Since I mentioned Helen Thomas's honors in Washington last night, I should add she was hailed as a celebrity at the radical-left National Conference for Media Reform in Memphis a couple of weeks ago. One of her interviews there was with the radical Pacifica Radio show "Democracy Now." She lamented that there aren't enough protesters hitting the street against the war in Iraq like in the glory days of the Vietnam War. But she also praised Jimmy Carter's book condemning Israel for "Apartheid" against the Palestinians. First, the Vietnam talk:
AMY GOODMAN: But how does this compare? Does it bring back any memories of other wars?
HELEN THOMAS: It's deja-vu all over again with Vietnam, except the difference is our passive society. At least during Vietnam, they hit the streets. The people hit the streets finally, when they realized there had been deception, and it was a no-go. Too many -- we were killing people 10,000 miles away, and the reason could not be explained, except the domino theory, which was fading.
In this case, I think that because every home isn't really affected, you don't have that same kind of -- but I’ll tell you this. I do think that the President's speech was a turning point. All the broadcasters, mainstream, were calling it the last chance. I call it merely -- I don't think the President expected that the people, the polls, Congress, would line up against it as they have. And it's a groundswell, really. It's a big change.
Then the Carter exchanges, as Thomas seemed to resent that Israel was ever created:
AMY GOODMAN: Helen Thomas, former president Jimmy Carter just wrote a new book called Palestine: Peace, Not Apartheid. Can you talk about the significance of this book and also the reaction to it? You covered Jimmy Carter as president.
HELEN THOMAS: I did. And I think he’s certainly -- President Carter, I believe he has credibility. He has faith in humanity. He's trying to do the right thing. He's trying to tell the other side of the story, and I don't think the Palestinian side has ever been told in a way that people might accept it. So I think he's done a good thing. I think, obviously, the reaction to the book by the Israelis -- some Israelis, but probably not all, is that’s understandable. But he’s out there. It's open for debate, and I think he started a good trend.
AMY GOODMAN: How do you think the Palestinian story should be told for people in this country?
HELEN THOMAS: Truthfully, from the beginning. If you were a Palestinian -- and they were 85% in the majority, when the British decided that that could be the Jewish homeland -- I mean, what would you think? Americans have to put themselves in other people's positions. Put yourself an Iraqi. I mean, we invade a country without any cause, because it was there.
AMY GOODMAN: This -- you're talking about Iraq.
HELEN THOMAS: Well, I’m talking about being able to do what you think you could. The British have no right to give. It was part of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire was falling apart. They didn't own Palestine. They got a mandate through the League of Nations, but they had no right to give it away. They also had no right really to annex Jerusalem, because the UN had voted actually not in that direction, and it’s still, you know, up in the air...
AMY GOODMAN: President Carter, in interviews since his book came out, did talk about the power of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. What about the scope of debate on this issue in the United States, in the US press, among your colleagues?
HELEN THOMAS: I think that the fact that it's starting up is good. Good. People should hear both sides of the story.
AMY GOODMAN: But do we hear it in the United States?
HELEN THOMAS: Pardon?
AMY GOODMAN: Do we hear it in the United States? I mean, some say that the scope of the debate here is more narrow than it is in Israel, in the press there.
HELEN THOMAS: I think that’s true. It's probably true. I think that since World War II, it’s that if you took a position against Israel, they were automatically -- you would be labeled anti-Semitic. I am more Semitic than most journalists I know. But this is --
AMY GOODMAN: Say that again.
HELEN THOMAS: This is the way they go around branding you. You get branded, because, I mean if you take an opposite position to Israel, you will be automatically considered anti-Semitic. Well, there are solutions to this. I mean, there are great peace groups in Israel and Palestine, and so forth. People are trying.
—Tim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center.




















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Helen is Lebanese. This should always be kept in mind.
February 7, 2007 - 19:13 ET by acaiguanaHelen is Lebanese. This should always be kept in mind.
She is anti-zionist. That means anti-Israeli. That means in the Middle East, anti-jew. That means anti-semitic. duh.
Now we have determined that Helen Thomas is anti-semitic, what else did we have to say?
Oh, yeah, Jimmy Carter.
He's anti-Israeli. He is against the Israeli State. That makes him anti-zionist. That in the Middle East means anti-jew. That means anti-semitic.
Now we have determined that Jimmy Carter is an anti-semite, where do we go from there?
How about not listening to the idiots?
That works.
ACA
...
Hillary Clinton says: "I want to take those profits."
ACA,Selective listening. An
February 7, 2007 - 19:16 ET by BlondeACA,
Selective listening. And viewing.
It's the only way to keep one's sanity.
I wouldn't walk across the room to pick the old bag up if she fell over. Oh, right, she's been inert for twenty-some years. Sorry.
