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This is a lesson in how the Propaganda Network is set up
NEW YORK — For former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, it was the
perfect trifecta, a way to slam The New York Times, Hillary Clinton and
the liberal, anti-war MoveOn.org group in one fell swoop.
All Giuliani needed was one bogus newspaper story and $64,575 in
campaign cash, both of which the Republican presidential hopeful used
Thursday to spawn a bonanza of free publicity in the conservative
blogosphere.
Giuliani, a Republican presidential hopeful, began the day by
accusing The New York Times of selling the Democrat-friendly MoveOn a
"heavily discounted" ad Monday that cast U.S. commander Gen. David
Petraeus as "General Betray Us."
The ad appeared on the morning of Petraeus' first appearance before
Congress to testify about conditions in Iraq. The ad accused Petraeus
of "cooking the books" for the White House.
President Bush expressed his displeasure with the MoveOn ad. If
critics of the president "want to attack him, fine, but the generals,
and by association the military, should be out of bounds from partisan
attacks," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said.
Swanny Note: Isn't this how the "leaks" happened, to some extent? Isn't this how Osama Appears as if on Queue? Isn't the extremist Facsist Right Wing Blogs filled with nothing but these kind of false stories with idiotic Pictures that are perfect for the BASE of Morons?
Republican candidates blasted the ad as an unpatriotic smear of a
revered general, and on Thursday, Giuliani accused The New York Times,
MoveOn and Democratic presidential foe Clinton — who has refused to
denounce the ad — of engaging in "character assassination."
Swanny Note : And then they all pile on the "enemy" as they see it when the enemy is with in their own ranks. Where did all these "Rubble, Rubble, Rubble" People come from? Never talking about real issues...but inventing issues to meet their crazy ideas.Calling on Hillary is just Priceless, then they can also regurgitate all the Clinton rhetoric instead of talking about the real crimes of Clinton that also include the Bushs.
"What we should move on with ... is a civil discourse without
name-calling," Giuliani said in Atlanta, after demanding that his
campaign be given the same "discounted rate" to run a pro-Petraeus ad
today.
Swanny Note: I can make a bet that Giuliani can not do the no name calling thing. He has already called Ron Paul a Nutcase so if he can'trestain himself from name calling someone in his own party I doubt if he can restrain himself from calling a Democrat evil names that they do not deserve while not calling them names they might deserve.
But Giuliani's facts were challenged.
Swanny Note: Did the fascist right wing blogs catch the lie and made up story made up by Giuliani and propped up by President Bush? I haven't seen any pigs fly yet....
Any advocacy group seeking to place a single, full-page,
black-and-white ad in The New York Times on "standby" over a seven-day
period — the paper picks the day — pays what MoveOn did, $64,575,
sources said.
The New York Post reported that The New York Times charges a higher
rate, $181,692, setting up erroneous reports that MoveOn got a "lefty"
discount.
Swanny Note: The Post is a faction of the fascist rightwing and nothing they say should be taken as fact.Since they are part of the Fox Entertainment network they need to be refered to as the entertainment Newspaper and TV Network and not NEWS anything.
But the higher price is for ads guaranteed to run on a
specific day, said New York Times spokeswoman Catherine Mathis.
By the end of the day — with Giuliani's challenge scoring huge
points on conservative talk radio and Web sites — his campaign released
its ad.
"These times call for statesmanship, not politicians spewing
political venom," Giuliani says in his ad, just above a Web address for
his campaign.
It was unclear, however, when it would run in The New York Times or
how much it cost, but sources indicated it was the same $64,575 as
MoveOn.org paid.
Clinton's campaign, meanwhile, noted that "Mayor Giuliani supports
George Bush's Iraq policy and believes it is working. Sen. Clinton
knows it isn't and will keep up her efforts to end the war."
Material from The Associated Press is included in this report.
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