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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 04:52 AM
Original message
The MO of manipulative propaganda
Edited on Tue Jun-27-06 10:30 AM by newyawker99
Former vets with GOP ties boost war effort in blogs

By JERRY ZREMSKI
NEWS NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT
6/25/2006

WASHINGTON - A former spokesman for President Bush recently offered to several newspapers supposedly objective freelance stories from Iraq by two combat veterans who lead a pro-war group with deep Republican ties.
Several months after revelations that a Pentagon contractor was paying Iraqi news outlets for favorable war coverage, former White House spokesman Taylor Gross approached at least four major newspapers, including The Buffalo News, with the offer.

Gross' pitch to The News said the two highly decorated veterans could serve as embedded correspondents and "offer balanced and credible viewpoints gained directly from those closest to and most affected by the Iraq War." One of the reporters, former Marine Lt. Wade Zirkle, helped run Republican Jerry Kilgore's 2005 campaign for governor of Virginia.

Zirkle and the other reporter, David Bellavia of Batavia, are top leaders of Vets for Freedom, a new group with a highly polished Web site hosted by a firm that previously worked for the 2004 Bush-Cheney re-election campaign and the Republican National Committee.

No mainstream paper accepted Gross' offer. Several major papers did, however, publish opinion pieces by Vets for Freedom leaders this spring. And last week, Bellavia and Zirkle returned to Iraq and embedded with military units. Their blog, at www.vetsforfreedom.org, paints a largely positive picture of the war effort.

"Baghdad is absolutely beautiful," Bellavia wrote last Sunday, a day after a series of explosions around the city killed 23 people. "I mean shockingly majestic. This is a city for years we have been told is unsalvageable and I was amazed to see this level of cleanliness."

Bellavia's return to the war zone culminates a pro-war effort that several prominent veterans started early this year. "The idea initially was to begin to connect the American public with those in the fighting," said Owen West, a major in the Marine Reserves who, like Bellavia, is a vice chairman of Vets for Freedom.

West said Bellavia an Army legend whose heroics in the November 2004 Battle of Fallujah got him nominated for the Medal of Honor quickly joined the effort.

Meanwhile, West said Zirkle who was seriously wounded in the first Battle of Fallujah in the spring of 2004 was able to get some "seed money" for the group. Zirkle, in an e-mail from Iraq, said the money did not come from any political organizations or from the federal government. "Initial funding came from family members and friends," he said.

Public records of the group's finances are not yet available. The group has applied for status as a tax-exempt charity, but donations are not yet tax-deductible because the application is pending.

More at link:


News Washington bureau assistant Patrick Reaves contributed to this report.
e-mail: jzremski@buffnews.com.

http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20060625/1066005.asp
--------------------------------------------------

EDIT: COPYRIGHT. PLEASE POST ONLY 4 OR 5 PARAGRAPHS
FROM THE COPYRIGHTED NEWS SOURCE PER DU RULES.
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FSogol Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 06:32 AM
Response to Original message
1. Catapulting the Propaganda!
Man, these repubs are slimy in ways that the left can't even begin to imagine.
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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 07:18 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. Par for the course
According to Annenburg (http://www.annenbergpublicpolicycenter.org/), "Over $404 million was spent on broadcast and print issue advocacy during the 108th Congress, with business interests outspending citizen-based advocacy groups by more than five to one." Add to this the hundreds of millions spent on thinktanks...

You want slime? http://www.factcheck.org/article398.html

"Vultures, Death, Taxes & More Falsehoods
The Free Enterprise Fund continues a campaign of misinformation against the estate tax.

June 26, 2006
Modified: June 26, 2006

Summary



The conservative Free Enterprise Fund (FEF) continues to push for permanent repeal of the federal estate tax with one of the most blatantly false advertising campaigns we've seen this year.

One recent TV ad repeats an utterly untrue claim that the estate tax can "rip away 55 per cent of what you save for loved ones." In fact, the tax takes zero per cent from all but a very few. Even multimillionaires pay an average effective tax rate estimated currently at less than 22 per cent of their estates.

The ads are particularly nasty in their tone as well. One portrays Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington as a carrion bird, saying "she voted with the vultures" to oppose consideration of estate-tax repeal. Another attacks Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor of Arkansas for supposedly going back on a promise to support repeal, saying "Pryor is a liar." Actually, Pryor is on record opposing total repeal, though a statement on his website can easily be read to imply the opposite.


Analysis



For months the Free Enterprise Fund has been running what it says is a $4.1 million campaign to kill the federal estate tax for good. So far this year the FEF says it has run ads nationally on Fox News and in seven states: Arkansas, Louisiana, Montana, Rhode Island, North Dakota, South Dakota and Washington. We've noted some of their distortions before . They're still putting out false information.

Vultures?

In ad after ad, FEF has repeated a false claim that the estate tax can take 55 per cent of "what you save." The latest version shows vultures feeding on carrion, and superimposes the head of Sen. Cantwell on a bird's body and says she "voted with the vultures" to prevent Senate consideration of a repeal measure.

The problem with this and several earlier FEF ads is that there is no way that even a billionaire would lose 55 per cent of their estate to the federal tax. The current top marginal rate is 46 per cent, for one thing. That rate doesn't apply to the entire estate, only to amounts above a specified level. A s we have pointed out before , for anyone who dies in 2006 the tax applies only to amounts over $2 million (or $4 million for couples who take advantage of estate-planning legal maneuvers.)

