ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Cop Tasers Camel (Live Fire Target Practice?)

Amplify’d from 12.68.233.230
‘Hostile’ camel tased at Kiln farm
By Dwayne Bremer
An out-of-control camel at a Kiln residence has attacked two people in the past month, causing damage to a car and sending one man to the hospital, authorities said Wednesday. One of the instances resulted in a sheriff's deputy using a Taser to subdue the beast.



The animal, a Dromedary camel, lives at the home of Donna Berdine at 3316 Firetower Road. The Dromedary or "Arabic" camel is known for its single hump, in contrast to the Bactrian camel, which has two.



They are native to dry desert areas. Berdine also has other exotic animals at her residence, including a zebra.



Camels, zebras, and horses roam freely at the home of Donna Berdine in Kiln. Over the past month, however, authorities say the domesticated camel has attacked two people, damaged a car, and the beast recently had to be subdued with a Taser.



Her property is fenced and gated with the animals roaming freely inside.



Major Bobby Underwood of the Hancock County Sheriff's Department said Wednesday his department first began getting complaints about the camel on Dec. 4.



According to Underwood, Nedra Lewis of Waveland was driving through Kiln when she noticed the camel outside the fence at Berdine's residence.



Lewis told police that she pulled into the driveway hoping to notify the owners that the camel was on the lam, but the camel attacked her red Nissan, Underwood said.



Startled and trapped in her car, Lewis called police, Underwood said.



Deputy Ed Merwin arrived a short time later and saw the camel still attacking the vehicle, according to Merwin's police report.



"As I approached the animal in an attempt to run it away from attacking the female's car, the animal turned and started to come towards me," Merwin said. "I tried to chase the animal away so the female could get her car to safety outside the gate. The animal was not complying with my commands. At this time, the animal was tased once. It fled to to the other side of the property."



The camel inflicted several scratches on Lewis' car, Merwin said. Berdine was contacted by phone and agreed to pay for the damages, the report said.



The camel was allowed to stay on the property, Underwood said.



A few weeks later, however, the camel was apparently at it once again.



Underwood said deputies received another complaint on Christmas about the camel knocking down a man.



Underwood said the camel apparently injured the man, who was taken to the hospital, Underwood said.



The name of the victim was not available by press time Thursday.



Former county attorney Gerald Gex said Wednesday he does not recall the county ever having a specific ordinance against exotic animals.



"There are several state statutes involving dangerous animals, but I have not been able to locate one involving a camel," Gex said.



Underwood said he is not sure what the camel's future will be.



"In my 42 years in law enforcement, I've never had to deal with a camel problem," he said. "I've been told the camel is really gentle. I don't know what got him fired up. We are going to continue to monitor the situation."



Berdine was not available for comment by press time Thursday, but someone at her residence said the camel was between two and three years old.
Read more at 12.68.233.230
 

Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged TV News

Amplify’d from www.nytimes.com

Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged TV News



By DAVID BARSTOW and ROBIN STEIN

t is the kind of TV news coverage every president covets.


"Thank you, Bush. Thank you, U.S.A.," a jubilant Iraqi-American told a camera crew in Kansas City for a segment about reaction to the fall of Baghdad. A second report told of "another success" in the Bush administration's "drive to strengthen aviation security"; the reporter called it "one of the most remarkable campaigns in aviation history." A third segment, broadcast in January, described the administration's determination to open markets for American farmers.


To a viewer, each report looked like any other 90-second segment on the local news. In fact, the federal government produced all three. The report from Kansas City was made by the State Department. The "reporter" covering airport safety was actually a public relations professional working under a false name for the Transportation Security Administration. The farming segment was done by the Agriculture Department's office of communications.


Under the Bush administration, the federal government has aggressively used a well-established tool of public relations: the prepackaged, ready-to-serve news report that major corporations have long distributed to TV stations to pitch everything from headache remedies to auto insurance. In all, at least 20 federal agencies, including the Defense Department and the Census Bureau, have made and distributed hundreds of television news segments in the past four years, records and interviews show. Many were subsequently broadcast on local stations across the country without any acknowledgement of the government's role in their production.


This winter, Washington has been roiled by revelations that a handful of columnists wrote in support of administration policies without disclosing they had accepted payments from the government. But the administration's efforts to generate positive news coverage have been considerably more pervasive than previously known. At the same time, records and interviews suggest widespread complicity or negligence by television stations, given industry ethics standards that discourage the broadcast of prepackaged news segments from any outside group without revealing the source.


Federal agencies are forthright with broadcasters about the origin of the news segments they distribute. The reports themselves, though, are designed to fit seamlessly into the typical local news broadcast. In most cases, the "reporters" are careful not to state in the segment that they work for the government. Their reports generally avoid overt ideological appeals. Instead, the government's news-making apparatus has produced a quiet drumbeat of broadcasts describing a vigilant and compassionate administration.


Some reports were produced to support the administration's most cherished policy objectives, like regime change in Iraq or Medicare reform. Others focused on less prominent matters, like the administration's efforts to offer free after-school tutoring, its campaign to curb childhood obesity, its initiatives to preserve forests and wetlands, its plans to fight computer viruses, even its attempts to fight holiday drunken driving. They often feature "interviews" with senior administration officials in which questions are scripted and answers rehearsed. Critics, though, are excluded, as are any hints of mismanagement, waste or controversy.


Some of the segments were broadcast in some of nation's largest television markets, including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas and Atlanta.


An examination of government-produced news reports offers a look inside a world where the traditional lines between public relations and journalism have become tangled, where local anchors introduce prepackaged segments with "suggested" lead-ins written by public relations experts. It is a world where government-produced reports disappear into a maze of satellite transmissions, Web portals, syndicated news programs and network feeds, only to emerge cleansed on the other side as "independent" journalism.


It is also a world where all participants benefit.


Local affiliates are spared the expense of digging up original material. Public relations firms secure government contracts worth millions of dollars. The major networks, which help distribute the releases, collect fees from the government agencies that produce segments and the affiliates that show them. The administration, meanwhile, gets out an unfiltered message, delivered in the guise of traditional reporting.


The practice, which also occurred in the Clinton administration, is continuing despite President Bush's recent call for a clearer demarcation between journalism and government publicity efforts. "There needs to be a nice independent relationship between the White House and the press," Mr. Bush told reporters in January, explaining why his administration would no longer pay pundits to support his policies.


In interviews, though, press officers for several federal agencies said the president's prohibition did not apply to government-made television news segments, also known as video news releases. They described the segments as factual, politically neutral and useful to viewers. They insisted that there was no similarity to the case of Armstrong Williams, a conservative columnist who promoted the administration's chief education initiative, the No Child Left Behind Act, without disclosing $240,000 in payments from the Education Department.


What is more, these officials argued, it is the responsibility of television news directors to inform viewers that a segment about the government was in fact written by the government. "Talk to the television stations that ran it without attribution," said William A. Pierce, spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services. "This is not our problem. We can't be held responsible for their actions."


Yet in three separate opinions in the past year, the Government Accountability Office, an investigative arm of Congress that studies the federal government and its expenditures, has held that government-made news segments may constitute improper "covert propaganda" even if their origin is made clear to the television stations. The point, the office said, is whether viewers know the origin. Last month, in its most recent finding, the G.A.O. said federal agencies may not produce prepackaged news reports "that conceal or do not clearly identify for the television viewing audience that the agency was the source of those materials."


