cheap shots? Yes. However, at the end of the day you're not like to watch her show and claim that she isn't informed and doesn't at least try to work within the confines of a fact-based argument.

If you're watching any of these political commentary shows in the hopes of finding objective points of view, I would question why you're watching. That's not what they do or what they claim to do. I think many of them do consider themselves to be journalists, but it's clearly colored by their own personal perspective and slants.

What I think viewers should be asking is whether they are at least coming at the topic reasonably and making salient points. I would say Maddow, though liberal, does that orders of magnitude more than Beck.
I guess I am missing the point of the point of watching the show. Is this for the uninformed to get their talking points? Is it for the somewhat informed to cheer their side and sharpen their talking points?What do they claim to do? Even though she is informed and attempting to work in within the confines of a fact-based argument, but she doesn't subject consenting and dissenting viewpoints with equal rigor, isn't this just well-polished propaganda as opposed to unpolished propaganda? It is easy to cite only your facts while allowing those to agree with you to slide with their missteps and attacking those with whom you disagree for their missteps. It makes your argument look superior when in fact may not be...no matter how you attempt to frame the tactics.

I will take her piece on ACORN as an example. It was loosely fact-based. Yes, ACORN does register people to vote. Check...that is accurate(for the moment, we will leave out the charges of voter registration fraud). They also did provide some services to the community. Check.

However, to completely dismiss the legitimate charges of outrageous behavior by their employees in multiple offices all across the country is more than disingenuous. To then attack people who legitimately expose these egregious acts by posting a strawman crosses the line of credibility.

Like the example I stated before(not in this thread), it is accurate to say that Al Capone provided soup kitchens during the depression. This is accurate. But how it is in the remote realm of fairness to cite these acts only when presented with the fact that Al Capone was a mob leader? How does it contribute to the discussion?

 
Matthias said:
...

Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Usually it's fairly easy to tell if someone is coming at a discussion from a particular political perspective. It's better if they just level with the audience. Maddow has said that she has liberal points of view and isn't trying to hide that fact. If you don't like that, don't watch.The distinction between a show like hers and someone like Beck's is that most of her commentary is well-researched and backed up. You may not agree with her targets or what she chooses to focus on, but at least you can count on her being somewhat reasonable. Does she use hyperbole? Sure. Does she take cheap shots? Yes. However, at the end of the day you're not like to watch her show and claim that she isn't informed and doesn't at least try to work within the confines of a fact-based argument.

If you're watching any of these political commentary shows in the hopes of finding objective points of view, I would question why you're watching. That's not what they do or what they claim to do. I think many of them do consider themselves to be journalists, but it's clearly colored by their own personal perspective and slants.

What I think viewers should be asking is whether they are at least coming at the topic reasonably and making salient points. I would say Maddow, though liberal, does that orders of magnitude more than Beck.
I guess I am missing the point of the point of watching the show. Is this for the uninformed to get their talking points? Is it for the somewhat informed to cheer their side and sharpen their talking points?What do they claim to do? Even though she is informed and attempting to work in within the confines of a fact-based argument, but she doesn't subject consenting and dissenting viewpoints with equal rigor, isn't this just well-polished propaganda as opposed to unpolished propaganda? It is easy to cite only your facts while allowing those to agree with you to slide with their missteps and attacking those with whom you disagree for their missteps. It makes your argument look superior when in fact may not be...no matter how you attempt to frame the tactics.

I will take her piece on ACORN as an example. It was loosely fact-based. Yes, ACORN does register people to vote. Check...that is accurate(for the moment, we will leave out the charges of voter registration fraud). They also did provide some services to the community. Check.

However, to completely dismiss the legitimate charges of outrageous behavior by their employees in multiple offices all across the country is more than disingenuous. To then attack people who legitimately expose these egregious acts by posting a strawman crosses the line of credibility.

Like the example I stated before(not in this thread), it is accurate to say that Al Capone provided soup kitchens during the depression. This is accurate. But how it is in the remote realm of fairness to cite these acts only when presented with the fact that Al Capone was a mob leader? How does it contribute to the discussion?
I think the difference being that Al Capone's primary business was not soup kitchens but running booze.If you want to be really "fair" about it, you can ask why your straw man is not the isolated individual employees at ACORN and not the overall organizational mission. But whatever.... the only reason ACORN is even the slightest bit interesting or intriguing to anybody on Capitol Hill is because of a tenuous and stale connection between it and Obama. So the right gets up and blasts it and they try to catch him in the collateral.

