BUSH NOW NEWSWEEK MANAGING EDITOR
Based on the content of Monday night's (5/16) and today's mainstream left wing media interviews, it is becoming evident that the spin machines are humming in an attempt to make you believe that Newsweek really did not do anything wrong with its now-retracted Koran Down the Toilet story.
A number of interviewers asked their guests if it were possible that the Newsweek story might, after all, be TRUE. That it was the White House, Scott McClellan and, of course, George W. Bush, that were putting pressure on Newsweek, and, by implication, that the Newsweek story probably was accurate. The evil Bush, in other words, is putting the pressure on the media and using Newsweek as its target-example in order to surpress anything that makes the Administration and the Pentagon look bad.
If this line of twisted questioning had been confined to one or two interview segments on TV, one might dismiss it as unimportant. However, the contrived questions appeared in far too many places in the last 24 hours to be coincidence.
What in fact is going on is a contrived left wing media spin designed to get Newsweek off the hook for its story that caused at least 14 deaths in Muslim mob demonstrations provoked by the phoney Koran-Toilet spread.
Joining in the effort to relieve Newsweek of responsibility was the ever-reliable voice of West Coast socialism, the Los Angeles Times. It offered more of the same, with an attempt to shift the blame for Muslim outrage on to the White House.
If President Bush does indeed have the power to tell Newsweek what to print and what to squelch when it comes to the magazine's articles, does this not mean that the President is secretly moonlighting as a Managing Editor for the once-reputable publication?
And, if Bush is holding a second job while serving as President, is he reporting his Newsweek income to the I.R.S.?
Why there is no limit as to where this Newsweek thing may take us!
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