It is not certain, though, whether the office's pronouncements will have much practical effect. Although a few federal agencies have stopped making television news segments, others continue. And on Friday, the Justice Department and the Office of Management and Budget circulated a memorandum instructing all executive branch agencies to ignore the G.A.O. findings. The memorandum said the G.A.O. failed to distinguish between covert propaganda and "purely informational" news segments made by the government. Such informational segments are legal, the memorandum said, whether or not an agency's role in producing them is disclosed to viewers.


Even if agencies do disclose their role, those efforts can easily be undone in a broadcaster's editing room. Some news organizations, for example, simply identify the government's "reporter" as one of their own and then edit out any phrase suggesting the segment was not of their making.


So in a recent segment produced by the Agriculture Department, the agency's narrator ended the report by saying "In Princess Anne, Maryland, I'm Pat O'Leary reporting for the U.S. Department of Agriculture." Yet AgDay, a syndicated farm news program that is shown on some 160 stations, simply introduced the segment as being by "AgDay's Pat O'Leary." The final sentence was then trimmed to "In Princess Anne, Maryland, I'm Pat O'Leary reporting."


Brian Conrady, executive producer of AgDay, defended the changes. "We can clip 'Department of Agriculture' at our choosing," he said. "The material we get from the U.S.D.A., if we choose to air it and how we choose to air it is our choice."


Spreading the Word: Government Efforts and One Woman's Role


Karen Ryan cringes at the phrase "covert propaganda." These are words for dictators and spies, and yet they have attached themselves to her like a pair of handcuffs.


Not long ago, Ms. Ryan was a much sought-after "reporter" for news segments produced by the federal government. A journalist at ABC and PBS who became a public relations consultant, Ms. Ryan worked on about a dozen reports for seven federal agencies in 2003 and early 2004. Her segments for the Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of National Drug Control Policy were a subject of the accountability office's recent inquiries.


The G.A.O. concluded that the two agencies "designed and executed" their segments "to be indistinguishable from news stories produced by private sector television news organizations." A significant part of that execution, the office found, was Ms. Ryan's expert narration, including her typical sign-off - "In Washington, I'm Karen Ryan reporting" - delivered in a tone and cadence familiar to television reporters everywhere.


Last March, when The New York Times first described her role in a segment about new prescription drug benefits for Medicare patients, reaction was harsh. In Cleveland, The Plain Dealer ran an editorial under the headline "Karen Ryan, You're a Phony," and she was the object of late-night jokes by Jon Stewart and received hate mail.


"I'm like the Marlboro man," she said in a recent interview.


In fact, Ms. Ryan was a bit player who made less than $5,000 for her work on government reports. She was also playing an accepted role in a lucrative art form, the video news release. "I just don't feel I did anything wrong," she said. "I just did what everyone else in the industry was doing."


It is a sizable industry. One of its largest players, Medialink Worldwide Inc., has about 200 employees, with offices in New York and London. It produces and distributes about 1,000 video news releases a year, most commissioned by major corporations. The Public Relations Society of America even gives an award, the Bronze Anvil, for the year's best video news release.


Several major television networks play crucial intermediary roles in the business. Fox, for example, has an arrangement with Medialink to distribute video news releases to 130 affiliates through its video feed service, Fox News Edge. CNN distributes releases to 750 stations in the United States and Canada through a similar feed service, CNN Newsource. Associated Press Television News does the same thing worldwide with its Global Video Wire.


"We look at them and determine whether we want them to be on the feed," David M. Winstrom, director of Fox News Edge, said of video news releases. "If I got one that said tobacco cures cancer or something like that, I would kill it."


In essence, video news releases seek to exploit a growing vulnerability of television news: Even as news staffs at the major networks are shrinking, many local stations are expanding their hours of news coverage without adding reporters.


"No TV news organization has the resources in labor, time or funds to cover every worthy story," one video news release company, TVA Productions, said in a sales pitch to potential clients, adding that "90 percent of TV newsrooms now rely on video news releases."


Federal agencies have been commissioning video news releases since at least the first Clinton administration. An increasing number of state agencies are producing television news reports, too; the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department alone has produced some 500 video news releases since 1993.


Under the Bush administration, federal agencies appear to be producing more releases, and on a broader array of topics.


A definitive accounting is nearly impossible. There is no comprehensive archive of local television news reports, as there is in print journalism, so there is no easy way to determine what has been broadcast, and when and where.


Still, several large agencies, including the Defense Department, the State Department and the Department of Health and Human Services, acknowledge expanded efforts to produce news segments. Many members of Mr. Bush's first-term cabinet appeared in such segments.


A recent study by Congressional Democrats offers another rough indicator: the Bush administration spent $254 million in its first term on public relations contracts, nearly double what the last Clinton administration spent.


Karen Ryan was part of this push - a "paid shill for the Bush administration," as she self-mockingly puts it. It is, she acknowledges, an uncomfortable title.


Ms. Ryan, 48, describes herself as not especially political, and certainly no Bush die-hard. She had hoped for a long career in journalism. But over time, she said, she grew dismayed by what she saw as the decline of television news - too many cut corners, too many ratings stunts.


In the end, she said, the jump to video news releases from journalism was not as far as one might expect. "It's almost the same thing," she said.


There are differences, though. When she went to interview Tommy G. Thompson, then the health and human services secretary, about the new Medicare drug benefit, it was not the usual reporter-source exchange. First, she said, he already knew the questions, and she was there mostly to help him give better, snappier answers. And second, she said, everyone involved is aware of a segment's potential political benefits.


Her Medicare report, for example, was distributed in January 2004, not long before Mr. Bush hit the campaign trail and cited the drug benefit as one of his major accomplishments.


The script suggested that local anchors lead into the report with this line: "In December, President Bush signed into law the first-ever prescription drug benefit for people with Medicare." In the segment, Mr. Bush is shown signing the legislation as Ms. Ryan describes the new benefits and reports that "all people with Medicare will be able to get coverage that will lower their prescription drug spending."


The segment made no mention of the many critics who decry the law as an expensive gift to the pharmaceutical industry. The G.A.O. found that the segment was "not strictly factual," that it contained "notable omissions" and that it amounted to "a favorable report" about a controversial program.


And yet this news segment, like several others narrated by Ms. Ryan, reached an audience of millions. According to the accountability office, at least 40 stations ran some part of the Medicare report. Video news releases distributed by the Office of National Drug Control Policy, including one narrated by Ms. Ryan, were shown on 300 stations and reached 22 million households. According to Video Monitoring Services of America, a company that tracks news programs in major cities, Ms. Ryan's segments on behalf of the government were broadcast a total of at least 64 times in the 40 largest television markets.


Even these measures, though, do not fully capture the reach of her work. Consider the case of News 10 Now, a cable station in Syracuse owned by Time Warner. In February 2004, days after the government distributed its Medicare segment, News 10 Now broadcast a virtually identical report, including the suggested anchor lead-in. The News 10 Now segment, however, was not narrated by Ms. Ryan. Instead, the station edited out the original narration and had one of its reporters repeat the script almost word for word.


The station's news director, Sean McNamara, wrote in an e-mail message, "Our policy on provided video is to clearly identify the source of that video." In the case of the Medicare report, he said, the station believed it was produced and distributed by a major network and did not know that it had originally come from the government.


Ms. Ryan said she was surprised by the number of stations willing to run her government segments without any editing or acknowledgement of origin. As proud as she says she is of her work, she did not hesitate, even for a second, when asked if she would have broadcast one of her government reports if she were a local news director.


"Absolutely not."


Little Oversight: TV's Code of Ethics, With Uncertain Weight


"Clearly disclose the origin of information and label all material provided by outsiders."


