Obama Disappoints NBC By 'Falling Short' on 'Climate Change,' Fret Expectations 'Dashed'

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A lover's quarrel emerged Tuesday night in the media's love affair with President Barack Obama. He disappointed NBC by failing, at the UN's “Summit on Climate Change,” to go far enough on global warming. “President Obama's being accused of falling short on the environment today with the whole world watching,” Brian Williams teased NBC Nightly News. Williams framed his lead story through the prism of the left as he fretted that, “in the eyes of a lot of environmentalists,” Obama “fell short.” Worse, while other nations are “ready to change, ready to get cleaner, President Obama's speech left a lot of people wanting more.”
 
Reporter Anne Thompson wistfully recalled that “when Barack Obama became President, many in the world hoped the U.S. would take a leadership role in stopping climate change” and so “that led to big expectations for today's speech -- expectations that were quickly dashed.” Thompson asserted “the world wanted to hear President Obama make a commitment to specific cuts in carbon dioxide emissions. Instead of action, it got talk” and, in the ultimate insult a journalist can deliver, she rued how Obama had “one line that sounded a lot like his predecessor, George W. Bush, who refused to agree to emission cuts without similar actions from India and China.”

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Thompson proceeded to tout the specific actions promised by China and Japan as she featured two critics who came at Obama from the left -- representatives of the Natural Resources Defense Council and the UN -- she ominously warned “the window to act is closing fast.”

Meanwhile, ABC's Jake Tapper whimsically began his World News report from Manhattan:

President Obama had quite the full plate today. He tried to save the planet, lift up the impoverished continent of Africa, avoid a trade war with China and, of course, bring peace to the Middle East.

CBS shared in the world's good feelings over moving away from former President George W. Bush's “brash go it alone style,” but worried about Obama's lack of successes:

KATIE COURIC: Among the world leaders here in New York is President Obama, making his UN debut today at a world conference on climate change. Our chief White House correspondent Chip Reid is at the UN tonight. And Chip, can the President be anything other than the center of attention? Can he do more with that?

CHIP REID: He sure would like to be, Katie. You know, at every international summit he has attended he has been the most popular person in the room. But now many people are asking: 'What good is popularity if it doesn't lead to concrete results?'

After eight months in office, he's still the darling of the international community, warmly welcomed by a world that grew weary of President Bush's brash go it alone style. In a sharp departure, President Obama has recommitted the United States to working with the UN and engaging the world. But with scant progress on a long list of issues, the question now is what does he have to show for it?...

Williams had harkened back to “when he was running for office and addressed throngs of people in Berlin, we were there when Barack Obama said, quote, 'This is the moment when we must come together to save this planet.' But today, President Obama -- in the eyes of a lot of environmentalists -- fell short on that topic.”
 
A July 24, 2008 NewsBusters item, “Can't Control Exhilaration Over 'World Stage' for 'Messiah' Obama,” recounted:

Barack Obama's Magical Media Tour hit its high point Thursday night as the ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts all led with Barack Obama's speech in Berlin, with NBC's Brian Williams and Andrea Mitchell the most giddy, though ABC featured a German man who hailed Obama as "my new messiah." ABC and NBC saw Obama on a "world stage." Charles Gibson teased ABC's newscast: "In a city steeped in history, before a massive crowd, the candidate calls on the world to tear down this generation's walls." NBC anchor Brian Williams, in Berlin, trumpeted how "the first ever African-American running as presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party brought throngs of people into the center of Berlin, streaming into this city, surging to get close to him, to hear his message. And when it was all over, he talked to us." Viewers next heard a sycophantic Williams ooze to Obama:

“When an American politician comes to Berlin, we've had some iconic utterances in the past. We've had 'ich bin ein.' We've had 'Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.' Is the phraseology that you would like remembered, 'people of Berlin, people of the world, this is our moment, this is our time'?”

The top story on the Tuesday, September 22 NBC Nightly News (transcript provided by the MRC's Brad Wilmouth who corrected the closed-captioning against the video):

BRIAN WILLIAMS, IN OPENING TEASER: On our broadcast tonight, sea change: why President Obama's being accused of falling short on the environment today with the whole world watching.