Whatever. Are you going to talk about Glenn Beck in any of this?
You are uniformed, Matthias. ACORN was going to participate in the census. Many people had objections to that. How was it isolated? It happened in multiple cities across the US. There exists a string of employee misconduct associated with ACORN, including an employee stealing almost $1M. The point, at least for me, was that ACORN should not be involved with the census with such a poor organizational structure.What do you want to know about Beck? He is a shrill for the right. Who cares about him? This has been discussed before in this thread. RIF.

 
...

Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Usually it's fairly easy to tell if someone is coming at a discussion from a particular political perspective. It's better if they just level with the audience. Maddow has said that she has liberal points of view and isn't trying to hide that fact. If you don't like that, don't watch.The distinction between a show like hers and someone like Beck's is that most of her commentary is well-researched and backed up. You may not agree with her targets or what she chooses to focus on, but at least you can count on her being somewhat reasonable. Does she use hyperbole? Sure. Does she take cheap shots? Yes. However, at the end of the day you're not like to watch her show and claim that she isn't informed and doesn't at least try to work within the confines of a fact-based argument.

If you're watching any of these political commentary shows in the hopes of finding objective points of view, I would question why you're watching. That's not what they do or what they claim to do. I think many of them do consider themselves to be journalists, but it's clearly colored by their own personal perspective and slants.

What I think viewers should be asking is whether they are at least coming at the topic reasonably and making salient points. I would say Maddow, though liberal, does that orders of magnitude more than Beck.
I guess I am missing the point of the point of watching the show. Is this for the uninformed to get their talking points? Is it for the somewhat informed to cheer their side and sharpen their talking points?What do they claim to do? Even though she is informed and attempting to work in within the confines of a fact-based argument, but she doesn't subject consenting and dissenting viewpoints with equal rigor, isn't this just well-polished propaganda as opposed to unpolished propaganda? It is easy to cite only your facts while allowing those to agree with you to slide with their missteps and attacking those with whom you disagree for their missteps. It makes your argument look superior when in fact may not be...no matter how you attempt to frame the tactics.

I will take her piece on ACORN as an example. It was loosely fact-based. Yes, ACORN does register people to vote. Check...that is accurate(for the moment, we will leave out the charges of voter registration fraud). They also did provide some services to the community. Check.

However, to completely dismiss the legitimate charges of outrageous behavior by their employees in multiple offices all across the country is more than disingenuous. To then attack people who legitimately expose these egregious acts by posting a strawman crosses the line of credibility.

Like the example I stated before(not in this thread), it is accurate to say that Al Capone provided soup kitchens during the depression. This is accurate. But how it is in the remote realm of fairness to cite these acts only when presented with the fact that Al Capone was a mob leader? How does it contribute to the discussion?
I understand your criticism. The ACORN thing has been a tricky issue to wade through. Clearly they have employees who aren't doing their job. Lots of places have that. There is also corruption and other issues that have come up. No question.I think the problem here is complicated with ACORN. Maddow's take I think is this:

- ACORN does far more good than bad

- ACORN has received an disproportional amount of scrutiny due to the '08 election, some warranted, most not

- most of the driving force behind the ACORN scrutiny has been by conservatives with agendas to discredit their practices in voter registration

- many of the cases of impropriety in the voter registration cases were self-reported by ACORN and dealt with internally

- ACORN is a very large organization that probably has a similar incidence of corruption than any other organization does

- ACORN is getting a bad rap overall because of the loud opposition from people pushing an agenda (in part to discredit Obama)

- though not a political organization, ACORN registers more lower income people to vote which helps Democrats disproportionately, thus the predictable opposition

One interesting counter argument about this ACORN stuff is to highlight the level of corruption in other groups, companies, non-profits that receive government funding. The logic goes as follows: if these other groups demonstrate incidents on par or worse than those of ACORN, where is the consistent outrage? Also, this seems like a fairly thinly-veiled attack on a group that ends up serving Democratic party interests more than Republican ones. If this was reversed, you wouldn't hear a peep from conservative critics.

Are there legitimate gripes about ACORN? Yes. In fact, ACORN itself has admitted as much. The trouble is the most vocal opposition to ACORN has focused on some narrow incidents and taken that to imply that the entirety of the organization is the most corrupt thing we've ever seen. That's taking it too far.

