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Friday, July 26, 2002
An Open Letter To Fox News Re: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,58760,00.html I see that your reporter Steven Milloy is a very busy man... he must be, since he didn't take the time to do any digging into what I assume was a very convincingly written press release from the "American Council on Science and Health". Had he done so, he would have very quickly found out (as I did) that the ACSH is a "front" organization for public relations companies to dole out bunk science as though it were the real thing. For substantiation, I point you to their board of directors: http://www.acsh.org/about/directors.html where you will note that “Lorraine Thelian” of Ketchum Public Relations is listed as a director. 15 seconds more research lead me to this site: http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/2002Q3/ketchum.html where you will discover that: “Ketchum has frequently turned to ACSH for help in its efforts to downplay health problems associated with its clients. In 1990, for example, ACSH president Elizabeth Whelan joined a behind-the-scenes Ketchum campaign to undermine science writer David Steinman's book, Diet for a Poisoned Planet, which had offended the California Raisin Advisory Board (CALRAB) by documenting high levels of pesticides in raisins. With coaching from Ketchum, Whelan wrote a letter to then-White House Chief of Staff John Sununu warning that Steinman and others "who specialize in terrifying consumers" were "threatening the U.S. standard of living and, indeed, may pose a future threat to national security." Her letter was copied to the heads of the Food and Drug Administration, Department of Agriculture, Department of Health and Human Services, Environmental Protection Agency, and the U.S. Surgeon General. The USDA joined efforts at "minimizing potential public concern about issues in the book." A scientist at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, who wrote the introduction to Diet for a Poisoned Planet, was pressured to withdraw his name from the book and later fired. Details of the Ketchum campaign against Steinman surfaced when a whistleblower leaked documents including an internal memo by Betsy Gullickson, a Ketchum senior vice president. In the memo, Gullickson plotted to obtain a prepublication copy of the book manuscript and a schedule of Steinman's upcoming book promotional activities "so that we can 'shadow' Steinman's appearances." Ketchum operatives telephoned talk shows that were planning to interview Steinman, depicting him as an "off-the-wall extremist without credibility" and attempting to persuade the programs to cancel the interviews altogether. Ketchum has represented many clients in the food industry, including the California Almond Board, Dole Foods, H.J. Heinz, Kikkoman, Miller Brewing, the National Meat & Livestock Commission, Nestlé, Oscar Mayer Foods, the Potato Board, Stouffer's, and Wendy's restaurants. On behalf of the California Prune Board, it renamed prunes as "dried plums," the name by which you are likely to find them in the supermarket today. Ketchum also designed the Beef Industry Council's 1985 "Beef Gives Strength" advertising campaign, which deceptively portrays beef as a health food while ignoring the fat content of most red meats. In 1992, Ketchum and the American Egg Board sponsored a seminar for health writers, titled " Risk Communication: Challenge for the 1990s," which attempted to downplay the risks from cholesterol in eggs (whose yolks add more cholesterol to the average American's diet than any other single food). The seminar included a report describing an 88-year-old man who had eaten 25 eggs daily for more than a decade and had a normal blood cholesterol level. “ And remember Lorrain Thelian, the Director? We find out that: “Ketchum's Washington office, where Lorraine Thelian works, handles most of the firm's "environmental PR work" on behalf of clients including the American Automobile Manufacturers Association, the Aspirin Foundation of America, Bristol Myers Squibb, the Consumer Aerosol Products Council, Dow Chemical, the National Pharmaceutical Council, the North American Insulation Manufacturers Association, and the American Industrial Health Council, an industry-funded group that lobbies against what it considers "excessive" regulation of carcinogens. Ketchum boasts that the D.C. office "has dealt with issues ranging from regulation of toxins, global climate change, electricity deregulation, nuclear energy, product and chemical contamination, and agricultural chemicals and Superfund sites, to name but a few." Clearly, we can see that the case presented in the article on your site are the arguments of a for-hire think tank that, in reality, represents only the views that their clients want to relate to the public, not legitimate, objective information. This is bad science, a bad commercial, and you are promoting it as the truth. It’s things like this that destroy the credibility of journalists the world over. Do a little research next time.
Thursday, July 25, 2002
How the European Political Perspective Differs from That of America "It is easier to see the contrast as an American living in Europe. Europeans are more conscious of the growing differences, perhaps because they fear them more. European intellectuals are nearly unanimous in the conviction that Americans and Europeans no longer share a common “strategic culture.” The European caricature at its most extreme depicts an America dominated by a “culture of death,” its warlike temperament the natural product of a violent society where every man has a gun and the death penalty reigns. But even those who do not make this crude link agree there are profound differences in the way the United States and Europe conduct foreign policy." Long but good. via k5
Wednesday, July 24, 2002
Boston Globe Online / Nation | World / President is keeping his messages front and center ''What is eerie about his backdrops is the repetitive slogans that you see over and over again,'' Palmieri said. ''It almost appears to be a subliminal attempt to persuade voters to believe his rhetoric... but there's very little beyond the backdrop. There's no substance to back it up. There's a problem when your slogan doesn't connect with reality.'' via fark
Tuesday, July 23, 2002
Security bill loses ID card, TIPS -- The Washington Times "There is no place in America for either an internal passport or for utility workers and cable technicians to become government-sanctioned peeping Toms." The TIPS program has been cancelled. A small victory.... As for the internal passport issue, see the article below.....
Monday, July 22, 2002
Gilmore v. Ashcroft -- FAA ID Challenge "United States courts have recognized for more than a century that honest citizens have the right to travel throughout America without government restrictions. Some people say that everything changed on 9/11, but patriots have stood by our Constitution through centuries of conflict and uncertainty. Any government that tracks its citizens' movements and associations, or restricts their travel using secret decrees, is violating that Constitution," said Gilmore. "With this case, I hope to redirect government anti-terrorism efforts away from intrusive yet useless measures such as ID checks, confiscation of tweezers, and database surveillance of every traveler's life." via kuro5shin This Week's Conspiracy Friday, July 19, 2002 DARPA - Information Awareness Office For their heavy use of mystical symbolism, obvious references to biblical and hermetic subjects, goals that include monitoring and tracking individuals and cabals, large scale databases for intelligence gathering, Big-Brother-esque technologies, and the fact that they are in fact an official government office, The Information Awareness Office has been named this week's conspiracy. |
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