You also forgot to mention th
February 7, 2007 - 21:44 ET by ZoneDaiatlasYou also forgot to mention that Helen Thomas is so old that she farts dust...
Vietnam again
February 7, 2007 - 19:14 ET by nkviking75The only way for the Iraq war to become another Vietnam is for the US to pull out prematurely and allow Iraq to collapse into chaos. The libs have a lot of blood on their hands from the fall of Saigon. Apparently they aren't satisfied.
I wonder if this country will be more sensible once my generation, the Baby Boomers, are gone? Thank goodness I was at the young end of that generation and never got caught up in all that nonsense.
I'm all for deporting that fa
February 7, 2007 - 19:20 ET by rbosqueI'm all for deporting that fat old gas bag Thomas to Lebanon.
Does any nation possess eno
February 7, 2007 - 19:47 ET by Free StinkerDoes any nation possess enough sealift capabilty to move her & her ego at the same time?
Good point FS!
February 7, 2007 - 20:22 ET by rbosqueGood point FS!
HELEN THOMAS: Well, I’m tal
February 7, 2007 - 19:54 ET by GalvanicHELEN THOMAS: Well, I’m talking about being able to do what you think you could. The British have no right to give. It was part of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Empire was falling apart. They didn't own Palestine. They got a mandate through the League of Nations, but they had no right to give it away.
That old 78-rpm record in her head must be skipping some grooves.
The Ottoman Empire was already dead when the League of Nations established the mandates, with the British administering Palestine and Trans-Jordan. Though they might have made promises to both the Zionist Jews (Balfour Delcaration) and the Arabs, they didn't give their mandates away to anyone. To satisfy the proponents of partition, the United Nations created Israel and a Palestinian state, the latter disappearing beneath the crush of the simultaneuos Arab attacks to destroy Israel.
Exactly, something most Pales
February 7, 2007 - 23:25 ET by kubob21Exactly, something most Palestinians want the world to forget was that the 1948 Partition gave them a huge advantage in territory and that Israel thru the Palmach and even the Irgun said to the Palestinians stay and work with us. Instead the Palestinians moved out of the Partition areas to join the Arab armies of Egypt, Jordan and Syria in the expectation of exterminating the Israelis. Thankfully for the world the Israelis held on and in the 6 Day War paid the Palestinians back for their perfidy. The Palestinians have no one else to blame but themselves for the loss of lands that were never theirs to begin with since they were nomadic tribes since the dawn of time. Like most liberals Thomas and Carter are a bit weak in their history.
Fighting over a plate of food.
February 8, 2007 - 00:37 ET by mastersofdeceitYet it's apparently still "up in the air" according to hellen. One of the things I always found ironic in the original World Islamic Front Statement for Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders, issued 2/98 (who was President?), was that they claim " nations are attacking Muslims like people fighting over a plate of food." Excuse me? Whose fighting over a plate of food? Have you looked at a map? Israel doesn't even rank a plate. More like a little saucer from a kids tea-cup set. Since hellen is so eager to answer questions, perhaps she'd like to field this one from Walid Shoebat: " Why is it that on June 4th 1967 I was a Jordanian and overnight I became a Palestinian?"
Speaking of attacking tiny places with force. Has anyone been following the latest b*lls up at the Temple Mount? I always love the "Quit defiling the Aksa Mosque!!" claims. Um, actually the gaudy Al-Aksa Mosque is defiling the Temple Mount.
What other cracks may be show
February 7, 2007 - 20:48 ET by ucWhat other cracks may be showing in a possible fast left wing Clinton style conspiracy cooked up by a couple in throughout their years puting on Hollywood airs of Beverly HillaryBillary's? Is it that trying to last as New Yorkers isn't sticking? So how many years are left before all the records of their eight years are all public? Has anyone checked below the skin for circuitry? Can we count on a past President not having overwelming loyalties in White House secret service such to allow for a Hollywood type take over undetectable as Hollywood style? How can we be certain?
I wonder if it ever occured t
February 7, 2007 - 22:23 ET by Clear thinkerI wonder if it ever occured to Helen that the 'passive society' she speaks of, are not against the war on terror.
ACA... Thanks for the reminder about her being Lebanese, I had long forgotten that tidbit.
I'd defend Democracy Now from
February 8, 2007 - 03:03 ET by ferrarimanf355I'd defend Democracy Now from the claim that it's radical, but it would appear that I would be talking to myself... ah, hell. It's worth a shot.
Radical? Oh, please, they cover stories that the so-called liberal media are scared to cover, and the best you guys can do is to call it radical? Listen to a whole show, then try to come up with facts that dispute what's said there. None of this hyperbole mumbo-jumbo. I'm taking a few classes in college about media, political economy, and media studies. My professor in all of those courses is the same guy, and he may be a leftist, but I agree with 99 percent of what he says about the state of the media in America. The Helen Thomases of the world have the cajones to not follow the so-called liberal media's softball questioning, and this is the thanks she gets? I read this page for the heck of it, and I comment once in a while, but this hatred of Helen just because she colors outside of the lines is amazing, depressing and maddening at once.