I do think that Maddow's reporting of ACORN hasn't been as balanced as it should be. She should at least admit that many of the claims are legitimate gripes. The problem with her doing that, I think from her perspective, is that it somehow allows people raising hell to score some points. She'd rather sweep these under the rug and make the consistency argument and say that most of what's being said is completely overblown (which I think is true).

In politics it's more about appearances than facts in some cases. I think this explains why Congress voted nearly unanimously to defund ACORN without taking much of a look into the frequency and pervasiveness of the incidents. If they did the same with other funded groups, they'd likely find similar or much worse cases. Maddow pointed out a number of these (mostly government contractors) on her show and questioned the seriousness of the ACORN attacks. I think she's right to do that (it's fact-based), but it does ignore legitimate gripes about ACORN.

 
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...I understand your criticism. The ACORN thing has been a tricky issue to wade through. Clearly they have employees who aren't doing their job. Lots of places have that. There is also corruption and other issues that have come up. No question.

I think the problem here is complicated with ACORN. Maddow's take I think is this:

- ACORN does far good than bad

- ACORN has received an disproportional amount of scrutiny due to the '08 election, some warranted, most not

- most of the driving force behind the ACORN scrutiny has been by conservatives with agendas to discredit their practices in voter registration

- many of the cases of impropriety in the voter registration cases were self-reported by ACORN and dealt with internally

- ACORN is a very large organization that probably has a similar incidence of corruption than any other organization does

- ACORN is getting a bad rap overall because of the loud opposition from people pushing an agenda (in part to discredit Obama)

One interesting counter argument about this ACORN stuff is to highlight the level of corruption in other groups, companies, non-profits that receive government funding. The logic goes as follows: if these other groups demonstrate incidents on par or worse than those of ACORN, where is the consistent outrage?

Are there legitimate gripes about ACORN? Yes. In fact, ACORN itself has admitted as much. The trouble is the most vocal opposition to ACORN has focused on some narrow incidents and taken that to imply that the entirety of the organization is the most corrupt thing we've ever seen. That's taking it too far.

I do think that Maddow's reporting of ACORN hasn't been as balanced as it should be. She should at least admit that many of the claims are legitimate gripes. The problem with her doing that, I think from her perspective, is that it somehow allows people raising hell to score some points. She'd rather sweep these under the rug and make the consistency argument and say that most of what's being said is completely overblown (which I think is true).

I politics it's more about appearances than facts in some cases. I think this explains why Congress voted nearly unanimously to defund ACORN without taking much of a look into the frequency and pervasiveness of the incidents. If they did the same with other funded groups, they'd likely find similar or much worse cases. Maddow pointed out a number of these (mostly government contractors) on her show and questioned the seriousness of the ACORN attacks. I think she's right to do that (it's fact-based), but it does ignore legitimate gripes about ACORN.
The thing she also completely dismisses is that here is an organization that has had repeated instances of out of control employees, so there is an obvious lack of organizational control. Why were they being used to handle the census in the first place? Where is her outrage there?Yes, politics is being played by both sides here. As it is with most issues, unfortunately. How much of the scrutiny of Haliburton was warranted? Why was there more scrutiny of Enron than Global Crossing? Because of political axes to grind.

As far as the consistent outrage, there are many of us in the middle that do hold all these companies/organizations in contempt and want the government to sever business with these companies/organizations. Maybe that will teach them to play by the rules.

Which brings me back to Maddow. You brought up six points, and I have heard similar things. Points 1,2,5, and 6 are solely opinion and have nothing to do with facts. Those things are almost impossible to quantify, and all people are left are their opinions. Point 4 has a factual basis, and point 3 is conventional wisdom but also is impossible to prove or quantify. I can't argue for it, but can't really factually base an argument against it because it goes into people's pyschology, and that is a very complex thing.

However, if Maddow is framed in such a way that claims that she is attempting to make fact-based arguments, as you said, she certainly failed in this regard. Does she make fact-based arguments when she thinks the facts are in her favor and ignores them in instances like this and solely relies on talking points and emotion(according to his detractors in this thread, just like Beck does)? Then that is not very consistent, and it is understandable that only like-minded people have a tendency to tune to her show. Again...doesn't this just make her a shrill for her side?

Thanks for the posts, Pickles. I have enjoyed reading your thoughts.