Those words are from the code of ethics of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, the main professional society for broadcast news directors in the United States. Some stations go further, all but forbidding the use of any outside material, especially entire reports. And spurred by embarrassing publicity last year about Karen Ryan, the news directors association is close to proposing a stricter rule, said its executive director, Barbara Cochran.


Whether a stricter ethics code will have much effect is unclear; it is not hard to find broadcasters who are not adhering to the existing code, and the association has no enforcement powers.


The Federal Communications Commission does, but it has never disciplined a station for showing government-made news segments without disclosing their origin, a spokesman said.


Could it? Several lawyers experienced with F.C.C. rules say yes. They point to a 2000 decision by the agency, which stated, "Listeners and viewers are entitled to know by whom they are being persuaded."


In interviews, more than a dozen station news directors endorsed this view without hesitation. Several expressed disdain for the prepackaged segments they received daily from government agencies, corporations and special interest groups who wanted to use their airtime and credibility to sell or influence.


But when told that their stations showed government-made reports without attribution, most reacted with indignation. Their stations, they insisted, would never allow their news programs to be co-opted by segments fed from any outside party, let alone the government.


"They're inherently one-sided, and they don't offer the possibility for follow-up questions - or any questions at all," said Kathy Lehmann Francis, until recently the news director at WDRB, the Fox affiliate in Louisville, Ky.


Yet records from Video Monitoring Services of America indicate that WDRB has broadcast at least seven Karen Ryan segments, including one for the government, without disclosing their origin to viewers.


Mike Stutz, news director at KGTV, the ABC affiliate in San Diego, was equally opposed to putting government news segments on the air.


"It amounts to propaganda, doesn't it?" he said.


Again, though, records from Video Monitoring Services of America show that from 2001 to 2004 KGTV ran at least one government-made segment featuring Ms. Ryan, 5 others featuring her work on behalf of corporations, and 19 produced by corporations and other outside organizations. It does not appear that KGTV viewers were told the origin of these 25 segments.


"I thought we were pretty solid," Mr. Stutz said, adding that they intend to take more precautions.


Confronted with such evidence, most news directors were at a loss to explain how the segments made it on the air. Some said they were unable to find archive tapes that would help answer the question. Others promised to look into it, then stopped returning telephone messages. A few removed the segments from their Web sites, promised greater vigilance in the future or pleaded ignorance.


Afghanistan to Memphis: An Agency's Report Ends Up on the Air


On Sept. 11, 2002, WHBQ, the Fox affiliate in Memphis, marked the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks with an uplifting report on how assistance from the United States was helping to liberate the women of Afghanistan.


Tish Clark, a reporter for WHBQ, described how Afghan women, once barred from schools and jobs, were at last emerging from their burkas, taking up jobs as seamstresses and bakers, sending daughters off to new schools, receiving decent medical care for the first time and even participating in a fledgling democracy. Her segment included an interview with an Afghan teacher who recounted how the Taliban only allowed boys to attend school. An Afghan doctor described how the Taliban refused to let male physicians treat women.


In short, Ms. Clark's report seemed to corroborate, however modestly, a central argument of the Bush foreign policy, that forceful American intervention abroad was spreading freedom, improving lives and winning friends.


What the people of Memphis were not told, though, was that the interviews used by WHBQ were actually conducted by State Department contractors. The contractors also selected the quotes used from those interviews and shot the video that went with the narration. They also wrote the narration, much of which Ms. Clark repeated with only minor changes.


As it happens, the viewers of WHBQ were not the only ones in the dark.


Ms. Clark, now Tish Clark Dunning, said in an interview that she, too, had no idea the report originated at the State Department. "If that's true, I'm very shocked that anyone would false report on anything like that," she said.


How a television reporter in Memphis unwittingly came to narrate a segment by the State Department reveals much about the extent to which government-produced news accounts have seeped into the broader new media landscape.


The explanation begins inside the White House, where the president's communications advisers devised a strategy after Sept. 11, 2001, to encourage supportive news coverage of the fight against terrorism. The idea, they explained to reporters at the time, was to counter charges of American imperialism by generating accounts that emphasized American efforts to liberate and rebuild Afghanistan and Iraq.


An important instrument of this strategy was the Office of Broadcasting Services, a State Department unit of 30 or so editors and technicians whose typical duties include distributing video from news conferences. But in early 2002, with close editorial direction from the White House, the unit began producing narrated feature reports, many of them promoting American achievements in Afghanistan and Iraq and reinforcing the administration's rationales for the invasions. These reports were then widely distributed in the United States and around the world for use by local television stations. In all, the State Department has produced 59 such segments.


United States law contains provisions intended to prevent the domestic dissemination of government propaganda. The 1948 Smith-Mundt Act, for example, allows Voice of America to broadcast pro-government news to foreign audiences, but not at home. Yet State Department officials said that law does not apply to the Office of Broadcasting Services. In any event, said Richard A. Boucher, a State Department spokesman: "Our goal is to put out facts and the truth. We're not a propaganda agency."


Even so, as a senior department official, Patricia Harrison, told Congress last year, the Bush administration has come to regard such "good news" segments as "powerful strategic tools" for influencing public opinion. And a review of the department's segments reveals a body of work in sync with the political objectives set forth by the White House communications team after 9/11.


In June 2003, for example, the unit produced a segment that depicted American efforts to distribute food and water to the people of southern Iraq. "After living for decades in fear, they are now receiving assistance - and building trust - with their coalition liberators," the unidentified narrator concluded.


Several segments focused on the liberation of Afghan women, which a White House memo from January 2003 singled out as a "prime example" of how "White House-led efforts could facilitate strategic, proactive communications in the war on terror."


Tracking precisely how a "good news" report on Afghanistan could have migrated to Memphis from the State Department is far from easy. The State Department typically distributes its segments via satellite to international news organizations like Reuters and Associated Press Television News, which in turn distribute them to the major United States networks, which then transmit them to local affiliates.


"Once these products leave our hands, we have no control," Robert A. Tappan, the State Department's deputy assistant secretary for public affairs, said in an interview. The department, he said, never intended its segments to be shown unedited and without attribution by local news programs. "We do our utmost to identify them as State Department-produced products."


Representatives for the networks insist that government-produced reports are clearly labeled when they are distributed to affiliates. Yet with segments bouncing from satellite to satellite, passing from one news organization to another, it is easy to see the potential for confusion. Indeed, in response to questions from The Times, Associated Press Television News acknowledged that they might have distributed at least one segment about Afghanistan to the major United States networks without identifying it as the product of the State Department. A spokesman said it could have "slipped through our net because of a sourcing error."


Kenneth W. Jobe, vice president for news at WHBQ in Memphis, said he could not explain how his station came to broadcast the State Department's segment on Afghan women. "It's the same piece, there's no mistaking it," he said in an interview, insisting that it would not happen again.


Mr. Jobe, who was not with WHBQ in 2002, said the station's script for the segment has no notes explaining its origin. But Tish Clark Dunning said it was her impression at the time that the Afghan segment was her station's version of one done first by network correspondents at either Fox News or CNN. It is not unusual, she said, for a local station to take network reports and then give them a hometown look.


"I didn't actually go to Afghanistan," she said. "I took that story and reworked it. I had to do some research on my own. I remember looking on the Internet and finding out how it all started as far as women covering their faces and everything."


At the State Department, Mr. Tappan said the broadcasting office is moving away from producing narrated feature segments. Instead, the department is increasingly supplying only the ingredients for reports - sound bites and raw video. Since the shift, he said, even more State Department material is making its way into news broadcasts.


