Howard Fineman Quotes


Howard Fineman

Asked at the hearing why she hadn`t pressed the FBI more closely about what it knew, or didn`t know, about domestic terrorist threats, Rice acted as though the question was an odd one: it wasn`t her job. Well, in retrospect, it was and now certainly is.

It`s hard to know now who, if anyone, in the media has any credibility.

By Rice`s own standards, the war was well underway by the time he took office. He was a war president the moment he took the oath. But did he act like one?

Remember the picture of the president in the classroom, being told of the attack by chief of staff Andy Card? The American people thought they were seeing a man suddenly thrust into a grave challenge no one could have anticipated.

The party that had nominated Clinton in 1992 eventually impeached him, thanks in good part to information supplied by GOP investigators.

The crusades of Vietnam and Watergate seemed like a good idea at the time, even a noble one, not only to the press but perhaps to a majority of Americans.

I know that from the days of Watergate... the notion of two sources on a story has become the popular dogma about how you confirm something. And there is a lot of truth to that, but there are all kinds of ways to check to the extent that you can, a story that you get.

If we are lucky, and George W. Bush is right, we are about to witness the War of the Happy Iraqis.

When Americans invade Iraq, Bush says, we will be greeted as liberators by the Iraqi people, proving that taking out Saddam Hussein was the right thing to do.

A purely objective viewpoint does not exist in the cosmos or in politics.

A political party is dying before our eyes-and I don`t mean the Democrats. I`m talking about the mainstream media, which is being destroyed by the opposition.

The ferocity with which the presidential press corps went after the Karl Rove story is startling, but it shouldn`t be surprising.

The notion of a neutral, mainstream national media gained dominance only in World War II and in its aftermath, when what turned out to be a temporary moderate consensus came to govern the country.

As Walter Cronkite would say, that`s the way it is.






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