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Are opinions presented as fact??

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    Are opinions presented as fact??

    > >Subject: The buildings that AREN'T burning in Iraq

    "They have a saying in the news business," Geraldo Rivera related
    this week. "Reporters don't report buildings that don't burn." And with
    that introduction, he told a TV audience about the story that is being
    systematically denied to our entire nation: the success story of
    post-Saddam Iraq.

    Are we losing some soldiers each week? Yes.

    Is there some frustration in the public about electricity and water
    service? Yes.

    Are some Saddam Hussein loyalists throughout the land, making
    trouble? Yes.

    Has this opened a window for some terrorist mischief? Yes.

    But that's ALL we hear. No wonder the country is in a mixed mood about
    Iraq. If you hear about the buildings that are not burning, though,it is
    a different story indeed.

    Rivera is no shill for George W. Bush. But Bush, Condi Rice and Colin
    Powell together could not have been as effective as Geraldo was
    Thursday night on the Fox News Channel's Hannity and Colmes program.

    "When I got to Baghdad, I barely recognized it," he began, comparing his
    just-completed trip to two others he made during and just after the battle
    to topple Saddam. "You have over 30,000 Iraqi cops and militiamen
    already on the job.
    This is four months after major fighting stopped. Can you imagine
    that kind of gearing up in this country? Law and order is better;
    archaeological sites are being preserved; factories, schools are being
    guarded." But what about the secondhand griping that the media have
    been so efficiently relating about power, water and other infrastructure?

    "To say that Iraq is being rebuilt is not true," answered Rivera. "Iraq is
    being built. There was no infrastructure before; we are doing it. I just
    think the good news is being underestimated and underreported." At this
    juncture, one must evaluate how to feel about the voices telling us only
    about the bad news in Iraq, whether from the mouths of news anchors or
    Democratic presidential hopefuls. At best, they are underinformed.

    At worst, their one-sided assessments of post-Saddam Iraq are
    intentional falsehoods for obvious reasons.
    If I hear one more person mock that "Mission Accomplished" banner beneath
    which President Bush thanked a shipload of sailors and Marines a few months
    back, I'm going to spit. That was a reference to the ouster of
    Saddam's regime, and that mission was indeed accomplished, apparently to the
    great chagrin of the American left. No one said what followed would be easy or
    cheap, and that's why the dripping-water torture of the cost and casualty
    stories is so infuriating.
    Remember we pay our soldiers whether they are in Iraq or in Ft Bragg, North Carolina.
    We should all mourn the loss of every fallen soldier. But context cries
    out to be heard. Our present news media is not performing this task.

    As some dare to wonder if this might become a Vietnam-like quagmire,
    I'll remind whoever needs it that most of our 58,000 Vietnam war toll
    died between 1966 and 1972, during which we lost an average of about8,000 per
    year. That's about 22 per day, every day, for thousands of days on end.
    Let us hear NO MORE Vietnam comparisons. They do not equate. What I hope
    to hear is more truth, even if we have to wrench it from the mouths of the
    media and political hacks predisposed to bash the remarkable job we
    are doing every day in what was not so long ago a totalitarian wasteland.
    Local elections are under way across Iraq, Rivera reported. "Where
    Kurds and Arabs have been battling for decades, things have been settling
    down.

    Administrator Paul Bremer is doing a great job."
    So does Geraldo think his media colleagues are intentionally
    painting with one side of the brush? "I'm not into conspiracy theories,..but
    there's just more bang for your buck when you report the GI who got killed
    rather than the 99 who didn't get killed, who make friends, who helped
    schedule elections, who helped shops get open for business, who helped
    traffic flow again.

    "The vast majority of Iraqis are very happy to have us there. I
    would like to see a bit more balance." This needs to be reported to the
    American Public who are presently being duped. I expect the dominant media
    culture to nitpick and attack Bush, and Democrats to blast him with reckless
    abandon. But when that leads to the willful exclusion of facts that would
    shine truthful light on the great work of the American armed forces,that
    level of malice plumbs new depths.
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