The Obama administration and American media, as well as the
governments and media in allied states, have denounced as a war crime
the Russian-backed Syrian government offensive that dislodged US-backed
Islamist “rebels” from the city of Aleppo. The plight of Aleppo
civilians, particularly imagery of suffering children, has been widely
reported.
The people of Mosul, however, are being treated as “collateral
damage” by the imperialist hypocrites, barely warranting comment.
Casualties are largely being blamed on ISIS using civilians as “human
shields” or attacking people trying to escape the city with snipers or
mortars.
Summing up the situation, one displaced person told the Washington Post: “People
of Mosul have two options. Either stay inside and die because of the
bombing or hunger, or go to the camps—to the prison. Either way, it’s a
slow death.”
-- James Cogan, "Mosul, Iraq and Obama’s legacy of war" (WSWS).
The Third Estate Sunday Review focuses on politics and culture. We're an online magazine. We don't play nice and we don't kiss butt. In the words of Tuesday Weld: "I do not ever want to be a huge star. Do you think I want a success? I refused "Bonnie and Clyde" because I was nursing at the time but also because deep down I knew that it was going to be a huge success. The same was true of "Bob and Carol and Fred and Sue" or whatever it was called. It reeked of success."
Monday, December 26, 2016
Truest statement of the week II
If we, ourselves embrace 'lesser-evilism,' then it only makes sense for other people to do that, as well.
-- Margaret Flowers on this week's BLACK AGENDA RADIO discussing the future for the Green Party.
-- Margaret Flowers on this week's BLACK AGENDA RADIO discussing the future for the Green Party.
A note to our readers
Hey --
Monday, the death of George Michael delayed us.
And our content is:
Monday, the death of George Michael delayed us.
Let's thank all who participated this edition which includes Dallas and the following:
The Third Estate Sunday Review's Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
The Third Estate Sunday Review's Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
And our content is:
James Cogan gets a truest.
As does Margaret Flowers.
This is one of two pieces everyone listed above worked on.
We take a last look (hopefully last) at Diane Rehm and her legacy of half-truths and outright lies. Iraq, especially, is something Diane lied about and owes apologies for.
This is the second piece that everyone listed above worked on.
Short feature, as Dona would say.
Iraq.
How did this woman ever get a following?
Short feature.
Do the ethics apply to NPR journalists?
What we listened to.
Repost.
And repost. George is missed. Or, as Goldie Hawn and Julie Christie say in SHAMPOO, "George is great."
Editorial: Iraq matters beyond Iraq
Ten years ago @MoveOn @NancyPelosi coopted the US peace movement to.serve @TheDemocrats. #Obama did this:
0 replies0 retweets0 likes
John Stauber's referring to the 2006 mid-term elections.
And the refusal to stand up to this nonsense, to call it out, explains why the Iraq War continues.
The failure to fight to end the Iraq War doesn't just mean that it continues, it also means that all the other illegal behavior of Bully Boy Bush was normalized by Barack Obama.
As president, candidate Barack Obama promised, he would end the war.
He didn't.
He continued it.
He continued the Afghanistan War.
He went to war on Syria.
He went to war on Africa.
He went to war on the Constitution with his illegal spying, his attacks on whistle-blowers, his efforts to prosecute the press . . .
All of this because the left wouldn't stand up against Barack.
They betrayed the Iraqi people.
Just as bad, they betrayed themselves.
Media: One of her guests was never you
Diane Rehm's hold on NPR finally came to an end last Friday. She got her current spot in 1979 and has spent years serving up falsehoods including the claim that "one of my guests is always you."
The falsehoods, like her image, could have remained intact if she'd only left at a reasonable time.
Instead, like every other radio host at NPR or PACIFICA RADIO, she treated the public airwaves as her own personal entitlement.
Irma R. Aandahl died June 9, 2014. She was 96-years-old at the time, 16 years younger than Diane is currently. From the heights of a program host for WAMU Irma wound down as a host on Mercer County Community College's radio station.
In 1973, Diane had started as a volunteer at WAMU on Irma's program. Ten months later, she was a part-time employee and a producer of Irma's show THE HOME SHOW which debuted in 1971.
Here it gets a bit blurry as Diane tells it -- kind of like her personal history, including her WIKIPEDIA entry -- which renders George Hamaty invisible (Hamaty was Diane's first husband, they married October 16, 1955).
Irma wasn't a big fan of Diane's -- as late as 2011, she was still mocking Diane's outfits (which Diane made herself). They didn't have the warm relationship Diane likes to pretend publicly (while skipping out on various memorials of Irma in 2014).
In 1979, Diane squeezed Irma more or less out of the public record -- like the way WAMU had squeezed blue grass off the airwaves -- and she became the host of KALEIDOSCOPE, later renamed THE DIANE REHM SHOW (1984).
WAMU declared her the winner of "a nation wide search." Usually left out is the fact that she was one of a hundred contenders or that she applied only after Irma herself called Diane to tell her she was retiring.
Why did she have to call Diane?
Because despite claims of Diane's ever-loving dedication to WAMU and public radio, Diane didn't stay at public radio in the 70s.