Meeting a Need: Rising Budget Pressures, Ready-to-Run Segments


WCIA is a small station with a big job in central Illinois.


Each weekday, WCIA's news department produces a three-hour morning program, a noon broadcast and three evening programs. There are plans to add a 9 p.m. broadcast. The staff, though, has been cut to 37 from 39. "We are doing more with the same," said Jim P. Gee, the news director.


Farming is crucial in Mr. Gee's market, yet with so many demands, he said, "it is hard for us to justify having a reporter just focusing on agriculture."


To fill the gap, WCIA turned to the Agriculture Department, which has assembled one of the most effective public relations operations inside the federal government. The department has a Broadcast Media and Technology Center with an annual budget of $3.2 million that each year produces some 90 "mission messages" for local stations - mostly feature segments about the good works of the Agriculture Department.


"I don't want to use the word 'filler,' per se, but they meet a need we have," Mr. Gee said.


The Agriculture Department's two full-time reporters, Bob Ellison and Pat O'Leary, travel the country filing reports, which are vetted by the department's office of communications before they are distributed via satellite and mail. Alisa Harrison, who oversees the communications office, said Mr. Ellison and Mr. O'Leary provide unbiased, balanced and accurate coverage.



"They cover the secretary just like any other reporter," she said.


Invariably, though, their segments offer critic-free accounts of the department's policies and programs. In one report, Mr. Ellison told of the agency's efforts to help Florida clean up after several hurricanes.



''They've done a fantastic job,'' a grateful local official said in the segment.



More recently, Mr. Ellison reported that Mike Johanns, the new agriculture secretary, and the White House were determined to reopen Japan to American beef products. Of his new boss, Mr. Ellison reported, ''He called Bush the best envoy in the world.''



WCIA, based in Champaign, has run 26 segments made by the Agriculture Department over the past three months alone. Or put another way, WCIA has run 26 reports that did not cost it anything to produce.



Mr. Gee, the news director, readily acknowledges that these accounts are not exactly independent, tough-minded journalism. But, he added: ''We don't think they're propaganda. They meet our journalistic standards. They're informative. They're balanced.''



More than a year ago, WCIA asked the Agriculture Department to record a special sign-off that implies the segments are the work of WCIA reporters. So, for example, instead of closing his report with ''I'm Bob Ellison, reporting for the U.S.D.A.,'' Mr. Ellison says, ''With the U.S.D.A., I'm Bob Ellison, reporting for 'The Morning Show.'''



Mr. Gee said the customized sign-off helped raise ''awareness of the name of our station.'' Could it give viewers the idea that Mr. Ellison is reporting on location with the U.S.D.A. for WCIA? ''We think viewers can make up their own minds,'' Mr. Gee said.



Ms. Harrison, the Agriculture Department press secretary, said the WCIA sign-off was an exception. The general policy, she said, is to make clear in each segment that the reporter works for the department. In any event, she added, she did not think there was much potential for viewer confusion. ''It's pretty clear to me,'' she said.



The 'Good News' People: A Menu of Reports From Military Hot Spots



The Defense Department is working hard to produce and distribute its own news segments for television audiences in the United States.



The Pentagon Channel, available only inside the Defense Department last year, is now being offered to every cable and satellite operator in the United States. Army public affairs specialists, equipped with portable satellite transmitters, are roaming war zones in Afghanistan and Iraq, beaming news reports, raw video and interviews to TV stations in the United States. All a local news director has to do is log on to a military-financed Web site, www.dvidshub.net, browse a menu of segments and request a free satellite feed.



Then there is the Army and Air Force Hometown News Service, a unit of 40 reporters and producers set up to send local stations news segments highlighting the accomplishments of military members.



''We're the 'good news' people,'' said Larry W. Gilliam, the unit's deputy director.



Each year, the unit films thousands of soldiers sending holiday greetings to their hometowns. Increasingly, the unit also produces news reports that reach large audiences. The 50 stories it filed last year were broadcast 236 times in all, reaching 41 million households in the United States.



The news service makes it easy for local stations to run its segments unedited. Reporters, for example, are never identified by their military titles. ''We know if we put a rank on there they're not going to put it on their air,'' Mr. Gilliam said.



Each account is also specially tailored for local broadcast. A segment sent to a station in Topeka, Kan., would include an interview with a service member from there. If the same report is sent to Oklahoma City, the soldier is switched out for one from Oklahoma City. ''We try to make the individual soldier a star in their hometown,'' Mr. Gilliam said, adding that segments were distributed only to towns and cities selected by the service members interviewed.



Few stations acknowledge the military's role in the segments. ''Just tune in and you'll see a minute-and-a-half news piece and it looks just like they went out and did the story,'' Mr. Gilliam said. The unit, though, makes no attempt to advance any particular political or policy agenda, he said.



''We don't editorialize at all,'' he said.



Yet sometimes the ''good news'' approach carries political meaning, intended or not. Such was the case after the Abu Ghraib prison scandal surfaced last spring. Although White House officials depicted the abuse of Iraqi detainees as the work of a few rogue soldiers, the case raised serious questions about the training of military police officers.



A short while later, Mr. Gilliam's unit distributed a news segment, sent to 34 stations, that examined the training of prison guards at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri, where some of the military police officers implicated at Abu Ghraib had been trained.



''One of the most important lessons they learn is to treat prisoners strictly but fairly,'' the reporter said in the segment, which depicted a regimen emphasizing respect for detainees. A trainer told the reporter that military police officers were taught to ''treat others as they would want to be treated.'' The account made no mention of Abu Ghraib or how the scandal had prompted changes in training at Fort Leonard Wood.



According to Mr. Gilliam, the report was unrelated to any effort by the Defense Department to rebut suggestions of a broad command failure.



''Are you saying that the Pentagon called down and said, 'We need some good publicity?''' he asked. ''No, not at all.''





Anne E. Kornblut contributed reporting for this article.





Read more at www.nytimes.com
 

Here's another great mystery for you!

One of the tantalising mysteries of archaeology has been the

zodiac.



Would you believe that all over the world – despite language

differences – isolated ancient cultures had IDENTICAL meanings

for the names of the constellations and stars.



For example, the same group of stars was called Virgo by the

Romans, Bethulah by the Hebrews, Parthenos by the Greeks, and

Kanya by the Indians. And every one of these names means

Virgin.



Investigators have come to the conclusion that all nations had

an original zodiac with a common source.



WHAT IS THE ZODIAC?



Zodiac? you ask. Isn’t that an astrological term? Not really.

Perhaps before proceeding further we should define our terms.



Astrology is the linking of positions and aspects of celestial

bodies to the belief that they influence earthly and human

affairs. Astronomy is purely and simply the scientific study

of the celestial bodies and phenomena. The zodiac belongs to

astronomy.



You see, very early in human history, the stars were named

and arranged into groups (constellations) and drawn on sky

charts as pictures of animals, people and other objects.



These constellations extend in a belt about 16 degrees wide,

encircling the earth. If the stars could be seen in daytime,

the sun, moon and planets would appear to move through this

belt over the course of one year, in a path called the

ecliptic.



It is this belt, with 12 months for its steps or stages, that

we call the zodiac (not from the Greek life as is commonly

supposed, but from a more ancient Hebrew word meaning a way

by steps).



Each stage of the yearly cycle contains its own group of stars

designated by a picture, or sign. These are the 12 signs of

the zodiac.



Each sign is accompanied by 3 more adjacent signs, called

decans (pieces). This makes a numbered and well-ordered set

of 48 signs (12 groups of 4).