 
Matthias said:
You are uniformed, Matthias. ACORN was going to participate in the census. Many people had objections to that. How was it isolated? It happened in multiple cities across the US. There exists a string of employee misconduct associated with ACORN, including an employee stealing almost $1M. The point, at least for me, was that ACORN should not be involved with the census with such a poor organizational structure.

What do you want to know about Beck? He is a shrill for the right. Who cares about him? This has been discussed before in this thread. RIF.
Look, I'm tempted to play this into, "every organization has their bad apples" shtick but then I'm just as weakly "fair" as you. Fine. Fire and/or prosecute the people who did something wrong. Investigate the organization and see if they were acting independently or under some organizational steerage. And then decide. And at the end of the day, it won't matter a fart in the wind because it is a small organization whose only significance is as a current political punching bag.And what do I want to know about Beck? Whatever you think about him... this thread is about him and not ACORN after all.
Rule #16 of forum posting rules went into effect after Beck was discussed ad nauseaum. This tangent is a worthwhile discussion about political biases of media personalities and their prejudices, which grew out of the discussion of Beck. If you don't like rule #16, it is being debated in the test forum.AGAIN, Beck is a shrill for the right and I pay him no mind. I have answered this question for you previously(just look up a few posts), and I don't know what else you want to know. Do you have a more specific question about him?

 
I just flipped by, He was talking about ''we can't afford what we have...We can't afford what we have entitled ourselves. Even if the good times come back we couldn't afford what we have.''

I know crazy talk.

 
However, if Maddow is framed in such a way that claims that she is attempting to make fact-based arguments, as you said, she certainly failed in this regard. Does she make fact-based arguments when she thinks the facts are in her favor and ignores them in instances like this and solely relies on talking points and emotion(according to his detractors in this thread, just like Beck does)? Then that is not very consistent, and it is understandable that only like-minded people have a tendency to tune to her show. Again...doesn't this just make her a shrill for her side?
I think you're expecting too much out of this claim that she's going to be rigorous in her fact-checking and backing up assertions. I think she does an adequate job, but does she make assertions without citing everything? Of course. They all do. She also glosses over contrary facts that don't support her own agenda. They all do this too. Plenty of arguments and commentary is made in this way, and you need to do your own work to strenuously verify if what they are saying is accurate. Let's not make her out to be some kind of uber-host that makes assertions and then backs up everything meticulously. No one does this. There isn't even time to do this.What I do see from Maddow is a better-than-average attempt to couch arguments in facts and to provide compelling evidence. Certainly she's not going to hit every angle of a subject. She's not going to give "equal time" to a contrary opinion. That's no what she does, nor does she claim to do so. In the end, it's a political commentary show. If she gives compelling arguments and provides facts to back it up, all the better. I think she does this better than most. She does this better than Olbermann for sure. She does this better than Beck could ever hope to do this. I'm not sure Beck even cares about this, really.

She's a partisan, and she admits as much. Getting back to Beck (since this thread is about him.. sorry Woz), you often have a guy that will say outrageous things and then act as though he's some kind of crusader for the little guy with no particular political interest in mind. That's just dumb. Anyone viewing his show knows this. His interview with Couric made me laugh when he tried to assert he was this big time libertarian and railed against Bush just as much as he does Obama. False. Period. Sorry, Glenn, we have things like transcripts and YouTube now. At least own up to what you are. I don't mind the political shilling as much as I do the hypocrisy. At least own up to what you are. Maddow does this. Beck is terrified of it.

 
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...

Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Usually it's fairly easy to tell if someone is coming at a discussion from a particular political perspective. It's better if they just level with the audience. Maddow has said that she has liberal points of view and isn't trying to hide that fact. If you don't like that, don't watch.The distinction between a show like hers and someone like Beck's is that most of her commentary is well-researched and backed up. You may not agree with her targets or what she chooses to focus on, but at least you can count on her being somewhat reasonable. Does she use hyperbole? Sure. Does she take cheap shots? Yes. However, at the end of the day you're not like to watch her show and claim that she isn't informed and doesn't at least try to work within the confines of a fact-based argument.

If you're watching any of these political commentary shows in the hopes of finding objective points of view, I would question why you're watching. That's not what they do or what they claim to do. I think many of them do consider themselves to be journalists, but it's clearly colored by their own personal perspective and slants.