She left public radio for a few years as she pursued a (failed) career in television.
In 1996, THE DIANE REHM SHOW would be distributed by NPR and -- as NPR spent the last ten years making clear to WAMU that they felt the two hour broadcast would be more successful without Diane -- that's no doubt a decision would like to take back.
In fact, she probably would like to take it back even more than last year.
Last year's when Diane finally got beat up in the press.
For decades, the press has played along with Diane, pretended that her every utterance was truth.
This is a woman who used her gender to get a job with public radio but who didn't feel the need to give back.
It's an important point, especially as Diane spent the last months giving empty lip service to the idea of diversity.
It's empty lip service and we know because we did a study of her show in 2010 and found 232 guests booked of which only 30.17% were women.
Two years later, we looked again:
As we've pointed out before, in the United States women are said to make up 50.1% of the population. So half the country is women. This should mean that half of Diane's guests were women.
But that's not the case. Over ten months, only 34% (33.9%) of Diane's guests have been women.
So although women make up half the country's population, they make up only 34% of Diane's guests.
It's amazing how some women use their gender to advance their own pocketbooks but never take the time to do anything to create equality.
But, outside of us, the climate for Diane from the left (us) and the middle was nothing but fawning.
Until 2015.
Diane got two major slapdowns that year.
There was her activism with what's been dubbed as the right-to-die movement.
As NPR ombudsperson Elizabeth Jensen explained near the start of 2015:
A story in the Washington Post, posted online on Feb. 14 and on the Feb. 15 front page, detailed how Diane Rehm "is becoming one of the country's most prominent figures in the right-to-die debate." Rehm is the longtime, well-respected host of the midday talk and call-in program, The Diane Rehm Show, which originates at Washington, D.C. station WAMU-FM.
The article chronicled Rehm's personal experience last year as her husband, John, deteriorated physically due to Parkinson's disease. His Maryland doctor rejected the couple's request for medical assistance to help him end his life — such actions are illegal in that state — instead counseling John to stop eating and drinking; he died ten days after doing so, according to the article.
While Rehm has dealt with the issue on her program before, with both proponents and opponents of medically assisted suicide represented, her personal experience has prompted her to get more deeply involved in the issue, the article recounted:
[. . .]
As to the fundraising dinners — small discussion gatherings, the first of which took place Monday night — she said: "Mind you, I am walking a very careful line. I am there to tell my own story, to tell John's story, and to hopefully help to facilitate discussion among the attendees. I am not being paid a dime for doing any of this. I am doing it because it's what I believe I want for myself and I believe that talking about it is something that is crucial within our entire society, no matter what side you come out on." The line she will not cross is "to ask people to do or give anything" and no solicitation of funds took place in her presence, she said.
We've never heard a bigger lie in our lives.
Diane appears at fundraiser dinners and, she insists, no line was crossed because in her speeches at these fundraiser dinners she did not ask for money and no one else did while she was there.
At these fundraiser dinners.
She'd already asked them to contribute to attend the dinners.
The dinners were the fundraisers.
And when she was advertised and served up as the guest speaker, she was asking people to donate to hear her speak.
That's reality.
In the end, it's a reality she could not escape and those in power at WAMU and NPR began more loudly insisting that she select an exit date.
Four months later, Diane got another smackdown.
Again, we'll go to ombudsperson Elizabeth Jensen:
Listeners are mad, and rightly so, about Diane Rehm's Wednesday interview with the Vermont senator, who is running for the Democratic nomination for president. (For the record, Rehm is employed by WAMU-FM, which produces her show; NPR distributes the show to stations across the country and it is clear from the mail I have received that listeners consider the program to be an NPR show.)
And Rehm? She told me this episode "has been the most difficult two days of my professional life."
To recap briefly what happened: During the interview Rehm said to Sanders: "Senator, you have dual citizenship with Israel." Even when Sanders immediately corrected her, Rehm pressed on, telling him his name was on a list of lawmakers with dual citizenship.
WAMU and NPR got louder in urging Diane to the door.
She thought it would pass.
At the end of March 2015, Diane thought she'd survived the controversy over her fundraising for the right-to-die movement.
In July, she confessed to a friend that she was beginning to believe the Sanders issue might not pass as easily.
It did not.
She was left humiliated and she finally agreed to leave which led to the end of 2015 announcement that Diane was stepping down.
These two high profile embarrassments of 2015 helped ensure that Diane's departure would be a story for NPR but for few other outlets, that her departure would not be the media story of 2016, the media story of December 2016 or even the media story of the week.
It was as though the entire media universe was done with Diane.
At least she still had her listeners, right?
Not really.
Which is why the rare coverage she got last week tended to focus on older ratings for the show.
Diane's been losing listeners.
Part of the reason is they woke up to the reality of the lie "one of my guests is always you."
Diane walked away from listeners over Iraq.
She was bored with the topic.
Even before Barack Obama was elected president at the end of 2008, Diane was bored.
And she had taken to ignoring listeners requests for Iraq coverage.
She still had to include it some in her second hour of her Friday show -- her international roundup.
Usually when someone posting to the show's discussion board pointed out that one or more US service members had died in Iraq that week and she hadn't even mentioned Iraq.