(Actually there are 88 constellations in all, but only 48 lie

within the band across the sky known as the zodiac.)



“EXPERTS” UNABLE TO EXPLAIN



The world has looked in vain for the origin of these inventions.

Current attempts to explain the zodiac's existence are clearly

lame and absurd, with no supporting fact.



It has been taught in introductory astronomy classes that these

star groupings resulted from the fantasies of primitive

imaginations.



Ask any expert, “Where did the constellations come from?”



“To identify the locations of surrounding nations,” some will

reply.



“No,” retort others. “They come from observations of the

seasons and man's seasonal occupations.”



For example, in December the sun was seen ascending toward the

north, so men gave that month the sign of a Goat, because goats

like to climb rocks! Hmm…er, well.



September's equal days and nights led to the drawing of the

sign of the Scales, it is said (though one wonders why March had

no such sign, and unfortunately - but don't dare mention it -

these “equal” Balances have one side up and the other down!).



October, abundant in fruit, meant that many people got sick,

hence a Scorpion! (These wizards seem unworried by the fact that

the scorpion has no particular season.)



Such delightful twaddle has actually appeared [don't laugh] in

our books of science.



It is true that some of the signs have at times been used as

seasonal markers. However, being of less than infinite

intelligence, I find myself asking a few dumb questions.



For starters, how is it there is not one country anywhere that

the interpretations for all the signs fit?



Then again, why, if the signs were developed to reflect local

planting conditions (which would differ in each global region),

or to celebrate local legends, then why are the signs - from

Mexico to Africa to Polynesia - the same the world over?

(Dead Men’s Secrets, p.17. <http://www.beforeus.com> )



Something else. Modern explanation is limited to only 12 of

the constellations. What of the remaining 36 equally

conspicuous figures?



One could go on, but you get the point. Is it not disturbing?



Here is a great and masterly system of ancient hieroglyphics,

very ancient and in use today, which modern man cannot

historically or scientifically explain.



It baffles them. So they guess. And the flippancy with which

they dispose of some of the problems, while ignoring others,

shows that they have not fully taken in the case.



I feel sorry for the theorists, but that will not do.



There is enough evidence now to show that not until Greece,

Rome and later, did such mistaken notions arise. The more

ancient peoples never so explained these signs.



Several ancient nations, such as the Chaldeans, the Egyptians,

the Persians, the Indians, and the Chinese, although seated

at some great distance from each other, possessed astronomical

formulae common to them all.



These were handed down to them by tradition from some general

source: for they used them, as our workmen use certain

mechanical or geometrical rules, without any knowledge of the

principles on which they were originally constructed.



Research now suggests that the constellation figures were

designed as a pictorial scientific coordinate system. In other

words, a set of imaginary lines for measuring positions.



But the pictures formed by them told a story.



A COMMON ORIGIN?



Is it possible that the system had one common origin?  Why do

I ask that? Because we find that this same star story was

scattered across the whole ancient world.



ANCIENT STAR MAPS RECORDED A PROPHECY



A prophecy?  Yes, it was a prophecy – and shown on star charts

in 48 pictures as well as in the meanings of star names.



So, what was this prophecy? That’s clear when you examine the

ancient names. It was about an expected coming Deliverer.



So many of us have just assumed that the star signs were to

tell peoples’ fortunes through the stars?



Oh, come on! It’s evident they had nothing to do with astrology.

They were known long before astrology was ever thought of.



It turns out that the ancient civilizations believed that a

serpent (representing the Devil) had taken control of the earth.



They believed that a virgin’s baby would fight the serpent,

defeat him and bring life, peace and happiness back to mankind.



The hieroglyphic pictures on the star maps plainly showed this.

It was a prophecy that parents around the world passed down to

their children.



In fact, carefully researching these star maps myself, I was

able to catalogue no less than 116 absolute parallelisms between

these star messages and prophecies in the Hebrew Scriptures

which told of the same coming Deliverer.



Both sources told the same, identical story – from beginning

to end… the prophecy of a Messiah who would come to rescue men

and woman of planet Earth.



OLDER THAN EVENTUAL “CHRIST” LEGENDS



How old are these star signs?



From internal evidences, it has been calculated that both the

solar and lunar zodiacs had their origin when the summer

solstice
was in the first degree of Virgo, about 4000 BC.



As you may already know, each year the stars rise and set some

50.2 seconds later. In 2,156 years they fall back 30 degrees.



It has been calculated that when the earliest zodiac sphere was

drawn, the position of the stars in relation to earth was

almost 90 degrees different from now.



So this brings us close to 4000 BC. That’s 6,000 years ago.



To tie the evidence together, it now appears that a promised

Messiah was portrayed on star maps that go back thousands of

years older than the various “christ” legends of India, Mexico,

Greece and Rome.



This prophecy was known to mankind LONG BEFORE the time of

the Sumerians, the Indians or the Egyptians.



In fact, whether you believe them or not, the ancients

themselves claimed it had been handed down from the first

parents of the human race.



If this has whetted your appetite for more scientific discovery,

you may like to pursue this further. Here’s a good starting

point:

http://www.beforeus.com/stolen-id.php



I wish you a great week ahead.



Kind regards

Jonathan Gray

info@archaeologyanswers.com

Bondage of Corruption Pt. 1: Culture


Bondage of Corruption Pt. 1: Culture

“Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.” Romans 8:21



The Holy Bible declares that corruption leads to bondage, while true liberty is only available to those who are freed from corruption by being counted amongst the children of God. In America, many today confuse liberty with license–that is, license in a sense of the freedom to behave as one wishes, especially in a way that results in excessive or unacceptable behavior. This behavior views corruption as freedom rather than bondage.



Nowhere is this spirit more easily observable than in our entertainment and entertainers–our storytellers, our musicians, our artists. This is made possible by a diversion away from the essence of things–the essence of what is good and what is intrinsically bad–and a preference for promoting the concept of the subjective over the reality of the objective.



It is manifestly unpleasant to hear fingernails dragged across a chalkboard. It becomes no less hideous when you make a video of this activity and play it on an endless loop, emblazoned on a hundred connected TV monitors in a museum, calling it an art installation. No matter how artfully done, it remains unpleasant.



It has been construed that pushing the boundaries of propriety–indeed, challenging the very notions of propriety, good taste, manners and common decency–somehow leads to better more legitimate art.

In spite of the general populous finding much of this sort of “art” repugnant, it is still somehow important to keep it in the public eye. Indeed, it is so important that some of the most repugnant art needs to be subsidized with public funding, as precious few in the private sector seem willing to patronize or own a portrait of the Virgin Mary smeared with fecal matter.



In essence, fecal matter is still fecal matter. It stinks. Objectively, that is. Subjectively, it is art, regardless of it being unpleasant in essence, poor in taste and potentially a health hazard if you were inclined to hang it in your home or place of business.



I used to own, with a couple of partners, a chain of three comic book stores in the 80’s and 90’s. Comic books have always been a big part of my life since I was seven years old, when my dad bought me my first comic, Captain America #117.



Recently, Spiderman, in an effort to keep his incredibly old Aunt May from dying, sold his soul to the Marvel Comics’ version of the devil. A provision in this deal, beyond the sacrifice of Peter Parker’s soul was that his marriage to Mary Jane would be wiped out of reality. So to save his aunt, he bargained his immortal soul and his marriage to the devil.



This is Spiderman, a character who in essence was one of the most incorruptible. What message does this send to the kids reading this story? It certainly devalues the idea of the immortal human soul. Does this sort of Faustian story make Spiderman better than when he was stopping Mysterio or the Green Goblin from robbing banks?



