NYT Blasts Bush on Chinese Human Rights on Same Day Prez Meets With Activists

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Whoops.  On the very day that the New York Times takes President Bush harshly to task for failing to promote human rights in China, the president meets at the White House . . . . with five Chinese human rights activists.

Railed the Times in this morning's editorial, Past Time for Speaking Out:

Two weeks before he goes to the Beijing Olympic Games, President Bush remains unacceptably silent about China’s crackdown on basic human rights.

[H]is refusal to speak out publicly and clearly about China’s repressive behavior is an abdication of leadership and a blot on his record.

But just hours later, the president was hosting the group of Chinese activists, in a meeting that had been planned in advance.  The White House press secretary put out this statement on the meeting:

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Today in The White House Residence, President Bush met with five Chinese freedom activists to discuss his concerns about human rights in China. The President assured them that he will carry the message of freedom as he travels to Beijing for the games, just as he has regularly made this a priority in all of his meetings with Chinese officials. He told the activists that engagement with Chinese leaders gives him an opportunity to make the United States' position clear - human rights and religious freedom should not be denied to anyone.

President George W. Bush poses for a photo at the South Portico entrance to the White House Tuesday, July 28, 2008, with Chinese Human Rights Activists, from left, Ciping Huang, Wei Jingsheng, Sasha Gong, Alim Seytoff, interpreter; Rebiya Kadeer, Harry Wu and Bob Fu, following their meeting at the White House. White House photo by Eric Draper The President met with Harry Wu, Wei Jingsheng, Rebiya Kadeer, Dr. Sasha Gong, and Bob Fu. The President asked them about their personal experiences in their peaceful efforts to press for more freedom in China. The group welcomed the President's strong commitment to human rights and religious freedom and urged him to continue to deliver that message not only to the Chinese leadership but also to all the people of China.

President Bush also dropped by a meeting his National Security Advisor had this morning with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi. The President reviewed current bilateral relations with the Foreign Minister; as well as his desire to see a successful Olympics, and noted that this presents the Chinese with an opportunity to demonstrate compassion on human rights and freedom.

Moreover, the President has taken a number of actions in the run-up to the Olympics to underline his support of human rights in China:

July 14, 2008: President Bush made clear that the United States stands with human rights activists during remarks honoring the 10th Anniversary of the International Religious Freedom Act.   
 
•        "We remember those seeking religious freedom in China, and we honor those who press for their liberties -- people like Uighur Muslims. I had the honor of meeting Rebiya Kadeer. I've also had the honor of meeting those who attend underground churches in China. And we also honor the courage of the Dalai Lama, and the Buddhists in Tibet.
 
•         "And you know, last month here at the White House I met with a Chinese dissident named Li Baiguang. He's a lawyer who worked on human rights cases; he's a 'house church' Protestant. For his work, he's been repeatedly jailed and attacked. A few weeks ago, he was scheduled to meet with members of Congress. State authorities blocked the meeting and detained Li on the outskirts of Beijing. … And my message to President Hu Jintao, when I last met him, was this: So long as there are those who want to fight for their liberty, the United States stands with them."
 
July 9, 2008: President Bush met with Chinese President Hu Jintao while attending the G8 conference in Toyako, Japan.  There, President Bush said "the President and I have constantly had discussions about human rights and political freedom.  He knows my position.  And as I told our people, Mr. President, I don't need the Olympics to talk candidly with somebody who I've got good relations with."
 
June 23, 2008:  President Bush met with Chinese recipients of the NED Annual Freedom Awards and those representing them--including Li Baiguang, Li HePing, and Wang Tienchang.  

Standing by for update and clarification from the Times . . .

—Mark Finkelstein is a NewsBusters contributing editor and host of Right Angle. Contact him at mark@gunhill.net.


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NYT

Obviously the Times Editorial Board is living in an alternate reality.

What wonderful timing!

note to NYT: Pat

note to NYT:

Pat Robertson and co have been bitching about this for years

while you've been praising the Chi-coms left and right

Yeah pigs will be flying

Yeah pigs will be flying before their is an apology or retraction/correction from the NYTs...

Excellent job Mark...NYTs knows no bounds with hypocrisy/bias/lies.

