Monday, February 27, 2017

CYBERALERT 02/27/2017 JORGE RAMOS GOES OFF THE DEEP END!

Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996


 
 

1. MTP: Tom Cotton Schools Chuck Todd About Relying Too Much on Anonymous Sources


Things arguably got a little embarrassing for NBC moderator Chuck Todd during Sunday’s Meet the Press, after Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton had to explain to him that the claims of anonymous sources should be taken with a grain of salt. “Anonymous sources said Steve Bannon drove from the White House to the Department of Homeland Security to confront John Kelly, which we now know is not the truth,” Cotton reminded Todd, “That’s not like the tone of a conversation, that’s someone’s physical whereabouts.” 

2. CNN's Stelter Terrified at New Trump Attacks on Media: ‘Chill Up’ the Spine!


The perpetually outraged Brian Stelter is outraged yet again. After Donald Trump lambasted CNN and the “fake news media” at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), Friday, Stelter fumed, “The demagoguery continues. This was all about us versus them. I think we heard it in almost every sentence. Us versus them.” 

3. NY Times' Rutenberg Tries to Enlist Republicans to Defend Media, Oppose Trump


Sunday’s New York Times featured the latest installment in easily-freaked media reporter Jim Rutenberg’s crusade against President Trump: “Trump’s Undermining Reporters May Haunt Republicans.” The online headline foreshadowed Rutenberg’s unlikely attempt to enlist Republicans in defense of the press and against Trump: “Will the Real Democracy Lovers Please Stand Up?” while the text box delivered an empty threat: “This strategy could push Republicans into a corner later.”

4. CNN Panelist: WHCD Is ‘a Blight on the Republic,’ Dem Party ‘Worship Center’


Things got painfully real for the liberal media during CNN’s New Day Sunday after Nick Adams, Founder of the Foundation for Liberty and American Greatness, called out the White House Correspondent’s Dinner for being “a Democratic Party worship center.” “But, I think that there's no reason for the President to go on this particular occasion,” Adams explained, after being asked if Trump should attend the lavish liberal event, “I know that it's a long-standing tradition, but in recent years it’s become a blight on the republic.” 

5. Trump Voters Defy NBC Attempts to Get Them to Criticize President


During a report for Friday’s NBC Today, rural Wisconsin Trump supporters repeatedly frustrated attempts by political analyst Nicolle Wallace to get them to criticize President Trump. The flummoxed journalist noted: “On this farm, the President gets plenty of pasture, even for the controversial travel ban.”

6. Jorge Ramos: U.S. Is 'Our Country, Not Theirs'


Further ramping up his open opposition to President Trump's immigration law enforcement policies, Univision anchor Jorge Ramos has let loose with an outrageous tirade that could best be described as equal parts nationalistic identity politics, racially-driven demagoguery, and yet another instance of the irresponsible conflation of legal and illegal immigration. 
 
 
 