The comics I loved while growing up featured heroes who had a letter on their chest, a cape, and a magic word, who fought bad guys because they were bad and they needed their butts kicked. Now, you are hard pressed to tell the heroes from the villains–the morality is so subjective and ambivalent.

Some of the superhero movies so popular today I have enjoyed, but none of them have gotten the characters right. None of them! Hollywood is about to release a film based on the Thor comic book character. It looks like a fun film, but it is not The Mighty Thor of the comic. He may superficially look a bit like Thor but he is not Thor.



In the comics, Thor was banished from Asgard, the home of the Norse gods, because he was arrogant, selfish and without a speck of humility. To teach him the humility necessary to make Thor the hero he would become, his father, Odin, placed him in the body of a scrawny, physically lame medical doctor named Donald Blake.



As a crippled doctor, he learned the value of serving others and gained an appreciation for his prowess and the responsibilities that prowess granted him when acting as Thor. The Don Blake persona humbled him and made Thor a hero. In the film, he is just sent to earth and he is still a big strapping good looking blond guy capable of beating up a bunch of highly trained operatives. He just doesn’t have the super powers. A guy like that would still have a pretty good time here on earth. And a pretty hard time learning true humility.



Humility is no longer a virtue worth translating in a comic’s storyline today, or in film. At least, not through serving others as Don Blake did.



I watched a sci-fi film, “Splice” this week that depicts a creature made by a scientist couple, culled from the DNA of several different creatures. Upon reaching maturity, the creature has graphic sexual relations with the male scientist, and then transforms into a male creature and graphically rapes the female scientist leaving her pregnant. Thats a long way from “This Island Earth” which I loved growing up. I wouldn’t even let my son see “Splice”.



I stayed home with a cold yesterday and watched daytime TV. I saw classic episodes of “Emergency”, “I Spy”, “Kojak”, and “Quincy”–all great, all compelling episodic TV. In prime time, I watched Law and Order SVU, not a show I normally watch but it is rerun time.



They ran two episodes back to back. Both dealt with rape, and both found it necessary to have the rape victims relate their stories in uncomfortably graphic detail–detail that would not have been allowed at the time the shows I watched earlier in the day were produced.



The graphic detail didn’t make the shows more compelling than the earlier shows. It just made them more...disquieting, gratuitously so. Disturbing to a point where I decided to scratch “Law and Order SVU”  off my list of shows to watch. Rape is never a pleasant subject, but the graphic nature of the testimony stuck with me far longer than the satisfaction derived from seeing the perpetrators face their just desserts.



The graphic testimony didn’t make the show better, just more salacious–especially in the first show, where they kept showing the rapist’s face as the victim told her story and he was obviously deriving pleasure from the telling.



The governor is deactivated in music, film, Television. A culture gets the art it deserves by virtue of what it allows. I don’t mean in the sense of governmental regulation, but by what the citizenry itself will accept, promote and support.



“Liberty cannot be established without morality, nor morality without faith.” – Alexis de Tocqueville



Bread and circuses! As corruption rises in our culture our liberty erodes, spiritually and physically. We are being plied with more and more debauchery as is our nature to desire. Culturally, God and objective morality based on the adherence to the dictates of God are being supplanted by subjective, let-it-all-hang-out licentiousness.



At some point we need to grab a hold of the moral reins and give a collective “Whoa there!” As we become looser in our morality, more and more distracted by the bread and circuses, more and more restraints on our liberty are being hammered into place by those forwarding agendas like Cap and Trade. Most Americans didn’t even notice the FCC takeover of the internet on a three Democrats to two Republicans vote a few days ago.



Who are these people and who put them in the position to make such a decision?

At some point, we have to stop patronizing this crap, Stop going to the movies, turn the TVs off, stop downloading the music. All of it. If these industries see that we mean business by not buying anything until they eliminate the crap, the crap will continue to eat away at us and our children. It starts with me and you!



Digital Publius
Read more at digitalpublius.blogspot.com
 

WND readers and editors identify 10 most underreported news events

Amplify’d from www.wnd.com

What was the most covered-up story of 2010?

WND readers and editors identify 10 most underreported news events

By Bob Unruh




© 2011 WorldNetDaily


Tim Adams, a former senior elections clerk for Honolulu, now teaches English at Western Kentucky University.

A senior elections clerk for the city and county of Honolulu during the 2008 presidential election burst onto the national media scene in June when WND reported his allegation that there is no Hawaiian birth certificate for Barack Obama.

But the disclosures from the elections insider regarding one of the most controversial issues of the day – the constitutional legitimacy of a president – was ignored by most of the media, thus putting Adams' story at the top of WND's annual list of the 10 most "spiked" or underreported stories of the last year.

At the end of each year, many news organizations typically present their retrospective replays of what they consider to have been the top news stories of the previous 12 months.

WND's editors, however, long have considered it more newsworthy to publicize the most underreported or unreported news events of the year – to shine a spotlight on those issues that the establishment media successfully "spiked."

WND Editor and CEO Joseph Farah has sponsored "Operation Spike" every year since 1988, and since founding WND in May 1997, has continued the annual tradition.

Adams' statements conflicted directly with repeated affirmations by public officials in Hawaii that they had seen or had inspected Obama's birth records that would document his representations that he was born in the state.

The issue of his birth is pertinent insofar as it plays a role in his status as a "natural born citizen" under the Constitution's requirement for presidents, a demand not imposed on any other federal office-holder.

Many critics are challenging, politically, legally and strategically, Obama's eligibility to occupy the high office, command U.S. troops, determine foreign policy and run domestic functions, including his initiatives early in his tenure to take over banks, insurance companies and automobile companies as well as nationalize health care.

Produced with the help of WND readers, here are the WND editors' picks for the 10 most underreported or unreported stories of 2010:

1. Elections official Tim Adams claims there is no Hawaiian birth certificate for Barack Obama.

WND reported on Adams, a college instructor who worked as senior elections clerk for the city and county of Honolulu in 2008, when he made the stunning claim Barack Obama definitely was not born in Hawaii as the White House maintains.

He reported that a long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate for Obama does not even exist in the Aloha State.

"There is no birth certificate," said Adams, a graduate assistant who teaches English at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green. "It's like an open secret. There isn't one. Everyone in the government there knows this."



Adams, who said he was a Hillary Clinton supporter who ended up voting for John McCain when Clinton lost the Democratic nomination to Obama, told WND, "I managed the absentee-ballot office. It was my job to verify the voters' identity."

"I had direct access to the Social Security database, the national crime computer, state driver's license information, international passport information, basically just about anything you can imagine to get someone's identity," Adams said. "I could look up what bank your home mortgage was in. I was informed by my boss that we did not have a birth record [for Obama]."

He said his office checked with both Honolulu hospitals – Queen's Medical Center in Honolulu as well as the Kapi'olani Medical Center for Women and Children across town – that had been identified at different times by the press as Obama's birth hospital.

"They told us, 'We don't have a birth certificate for him,'" he said. "They told my supervisor, either by phone or by e-mail, neither one has a document that a doctor signed off on saying they were present at this man's birth."

To date, no Hawaiian hospital has provided documented confirmation that Obama was born at its facility.




Image of an original long-form birth certificate of Susan Nordyke, born in Honolulu the day after Obama's reported birth date. President Obama has never produced a similar document.



WND confirmed with Hawaiian officials that Adams was indeed working in their election offices during the last presidential election. However, they told WND they have no access to birth records.

"They may say, 'We don't have access to that.' The regular workers don't, the ones processing ballots; but the people in administration do," said Adams, "I was the one overseeing the work of the people doing the balloting."