What I think viewers should be asking is whether they are at least coming at the topic reasonably and making salient points. I would say Maddow, though liberal, does that orders of magnitude more than Beck.
I guess I am missing the point of the point of watching the show. Is this for the uninformed to get their talking points? Is it for the somewhat informed to cheer their side and sharpen their talking points?What do they claim to do? Even though she is informed and attempting to work in within the confines of a fact-based argument, but she doesn't subject consenting and dissenting viewpoints with equal rigor, isn't this just well-polished propaganda as opposed to unpolished propaganda? It is easy to cite only your facts while allowing those to agree with you to slide with their missteps and attacking those with whom you disagree for their missteps. It makes your argument look superior when in fact may not be...no matter how you attempt to frame the tactics.

I will take her piece on ACORN as an example. It was loosely fact-based. Yes, ACORN does register people to vote. Check...that is accurate(for the moment, we will leave out the charges of voter registration fraud). They also did provide some services to the community. Check.

However, to completely dismiss the legitimate charges of outrageous behavior by their employees in multiple offices all across the country is more than disingenuous. To then attack people who legitimately expose these egregious acts by posting a strawman crosses the line of credibility.

Like the example I stated before(not in this thread), it is accurate to say that Al Capone provided soup kitchens during the depression. This is accurate. But how it is in the remote realm of fairness to cite these acts only when presented with the fact that Al Capone was a mob leader? How does it contribute to the discussion?
Looks like you've really been swayed by our sound bite media when it comes to Acorn. Wow.
 
...Looks like you've really been swayed by our sound bite media when it comes to Acorn. Wow.
No, I have been convinced by ACORN's long list of shady dealings and questionable associations living in New Orleans. As I have stated in several threads, ACORN in New Orleans was part of local machine politics which played fast and loose with the rules. So, no "Wow" involved here.
 
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I'll give Maddow credit for occassionally having a competing view on her show. The others get by with that GOP guy that looks like Captain Caveman. Olbermann doesnt permit opposing views.

I miss Tim Russert, while he wasnt a talking head, Meet the Press was interesting and he would hammer both sides it they tried to evade him.
Maddow does have quite a few guests that have opposing viewpoints. She actually relishes the opportunity to talk to people who don't agree with her. It sounds like she gets about 5% of the people that she asks because she's often begging conservatives to come on her show. Once they do show, I think she does a nice job with the discussion. She tries to be fair and not misrepresent, but they are also not there to be coddled. She will lay into them early and often....
Mr. Pickles, does she lay into the left with equal vigor?
Of course not. She's an unapologetic liberal. You know that going in.
Yes, it seems pretty obvious...well, at least to most people. And it is probably why conservatives don't want to appear on her show.
Why should conservatives not want to debate with those that disagree with them? Isn't that the point of debate?
 
...Looks like you've really been swayed by our sound bite media when it comes to Acorn. Wow.
No, I have been convinced by ACORN's long list of shady dealings and questionable associations living in New Orleans. As I have stated in several threads, ACORN in New Orleans was part of local machine politics which played fast and loose with the rules. So, no "Wow" involved here.
Yea, empowering people we have spent decades keeping down with bad laws and stupid voting rules is the shady part.
 
...

I think you're expecting too much out of this claim that she's going to be rigorous in her fact-checking and backing up assertions. I think she does an adequate job, but does she make assertions without citing everything? Of course. They all do. She also glosses over contrary facts that don't support her own agenda. They all do this too. Plenty of arguments and commentary is made in this way, and you need to do your own work to strenuously verify if what they are saying is accurate. Let's not make her out to be some kind of uber-host that makes assertions and then backs up everything meticulously. No one does this. There isn't even time to do this.

What I do see from Maddow is a better-than-average attempt to couch arguments in facts and to provide compelling evidence. Certainly she's not going to hit every angle of a subject. She's not going to give "equal time" to a contrary opinion. That's no what she does, nor does she claim to do so. In the end, it's a political commentary show. If she gives compelling arguments and provides facts to back it up, all the better. I think she does this better than most. She does this better than Olbermann for sure. She does this better than Beck could ever hope to do this. I'm not sure Beck even cares about this, really.