 
1

MTP: Tom Cotton Schools Chuck Todd About Relying Too Much on Anonymous Sources

By Nicholas Fondacaro

Things arguably got a little embarrassing for NBC moderator Chuck Todd during Sunday’s Meet the Press, after Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton had to explain to him that the claims of anonymous sources should be taken with a grain of salt. “Anonymous sources said Steve Bannon drove from the White House to the Department of Homeland Security to confront John Kelly, which we now know is not the truth,” Cotton reminded Todd, “That’s not like the tone of a conversation, that’s someone’s physical whereabouts.”
Cotton’s schooling of Todd came as the NBC moderator pressed the Senator on when the media could expect the Senate to call for a special prosecutor to investigate Russian ties to the Trump administration. “What point is it in the best interest of the country to sort of take it away from elected partisans at this point,” Todd wanted to know.
According to Cotton, Todd was putting the cart way before the horse. “There are no allegations of any crime occurring,” he explained to Todd, “There's not even indication that there's criminal investigations under way by the FBI as opposed to counter intelligence investigations.” He also tried to make it clear to Todd that as the FBI investigation progressed it would be up to Attorney General Jeff Sessions to make the call for a special prosecutor.
But before Cotton could finish his thought, Todd interjected reminding the Senator that he once called for a special prosecutor to look into the IRS for politically motived actions against Tea Party organizations. “That's something that can be decided down the road, but right now there's no credible evidence of these contacts beyond anonymous sources in the media,” Cotton clarified.  
“And I’ve got to tell you, anonymous sources can't always be trusted,” Cotton quipped at the end of that thought. That didn’t sit well with Told who defended the practice, noting, “Anonymous sources are how we find out about a lot of scandal in this country.” It was then when Cotton reminded Todd of the false accusations made about Bannon’s interaction with Secretary Kelly. The earlier point Cotton described was excellent, an observer could read into all sorts of body language and misinterpret the tone and motivation in a conversation.
Todd seemed befuddled as Cotton continued to caution about relying on such sources, “You cannot credit stories that are based on anonymous sources. You should look into them especially if you're in a position of responsibility, but you can't simply credit them.” Todd seemed to give up and moved on to talking about health care.
Todd’s pushing for a special prosecutor to investigate Trump came off as lusting for it to happen. Todd talked about it as though it was something that was going to happen as a matter of fact. That’s a narrative that the liberal media has been pushing for a while now. They even overlooked CNN’s own reporting that when the FBI brief the White House on the investigation they said the media’s reports were overstating the facts. That’s an important fact Cotton had to remind Todd of. 
Transcript below:
NBC
Meet the Press
February 26, 2017
10:37:51 AM Eastern
TOM COTTON: So Chuck, let's take the CNN article on face value. I'm not going to confirm or deny obviously anything in these stories because these leaks of classified information could do real harm to our national security, but let's take it at face value. So it says the FBI went to President Trump and Reince Priebus and said that reports of contacts between Trump associates last year and Russian intelligence officials were grossly overstated. Isn't it reasonable for the chief of staff to then say to the FBI director “Well, are you going to say anything to correct the record on this since everyone is running around Washington making these allegations?” I think that's a perfectly reasonable response. Now the FBI and other intelligence agencies have reasons that they don't go out and call balls and strikes on news stories because we don't want to let our adversaries know what we do know and what we don't know, or how we know it. But again, if you take everything in that story at face value I don’t think there’s that much alarming in it
...
10:40:39 AM Eastern
CHUCK TODD: And finally, I want to ask you about the Darrell Issa being open to a special prosecutor. What point is it in the best interest of the country to sort of take it away from elected partisans at this point? Whether it's a commission-- I know a select commission, outside commission or a special prosecutor. Where are you in that?
COTTON: Well, I think that's way, way getting ahead of ourselves here, Chuck. There are no allegations of any crime occurring. There's not even indication that there's criminal investigations under way by the FBI as opposed to counter intelligence investigations, which the FBI conducts all the time as our main counter-intelligence bureau. If we get down that road that's a decision that Attorney General Sessions can make at the time. But I think that’s—
TODD: Senators can call for it on their own. I mean, you called during your campaign against Mike prior. You called for a special prosecutor for the IRS. When does-- How does this Russia allegation, when does that rise to that level in your mind?
COTTON: Well, I think that's far down the road from what our inquiry might reveal in the Intelligence Committee or what the FBI’s inquiries might reveal. That's something that can be decided down the road, but right now there's no credible evidence of these contacts beyond anonymous sources in the media. And I’ve got to tell you, anonymous sources can't always be trusted.
TODD: Anonymous sources are how we find out about a lot of scandal in this country.
COTTON: Anonymous sources said Steve Bannon drove from the White House to the Department of Homeland Security to confront John Kelly, which we now know is not the truth. That’s not like the tone of a conversation, that’s someone’s physical whereabouts.
TODD: I – I – I
COTTON: You cannot credit stories that are based on anonymous sources. You should look into them especially if you're in a position of responsibility, but you can't simply credit them.
TODD: Let me talk to you about healthcare. 
2

CNN's Stelter Terrified at New Trump Attacks on Media: ‘Chill Up’ the Spine!