Short-form Certification of Live Birth image, which is not the same as a long-form, hospital-generated Certificate of Live Birth, released by the Obama campaign in June 2008.



He said what Obama posted online doesn't prove anything.

"Anyone can get that [Certification of Live Birth]," said Adams. "They are normally given if you give birth at home or while traveling overseas. We have a lot of Asian population [in Hawaii]. It's quite common for people to come back and get that."

2. Army officer court-martialed, jailed, after questioning Obama's eligibility.

A related story WND documented was that of Lt. Col. Terrence Lakin, now imprisoned in Ft. Leavenworth for disobeying Afghanistan deployment orders based on the refusal by the Army and the Obama White House to show proof of Obama's eligibility.








Dr. Terrence Lakin


Convicted of missing a deployment assignment and several other lesser charges, his case now is pending before Maj. Gen. Karl Horst, commanding general of forces in the Washington, D.C., region and the convening authority over Lakin's court martial.

Horst can approve Lakin's sentence, reduce it or order him released.

Lakin's case was torpedoed from the outset when the judge handling the proceedings ruled that because revelations regarding Obama's eligibility could "embarrass" the president, Lakin would not be allowed to discuss the issue, would not be permitted to bring forth evidence regarding eligibility, would not be allowed to bring in witnesses on the issue, and would not be allowed to pose any of his questions.

The judge, Col. Denise Lind, also ruled that Lakin would not be allowed any discovery to obtain existing evidence that might document his case.

Lakin was sentenced to six months confinement, forfeiture of pay and allowances, and dismissal from the service for disobeying orders. His supporters have established a fund to support Lakin's legal defense and provide for the needs of his wife and children while he is incarcerated at Leavenworth.








3. The reality of the U.S. economy is being assessed as a major issue by those who know, but has been getting little to no media attention. Very real questions about impossible deficits and skyrocketing taxes haven't earned much network time.

In fact, the stock market's modest rebound over the course of 2010 was being hailed by administration officials as an indicator of a turnaround and when numbers of new applications for unemployment benefits didn't rocket, it was called an advance.

But in reality, WND reported on the estimated $3 trillion in unfunded government pension liabilities even as there was discussion of a possible Value Added Tax on everything in the country.

"Everything" seemed to be a popular target for taxes, as WND reported Democrats proposed another plan to raise $4.4 trillion through a fee on each and every "transaction" across the country.

The hard facts that nobody wants to see are that the U.S. dollar today is backed only by "promises" from the same politicians who created today's economic disaster, according to longtime monetary expert Craig R. Smith who documented that the nation already faces some $120,000,000,000,000 ($120 trillion) in debt, deficit and unfunded liabilities.

The situation has gotten so bad former Libertarian vice presidential nominee Wayne Allyn Root wrote that based on the direction of the U.S. economy, he was beginning to miss George.

Not George W. Bush, the president, but another George.

"President Obama and his cabal of socialists and fascists are so bad, so oppressive, so corrupt, I'm actually starting to miss King George III, the ruler of the original American colonies," he said.

"King George III may have taxed the colonies too much with his Stamp Act, thereby inspiring the history-changing American Revolution – but as oppressive as King George was, he did provide something in return for the taxes: military protection and a navy. … The question for taxpayers today is: Are things really any better? Have we traded King George for a series of homegrown despots?"





4. America's move toward socialism continued, even though it never in 2010 got attention like Obama's remark to "Joe the Plumber" about just wanting to "spread the wealth."

A republic is based on personal responsibility, limited government and the vote of the people, in contrast to socialism, where the state hands out what it believes citizens need and takes from them what it wants.

Has the change in the United States gone that far already?

WND reported that former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton warned that Obama's goal is just exactly that: a nation heavily influenced by socialism.

Obama's early work included programs that effectively nationalized car companies, banks, insurance companies and investment companies and this year he awarded a socialist, John Sweeney of the AFL-CIO, the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

The actions of one of socialism's most active advocates in the United States, George Soros, also became more blatant, and a Soros-funded organization suggested that with the GOP taking over the U.S. House now, Obama simply should rule by executive order.

"The ability of President Obama to accomplish important change through these powers should not be underestimated," wrote John Podesta of the Center for American Progress.

5. The fall of the "mainstream" news media – as ratings drop, advertising plunges and the public distrust grows.

It's not necessarily new that the old media – television networks, newspaper conglomerates and the like – are in decline, as their viewer totals and reader numbers have been dropping for years, evidenced by the collapse of even major institutions such as the Rocky Mountain News in Denver.

But in the last year, some startling developments came up revealing just how troubled the "old" part of the media industry is, including the stunning revelation that would have been unheard of historically in the news industry, a network anchor boasting of his socialism.

MSNBC anchor Lawrence O'Donnell confirmed to viewers, "I live to the extreme left of you liberals," and, "Liberals amuse me. I am a socialist."

WND also had the report when Keith Olbermann was suspended from MSNBC for unapproved political contributions – he was backing the Democrats financially – and then again when Chris Hayes, who subbed during Olbermann's suspension, was found to have done the same thing.

WND also reported when CNN, one of the key players in reporting in decades gone by, took the time to profile Lila Rose of the cutting-edge pro-life Live Action organization, an individual on whom WND has reported since her beginning work.

CNN described her work of visiting Planned Parenthood abortion businesses under cover and catching them in inappropriate – or even illegal – situations, "guerrilla journalism."

Even CNN admitted it was because of a "growing distrust of the mainstream media…"

The politically correct banner also was raised. In a column on a page for a group of professional journalists was announced a plan to abolish the words "illegal alien" or "illegal immigrant" in reporting about the invasion into the U.S. of, well, "illegal aliens."

On the website for the Society of Professional Journalists came the explanation that the term is offensive, and only a judge can determine someone is "illegal."


6. Allegations of fraud, including illegal voting by felons and a formalized refusal by some states to follow election law regarding ballots for the military, raise the dark possibility of the manipulation of elections.

WND has reported that election irregularities are becoming more and more common, raising serious concerns about one of the bedrock principles of the republic – the integrity of the ballot box.

Some of the reports have focused on the election from 2008 in Minnesota that gave ex-comedian Al Franken a U.S. Senate seat over incumbent Norm Coleman, who had more votes at the end of the count.

Citizen investigators there have found more illegal votes – and a number of court cases have resulted – than the Franken margin of victory in a recount.

Further, during the 2010 election some states simply disregarded – or demanded an exemption to – requirements that they get ballots to members of the military, who vote more conservatively than the general population, on time for them to be returned and counted.

Other investigations have started in Kentucky, Nevada, Texas, North Carolina, Colorado, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

WND reported that in Connecticut, there even were allegations that voting by illegal aliens may have swayed the results.



7. Mysterious missile spotted off the coast of California.







Contrail was recorded in this image by KCBS-KCAL in California

One of the most mysterious stories largely left unreported was the appearance of what appeared to be a missile contrail filmed Nov. 8 by a KCBS television crew near Los Angeles.

The government said there was no danger, but has refused further explanation.

Several experts who analyzed the images, however, suggested that the missile might even have been shot from a submerged Chinese submarine, coinciding with an increasing level of confrontation between the U.S. and China.

Complicating the theory, however, was confirmation from a federal agency that it had warned the public that there would be "intermittent missile firing operations" in that area at the time.

So the questions remain: Was it a missile, and who launched it?

8. The rising tide of evidence that the rising tide from global warming is a man-made hoax.

The "Climategate" scandal, where e-mails purloined from a major global warming advocacy team at the University in East Anglia, U.K., continued to develop but got scant attention.