She and her 'experts' would quickly and desperately try to use commercial break time to familiarize themselves with Iraq.
Susan Page often filled in for Diane and that only hurt Diane more.
You could ask about Iraq on the air if Susan was the guest host.
But Diane had banned the topic for phone calls on the shows she herself hosted.
And she grew even more bored with Iraq and went on to limit it to a brief discussion (four minutes or less) on the second hour of her Friday show -- limit it to once a month.
Then she walked away completely.
This was a huge topic to her listeners.
It always had been since the start of the Iraq War in 2003.
But as they noted their e-mails and calls were ignored, as they noted their comments on her discussion boards did not prompt coverage, they began to grasp that they were not, and never had been, her guest.
This was especially true May 8, 2009 when angry e-mails flooded the show as Diane elected to ignore the conviction of a US soldier for raping a 14-year-old Iraqi girl.
We shared some of the e-mails that were passed onto us by a friend with the show:
As I listen to all the babble on this second hour and notice that NO female guest is on the panel, I have to wonder if that's why we're hearing nothing about Abeer Qassim Hamza.
Steven Dale Green was convicted yesterday afternoon.
Why aren't you talking about that?
And why doesn't Diane book female guests?
This is embarrassing, in 2009, that Diane's got 3 guests and everyone's a man.
A 14 y.o. girl was gang-raped and murdered. In Iraq. US soldiers. It's an international incident. And we can't hear it and I've got to hear three men drone on about the most dull topics in the world.
[name withheld]
Manchester, New Hampshire
As a Iraqi American whose family came here twenty years ago I am very concerend about the story of Abeer Qassim al Janabi who was only 14 when she was killed in her home along with other members of her family and she was killed after she had been raped. I have been most displeased to see no attention given to this especially since the man who is said to be the leader was convicted yesterday in court. I would hope you would find time for this topic.
Thank you,
[name withheld]
Dear Diane Rehm,
Looking forward to today's second hour because I always enjoy the lively international discussion.
Hope you will be addressing the conviction of Steven D. Green yesterday in the Kentucky federal court for his crimes in Iraq.
Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi was a 14 year old girl and he was stationed in her Iraq neighborhood at a checkpoint. He was supposed to protect the neighborhood. Instead, he plotted with other US soldiers on how to rape her. He (and other soldiers already convicted) raped her. He killed her parents, he killed her sister and he killed her.
Hope this will be addressed.
Thank you,
[name withheld]
[Note that the e-mailer attaches this CNN article on the verdict after his name.]
Good morning Miss Rehm,
Can you and your guests cover the trial of the US soldier who was convicted of raping and murdering an Iraqi girl yesterday? I have not heard this covered on any show and it's the topic I really count on you for deep explorations of.
Sincerely,
[name withheld]
Ann Arbor, MI
Yesterday in Kentucky, a federal court convicted Steven Green on 16 counts over the March 12, 2006 crimes in Iraq that he and other U.S. soldiers took part in.
Green specifically took part in the gang-rape of a 14 y.o. girl, he murdered her, he murdered her parents, he murdered her sister, and he was the ringleader.
This was an international incident.
This topic belongs on today's show and I'm very distressed that I'm having to write in to say, "Girlfriend, cover it!!!!!"
[name withheld]
This story [link to Democracy Now! headlines for Friday] about the soldier being convicted for raping the 14 year old girl is really tragic and I hope you and your guests plan to discuss it.
Also when do you plan to have Jerry Seib back on the show?
Yours truly,
[name withheld]
Boston
Why is today's show ignoring the verdict in United States versus Steven D. Green?
That is the big international story and there's been no mention of it. War crimes took place in Iraq. A verdict came down yesterday.
It needs to be addressed.
[name withheld]
listening on KERA in Dallas
Dear Ms. Diane Rehm,
As a survivor of rape, I know the horror involved and I know that we rarely get media attention on sexual assault cases. That is why National Public Radio is so important. It can cover these topics and do so without interrupting to broadcast commercials. Yesterday Stephen Green, a US Army man, was convicted in court of raping and murdering a 14 year-old girl while he was serving in Iraq. This is a very important story that I believe many of your listeners would be interested in hearing about. I know I would be. Please consider addressing it.
[name withheld]
New Haven, Conn.
A woman as a host and yet a rape conviction can't be covered.
A US court convicts a soldier or raping a girl in Iraq and it can't be covered.
Listeners realized Diane wasn't who she pretended to be and that they weren't really her guests.
Another clue was the way her guests, her real guests, repeatedly began attacking listeners on air. In September 2012, they hit an especially rough patch as David Corn was allowed to trash listeners on air repeatedly in one program.
Then came Friday, her last show, where she declared "I hope to hear from you" at the top of the show and that she was "most especially grateful to all of you, the listeners."
How did she prove it?
By taking calls from listeners.
Or 'listeners.'
In that last hour of the show, where Diane hoped to hear from you the listener, she took 8 calls from listeners.
She took many more calls from insiders.
