By Dennis Prager
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
When Air America, the left-wing talk radio network, began, I predicted
that it would not succeed. One of the main reasons I gave was that
liberals already had their views expressed in the mainstream news
media -- the major networks, PBS and NPR (National Public Radio), and
just about every major city newspaper. Therefore, the need liberals
have for liberal talk radio is nowhere near the need conservatives
have for conservative talk radio.
To its credit, The New York Times -- through its public editor -- has
acknowledged that the Times is liberal; and anyone intellectually
honest understands this is true regarding virtually all of the news
media. But for those still needing proof, Bill Moyers supplied it on
PBS this past weekend during his interview of one of the most
radically polarizing figures in America today, the Rev. Jeremiah
Wright, Sen. Barack Obama's mentor and pastor for 20 years.
The Rev. Wright's decision to allow himself to be interviewed by Bill
Moyers was, from his perspective, an excellent one. It is difficult to
imagine a less challenging, more fawning, interview.
How bad was it?
Given that one of the most egregious of the Rev. Wright's statements
was his charge that the American government developed the AIDS virus
and inflicted it on black Americans, one assumed that the first major
reporter to interview Wright since the comments were made public would
ask him about it. Not Bill Moyers. Beyond mentioning in the opening
introduction, "Wright repeating the canard heard often in black
communities that the U.S. government spread HIV in those communities,"
the subject was never raised.
But Moyers did ask Wright tough questions like these:
"When did you hear the call to ministry? How did it come?"
"What does the church service on Sunday morning mean in general to the
black community?"
Instead of challenging Wright's un-Christian, anti-American and
immoral "God damn America, God damn America" statement, Moyers asked
three questions about it:
Here they are (I could not make up such puffball questions):
1. "One of the most controversial sermons that you preach is the
sermon you preach that ended up being that sound bite about God damn
America."
Wright's response was to deliver a 300-word indictment of America for
its violence against the world.
And how then does Moyers respond? With another killer question:
2. "What did you mean when you said that?"
So Wright then delivered another, 174-word, indictment of America for
its evils.
But instead of challenging Wright or defending America, Moyers' third
question was:
3. "Well, you can be almost crucified for saying what you've said here
in this country."
Moyers changes Wright's "God damn America" to "Poor Rev. Wright."
And why not? It is soon clear that Moyers essentially agrees with
Wright about America:
"What is your notion of why so many Americans seem not to want to hear
the full Monty -- they don't want to seem to acknowledge that a nation
capable of greatness is also capable of cruelty?"
For the many Americans who suspect that most Americans on the left
silently agree with nearly all of Wright's views of America, Moyers
provided proof.
Nevertheless, Moyers' total failure to confront the America-hating,
race-preoccupied mentor of a man who may be the next president of the
United States does not mean the interview was worthless. Any time
Wright speaks publicly, even with the most sympathetic of questioners,
we learn more about the two motivators of his thinking: race and
contempt for America.
Here is Wright in his sermon the Sunday after 9-11 as replayed during
the Moyers interview:
"Terrorism! We bombed Grenada and killed innocent civilians, babies,
non-military personnel. We bombed the black civilian community of
Panama with stealth bombers and killed unarmed teenagers and toddlers,
pregnant mothers and hardworking fathers. We bombed Gadafi's home and
killed his child. 'Blessed are they who bash your children's head
against a rock!' We bombed Iraq. We killed unarmed civilians trying to
make a living. We bombed a plant in Sudan to pay back for the attack
on our embassy. Killed hundreds of hardworking people; mothers and
fathers who left home to go that day, not knowing that they would
never get back home. We bombed Hiroshima! We bombed Nagasaki, and we
nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we
never batted an eye! Kids playing in the playground, mothers picking
up children after school, civilians -- not soldiers -- people just
trying to make it day by day. We have supported state terrorism
against the Palestinians and black South Africans, and now we are
indignant? Because the stuff we have done overseas has now been
brought back into our own front yards! America's chickens are coming
home to roost! Violence begets violence. Hatred begets hatred and
terrorism begets terrorism."
To which Moyers offered another lacerating response:
"You preached that sermon on the Sunday after 9-11, almost seven years
ago. When people saw the sound bites from it this year, they were
upset because you seemed to be blaming America. Did you somehow fail
to communicate?"
Finally, as regards the Rev. Wright's Africa-centric form of
Christianity, this was Wright's explanation to his young church
members as shown during the PBS interview:
"We wanted our stained-glass windows to tell the story of the
centrality of Africans in the role of Christianity from its inception
up until the present day. We play some interesting games educationally
with the kids to help kids understand -- 'Can you name the seven
continents?' As a kid, you learn that in school. All right, on what
continent did everything in the Bible from Genesis to Malachi take
place?"
And, of course, the Reverend and his church's answer is: Africa.
Now, as it happens, the Middle East is not Africa. It is Asia Minor,
or Southwest Asia, if one must have an identifying continent. And
Jesus was not black, nor were the apostles. It's all racial pride. And
not true. Africa in the Bible is overwhelmingly Egypt, which was not
black and not a moral model.
In sum: PBS has done some wonderful programming. But when it comes to
the news or anything controversial, it is as politically correct and
liberal as the rest of the news media. As for Bill Moyers, had Mrs.
Wright interviewed the Rev. Wright, the questions and reactions could
not have been less challenging or even supportive. And as regards the
Rev. Wright, the more he talks, the more one worries about Barack
Obama's values.
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-C-


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