Schreiner’s Media Landscape

May 12, 2010

BP Oil Rig Similar to 9/11: The Question Is Why It Wasn’t Prevented

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Congress, Earth, Environment, Iraq, Oil, dualism, politics, pollution, water — Ken Schreiner @ 4:50 pm

“How can a device that has 260 failure modes be considered fail-safe?”

- Rep. Bart Stupak on the catastrophic failure of spill prevention equipment

The oil industry, Republican Party and other radical right-wingers openly express their hatred for environmentalists, calling us “wackos”, “treehuggers”, and most inaccurate and reckless, “terrorists.” Terrorists are normally considered bad people so why someone who wants to save the planet and its inhabitants, including members of the Tea Party,  is bad I don’t quite understand.

It turns out Rush and the radical right were wrong- SURPRISE!- about the BP oil rig being sabotaged by eco-terrorists. It was massive equipment and policy failure by the companies involved- the “drill, baby, drill” team. But with ten per cent of America still believing environmentalists are responsible and environmentalism still being “bad”, this delusion needs to be analyzed for its self-destructive origins and utter uselessness as a “policy”, and the outrage directed more accurately and constructively.

First of all, environmentalists are not going to hurt the planet or people to PREVENT hurting the planet or people. No one can compete with right-wingers for violence against the planet and killing people. Which brings us back to 9/11 and BP. The 9/11 terrorists were bad people.  But al-Qaeda’s and Saudi Arabia’s attack on America is less perplexing and outrageous than why we didn’t stop it when we had a previous attack, advance intelligence, and information indicating not only what was going to happen but when, how, by whom.

Now like 9/11, the question in the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is not so much what went wrong and how but why the systems we had in place to prevent it failed so cataclysmically. Sadly, the answers are different but quite simple: in 9/11, the Bush Administration was stupid or complicit. But it’s obvious they cared because they spent the next eight years struggling to make up for their mistakes on 9/11. However, with the BP oil disaster, the oil industry showed again they just don’t care. Their leaders’ peformance at the current congressional hearings indicates no interest in changing that position.

If they did care, the blowout preventer’s battery wouldn’t have been dead. Nor would there have been leaks, outages and a shutdown of a crucial “fail-safe” system as was revealed at today’s hearing. Ironically, BP had just spent millions repairing the rig to pump more oil, but just couldn’t find a few thousand bucks to maintain their blowout preventer. So who are the real “environmental wackos” here?

America’s security industry claims to have learned much from 9/11. Certainly, the advances in security changed life in America. And if no 9/11s since then was the objective, we have succeeded. Maybe the oil industry will learn something too and spend the right amount to make sure this never happens again. But all that knowledge and money spent protecting the planet will be wasted if they don’t first learn to care about it.

May 9, 2010

Sen. Bennett Thrown Overboard by Utah Tea Party: Keep on Tossing!

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, China, Congress, Iraq, Jazz, Salt Lake, Utah, dualism, politics, religion — Ken Schreiner @ 8:29 am

The Republican Party may have finally found something they can do correctly: destroy themselves. The developments at Saturday’s Utah state Republican Party convention were more exciting than the Jazz-Lakers game- and it was a good game. With three-term U.S. Senator Bob Bennett being voted off the ticket by the growing number of delegates claiming affiliation with the so-called Tea Party, it’s obvious that America’s right-wing is well on the way to the extinction it has sought so vigorously and deserves so completely.

Given their fiscal irresponsibility, total mishandling of 9/11, Iraq, the subprime meltdown, China, Katrina (name your favorite disaster here), and misguided, angry vengeance at anything non-white and non-Christian, the Republicans are saving the rest of the country (the MAJORITY) a lot of trouble by spanking themselves and putting each other out of work.

February 9, 2010

New Orleans Saints Win the Super Bowl: America Cheers Again

Filed under: America, Bush, Congress, Iraq, media, sports, television — Ken Schreiner @ 9:00 am

For the first time since the Bears were in the Super Bowl, and the third time ever (the first time being the first time the Bears were in it), I watched the game for the game, not the commercials. Obviously, the record-setting ratings for this one indicate more people tuned in to see something. While polls show most people watched the Big Game for the ads (51% to 49%), I believe most tuned in to see the New Orleans Saints put their city back on the map after the Bush Administration and Republican-led Congress let it float out to sea after Hurricane Katrina.