Frequent guest Paul Butler was allowed on air first. Then NPR CEO and president Jarl Mohn, singer Judy Collins, FACE THE NATION host John Dickerson, her son David Rehm, Academy Award winning actress Julie Andrews and her daughter Emma Walton Hamilton, author Isabel Wilkerson, politician Corey Booker
It wasn't just that these nine insiders were on, it was that they were allowed on so long.
So many exchanges of "I love you" to one another and greetings for the holidays and would they be guests on Diane's new weekly podcast and so much more.
Actual listeners were rushed off the air while what passes for celebrities were allowed to pontificate endlessly.
As, for example, Judy Collins and Diane Rehm cooed on air to one another, who benefitted.
It was with crap like that, navel gazing and gushing, that Diane wrapped up her public radio career.
Even when Nick from New Hampshire called to ask if any callers over the years stood out, Diane didn't bother to address the listeners who had called in because, instead, she wanted to share a celebrity story.
You know, speaking of callers, I have to tell you, Tom Wolfe, in his gorgeous white suit, was on this program one day. And I'm talking about Tom Wolfe, who wrote "Bonfire of the Vanities." He was on this program one day. And, of course, the producers had reminded him several times to turn off his cell phone. And what happened? During the program, not only did his cell phone ring, but he answered it. He answered the telephone and said, hi, it's Tom. And the person on the other line began talking. And he said, well, you know, actually I'm on "The Diane Rehm Show," right now. Yeah. She's in Washington. He continued the phone call. And I'm sitting there and I'm glaring at him. And finally I said, Tom, would you be good enough to hang up? And he finally hung up the phone. You know, you never know what's going to happen in live radio.
How caring of Diane.
The listeners were never a guest.
It's a lie.
She loved to lie about listeners.
For example, she claimed her show took calls because, once upon a time, a guest didn't show up.
No, it took calls because it was a WAMU program.
It took calls the same way THE HOME SHOW had -- or, more frequently, tried to take calls. (In the early days, it was very hard to get callers.)
In the end, very little Diane said on the air was true -- and that's her real legacy.
The falsehoods, like her image, could have remained intact if she'd only left at a reasonable time.
Instead, like every other radio host at NPR or PACIFICA RADIO, she treated the public airwaves as her own personal entitlement.
Irma R. Aandahl died June 9, 2014. She was 96-years-old at the time, 16 years younger than Diane is currently. From the heights of a program host for WAMU Irma wound down as a host on Mercer County Community College's radio station.
In 1973, Diane had started as a volunteer at WAMU on Irma's program. Ten months later, she was a part-time employee and a producer of Irma's show THE HOME SHOW which debuted in 1971.
Here it gets a bit blurry as Diane tells it -- kind of like her personal history, including her WIKIPEDIA entry -- which renders George Hamaty invisible (Hamaty was Diane's first husband, they married October 16, 1955).
Irma wasn't a big fan of Diane's -- as late as 2011, she was still mocking Diane's outfits (which Diane made herself). They didn't have the warm relationship Diane likes to pretend publicly (while skipping out on various memorials of Irma in 2014).
In 1979, Diane squeezed Irma more or less out of the public record -- like the way WAMU had squeezed blue grass off the airwaves -- and she became the host of KALEIDOSCOPE, later renamed THE DIANE REHM SHOW (1984).
WAMU declared her the winner of "a nation wide search." Usually left out is the fact that she was one of a hundred contenders or that she applied only after Irma herself called Diane to tell her she was retiring.
Why did she have to call Diane?
Because despite claims of Diane's ever-loving dedication to WAMU and public radio, Diane didn't stay at public radio in the 70s.
She left public radio for a few years as she pursued a (failed) career in television.
In 1996, THE DIANE REHM SHOW would be distributed by NPR and -- as NPR spent the last ten years making clear to WAMU that they felt the two hour broadcast would be more successful without Diane -- that's no doubt a decision would like to take back.
In fact, she probably would like to take it back even more than last year.
Last year's when Diane finally got beat up in the press.
For decades, the press has played along with Diane, pretended that her every utterance was truth.
This is a woman who used her gender to get a job with public radio but who didn't feel the need to give back.
It's an important point, especially as Diane spent the last months giving empty lip service to the idea of diversity.
It's empty lip service and we know because we did a study of her show in 2010 and found 232 guests booked of which only 30.17% were women.
Two years later, we looked again:
As we've pointed out before, in the United States women are said to make up 50.1% of the population. So half the country is women. This should mean that half of Diane's guests were women.
But that's not the case. Over ten months, only 34% (33.9%) of Diane's guests have been women.
So although women make up half the country's population, they make up only 34% of Diane's guests.
It's amazing how some women use their gender to advance their own pocketbooks but never take the time to do anything to create equality.
But, outside of us, the climate for Diane from the left (us) and the middle was nothing but fawning.
Until 2015.
Diane got two major slapdowns that year.
There was her activism with what's been dubbed as the right-to-die movement.
As NPR ombudsperson Elizabeth Jensen explained near the start of 2015:
A story in the Washington Post, posted online on Feb. 14 and on the Feb. 15 front page, detailed how Diane Rehm "is becoming one of the country's most prominent figures in the right-to-die debate." Rehm is the longtime, well-respected host of the midday talk and call-in program, The Diane Rehm Show, which originates at Washington, D.C. station WAMU-FM.
