Lies
Research support for this article was provided by the Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute.
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Reality Bites
Eric Alterman: That McCain and Palin actually have a shot at the White House gives one pause contemplating the future of this country.
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Letters
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Something Stupid
Eric Alterman: John McCain is determined to lie his way into the White House, and pundits and reporters are doing everything they can to enable that strategy.
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The Times, They Have A-Changed
Eric Alterman: Nothing short of a divine thunderbolt will get Obama's message through to the brain-dead media establishment.
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Israel at 60: The State of the State
Eric Alterman: Israeli writers and intellectuals look at their nation and its problems in a more nuanced and realistic way than most Americans.
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How to Cover the GOP
Eric Alterman: Since they got all the megastories wrong in Denver, here's a primer for the media horde as they descend on St. Paul.
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Media Gone Mad
Eric Alterman: The national news narrative from Denver is completely nuts: consider the unsourced myth of the Clinton-Obama feud.
Rather than regurgitate that fruitless debate over the war--the deliberate untruths told by the Administration have been delineated ad nauseam--consider just two recent examples of its deception on matters relating to scientific and medical evidence:
§ Mercury emissions: When the EPA unveiled a rule to limit mercury emissions from power plants, Bush officials argued that anything more stringent than the EPA's proposed regulations would cost the industry far in excess of any conceivable benefit to public health. They hid the fact, however, that a Harvard study paid for by the EPA, co-written by an EPA scientist and peer-reviewed by two other EPA scientists, found exactly the opposite, estimating health benefits 100 times as great as the EPA did. Even more shocking, according to a GAO investigation, the EPA had failed to "quantify the human health benefits of decreased exposure to mercury, such as reduced incidence of developmental delays, learning disabilities, and neurological disorders."
§ Nuclear materials: The Los Angeles Times recently reported that government scientists apparently submitted phony data to demonstrate that a proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada's Yucca Mountain would be safe. As with the EPA and mercury emissions, the Interior Department found unsatisfactory the results of a study from the Los Alamos National Laboratory concluding that rainwater moved through the mountain sufficiently quickly for radioactive isotopes to penetrate the ground in a few decades, so it just pretended it hadn't happened.
In these two emblematic cases, as it has done so many times before, the Administration simply issued its own pronouncements, ignored reality and went its merry way, damn the consequences both for the reality of its policies and for its own credibility. Those found guilty of deception did not mind the one-day story that would result demonstrating them to be liars any more than Vice President Cheney minded the fact that a videotape existed of him claiming on Meet the Press that the alleged Prague meeting between Mohammed Atta and an Iraqi intelligence official had been "pretty well confirmed" when he twice insisted, also on videotape, that he "never said that." And the political calculation turned out to be a good one. It was left to The Daily Show to run the two tapes of Cheney together. Reporters may have been angry at being lied to, but they returned the next day to swallow some more.
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