If they tuned in for the ads, viewers were disappointed. If they tuned in to see the Saints win, they were not. There was, of course, a revenge factor also. The Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts who beat the Bears in the Big Game a couple of years ago. America loves the underdog even though we’ve never been one ourselves throughout the modern age of U.S.-supersupremacy (we would’ve rooted for Iraq if we weren’t the ones bombing them). And this realized expectation was what made America watch, cheer again, and say congratulations. Though it could also be because the game was better than any of the commercials.

January 15, 2010

NBC’s Loss is NBC’s Gain: Tonight Show Ratings “War” as Phony as Bush’s Iraq

Filed under: America, Bush, Hollywood, Iraq, media, television — Ken Schreiner @ 10:06 am

Conan’s O’Brien’s ratings are way up since NBC threatened to blow him up. Which is just what NBC needed. If there was a way to draw much-needed attention to the flailing late-night hosts’ mostly goofy and occasionally funny, it’s the current flap over whether to replace him with Jay Leno. In the annals of ratings ploys, this one certainly rates in the Top Ten besides Fox News’ “War on Christmas”, CBS’ Katie Couric ascent, and anything Charles Barkley or Oprah do.

But don’t expect NBC to try and keep Conan. Increasing his ratings, even temporarily, increases his value to prospective buyers like Fox. And the fake slams of Jimmy Kimmel on Leno’s own show are just a tactic stolen from Vince McMahon and the WWE. And just like wrestling, Americans love to watch a good fight- even if it’s all an act.

October 13, 2009

The Big Lie: Obama Avoids Fox News for the Same Reason Bush Pandered To It

Filed under: America, Bush, Iraq, Obama, dualism, journalism, media, politics, television — Ken Schreiner @ 10:29 am

His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.

- United States Office of Strategic Services in describing Hitler’s psychological profile

This phrase could easily be used to describe Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, Sen. James Inhofe or all the other right-wing blowhards. Whether you agree with the daily drivel Fox News passes off as “news” is immaterial. The reason FNC continues to gain viewers and power over the public agenda is because THEY MAKE THEMSELVES THE STORY. The outrageous, unsubstantiated and downright weird and dangerous opinions vomited nightly by Hannity, Beck, O’Reilly et al are cornerstones of the age-old process of propaganda. It’s why Joe McCarthy became an enduring legend, not his maniacal and misguided Communist witchhunt.

The “Big Lie Theory” was implemented and executed to perfection by the Hitler-Goebbels Nazi machine (we remember the Nazis alright but we remember little about what they stood for). Meaning, the bigger the lie and the more often you repeat it, the more people will believe it. It’s sad to think that America hasn’t learned anything from the Nazi nightmare and in fact are falling for it right here at home again.

Fox News’ viewers are being duped into believing that FNC is looking out for them (like the Republican Party also wants you to believe) when in reality, they are both exploiting their loyal legions of lunatics to raise money (political contributions or commercials- it’s all the same) and manipulate the social agenda in their favor i.e. defending corporations from health care reform, keeping our tax money flowing into the pockets of defense contractors by maintaining our pointless middle east wars.

Is it Fox News’ fault? Yup. But it’s America’s too. Millions march to their tune now regardless of whether it’s their fabricated “War on Christmas” or the War on Terror. What Fox News’ viewers don’t understand is that they are the victims of war as well: a war on their common sense.

You want to stop this madness? Stop believing Fox News and read something- else. You’ll be surprised what’s REALLY going on here.

September 10, 2009

Republicans Heckle Obama: Health Care Reform Now More Terrible Than 9/11, Iraq, Recession, Housing Collapse, Hurricane Katrina, Bush Corruption, Climate Change and BCS

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Congress, Iraq, Obama, politics, video — Ken Schreiner @ 8:02 am


Through all of the Bush-Republican-created crises of the past eight years, no one ever heckled Bush or even challenged the Republican autocracy. But this South Carolina (there’s that state again) congressman is apparently so outraged that his unfounded fears of illegal immigrants getting health care inspired him to yell at President Obama last night.