President Bush just proved that with actual people and a big ol' smile on his face. 

"America isn't the problem...America is the solution." ~ Rush Limbaugh

<waving hand> Oh, never

<waving hand> Oh, never mind! -Emily Litella


Obama's theme song

I hope that foot...

...is large and tastes like, well...dirty sock.

Up Next...

Bush is accused of murdering puppies or, worse yet, shopping with a plastic bag.

NYTimes.. It's in the delivery - Mark

NY Times..Indeed; often It's in the delivery - Mark. The Times has often been quite vocal in it's vision, regardless of who is in the White House. But even here, as when they critique Obama, they're looking to offer guidance to a President Clinton - not come out and attack him for his failures (in their view). 

Clinton Visits Dalai Lama, Informally

By ALISON MITCHELL
Published: April 24, 1997
Following the same diplomatic script he has used in the past, President Clinton dropped in on a White House meeting between Vice President Al Gore and the Dalai Lama and told the exiled Tibetan leader that he would urge China to open a dialogue with him.

The President's decision to see the Dalai Lama but not grant him a formal Presidential meeting was intended to demonstrate concern for Tibet without igniting new tensions with China.

Mr. Clinton sat in on the meeting for 20 minutes.

President Bush did meet formally - officialy with the Dalia Lama, and in doing so, pushed hard against the Chinese regime. 

If the NYTimes were fair, they would have headlined the piece on Clinton, "What a Chickens--t move, Mr. President - you let us down." 

I disagree with President Bush

 On several items... so I'm not in the tank for him... however...

President Bush could cure cancer, solve "global warming", bring peace to the middle east, cure AIDs, give illegal immigrants amnesty, solve the energy crisis with no new drilling, recycle, approve of abortion, (pick a liberal cause and insert here) etc,etc, etc,,,  in one day.

And most if not all of the MSM would bitch...

 

NOBAMA 08 !!!

Have you ever got that

Have you ever got that right!

"America isn't the problem...America is the solution." ~ Rush Limbaugh

I think so BT

It's rare, but I believe I am correct.... ;) 

NOBAMA 08 !!!

There are about 190

There are about 190 countries that belong to the UN.  Of them, about 100 of them are run by murderous henchmen that the NYT fails to identify as such day after day within its pages.  In fact, quite the opposite is true.

For example, they have often praised one of their favorite murdering thugs, fidel castro.   To add insult to injury on the cuban slaves aka citizens, the NYT have misled the world with praise of communist cubas miserable and whoafully inadequate education and healthcare systems.  

Whether its within the NYT editorial pages or on its front page, frankly it's hard to tell the difference, they have given tacit support of the worst political systems and their leaders time after time.  The more miserable the cur of a political leader, the more people that that leader has incarcerated, tortured, and murdered, the more praise they seem to find.  They are the planet's dictators favorite news dissemination organ.  The NYT can always be counted on to put in a good word for them.

 

 

Canoe worthy?

Not sure what to think about a leading news organization out of touch with the.....news.

NY Times is up a creek without a canoe.

NYT: 0, Bush: 5

Another case where the NYT does not know a hole in the ground from its hinder part.

Timing....

It's all about the timing and the NYSlimes ain't got none, or someone sent them a dead fish.

 

Old, Retired and glad of it.

Has there ever been a news organization so out of touch?

Do the reporters, for the Times, wake up in the morning and ask, "What can I yell at Bush for today?" Just as the fawning press, chasing Obama, has become a joke, so has the NY Times become a something to laugh at, when it comes to the news and the President. 

Hell, they didn't care about the Chinese, when they were donating tons of cash to the Clinton/Gore campaign.  I guess that controlling legal authority thing just got to them.  Ya Think? 

It take grownups, to be fair and balanced, and I guess they just don't graduate many of them from journalism school these days.  

Democrats: Stuck on Stupid since 2000.

Mark Finkelstein wrote:

Mark Finkelstein wrote: “Standing by for update and clarification from the Times.”

Mark – I think you had better sit down. You may have a long wait for the Times to issue an update or correction.

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"Could it be that Barack Obama is secretly Martian? He does seem awfully green . ."  ~ JAMES TARANTO WSJ Best of the Web