By Scott Whitlock

The perpetually outraged Brian Stelter is outraged yet again. After Donald Trump lambasted CNN and the “fake news media” at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), Friday, Stelter fumed, “The demagoguery continues. This was all about us versus them. I think we heard it in almost every sentence. Us versus them.” 
The CNN journalist complained, “He tried to divide the real media from the fake news media, suggesting CNN is fake news and unspecified others are real news.” In the speech, Trump promised to “do something” about fake news. Stelter saw this as a threat, wondering, “A lot of journalists got a chill up their spine hearing that sentence. Is that just normal bluster from the President?” 
Stelter speculated: 
Is that just normal bluster from the President? It could be just normal bluster. He's just complaining. But to say 'we're going to do something about it,' it's curious. Because so far all he's really done is complained about the coverage. He hasn't taken actions against news organizations. So, that sentence stood out to me from this speech. 
Stelter also laughably insisted, “But let's just, for the record, let’s make clear: He said that journalists make up stories and make up sources. There's no evidence of that.” 
Really? Like when the New York Times used a fake Michael Flynn Twitter account in a recent story and then the journalist involved repeated it on CBS This Morning? For more on fake news, go here. 
A partial transcript is below: 
At this Hour With Kate Bolduan
2/24/17
11:13
KATE BOLDUAN: And speaking of the media, Brian Stelter, to you, he railed on the media. He doubled down on that the media is the enemy of the people line. And yet this also comes at a time when we look at the latest Quinnipiac University poll which came out yesterday, more people trust the media than trust Donald Trump. Now, obviously there is a big break along party lines here. But what do you make of him doing that? It seems to certainly work well for him, at least with his base. 
BRIAN STELTER: The demagoguery continues. This was all about us versus them. I think we heard it in almost every sentence. Us versus them. And that's true with the media. He tried to divide the real media from the fake news media, suggesting CNN is fake news and unspecified others are real news. So, what he's trying to do even there is divide, create a division between the sources he like and the sources he doesn’t like. But let's just, for the record, let’s make clear: He said that journalists make up stories and make up sources. There's no evidence of that. When we have anonymous sources, our bosses know who they are and there's very careful research and vetting that goes on. Journalists do not make up stories and sources. Once in a while, there are bad apples in a news organization, I can count them on one hand of the cases we know about and when that happens there are penalties. But journalists don't make up sources. One more point about polls, he said journalists make up polls. 
That is completely untrue. People work really hard using scientific methods to conduct these polls. And finally, one sentence I think we're going to need to probe in more detail, he said the media doesn't represent the people. It never will represent the people, and we're going to do something about it. A lot of journalists got a chill up their spine hearing that sentence. Is that just normal bluster from the President? It could be just normal bluster. He's just complaining. But to say we're going to do something about it. It's curious, because so far all he's really done is complained about the coverage. He hasn't taken actions against news organizations. So, that sentence stood out to me from this speech. 
3