Only one thing is left to ask all Republicans: what is wrong with you people?

August 14, 2009

Obama vs. Bush: 9/11, Iraq, Katrina, Economic Collapse, Corruption- Ah, the Good, Old Days

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Iraq, Obama, politics — Ken Schreiner @ 8:41 am

Personally, life for me is better than ever. I’m beginning to believe that it’s actually been just as great for several years but that what happened to our country from 2001-2009 was creating the illusion that my life was suffering. I succumbed to what is now the number-one American pasttime: complaining.

We went on a cruise of the Colorado River in Moab last spring. All the tour guide did was complain about the federal government (no kidding). We went on a raft trip down the Weber River a couple of weekends ago. The weather was perfect, the water was fast, and the tour guide did nothing but complain about all the people who drank too much, hollering and littering as they floated their troubles away. Then of course, all the Obama supporters who’ve been complaining about Bush the past eight years are now forced to listen to all the right-wingers now loudly whining about health care reform, immigration- you know, the same stuff they whined about even when they were running things (albeit into the ground).

Even though life is much happier for me now that Bush is gone, I decided to think back to the Bush years and determine if things really are better now than they were then. To listen to Obama’s detractors, you’d think 9/11, Iraq and Afghanistan, the numerous economic diasters, Hurricane Katrina, scandals, corruption were the good old days. If someone can explain to me how America is not better now than we were just six months ago, I’d love to hear it.

Because to listen to Fox News Channel, Lou Dobbs, Sarah Palin, the health care nuts and other idiots yellling and screaming about “death panels” and “socialism”, you’d think we were all headed straight for hell- instead of just emerging from it.

May 10, 2009

Cheney Confirms Democrats’ Claims that Limbaugh Leads Republicans; Shooting More Friends Would Be More Constructive

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Cheney, Iraq, Obama, dualism, politics — Ken Schreiner @ 2:38 pm

Former vice-emperor Dick Cheney continues to appear and speak more now since being run out of Washington than he did in his last four years in office. On the chat shows, he’s spending more time defending his stupid, costly and destructive decisions than actually THINKING about what he was doing before doing it.

Now, he’s saying he’d rather follow Rush Limbaugh than Colin Powell. No surprise there. Rush is white, fat, rich, and an industrial strength demagogue and embittered bigot- just like Cheney. That’s probably the best news Obama and the Democrats could’ve heard, seeing as they’ve been contending for weeks, as part of their latest campaign, that Rush Limbaugh is the GOP’s spiritual leader and not any Republican politician (certainly not Cheney or Bush).

Cheney’s still smarting over history proving that Powell was indeed correct about Iraq and not the Cheney- oops, I mean Bush- administration. Since then, Cheney’s been on a campaign of disinformation and history revision to show that, while he and W may have been WRONG, their post-9/11 convulsions all worked out great anyway. Mission Accomplished Lite.

It’s also clear that the new Republican “leadership” is not powerful enough to stop Cheney from stabbing his party in the back and from going totally rogue to distance himself from Bush, Powell, and anybody he disagreed with or who crossed him in the past eight, tragic years. Perhaps it’s not quite as pathetic for the GOP as it is for Cheney who’s having a difficult time convincing anyone- except himself- that the events of the past eight years are anything other than sad and that Cheney’s and Bush’s incompetence and corruption are centrally responsible.

But Cheney’s magical mystery media tour is not good for anyone, certainly not the Republican Party and especially not Cheney. We know he’s smart- in a Joseph Goebbels sort of way. But if he was less suicidal, homicidal, and/or just plain deluded- as Goebbels was- he’d do what Bush is doing: Take your taxpayer-funded pension, go home, sit down and shut up. Do more hunting, Dick. In fact, shooting a few more of your friends would be a lot more constructive.