The article chronicled Rehm's personal experience last year as her husband, John, deteriorated physically due to Parkinson's disease. His Maryland doctor rejected the couple's request for medical assistance to help him end his life — such actions are illegal in that state — instead counseling John to stop eating and drinking; he died ten days after doing so, according to the article.
While Rehm has dealt with the issue on her program before, with both proponents and opponents of medically assisted suicide represented, her personal experience has prompted her to get more deeply involved in the issue, the article recounted:
[. . .]
As to the fundraising dinners — small discussion gatherings, the first of which took place Monday night — she said: "Mind you, I am walking a very careful line. I am there to tell my own story, to tell John's story, and to hopefully help to facilitate discussion among the attendees. I am not being paid a dime for doing any of this. I am doing it because it's what I believe I want for myself and I believe that talking about it is something that is crucial within our entire society, no matter what side you come out on." The line she will not cross is "to ask people to do or give anything" and no solicitation of funds took place in her presence, she said.
We've never heard a bigger lie in our lives.
Diane appears at fundraiser dinners and, she insists, no line was crossed because in her speeches at these fundraiser dinners she did not ask for money and no one else did while she was there.
At these fundraiser dinners.
She'd already asked them to contribute to attend the dinners.
The dinners were the fundraisers.
And when she was advertised and served up as the guest speaker, she was asking people to donate to hear her speak.
That's reality.
In the end, it's a reality she could not escape and those in power at WAMU and NPR began more loudly insisting that she select an exit date.
Four months later, Diane got another smackdown.
Again, we'll go to ombudsperson Elizabeth Jensen:
Listeners are mad, and rightly so, about Diane Rehm's Wednesday interview with the Vermont senator, who is running for the Democratic nomination for president. (For the record, Rehm is employed by WAMU-FM, which produces her show; NPR distributes the show to stations across the country and it is clear from the mail I have received that listeners consider the program to be an NPR show.)
And Rehm? She told me this episode "has been the most difficult two days of my professional life."
To recap briefly what happened: During the interview Rehm said to Sanders: "Senator, you have dual citizenship with Israel." Even when Sanders immediately corrected her, Rehm pressed on, telling him his name was on a list of lawmakers with dual citizenship.
WAMU and NPR got louder in urging Diane to the door.
She thought it would pass.
At the end of March 2015, Diane thought she'd survived the controversy over her fundraising for the right-to-die movement.
In July, she confessed to a friend that she was beginning to believe the Sanders issue might not pass as easily.
It did not.
She was left humiliated and she finally agreed to leave which led to the end of 2015 announcement that Diane was stepping down.
These two high profile embarrassments of 2015 helped ensure that Diane's departure would be a story for NPR but for few other outlets, that her departure would not be the media story of 2016, the media story of December 2016 or even the media story of the week.
It was as though the entire media universe was done with Diane.
At least she still had her listeners, right?
Not really.
Which is why the rare coverage she got last week tended to focus on older ratings for the show.
Diane's been losing listeners.
Part of the reason is they woke up to the reality of the lie "one of my guests is always you."
Diane walked away from listeners over Iraq.
She was bored with the topic.
Even before Barack Obama was elected president at the end of 2008, Diane was bored.
And she had taken to ignoring listeners requests for Iraq coverage.
She still had to include it some in her second hour of her Friday show -- her international roundup.
Usually when someone posting to the show's discussion board pointed out that one or more US service members had died in Iraq that week and she hadn't even mentioned Iraq.
She and her 'experts' would quickly and desperately try to use commercial break time to familiarize themselves with Iraq.
Susan Page often filled in for Diane and that only hurt Diane more.
You could ask about Iraq on the air if Susan was the guest host.
But Diane had banned the topic for phone calls on the shows she herself hosted.
And she grew even more bored with Iraq and went on to limit it to a brief discussion (four minutes or less) on the second hour of her Friday show -- limit it to once a month.
Then she walked away completely.
This was a huge topic to her listeners.
It always had been since the start of the Iraq War in 2003.
But as they noted their e-mails and calls were ignored, as they noted their comments on her discussion boards did not prompt coverage, they began to grasp that they were not, and never had been, her guest.
This was especially true May 8, 2009 when angry e-mails flooded the show as Diane elected to ignore the conviction of a US soldier for raping a 14-year-old Iraqi girl.
We shared some of the e-mails that were passed onto us by a friend with the show:
As I listen to all the babble on this second hour and notice that NO female guest is on the panel, I have to wonder if that's why we're hearing nothing about Abeer Qassim Hamza.
Steven Dale Green was convicted yesterday afternoon.
Why aren't you talking about that?
And why doesn't Diane book female guests?
This is embarrassing, in 2009, that Diane's got 3 guests and everyone's a man.
A 14 y.o. girl was gang-raped and murdered. In Iraq. US soldiers. It's an international incident. And we can't hear it and I've got to hear three men drone on about the most dull topics in the world.