NY Times' Rutenberg Tries to Enlist Republicans to Defend Media, Oppose Trump

By Clay Waters

Sunday’s New York Times featured the latest installment in easily-freaked media reporter Jim Rutenberg’s crusade against President Trump: “Trump’s Undermining Reporters May Haunt Republicans.” The online headline foreshadowed Rutenberg’s unlikely attempt to enlist Republicans in defense of the press and against Trump: “Will the Real Democracy Lovers Please Stand Up?” while the text box delivered an empty threat: “This strategy could push Republicans into a corner later.”
Rutenberg made no acknowledgement of the increasingly unconcealed anti-Trump partisanship displayed by the media, including his own newspaper. Rutenberg’s own infamous front-page column from August 2016 argued that the rules of journalistic objectivity didn’t apply in the case of fighting then-candidate Trump.
During another week of presidential declarations that some journalists were “enemies of the people;” of new steps to restrict White House press access by way of a naughty-and-nice list, and of reported moves to force national intelligence agencies to toe the administration line, a now-familiar pattern set in.
Journalists, their subscriptions and ratings spiking, howled about another move to undercut the role the free press plays in a democracy (which “Dies in Darkness” as the new Washington Post slogan has it). The administration doubled down on its antipress aggression, this time declaring it was “going to get worse every day” for these “globalist” and “corporatist” journalists (and other such gobbledygook from the former Goldman Sachs executive Stephen K. Bannon).
And all the while, so many of the most important and credible leaders in the president’s own party more or less kept their traps shut or looked the other way.
If there were ever a moment for government leaders who believe that true information unearthed by independent news sources is vital to our nation to stand up and say so, this would be it.
President Trump’s argument that the national press corps is illegitimate and dishonest has emerged as one of the most consistent themes of his presidency, alongside -- and seemingly as important to him -- his calls for a major tax code overhaul, an end to Obamacare, a border wall and “extreme vetting.”
Those other parts of his agenda appeal to large groups of Republicans on Capitol Hill, including the leaders of the House and the Senate. So you could see the appeal of staying out of the way to let Mr. Trump do his thing against the press -- no great favorite on The Hill anyway-- as their other big policy dishes marinate and cook.
But they might be wise to rethink that strategy. The journalism that Mr. Trump and his aides seek to delegitimize today could be the legitimate research and bipartisan data points they try to use to make policy arguments with Mr. Trump tomorrow.
Not likely. Rutenberg tried to enlist Republicans to go after Trump and defend the press, which has always been just so fair to the GOP in the past.
Asked on Thursday about Mr. Trump’s first declaration that the press was “the enemy,” Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, said, “I don’t view you guys as the enemy.” It warms the heart.
He went on to say: “I expect adversarial questions. And you rarely disappoint me. And I think it’s part of what make America function.”
It was a start, I guess. But it fell short of the full-throated “knock it off” to Mr. Trump that these times demand, at least when it comes to calling true journalism false or calling journalists dishonest enemies.
The office of Representative Paul D. Ryan, the House speaker, declined to engage with me on Saturday when I asked for a comment on whether Mr. Ryan was comfortable with what I called Mr. Trump’s attempt to delegitimize the fourth estate. His office said it disputed the premise of the question.
Rutenberg then undercut his own argument a bit by admitting that tough anti-Trump journalism was still being done.
And every week I wonder about it myself -- how serious are all the threats and bluster against the news media by Mr. Trump and Mr. Bannon, given that news organizations continue to break big stories about the administration with help from leaks that have not abated despite the presidential pounding?
None of it stopped The Washington Post from reporting on Friday that presidential aides, after failing to convince the F.B.I. to publicly dispute reports by The New York Times and CNN about contact between Trump campaign aides and Russian intelligence, went on to successfully pressure other intelligence officials and key congressmen to do the same. It didn’t keep The Associated Press and The Wall Street Journal from reporting on a Department of Homeland Security assessment disputing the basis for the administration’s attempt to block travel to the United States from seven predominantly Muslim countries.
Falsely conflating pleasing reporters with defending democracy, Rutenberg turned to a grand old man of journalism:
On Saturday, I turned to a sage of the Washington press corps, Bob Schieffer of CBS, whose time in Washington dates to the Nixon administration, to see how seriously he took the recent threats against the press. It was his 80th birthday.
“We need to be taking this very seriously -- any time you undermine the press, I think that’s very dangerous for democracy,” Mr. Schieffer said. “Do we want a situation where the only source of information is the government? I mean, really? Somehow I don’t think that’s what the founders intended.”
Rutenberg even considered boycotting Trump’s next round of media criticism in the name of solidarity.
There should be, however, legitimate questions about whether that reporting should include blanket coverage of the next speech Mr. Trump gives in which he calls honest journalists dishonest or “the opposition.” Those kinds of polemical statements are no longer “news” (defined as “new”) but rather part of a repetitive, antipress, negative branding campaign.
4

CNN Panelist: WHCD Is ‘a Blight on the Republic,’ Dem Party ‘Worship Center’