So – just to be clear – that means that for the vast majority of Americans the estate tax will take zero per cent. Just over one per cent of Americans who died in 2002 owed any estate tax at all, according to the most recent figures from the Internal Revenue Service. That was when only the first $1 million was exempt. Now that the exemption has doubled, experts at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center calculate that only 12,600 Americans who die in 2006 will owe any estate tax at all. That's roughly one in every 200. Furthermore, even for those affluent few, the Tax Policy Center estimates that the estate tax will take an average of 18.7 per cent. Even for estates valued at over $20 million, the average tax will be 21.7 per cent.

We asked the Free Enterprise Fund to show us how it would be possible for the estate tax to take 55 per cent of anybody's estate, and they did not do so. Instead, FEF policy analyst Marco DeSena pointed to "the 55 per cent estate tax rate that will be imposed when the current law runs out in 2010." That doesn't come close to backing up the ad's claim, however.

It is true that the estate tax currently is scheduled to be repealed for one year only, 2010, and then return at a top marginal rate of 55 per cent in 2011. But that rate would not apply to the entire estate. The first $1 million would be completely exempt ($2 million for a couple), and the rate on amounts over that would go up in stages before reaching the maximum. Even a billionaire who engaged in no estate planning couldn't possibly lose 55 per cent of everything.

It's unlikely the 55 per cent rate will ever come back. The House approved a permanent reduction in the estate tax on June 22 by a bipartisan vote of 269 to 156. It would exempt all estates under $5 million from any tax, and sharply reduce rates, to 15 per cent for most taxable estates. A majority of Senate members are also on record favoring either a reduction or repeal of the estate tax, and a motion to cut off a Democratic filibuster and take up a repeal bill fell only three votes short of the required 60 votes on June 8. FEF says even the House measure is not enough. They are holding out for no tax at all, even for billionaires
Who's A Liar?

Another recent FEF ad running in Arkansas attacks Sen. Mark Pryor for voting to block consideration of a repeal bill on June 8. The announcer says, "Tell Mark Pryor he's a liar."

What the 15-second ad claims to be a lie is a statement on Pryor's Senate website saying (as of June 24): "I support the permanent repeal of an estate tax that harms small businesses and family farms." It is true that Pryor's statement is worded in a misleading way, and could easily give the impression that he supports total repeal of the entire estate tax. However, he's stated clearly on other occasions that he supports "repeal" for farmers and small-business owners only, and opposes repeal of the entire tax. Even the statement on his website refers to repealing "an" estate tax, and not "the" estate tax.

Pryor has made no secret of his opposition to blanket repeal. On Nov. 7, 2005, the Arkansas Business newspaper reported: "Even Democratic U.S. Sens. Blanche Lincoln and Mark Pryor are divided. Pryor opposes the repeal , while Lincoln is for it. Another home-state newspaper, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, said in an editorial on June 14 that "we'd been under the impression he'd been for only partial repeal all along."

Foes of the estate tax were well aware that Pryor was not supporting total repeal. Americans for Tax Reform, noting the Arkansas Business story, issued a statement just before the June 8 Senate vote saying Pryor favored "reform" and noting that the state's other senator "has gone one step further and claims she is for outright repeal."

What Pryor means by "repeal" for farmers and small-business owners is not entirely clear. He told Arkansas Business in a prepared statement that while he generally opposes repeal, "I do, however, fully support raising the estate tax exemption high enough to protect our producers and small businesses from being harmed." He did not specify what exemption level he favored, though presumably it would be higher than the $3.5 million ($7 million for a couple) that is scheduled to take effect in 2009. Whether a higher exemption amounts to "repeal" for farmers and proprietors is a matter of interpretation. And whether the misleading statement on Pryor's website is simply a result of clumsy wording, or of a sly intent to deceive, we leave to the judgment of our readers."

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Quantess Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 05:00 PM
Response to Reply #3
6. Some heavy reading.
It's worth a K&R
:kick:
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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-28-06 05:46 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. That's the problem
SOME people seem to be aware of the indoctrination/propaganda. Some of the more grotesque examples (Saving Private Lynch/Timmerman) almost made it mainstream.

But outside of a few politically-aware posters, none of this filters through.
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treestar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 06:46 AM
Response to Original message
2. Bored with the concept that because a person is a veteran, their
opinion carries more weight. Obviously they don't, since there are veterans and even currently serving who have all different views on the subject.

We would all be veterans or serving if we were the right age and gender at the time of a truly necessary war.

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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 07:19 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. You'll love this one
Swiftly Defending DeLay
A somewhat misleading pro-DeLay ad is funded by $200,000 from a donor who also bankrolled the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.

http://www.factcheck.org/article377.html
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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-27-06 07:27 AM
Response to Original message
5. If you're interested in this sort of thing,
try:

http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/2005Q4/battletanks

Battle Tanks: How Think Tanks Shape the Public Agenda
by Bob Burton

If you were the least bit nervous about all the worrying reports - from leading scientists, insurance companies and even the Pentagon - about human-induced climate change, don't worry: the Frontiers of Freedom (FF), a right-leaning think tank, is here to reassure you.

FF has established the Center for Science and Public Policy (CSPP) to alert "policy makers, the media, and the public to unreliable scientific claims and unjustified alarmism which often lead to public harm." If you are so inclined, you can subscribe to the "non-profit, non-partisan" Climate & Environment Weekly, CSPP's email bulletin that keeps track of why climate change is not the problem many make it out to be.

But if you want to find out who funds FF's climate change program, you won't find out by checking their website or annual report. However, over at ExxonMobil's website you'll discover that the CSPP was established in 2002 with a $100,000 grant from the world's biggest oil company. ..."

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alvarezadams Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-29-06 05:15 PM
Response to Reply #5
8. Just watch the news
You'll recognize the problem.
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