[name withheld]
Manchester, New Hampshire
As a Iraqi American whose family came here twenty years ago I am very concerend about the story of Abeer Qassim al Janabi who was only 14 when she was killed in her home along with other members of her family and she was killed after she had been raped. I have been most displeased to see no attention given to this especially since the man who is said to be the leader was convicted yesterday in court. I would hope you would find time for this topic.
Thank you,
[name withheld]
Dear Diane Rehm,
Looking forward to today's second hour because I always enjoy the lively international discussion.
Hope you will be addressing the conviction of Steven D. Green yesterday in the Kentucky federal court for his crimes in Iraq.
Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi was a 14 year old girl and he was stationed in her Iraq neighborhood at a checkpoint. He was supposed to protect the neighborhood. Instead, he plotted with other US soldiers on how to rape her. He (and other soldiers already convicted) raped her. He killed her parents, he killed her sister and he killed her.
Hope this will be addressed.
Thank you,
[name withheld]
[Note that the e-mailer attaches this CNN article on the verdict after his name.]
Good morning Miss Rehm,
Can you and your guests cover the trial of the US soldier who was convicted of raping and murdering an Iraqi girl yesterday? I have not heard this covered on any show and it's the topic I really count on you for deep explorations of.
Sincerely,
[name withheld]
Ann Arbor, MI
Yesterday in Kentucky, a federal court convicted Steven Green on 16 counts over the March 12, 2006 crimes in Iraq that he and other U.S. soldiers took part in.
Green specifically took part in the gang-rape of a 14 y.o. girl, he murdered her, he murdered her parents, he murdered her sister, and he was the ringleader.
This was an international incident.
This topic belongs on today's show and I'm very distressed that I'm having to write in to say, "Girlfriend, cover it!!!!!"
[name withheld]
This story [link to Democracy Now! headlines for Friday] about the soldier being convicted for raping the 14 year old girl is really tragic and I hope you and your guests plan to discuss it.
Also when do you plan to have Jerry Seib back on the show?
Yours truly,
[name withheld]
Boston
Why is today's show ignoring the verdict in United States versus Steven D. Green?
That is the big international story and there's been no mention of it. War crimes took place in Iraq. A verdict came down yesterday.
It needs to be addressed.
[name withheld]
listening on KERA in Dallas
Dear Ms. Diane Rehm,
As a survivor of rape, I know the horror involved and I know that we rarely get media attention on sexual assault cases. That is why National Public Radio is so important. It can cover these topics and do so without interrupting to broadcast commercials. Yesterday Stephen Green, a US Army man, was convicted in court of raping and murdering a 14 year-old girl while he was serving in Iraq. This is a very important story that I believe many of your listeners would be interested in hearing about. I know I would be. Please consider addressing it.
[name withheld]
New Haven, Conn.
A woman as a host and yet a rape conviction can't be covered.
A US court convicts a soldier or raping a girl in Iraq and it can't be covered.
Listeners realized Diane wasn't who she pretended to be and that they weren't really her guests.
Another clue was the way her guests, her real guests, repeatedly began attacking listeners on air. In September 2012, they hit an especially rough patch as David Corn was allowed to trash listeners on air repeatedly in one program.
Then came Friday, her last show, where she declared "I hope to hear from you" at the top of the show and that she was "most especially grateful to all of you, the listeners."
How did she prove it?
By taking calls from listeners.
Or 'listeners.'
In that last hour of the show, where Diane hoped to hear from you the listener, she took 8 calls from listeners.
She took many more calls from insiders.
Frequent guest Paul Butler was allowed on air first. Then NPR CEO and president Jarl Mohn, singer Judy Collins, FACE THE NATION host John Dickerson, her son David Rehm, Academy Award winning actress Julie Andrews and her daughter Emma Walton Hamilton, author Isabel Wilkerson, politician Corey Booker
It wasn't just that these nine insiders were on, it was that they were allowed on so long.
So many exchanges of "I love you" to one another and greetings for the holidays and would they be guests on Diane's new weekly podcast and so much more.
Actual listeners were rushed off the air while what passes for celebrities were allowed to pontificate endlessly.
As, for example, Judy Collins and Diane Rehm cooed on air to one another, who benefitted.
MS. JUDY COLLINS: Hi, Diane. It's Judy Collins.
11:21:23
REHM: Oh, aren't you dear, Judy Collins, to call in?
11:21:29
COLLINS: Well, I...
11:21:30
REHM: Will you sing for us?
11:21:31
COLLINS: I
-- of course. Of course. Let's see. There are places I remember all
my life, though some have changed. So, you know, I love you. I love
your show.
11:21:49
REHM: Oh.
11:21:49
COLLINS: And
I wanted to be here to pay my respects and to honor your amazing
program and you, who are an amazing woman and broadcaster and friend to
so many of us. I loved being on your show and I've loved getting to
know you over the years and sharing things that are important to both of
us. So I want to wish you the very best, Diane, whatever you are going
to do. And I know it'll be spectacular.
11:22:21
REHM: Judy, you're just adorable to call in. Thank you so much.
11:22:27
COLLINS: You're so welcome, my dear.
11:22:28
REHM: Would you do me a favor?
11:22:32
COLLINS: Tell me what.
11:22:33
REHM: Would you sing one verse of "Amazing Grace"?