And one more thing. That confrence on media reform will do more good than you guys are willing to give it credit for, that's for sure. Isn't one of the foundations of a good democracy a media system that allows many different opinions? That sure as hell isn't what I'm getting in the MSM.
I'll be back tomorrow to see the responses. :-)
Uzumaki/Ayanami '08. Because a ninja and an Eva pilot can govern the nation better that what we have now...
Vaccuuuuum Cleaner Boy!!!!If
February 8, 2007 - 09:50 ET by BDVaccuuuuum Cleaner Boy!!!!
If you think Helens questions are TOUGH, then psychotic registers as "Intriguing."
ferrarmanf355 - Too bad you can't stay to talk...poor form.
February 8, 2007 - 10:06 ET by acaiguanaferrarmanf355 - Too bad you can't stay to talk...poor form.
I'm just glad for the opportunity to expose once again the blatant political shell that is the so-called Democracy Now radio program.
First, it is a George Soros funded program.
Second, it is an illigitimate rip off of the Pacifica Radio funding base; separated from the overall stucture of Pacifica Radio in an underhanded move to basically grab the resouces of Pacifica for its own political agenda.
Third, while I don't defend Pacifica Radio in general for its government funded radio or its content; I'd just as soon they dropped the show, Democracy Now as a stand for principles rather than bow under the weight of its Liberal supporters in fear of retaliation for such a move.
Democracy Now is a far far left wing radio program that puts the lie to your contention that:
"Isn't one of the foundations of a good democracy a media system that allows many different opinions? That sure as hell isn't what I'm getting in the MSM."
I think the MSM is guilty of a lot of things. One of them would be a Liberal Bias that extends to the petty acts of not identifying Democrats when stories are about their misbehavior.
But I don't think you can hold up Democracy Now as a solution to any bias.
I can't see your beef with the MSM. They are sure a lot closer to Democracy Now then they are to the Washington Times or to Fox News.
I think you are confusing the MSM with Conservative Talk Radio.
Conservative Talk Radio is a 'commercial' venture and I think they pay their own way. Air America tried that and failed, miserably. The other slightly important difference in this discussion is that Conservative Talk Radio Hosts (Rush, Sean, etc) all identify themselves as such; admit proudly their bias; and that allows the radio listener to do one very simple thing - turn the dial.
I don't get that from any of the MSM TV media comprised of the alphabet channels.
I've covered Democracy Now on this site before. You cannot be a 'student' and not appreciate my surprise at your seeming lack of research into what is really behind Democracy Now.
ACA
...
Hillary Clinton says: "I want to take those profits."
Woah, woah, woah down there.
February 9, 2007 - 06:35 ET by ferrarimanf355Woah, woah, woah down there. You just had to throw George Soros into all of this, didn't ya? You ignored the point of what I'm getting at. Doesn't it bother anyone that media consolidation is happening at a rapid rate? That conglomerates are buying up every TV station, radio station, newspaper and website that they can find? Isn't one of the major points of a democracy supposed to be the free spreading of many vast and different viewpoints? Then why is nobody here outraged about those viewpoints shrinking in quantity? Doesn't it bother anyone here one iota that the MSM care more about the latest celebrity gossip than issues that really matter, like Iraq, the Israel-Palestinian conflict, social issues here and abroad, and the enviroment?
What I'm saying is this: Amy Goodman, Noam Chomsky, Robert McChesney, et. al., should be taken a lot more seriously by people on the right. It serves no good to ridicule liberal schools of thought (and not all of them are Marxist, let me make that clear) if you don't read their books, tune into their radio shows, and log on to their blogs. Dissent is American, and a few radicalists shouldn't influence how you see an entire group.
Uzumaki/Ayanami '08. Because a ninja and an Eva pilot can govern the nation better that what we have now...
Every time I see a picture
February 8, 2007 - 06:37 ET by motherbeltEvery time I see a picture of HT I think:
"Put down the lipstick and slowly step away from the mirror......"
Sorry, that's a very Liberal-style attack on her looks.
But you gotta admit, it fits.
And, there were two thousand
February 8, 2007 - 11:41 ET by ucAnd, there were two thousand murders a year in New York City before Giuliani took office.
Helen, Helen, Helen, what C
February 8, 2007 - 14:28 ET by FlashmanHelen, Helen, Helen, what Carter says is absolutely not up for debate. He's avoided every debate about his book.
PS: I'll not mock the way the Good Lord made you, that would be unkind.
be charitable flashman
February 8, 2007 - 14:36 ET by tumbler_2007It's the days after days. Helen is aged to the max.
I can imagine many moons ago when a bag over her head could still allow her to fight the sheets with somebody.