By Nicholas Fondacaro

Things got painfully real for the liberal media during CNN’s New Day Sunday after Nick Adams, Founder of the Foundation for Liberty and American Greatness, called out the White House Correspondent’s Dinner for being “a Democratic Party worship center.” “But, I think that there's no reason for the President to go on this particular occasion,” Adams explained, after being asked if Trump should attend the lavish liberal event, “I know that it's a long-standing tradition, but in recent years it’s become a blight on the republic.
You know, I think the oligarchic spectacle of the fourth-estate, dressing up in a white tie to celebrate themselves accompanied by various celebrities--” he continued before being rudely cut off by flabbergasted New Day Sunday co-host Christi Paul. “You mean it’s inappropriate? You think it's inappropriate? I don't understand why you call it a blight,” she said.
He then scorned the event as “a Democratic Party worshiping center” and recalled how the event’s lampooning was harsher on Republicans. “I mean, when we have a look at what has happened in recent years, Republican presidents are mocked in a brutal way, while Democratic presidents are soothed and patted like family pets,” a point which was proven when Paul previously hyped and cut to a clip of former President Barack Obama mocking Trump at the dinner.
Paul was still shocked as she interrupted Adams again and tried to find something to come back with. “But Nick—I mean—we’ve – we’ve had all the other – I mean -- both President Bush’s have been up there. Clinton has been up there. We—it’s kind of an equal opportunity roasting to some degree. Is it not,” she finally managed to ask. He responded by reminding the viewers that according to Gallup that “trust in the media is at an all-time low…
The CNN co-host was so befuddled that when she spouted off about Trump’s negative approval ratings (as compared to the media’s) she kept referring to him as “Obama.” “There may be a low trust in the media there's also a low trust with President Obama as well, and a 38 percent favorability rate for President Obama.
She then tried to stick Adams with a clip of White House Chief Strategist Steven Bannon commenting at CPAC about the media not wanting to give up control of the country. Adams shot her down with help from a Media Research Center study:
Well, Christi look, I think it's very clear that President Trump has an agenda that many journalists in this country don't like. It's no secret, that journalists are far more liberal than the rest of the United States. And I don't think it would surprise anybody to know that the Media Research Center discovered that if only journalists could vote, we would only get Democratic presidents. So I think that there's a gulf between journalists and Middle America.
The MRC’s study noted that “Between 1964 and 1992, Republicans won the White House five times compared with three Democratic victories. But if only journalists’ ballots were counted, the Democrats would have won every single election.”
I don't know you can – you can generalize all journalists as – as being liberal,” Paul declared before handing the attack over to Amanda Terkel, a senior political reporter from the radically liberal Huffington Post. “I mean, the agenda of the media that Trump doesn't like is presenting the facts, whether or not they make Donald Trump look very good,” Terkel claimed.
As much as CNN wanted to whine about Trump not attending the dinner, Adams’ quip that the event is a gathering of an elite “oligarchy” is a criticism that can be found on the left as well. In May of last year, the very liberal Bob Garfield tore into CNN’s Brian Stelter and declared the event “ethically questionable,” because “[e]verybody's too cozy and it's hard for the press to fulfill its watchdog function if you're palling around with people who you can't even ask a journalistic question of.” 
Transcript below: 
CNN
New Day Sunday
February 26, 2017
7:34:48 PM Eastern
CHRISTI PAUL: So Nick, here’s the thing, he would have been standing at the podium himself, President Trump. He would have had the attention of everybody. Why do you think he chose not to go?
NICK ADAMS: Well Christi, it's President Trump's party and he can cancel if he wants to. I think there’s an argument to be made that it's a good opportunity for a president to present himself in a light-hearted self-deprecating way that might endear him to people that don’t necessarily like or align with his mission or objectives. But, I think that there's no reason for the President to go on this particular occasion. I know that it's a long-standing tradition, but in recent years it’s become a blight on the republic. You know, I think the oligarchic spectacle of the fourth-estate, dressing up in a white tie to celebrate themselves accompanied by various celebrities—
PAUL: You mean it’s inappropriate? You think it's inappropriate? I don't understand why you call it a blight.
ADAMS: Well Christi, I think it has been a Democratic Party worship center. I mean, when we have a look at what has happened in recent years, Republican presidents are mocked in a brutal way, while Democratic presidents are soothed and patted like family pets.—
PAUL: But Nick—I mean—we’ve – we’ve had all the other – I mean -- both President Bush’s have been up there. Clinton has been up there. We—it’s kind of an equal opportunity roasting to some degree. Is it not?
ADAMS: Well, I think it's not. I think that it's very clear that Democratic presidents get a much easier, much smoother run, Christi, than Republican presidents. And – I -- you know, I don't think that there's any reason for the President to go. I think he’s made a good decision, and I think that the recent Gallup information that came out that trust in the media is at an all-time low, only 30 percent Independents trust the media, only 40 percent of Republicans trust the media. There's a real problem here and I think that President Trump is listening to it.--
PAUL: Well it doesn’t speak well for anybody, because yes, there may be a low trust in the media there's also a low trust with President Obama [Trump] as well, and a 38 percent favorability rate for President Obama [Trump]. Let’s listen too something Steve Bannon said at CPAC earlier this week about this.
… 
PAUL: Nick, what did he mean by that? 
ADAMS: Well, Christi look, I think it's very clear that President Trump has an agenda that many journalists in this country don't like. It's no secret that journalists are far more liberal than the rest of the United States, and I don't think it would surprise anybody to know that the Media Research Center discovered that if only journalists could vote, we would only get Democratic presidents. So I think that there's a gulf between journalists and Middle America. And—
PAUL: I don't know you can – you can generalize all journalists as – as being liberal. Amanda, did you want to take that one?
AMANDA TERKEL: I mean, the agenda of the media that Trump doesn't like is presenting the facts, whether or not they make Donald Trump look very good. I mean yes, trust in the media is low as it is with Donald Trump. But then you have the President out there saying that the media is the enemy of the American people. You have declaring things to be fake news if he doesn't like them, going after them for using anonymous sources even though Donald Trump himself for many years loved talking to the media off the record and would actually make up fake names and talk to the media when he was being himself but would pretend to be somebody else. And you have Donald Trump deciding that the media is a good scapegoat and going after them whether it's fair or not.
BRIAN STELTER: Yeah, the President needs an opponent, and right now the opponent is the media, because the media is actually pretty strong. People are tuning in and watching and reading in record numbers right now because they want to know if what the President is saying is true or not. So, you know, I understand why he is skipping the dinner after both Bush’s and Reagan and all those Republican presidents in the past did show up. I understand why he wants to be anti-establishment and break with tradition, because he wants to break with lots of traditions. But this event was about celebrating – and it is and will be about celebrating journalism, and actually celebrating the institution of the president. It's bigger than anyone man and it's a missed opportunity, I think, for the president this year.
5