11:22:39
COLLINS: Of
course I will. I wanted to tell you, I had some news that I wanted to
give you. "Amazing Grace" celebrates it very well. I just got
nominated for a Grammy.
11:22:49
REHM: Oh!
11:22:50
COLLINS: After 40 years.
11:22:51
REHM: How wonderful! And you're announcing it here. That's terrific.
11:22:57
COLLINS: Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound that saved a retch like me. I once was lost but now I'm found. Was blind but now I see.
11:23:37
REHM: Oh.
11:23:37
COLLINS: That's for you, Diane.
11:23:38
REHM: Oh, you beautiful woman. Thank you so much.
11:23:41
COLLINS: Thanks, honey. God Bless.
11:23:43
REHM: Thank you.
11:23:44
COLLINS: And Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
11:23:46
REHM: Merry Christmas to you as well. I love you.
11:23:50
COLLINS: Love you, too. Bye.
11:23:51
REHM: Bye. Oh, my goodness. What special treats. All right. Let's go to caller number three.
It was with crap like that, navel gazing and gushing, that Diane wrapped up her public radio career.
Even when Nick from New Hampshire called to ask if any callers over the years stood out, Diane didn't bother to address the listeners who had called in because, instead, she wanted to share a celebrity story.
You know, speaking of callers, I have to tell you, Tom Wolfe, in his gorgeous white suit, was on this program one day. And I'm talking about Tom Wolfe, who wrote "Bonfire of the Vanities." He was on this program one day. And, of course, the producers had reminded him several times to turn off his cell phone. And what happened? During the program, not only did his cell phone ring, but he answered it. He answered the telephone and said, hi, it's Tom. And the person on the other line began talking. And he said, well, you know, actually I'm on "The Diane Rehm Show," right now. Yeah. She's in Washington. He continued the phone call. And I'm sitting there and I'm glaring at him. And finally I said, Tom, would you be good enough to hang up? And he finally hung up the phone. You know, you never know what's going to happen in live radio.
How caring of Diane.
The listeners were never a guest.
It's a lie.
She loved to lie about listeners.
For example, she claimed her show took calls because, once upon a time, a guest didn't show up.
No, it took calls because it was a WAMU program.
It took calls the same way THE HOME SHOW had -- or, more frequently, tried to take calls. (In the early days, it was very hard to get callers.)
In the end, very little Diane said on the air was true -- and that's her real legacy.
Pathetic joke of the year Kurt Eichenwald
Insatiable idiot Kurt Eichenwald can't stop whining.
No, fool, you acted like a bitch for weeks online and that's why they're making fun of you.
A lot of people are making fun of you for many reasons -- not just due to your enthusiasm for kiddie porn.
They enjoy your misfortune not because you have epilepsy but because you're such a little whiner.
You've lied repeatedly -- including insisting that Donald Trump was in a mental home -- and it's no surprise people hate a liar.
You lied to THE NEW YORK TIMES which is why you don't work for them anymore.
Unlike you, most people don't look at kiddie porn online -- yeah, we know your lie, you wanted to 'save' the boy -- is that why you gave him thousands of dollars and lied about it to your employers?
Oh, wait, you lied and said epilepsy was the reason you lied to your employers.
Yeah, you tend to claim your disease whenever you've disgraced yourself in public.
It's a really a low bitch move from a scurrilous bitch.
But Kurt's one of the lowest bitches to ever slither across the dirt on his rotund belly.
For example, he attacked journalist Chris Floyd on Twitter -- apparently not realizing that Floyd was a journalist. Here's the opening of Floyd's COUNTERPUNCH piece on the attack:
I had a short exchange on Twitter last night with a national journalist of some note: Kurt Eichenwald of Newsweek. In this brief encounter, I learned a remarkable fact: no one can criticize the CIA in any way — unless you actually work for the CIA! And here I thought the purpose of journalism was to, you know, serve as watchdog on government, “speak truth to power,” question, probe, dig for facts and that kind of thing. But nope, that’s not it at all.
It turns out only those in power have the right to question, uh, those in power. Everyone else should “go crawl off and watch cartoons” and let the “adults” in power do their work. I have been in journalism, directly and tangentially, for 39 years, but I must admit that I never learned this secret until now. No wonder I never made it to Newsweek!
It began when I replied to a tweet by Eichenwald, questioning his use of the word “misinformation” for information that was actually true, whatever the source of the information might be. I also sought to ascertain the degree of credence he will give to the CIA in the interesting new political arrangement we are about to experience after Jan. 20. I thought I spoke — as is always my wont — with sweet reason. But Mr. Eichenwald seemed to suffer some sort of deep emotional wound from my comments and responded accordingly.
Know it all Kurt was a disgrace forever.
But NEWSWEEK likes to employ the crazies so he had a base.
And then crazies like the Debra Messings of the world fell for all his claims of scoops on Donald Trump -- scoops that never panned out.
He's piece of filth and a little bitch and that's why people don't like him.
He's yet again taken to hiding behind his disease -- no surprise, this happened right after Tucker Carlson, of all people, handed him his lunch on national television.
He's a joke to everyone.