...

WILLIAMS: Good evening. Back when he was running for office and addressed throngs of people in Berlin, we were there when Barack Obama said, quote, “This is the moment when we must come together to save this planet.” But today, President Obama – in the eyes of a lot of environmentalists – fell short on that topic. While many different countries under fire on the environment for years came to today’s U.N. gathering here in New York, ready to change, ready to get cleaner, President Obama's speech left a lot of people wanting more – and the reason may be health care. That's because it's what he needs from Congress most and first. In a moment, our exclusive poll, what Americans have to say about their President and their country right about now. First, we begin our coverage at the U.N. with our chief environmental affairs correspondent, Anne Thompson. Anne, good evening.

ANNE THOMPSON: Good evening, Brian. When Barack Obama became President, many in the world hoped the U.S. would take a leadership role in stopping climate change. That led to big expectations for today's speech – expectations that were quickly dashed. The world wanted to hear President Obama make a commitment to specific cuts in carbon dioxide emissions. Instead of action, it got talk-

BARACK OBAMA: We understand the gravity of the climate threat. We are determined to act.

THOMPSON: -and even one line that sounded a lot like his predecessor, George W. Bush, who refused to agree to emission cuts without similar actions from India and China.

OBAMA: But those rapidly growing, developing nations that will produce nearly all the growth in global carbon emissions in the decades ahead must do their part as well.

THOMPSON: This was not the leadership the world's diplomats wanted.

JAKE SCHMIDT, NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL: Many of the key players that I talked to today were a little disappointed with what the U.S brought to the table. They were hoping that there would be more.

THOMPSON: Carbon dioxide emissions from burning oil and coal are changing the Earth’s climate. Eighty percent of those emissions come from the world's richest countries. The two biggest – China and the U.S. – each account for 20 percent. While the U.S. held its cards close, surprisingly, China put some on the table.

HU JINTAO, THROUGH TRANSLATOR: China stands ready to work with all countries to build an even better future for the generations to come.

THOMPSON: President Hu Jintao said China would increase its renewable and nuclear energy to 15 percent by 2020; plant more forests to absorb carbon; and cut emissions but not by a specific target. The most dramatic pledge came from Japan, responsible for four percent of the world's emissions.

YUKIO HATOYAMA, PRIME MINISTER OF JAPAN: For its mid-term goal, Japan will aim to reduce its emissions by 25 percent by 2020.

THOMPSON: At stake, the fate of island nations like the Maldives that could be swamped by rising sea levels. With meetings in Copenhagen this December to reach a new global climate pact, the window to act is closing fast.

YVO DE BOER, U.N. FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE: If we miss it again in Copenhagen, then basically we’re out of time and very little chance to keep global temperature increase below two degrees Centigrade, which scientists have told us we need to do.

THOMPSON: With today's announcements from China and Japan and India's pledge to increase energy efficiency and find a cleaner way to burn coal, as one diplomat put it, the pressure is now squarely on the United States.

—Brent Baker is Vice President for Research and Publications at the Media Research Center


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Instead of action, it got talk.

 

 Three day media blitz was a clue. All talk, said nothing.

Picture says it all

Brian, the Obama's new puppy

No, no, no

I think it is called a bromance.  It is just horrible.

Mr. POTUS, don't p*ss off

Mr. POTUS, don't p*ss off NBC...they are your partner.

Is parent company GE upset

Is parent company GE upset that their anticipated revenues might fall a little short because Obama isn't "green" enough?

G.MAY...

 You are on the scent, domestically this is about paying off GE. The other part, is world socialism, cutting America down to size, & all in the name of "fairness".

 

"...How blind can you be, don't you see...

...that the gambler lost all he does not have..."  

Nightwish

Oh please!!!

Screw the world. They don't want to see us take a leadership position on "climate change". They want to see us fall of the face of the earth. 

Screw them and anyone else who buys into this nonsense. 

"If the man, with the power, can't keep it under control...some heads are gonna roll." -Judas Priest

How indoctrinated do you

How indoctrinated do you have to be to determine that when the President of the United States says, in the UN no less, that if we don't act to curb climate change now, a catastrophe is unavoidable- is not forceful enough language?