She's a partisan, and she admits as much. Getting back to Beck (since this thread is about him.. sorry Woz), you often have a guy that will say outrageous things and then act as though he's some kind of crusader for the little guy with no particular political interest in mind. That's just dumb. Anyone viewing his show knows this. His interview with Couric made me laugh when he tried to assert he was this big time libertarian and railed against Bush just as much as he does Obama. False. Period. Sorry, Glenn, we have things like transcripts and YouTube now. At least own up to what you are. I don't mind the political shilling as much as I do the hypocrisy. At least own up to what you are. Maddow does this. Beck is terrified of it.
I agree that the hypocrisy is worse, but the political shrilling is awfully distasteful to me.
 
...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
The thing is, reality isn't right down the middle. One side is getting it correct more than the other. How do you not get that?
 
Bonzai said:
Saints-Man said:
Mr. Pickles said:
...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
The thing is, reality isn't right down the middle. One side is getting it correct more than the other. How do you not get that?
Glad to see you are so open minded.
 
the moops said:
Saints-Man said:
Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
Of course she does. And of course, she is a journalist.Just as Beck, Hannity, Olberman, Rush, etc are journalists.
Well, now, hold on! I've heard Beck on at least one occasion say he is NOT a journalist. But, he did say that he's doing the job of journalists, because all the real journalists are too cowardly to do so.
 
Bonzai said:
Saints-Man said:
Mr. Pickles said:
...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
The thing is, reality isn't right down the middle. One side is getting it correct more than the other. How do you not get that?
No reality isnt right down the middle. But I disagree that one side is more correct than the other. Both sides hve some arguments that are correct.However, by and large both sides are more concerned with proving their "correctness" and the other sides"incorrectness" than they are in actually getting things accomplished. The Republicans in congress started screwing up when GWB was elected in 2000. They lost their commitment to fiscal responsibility that led them to majorities in 1994.As a result they were swept from power in 2006.The Democrats have done nothing to usher in a new tone or to get anything done. They said they were going to get us out of Iraq, we are still there. They said they were going to reform the earmark process, they havent. Both sides have screwed up and will continue to screw up.Glenn Beck is a blowhard. Much of his shows are schtick. As are most radio and TV talking heads. Almost all of them give their "side" an easy time or free pass. While they attempt to thrash the other side.But they all throw stuff out their that makes me think and want to learn more. Well, let me correct that. All of them that I watch, except for Schulz and Olbermann and I don't watch O'Reilly or Hannity.I have recently begun to listen to guys who are more thoughtful about what they say. I listen to Bill Bennett, Dennis Prager and Michael Medved and I do watch Maddow and Matthews.
 
Bonzai said:
Saints-Man said:
Mr. Pickles said:
...Maddow is one of the few TV hosts that will outright say that she's a raging liberal.
I am glad she is honest, but does it really contribute constructively to the discussion? If you already know where she stands, why watch the show? Also, just because she is honest about her slant, does it not still make her slanted? Does she portray herself as a "journalist"?
The thing is, reality isn't right down the middle. One side is getting it correct more than the other. How do you not get that?
Glad to see you are so open minded.
lolSo once someone takes a stand on something, they've lost all touch with reality?ETA: Take a couple guys from the FFA. Jim11 and IvanKaramazov both lean right. Should we equally discount their posts because of their leanings? No, IK makes sense and has well reasoned arguments, while Jim11 babbles incoherently. The way someone leans doesn't discount their input. Now, Jim11 and TGunz are both hacks for their "sides". While both are annoying (and on Ignore), TGunz is going to end up being right more often because his views happen to line up with reality more often (even though he may not realize it).If each had a show, it seems that you'd have no preference as to which you'd watch since they all lean a certain way. I'd watch IK, then TGunz, then Jim11.
 
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Saints-Man said:
urbanhack said:
...Looks like you've really been swayed by our sound bite media when it comes to Acorn. Wow.
No, I have been convinced by ACORN's long list of shady dealings and questionable associations living in New Orleans. As I have stated in several threads, ACORN in New Orleans was part of local machine politics which played fast and loose with the rules. So, no "Wow" involved here.
An organization in New Orleans part of a political machine? Say it isn't so. C'mon, that's like picking on one particular fat guy at the Chinese Buffet.
 