Author Brian Sussman warned the U.S. government was developing protocols to deal with citizens based on the East Anglia assumptions.

"Buried in the 2009 America Clean Energy and Security Act are federally mandated energy-efficient building regulations, which supersede all local and state codes and which will be enforced by a national, green goon squad, funded in part by revenues from energy taxes, as well as by an annual $25 million from the Department of Energy 'to provide necessary enforcement of a national energy efficiency building code,'" he confirms.

"The legislation also authorizes the Secretary of Energy to 'enhance compliance by conducting training and education of builders and other professionals in the jurisdiction concerning the national energy efficiency building code.'"

He continued, "The plan is modeled on building code enforcement in California. Each time a home is built, remodeled, or – in the case of the federal plan – preparing to be sold, a G-man wearing a federal badge and armed with a clipboard will show up at your house to make sure ... all of your appliances have been updated with the most recent Energy Star-approved internal communication devices, and that the Home Area Network has been properly installed and connected to your new SmartMeter, whether you like it or not."

Meanwhile, global warming investor Al Gore, the former vice president, bitterly lamented the "failure" of the government to adopt comprehensive laws taxing energy use and emissions.

He blamed the "right-wing" media for reporting on the "Climategate" e-mail scandal, where leaked e-mails from top global warming proponents appeared to manipulate the information about the issue.

One said, "The fact is that we can't account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can't. … The data are surely wrong."

Sen. James M. Inhofe, R-Okla., has suggested the Justice Department investigate scientists for potentially falsifying data as part of "Climategate." And the Orange County Register has posted a chart for consumers to try to keep up with all the scandals developing in the "global warming" community.

Among the scandals listed are:

  • ClimateGate: The scandal over the Climatic Research Unit e-mails from East Anglia.


  • FOIGate: In which British officials are investigating whether East Anglia scientists refused to follow that nation's freedom-of-information law about their work.


  • ChinaGate: In which dozens of weather monitoring stations in rural China apparently have simply disappeared. This would lead to higher temperature averages since city levels frequently are warmer.


  • HimalayaGate: In which an Indian climate official admitted in January that he falsely claimed Himalayan glaciers would melt away by 2035 to prod governments into action.


  • And PachauriGates I and II, SternGates I and II, AmazonGate (in which a claim that global warming would wipe out rain forests was exposed as a fraud), PeerReviewGate, RussianGate I and II and nearly a dozen others.





9. The push in the U.S. courts by homosexual advocates to demand the legalization of same-sex "marriage" as well as through Congress to formally adopt the policy of allowing open homosexual behavior in the U.S. military.

This is not a new issue, but remains beyond the reach of most traditional reporting staffs, as the demands that courts impose same-sex "marriage" on state populations and Congress allow openly homosexual lifestyles in the military became intense.

The reporting from WND, which earlier documented how homosexual activists have lost 31 out of 31 votes in states when the definition of marriage is on the ballot, revealed the strategy of avoiding voters when demanding such changes.

Much of the focus right now remains on California, where the judges on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals are considering whether to rubberstamp a decision by a homosexual judge that said voters had no right to amend their own state constitution, through the Proposition 8 definition that marriage is only between one man and one woman.

The judge, Vaughn Walker, on open homosexual, in September overruled more than seven million voters to banish Proposition 8, which had been approved by voters in 2008.

His 136-page ruling said, "Proposition 8 fails to advance any rational basis in singling out gay men and lesbians for denial of a marriage license. Indeed, the evidence shows Proposition 8 does nothing more than enshrine in the California Constitution the notion that opposite-sex couples are superior to same-sex couples."

Walker also wrote:

  • "Religious beliefs that gay and lesbian relationships are sinful or inferior to heterosexual relationships harm gays and lesbians."


  • "Rather, the exclusion exists as an artifact of a time when the genders were seen as having distinct roles in society and in marriage. That time has passed."


  • "The gender of a child's parent is not a factor in a child's adjustment."


  • "The evidence shows beyond any doubt that parents' genders are irrelevant to children’s developmental outcomes."


  • "Gender no longer forms an essential part of marriage; marriage under law is a union of equals."


  • "Many of the purported interests identified by proponents are nothing more than a fear or unarticulated dislike of same-sex couples."

His decision essentially ignored a warning from California Supreme Court Justice Marvin Baxter, who dissented when his court created same-sex "marriage" in the state, a result later overruled by voters.

He wrote, "The bans on incestuous and polygamous marriages are ancient and deeprooted, and, as the majority suggests, they are supported by strong considerations of social policy. Our society abhors such relationships, and the notion that our laws could not forever prohibit them seems preposterous. Yet here, the majority overturns, in abrupt fashion, an initiative statute confirming the equally deeprooted assumption that marriage is a union of partners of the opposite sex. The majority does so by relying on its own assessment of contemporary community values, and by inserting in our Constitution an expanded definition of the right to marry that contravenes express statutory law.

"Who can say that, in 10, 15 or 20 years, an activist court might not rely on the majority's analysis to conclude, on the basis of a perceived evolution in community values, that the laws prohibiting polygamous and incestuous marriages were no longer constitutionally justified?" Baxter wrote.

WND had the story when voters in Iowa handed homosexual activists a stunning setback, by firing three of the state Supreme Court justices who had created same-sex "marriage" in the state. The other four justices weren't on the ballot this year.

A related issue, open homosexuality in the military, reached critical mass when desperate Democrats, knowing their agenda would fail in the new year under a GOP leadership in the House, forced through Congress a plan to authorize such sexual behaviors in the military.

While the formal change still awaits several conditions, including verification from the military that there will be no significant "impacts," it was WND that reported how veterans protested and one officer immediately announced he would rather be relieved of his command than order his troops to go through pro-homosexual indoctrination.

WND also had the report when experts warned the move to open homosexuality in the military was being rushed and when it was revealed that the military's own survey – used to support the change – probably was manipulated or worse.





10. The impact of the TSA's new full-body scanners, including the associated health risks, invasion of privacy issues and violations of the 4th Amendment protections against unreasonable searches.

Late in 2010, the federal government in the name of air travel security rolled out new demands for passengers at airport screening stations to undergo either an X-ray that produces an essentially nude image or a full-body pat-down that includes touching private parts.

The backlash was strong among civil rights advocates and the videos and images of offensive pat-downs and invasive images were viral on the Internet.

However, it was left largely to WND for reporting that found an analysis concluding the searches probably violate the Constitution.

In addition, WND reported how the Transportation Security Administration's newest technology can be fooled into missing bombs that are taped onto a person as well as the likelihood that cancer would result from repeated X-ray radiation.

Further, experts documented for WND how loathsome diseases easily could – and probably would – be spread from one passenger to another through the gloves agents use to touch passengers, but don't change.

Finally, came the alarming warning that a TSA official's recommendation that invasive pat-downs of young children be treated as a game brought the warning that such actions would only groom them for possible attacks from pedophiles.


Honorable mention: The pink slips.

Earning honorable mention were the "pink slip" campaigns that were organized by WND Founder and CEO Joseph Farah, on issues including America's opposition to amnesty for illegal aliens, the nation's abhorrence at machines that produce nude body images or invasive pat-downs at airport security checkpoints, concerns Americans have over Obama's nomination of Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court, and others.

They all were based on the success of a campaign that dispatched nearly 10 million warnings to members of Congress to return to the values of their constituents or face being removed from office in November.

The GOP landslide in the November election followed those warnings.


Read more at www.wnd.com