GIZMODO MEDIA STAFF remembered Kurt at year's end:
Kurt Eichenwald, NewsweekRemember when Kurt Eichenwald’s explosive Newsweek piece totally changed the course of the election?
And remember when political pundits everywhere couldn’t shut up about his other explosive Newsweek piece?
Yeah,
us either. We do, however, remember when Eichenwald wrote a piece
incorrectly alleging that Trump read out false information he received
directly from Russian intelligence. We also remember when he wrote a
2,000-word, rambling defense of himself that was somehow even less intelligible
than the thing he was trying to defend in the first place. Yet despite
all that, and despite his 5,000-tweet-a-day quota, he still manages to
find time to compile extensive, homemade oppo binders on idiots.
It’s unethical to diagnose mental illness in strangers based on hearsay or simple observation of their online presence—as Kurt should well know—but if we say that Eichenwald seems unstable, paranoid, and probably delusional, just know that we are merely sending a secret signal to one of our many well-placed sources.
He can hide behind his disease all he wants but the reality is that Kurt made himself a joke.
He's pathetic.
Jesus healed those w/ epilepsy in Bible. Some Trump Christians make fun of em. Tonight theyll be in church praising Jesus. Think about that
680 replies2,808 retweets7,718 likes
No, fool, you acted like a bitch for weeks online and that's why they're making fun of you.
A lot of people are making fun of you for many reasons -- not just due to your enthusiasm for kiddie porn.
They enjoy your misfortune not because you have epilepsy but because you're such a little whiner.
You've lied repeatedly -- including insisting that Donald Trump was in a mental home -- and it's no surprise people hate a liar.
You lied to THE NEW YORK TIMES which is why you don't work for them anymore.
Unlike you, most people don't look at kiddie porn online -- yeah, we know your lie, you wanted to 'save' the boy -- is that why you gave him thousands of dollars and lied about it to your employers?
Oh, wait, you lied and said epilepsy was the reason you lied to your employers.
Yeah, you tend to claim your disease whenever you've disgraced yourself in public.
It's a really a low bitch move from a scurrilous bitch.
But Kurt's one of the lowest bitches to ever slither across the dirt on his rotund belly.
For example, he attacked journalist Chris Floyd on Twitter -- apparently not realizing that Floyd was a journalist. Here's the opening of Floyd's COUNTERPUNCH piece on the attack:
I had a short exchange on Twitter last night with a national journalist of some note: Kurt Eichenwald of Newsweek. In this brief encounter, I learned a remarkable fact: no one can criticize the CIA in any way — unless you actually work for the CIA! And here I thought the purpose of journalism was to, you know, serve as watchdog on government, “speak truth to power,” question, probe, dig for facts and that kind of thing. But nope, that’s not it at all.
It turns out only those in power have the right to question, uh, those in power. Everyone else should “go crawl off and watch cartoons” and let the “adults” in power do their work. I have been in journalism, directly and tangentially, for 39 years, but I must admit that I never learned this secret until now. No wonder I never made it to Newsweek!
It began when I replied to a tweet by Eichenwald, questioning his use of the word “misinformation” for information that was actually true, whatever the source of the information might be. I also sought to ascertain the degree of credence he will give to the CIA in the interesting new political arrangement we are about to experience after Jan. 20. I thought I spoke — as is always my wont — with sweet reason. But Mr. Eichenwald seemed to suffer some sort of deep emotional wound from my comments and responded accordingly.
Know it all Kurt was a disgrace forever.
But NEWSWEEK likes to employ the crazies so he had a base.
And then crazies like the Debra Messings of the world fell for all his claims of scoops on Donald Trump -- scoops that never panned out.
He's piece of filth and a little bitch and that's why people don't like him.
He's yet again taken to hiding behind his disease -- no surprise, this happened right after Tucker Carlson, of all people, handed him his lunch on national television.
He's a joke to everyone.
Kurt Eichenwald, Paul Krugman, and Keith Olbermann walk into a bar... bartender says, "Sorry gents, the insane asylum is one block over"
110 replies996 retweets2,327 likes
GIZMODO MEDIA STAFF remembered Kurt at year's end:
Kurt Eichenwald, NewsweekRemember when Kurt Eichenwald’s explosive Newsweek piece totally changed the course of the election?
I have a piece coming out in @Newsweek next week that I believe could well upend the dialogue in this election. Stay tuned.
And remember when political pundits everywhere couldn’t shut up about his other explosive Newsweek piece?
Tomorrow, the political discussion of the day may well be about my exclusive piece scheduled to appear then in @Newsweek.
It’s unethical to diagnose mental illness in strangers based on hearsay or simple observation of their online presence—as Kurt should well know—but if we say that Eichenwald seems unstable, paranoid, and probably delusional, just know that we are merely sending a secret signal to one of our many well-placed sources.
He can hide behind his disease all he wants but the reality is that Kurt made himself a joke.
He's pathetic.
Barack plays the movie game
A Fun Playful hug from President Obama
78 replies277 retweets1,069 likes
Lifelong Anthony Perkins fan Barack Obama attempts to recreate the car scene from MAHOGANY with Diana Ross.