I like Joe Scarborough most of the time. Howver, I guess he missed the part of the interview with Katie Couric where Beck says he should have said that differently. I believe Beck's argument has been that the President sat in a pew at Rev. Wright's church for two decades. He considered Wright a mentor. He has also made conflicting statements about whether or not he has heard Wright's inflammatory rhetoric. I find it hard to believe that some of the beliefs of his mentor and pastor didn't influence him or color his opinions. I think most of us who attend church pick a church whose message we agree with. Much of that comes from the Pastor. I personally find some of the sermons of Rev. Wright disturbing and I have never heard a pastor in any church that I have attended make such comments. Had something similar happened, I wold have gotten up and walked out of the sanctuary.

That being said, I believe Beck put his foot in his mouth on that one. I don't believe the President is a racist, however I do believe that his opinions may have been colored by the theology of his Pastor.

Also, Scarborough harped on him for the FEMA camp thing. Beck went over that in the interview as well. He stated from the otset that he didnt believe the rumor. He set out to debunk it and ultimately he did debunk it.

Scarborough has a vested interest in seeing Beck fail. It benefits his employer is Beck fails. I think Scarborough's motives arent so shallow. I think he;s more moderate, and he's trying to give legitimacy to himself. I don;t falt him for that. I'd like to see more moderation in regard to tone.

Joe doesnt like Glenn.

 
I like Joe Scarborough most of the time. Howver, I guess he missed the part of the interview with Katie Couric where Beck says he should have said that differently. I believe Beck's argument has been that the President sat in a pew at Rev. Wright's church for two decades. He considered Wright a mentor. He has also made conflicting statements about whether or not he has heard Wright's inflammatory rhetoric. I find it hard to believe that some of the beliefs of his mentor and pastor didn't influence him or color his opinions. I think most of us who attend church pick a church whose message we agree with. Much of that comes from the Pastor. I personally find some of the sermons of Rev. Wright disturbing and I have never heard a pastor in any church that I have attended make such comments. Had something similar happened, I wold have gotten up and walked out of the sanctuary.
How many times was race brought up in sermons over two decades? How many full sermons have you listed to or watched?
 
I like Joe Scarborough most of the time. Howver, I guess he missed the part of the interview with Katie Couric where Beck says he should have said that differently.
I believe the Scarborough clip was before the Couric interview.
I think you need to rewatch the video you posted. The Couric Interview was the intro piece to Scarborough's comments.
Oh. :lmao:
 
Saints-Man said:
Maurile Tremblay said:
...

Parodying that kind of rhetoric is this website: DidGlennBeckRapeAndMurderAYoungGirlIn1990.com.

...
Did Couric bring up this obvious hypocrisy later in the interview?
I don't think it is hypocrisy as much as poor taste in satire. I don't think it can be hypocrisy if they are trying to be intentionally ironic.
I think Saints-Man was referring to Beck's hypocrisy -- in trying to silence the website for using the same rhetorical tactic he uses, and in trying to have it silenced using a method he's criticized others for using.The website hasn't engaged in any hypocrisy. It's not actually trying to convince anyone, via its absurd rhetorical stunt, that Glenn Beck raped and murdered a young girl in 1990. It is, on the contrary, trying to demonstrate the absurdity of that very rhetorical stunt.

 
I like Joe Scarborough most of the time. Howver, I guess he missed the part of the interview with Katie Couric where Beck says he should have said that differently. I believe Beck's argument has been that the President sat in a pew at Rev. Wright's church for two decades. He considered Wright a mentor. He has also made conflicting statements about whether or not he has heard Wright's inflammatory rhetoric. I find it hard to believe that some of the beliefs of his mentor and pastor didn't influence him or color his opinions. I think most of us who attend church pick a church whose message we agree with. Much of that comes from the Pastor. I personally find some of the sermons of Rev. Wright disturbing and I have never heard a pastor in any church that I have attended make such comments. Had something similar happened, I wold have gotten up and walked out of the sanctuary.
How many times was race brought up in sermons over two decades? How many full sermons have you listed to or watched?
I'm afraid I havent seen much beyond the snippets that I have seen on the news. I have watched a couple of his sermons, which have been posted by Trinity United on Youtube.Those snippets that I have seen, even in the fully context of the sermon are still offensive in my opinion. In the God **** America Sermon. He talks about God not changing and he cites a bible passage. Malachi 3:6. But God does change from the old testament to the new. Leviticus 24:19-21 espouses the eye for an eye God. But Matthew 5:38 espouses the turn the other cheek philosophy.