May 5, 2009

Obama vs. Bush: First 100 Days’ Trajectory of Hope Replaces Deception, Arrogance, Insanity and Violence

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Environment, Hollywood, Iraq, Obama, dualism, politics, religion, sports — Ken Schreiner @ 9:02 am

I’ve lost interest in the “Obama’s First 100 Days” story. As Frank Rich wrote in the NYT this weekend, “Enough already.” While the beginning of the tenure of a new CEO, baseball manager and Hollywood film is important, it’s being overemphasized at the expense of the value of the long-term. Take George W. Bush. His first 100 days were very different than the way his disastrous reign ended. If 9/11 never happened, if the Iraq War didn’t go so long and so badly, and if the American economy didn’t choke on the Bush Regime’s incompetence and Wall Street’s deception, we might be comparing Bush to Thomas Jefferson right now instead of Herbert Hoover.

But there was one thing that was consistent throughout the Bush Years from stuttering start to fatal finish: his mysterious and obnoxious arrogance. From his “victory” over Al Gore to his recent comments about Obama’s efforts to correct Bush’s grievous errors, W and the Republicans have shown that they STILL are not only arrogant but, worse, are leaderless, disorganized and still flying the tattered flag that is the only substantial remnant of a vanquished army of aristocrats, bigots and zealots. Besides Rush Limbaugh.

Rich also hits this point hard in his column: the first 100 days of the Obama administration are marked less by his accomplishments but by the clueless opposition’s failure to change from a party of thieves, cynics, obstructionists, killers, ideologues and liars (even the term “conservatives” doesn’t apply):

“… the former party of Lincoln and liberty has now melted down to a fundamentalist core of aging, rural Dixiecrats and intrusive scolds — as small as 20 percent of the populace in the latest polls. Its position on the American spectrum of ideas is somewhere between a doomsday cult and Scientology.”

The reason the Republicans can’t change is because the people who comprise this wretched band won’t change. They are going to their graves believing the costly and terrible rules of their heroes- Ronald Reagan and the Bushes- were actually good. As I’ve written before, Republicans are a lot like Cubs fans. The delusion of their eventual transcendence thinly disguises the sad reality that they are losers who don’t know how to win and will keep doing things the same way while others do it correctly.

That fits Albert Einstein’s famous definition of insanity to a tee. And until the Republican Party wakes up to the reality THEY CREATED and its beaten and bloody democracy terrorists vow to end their ideological crusades, they are doomed to, as Einstein said, ”doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”.

The rest of us- THE GREAT MAJORITY OF AMERICANS- are more hopeful, less cynical, and moving on toward a brighter future that promises a cleaner environment, no more stupid, costly wars and their useless deaths, rampant corruption and lies, and freedom and justice for all- not just the ones in control and not those who think they’ve been divinely or genetically selected.

April 21, 2009

David Barstow’s Pulitzer Sheds Little Light on TV Networks’ Coverup of Iraq, Pentagon Propaganda Scandal

Filed under: America, Bush, Cheney, Iraq, journalism, media, television — Ken Schreiner @ 10:54 am

“It is not legal for the U.S. government to direct psychological operations or propaganda against the American people. But the lines between ordinary public affairs and propaganda are sometimes blurry…”

- David Barstow, New York Times reporter who won the Pulitzer Prize for his stories about the connection among retired generals, TV network news and the Bush Regime’s propaganda campaign to win public support for invading Iraq

Glenn Greenwald of Salon has put together an excellent and embarassing analysis of how the TV networks have concealed their complicity in leading America into the Iraq War through dis-, mis-, and non-information from the Pentagon and Bush Regime. By hiring retired generals as “analysts,” all the networks’ news operations became loudspeakers for the military-industrial complex’ campaign to destroy the wrong but easier target of revenge for the 9/11 attacks. What’s worse is that there are ties between the networks and the companies who would reap windfall profits from the war.

Not only do the networks continue to conceal their involvement in the scandal (despite congressional and other ongoing investigations), they’ve even failed to report the Pulitzer Prize awarded to the New York Times reporter who broke the story. David Barstow’s articles would’ve easily made the lead slot on the scandal-hungry nightly network newscasts- if the networks themselves had not been the subject of the story. But they all have refused to run the story or merely acknowledge that there IS a scandal involving Iraq, propaganda, the Pentagon, the Bush Regime, as well as a coverup by the most popular sources for news in America.

That’s a disgrace. But then again, so is network news.

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