Didn't it snow in Colorado and Wyoming yesterday?

"a catastrophe is unavoidable"

Another "crisis" on the plate which requires drastic action.

Dan

 
Not only drastic, but right now!

Gary

If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace. -- Tom Paine

Fire up Cheney's Time Machine,

A senior U.N. environmental official says entire nations could be wiped off the face of the Earth by rising sea levels if the global warming trend is not reversed by the year 2000. Coastal flooding and crop failures would create an exodus of "eco-refugees," threatening political chaos, said Noel Brown, director of the New York office of the United Nations U.N. Environment Program, or UNEP. He said governments have a 10-year window of opportunity to solve the [problem].

Published on July 5, 1989, Page 2E, Miami Herald, The (FL).

http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Minority.Blogs&ContentRecord_id=37ae6e96-802a-23ad-4c8a-edf6d8150789

 

Kind of Freudian, if you ask me...

...the love affair, almost a sexual tension, between the MSM and Obama. 

The period of foreplay is ending; the big networks are all sweaty and breathing hard in anticipation of some real action.  And what happened?

Obama “fell short.”  ...and "left a lot of people wanting more.”

THAT'S WHAT SHE SAID!

As in real life, when the male icon comes up short, proving to be inadequate and not up to the task at hand, it leaves the female disappointed and unsatisfied...I have heard that they can get a bit snippy.**

(**Not that I have experienced this personally, you understand.)   

lol!

lol! I think you're right about the all sweaty and breathing hard then no action thing.

hummmmm....

almost sounds like a premature ejac---something...

The Real Question

The real question everyone needs to be asking is, how can America take the lead in stopping something that isn't happening?

Simply do what the left has

Simply do what the left has been doing for years... make s**t up!

Young Students Indoctrination Video

 

 

 

http://iamnotaracist.wordpress.com/  

So NBC is disapointed, who cares

So NBC is disapointed, who cares. As pointed out earlier it might be because General Electric, NBC's parent company, might stand to lose billions in revenue if Cap and Trade is truely dead. If ge/nbc is disapointed all I can say is who cares what GE/NBC think anyway?

What really struck me today was how Obama tried to claim credit for the USA reducing its' carbon footprint during the first 8 months of his administration. He did not say how this was accomplished. What new legislation could have had such an impact? What new regulation? The answers is simple. Nothing Obama has done has had any effect except his real lack of understanding of economics. The only thing that has had an impact on the USA releasing less carbon into the atmosphere has been the economic meltdown. Since Obama has not really done anything to lessen the duration or intensity of this economic downturn he can technically say that his policies have resulted in the USA reducing the carbon released but the price for this reduction has been record high unemployment and a reduced GDP. So is that supposed to be Change I can Believe In?

'economic meltdown'

Our economy remains 5 times larger China yet they continue to out-pollute us.

JDW

DAILY WAVE

I didn't know ACORN was getting a lot of money

climate change

Well!

The globe stopped warming at least 10 years ago so it is difficult to tie CO2 to global warming to danger to  cap and trade to higher taxes to someone making a load of money at our expense and the destruction of our economy.

Now, if the rest of the press did their job, they would find thousands of qualified scientists who agree and only a handful who need their government fix  so still support the hoax.

 

Where's deep throat when you need him?

OF COURSE NBC IS DISAPPOINTED - THEY'RE GE!

GE has one hell of a lot of $$ riding on GE Wind.

And right now, they're bleeding to death.

Brian Williams

Good grief.  Maybe NBC is the designated crybaby du jour.

Brian Williams looks nice in his SEIU-purple tie, though.

networks and newspapers that are..

Peddling the "global warming" spiel can do their part:

- Cut broadcast time back to the old days: stop transmitting at 11 PM. Back on at 6 am. oooohhh that would cut back on the carbon footprint, now would'nt it???

- For you pressmen that keep pressing on "global warming"  - how about taxes on all those carbony footprinty things like: newsprint, energy to run the presses, toxic inks, etc. etc. 

In other words put the $$$ where your mouth is...