I think like many preachers, Wright is trying to stoke the passions of his congregation. He basically says, "Clinton good, Bush bad." While I might agree with some of his statements regarding racism, slavery and segregation. We can not change the past as such we can't live there either. What do we do now, how can we make positive change now to better our lives and live our lives in God's image? It seems to me that what he is doing is playing to the lowest common denominator to the detriment of his congregation. He is seen as authoritative to the congregation.

I liken him to the televangelists that espouse the prosperity theology. He's a charlatan just as mich as Benny Hinn or Randy White.

 
I believe Beck's argument has been that the President sat in a pew at Rev. Wright's church for two decades. He considered Wright a mentor. He has also made conflicting statements about whether or not he has heard Wright's inflammatory rhetoric. I find it hard to believe that some of the beliefs of his mentor and pastor didn't influence him or color his opinions. I think most of us who attend church pick a church whose message we agree with. Much of that comes from the Pastor. I personally find some of the sermons of Rev. Wright disturbing and I have never heard a pastor in any church that I have attended make such comments. Had something similar happened, I wold have gotten up and walked out of the sanctuary.
Isn't it all relative? Personally, I find it disturbing that anyone would sit in any pew and listen to religious sermons for 20 years. I don't see why Rev. Wright's damning of America for it's racist history is more disturbing that a pastor saying that Noah literally put 2 of each species on a boat, or that Moses literally parted a body of water, or that a burning bush actually spoke, or that the earth is literally 6k years old. Sermons focusing on those events aren't controversial even though they're illogical and the stuff of fairy tales. Yet incendiary social commentary rooted in fact from an African American preacher has be elevated to a virtual national outrage.I don't see why one comment is any more disturbing than the other.
 
I believe Beck's argument has been that the President sat in a pew at Rev. Wright's church for two decades. He considered Wright a mentor. He has also made conflicting statements about whether or not he has heard Wright's inflammatory rhetoric. I find it hard to believe that some of the beliefs of his mentor and pastor didn't influence him or color his opinions. I think most of us who attend church pick a church whose message we agree with. Much of that comes from the Pastor. I personally find some of the sermons of Rev. Wright disturbing and I have never heard a pastor in any church that I have attended make such comments. Had something similar happened, I wold have gotten up and walked out of the sanctuary.
Isn't it all relative? Personally, I find it disturbing that anyone would sit in any pew and listen to religious sermons for 20 years. I don't see why Rev. Wright's damning of America for it's racist history is more disturbing that a pastor saying that Noah literally put 2 of each species on a boat, or that Moses literally parted a body of water, or that a burning bush actually spoke, or that the earth is literally 6k years old. Sermons focusing on those events aren't controversial even though they're illogical and the stuff of fairy tales. Yet incendiary social commentary rooted in fact from an African American preacher has be elevated to a virtual national outrage.I don't see why one comment is any more disturbing than the other.
I am not saying one is more inflammatory than another. The people who take the bible literally are troublesome. As are the people who twist the bible to fit their politcal views. I dont find it disturbing that someone sat in a church pew for 20 years. Many churches preach doing good both in our personal lives and within our communities. Helping the poor and the down trodden. There are many religious charities that focus on serving people rather than preaching. Would it bother you if your President sat in a church for 20 years and listened to a preacher say that the Earth is 6000 years old and that Dinosaurs don't exist because they arent in the bible?It would bother me.Wright's social commentary may be rooted in truth, but he only harps on the terrible things. He doesnt acknowledge the progress we have made. Racism, Slavery and Segregation are not exclusive to the United States. We have ended overt discrimination in this country. It is much more difficult to end the soft discrimination that still exists at a certain level. We have integrated our schools and many of our communities.African Americans have seen their standard of living increase in the last 40 years.Educational outcomes are constantly improving, although we still have a long way to go.With the Election of the President, African Americans have served at all levels of Government, the Military and the Private Sector.I can no more change the fact that we had Jim Crow laws before my birth than I can make it rain. But what I can do now is make sure that people are ensured their right to vote. I can speak out against overt racism and raise my children to see more than color.My issue with Wright is that it seems he lays the complete blame for the issues in the African American community on the door step of whites. When will the majority of the African American community say enough is enough? Did this nation oppress blacks in the past? Yes. Have we tried to change? Yes. Are we still changing? Yes. But we can't move forward if all that we are doing is looking behind us. Other racial and ethnic groups have experienced racism and discrimination and they have overcome it and thrived. These groups may not have endured slavery, but neither has any African American that is alive today.
 

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