Trump Voters Defy NBC Attempts to Get Them to Criticize President

By Kyle Drennen

During a report for Friday’s NBC Today, rural Wisconsin Trump supporters repeatedly frustrated attempts by political analyst Nicolle Wallace to get them to criticize President Trump. The flummoxed journalist noted: “On this farm, the President gets plenty of pasture, even for the controversial travel ban.”
Of Trump’s executive order on immigration, dairy farmer Brian Laplant argued: “Maybe he didn't handle it the right way. But is there ever going to be a right way to handle that? If it keeps us safe, maybe that's what we gotta do.” Wallace worried: “Do you think that's in line with our values as a country?” Laplant replied: “There's a small group of radicals that make everyone look bad. There's no good way of handling this.”
Wallace took a similar approach weeks earlier, when she scolded a Pennsylvania Trump voter for supporting the policy: “You don't think that's un-American?”
Turning to Laplant’s daughter, Wallace confessed: “I think a lot of people in the media, like me, that got this wrong, got it wrong because we thought that women would be offended by some of the things he said. Did any of the things he – ” Holly Laplant cut her off: “No, no. He's just a guy. I don't know how well you guys know Wisconsinites, but we're pretty brash people. You know, we drink beer, like the cold. I mean, we are just who we are. He – to me – he fits really well with us.”
Wallace managed to find another farmer who was concerned “that this week's sweeping changes to immigration policy could hurt business.” She explained: “John Pagel also supports Donald Trump, but says his dairy can't survive without Hispanic immigrants....many of his employees are scared that they'll be deported...” However, she added that “he still supports the President.”
Back on the Laplant farm, Wallace pressed 22-year-old Holly: “What about the tweeting? Do you like that he tweets or do you think he gets himself in trouble?” Laplant was unfazed:
It's just his way. I don't know. He doesn't have to change who he was from previous just because he is now the president. Should he try to do things a little differently? Yes. But he doesn't have to completely change who he is. I mean, that kind of defeats the purpose of us voting for him in the first place.
Her father followed: “He's ruffling a lot of feathers, which is kind of what we were looking for. I don't know, people just need to give him a chance. We did that with Obama, we gave Obama him a chance. So now let's give this guy a chance.”
After the taped segment, Wallace tried to offer hope to Trump’s opponents: “I guess the heartening piece for his critics is that nothing is lost on him. None of his missteps are lost on these voters.”

Here is a full transcript of the February 24 report:
8:33 AM ET
MATT LAUER: Let's continue now with our ongoing series, In Trump They Trust. Nicolle Wallace has been hitting the road, visiting people who helped elect President Trump. Nicolle, good morning again, good to see you.
NICOLLE WALLACE: Good morning you guys, you can't get rid of me today.
LAUER: Happy to have you.
WALLACE: So President Trump was the first Republican to win Wisconsin since Ronald Reagan by appealing to life-long Democrats and while Hillary Clinton never visited that state that was supposed to be part of her so-called “blue wall.” We went back to the Badger State to find out how some of them are feeling about their vote now.
[ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: In Trump They Trust; Supporters Speak Out One Month Into Presidency]
It's milking and feeding time at the Laplant family farm in Sturgeon Bay. And if you want to hear what they think about Donald Trump, be ready to help with the chores first.
HOLLY LAPLANT: They'll come to you. They know what time it is.
WALLACE: So why doesn't he ever say anything bad about Putin?
BRIAN LAPLANT: Maybe we need them in the long run to fight radical Islam. Better to have a few allies in that department than being all alone. We’ve done this alone for how long?
WALLACE: On this farm, the President gets plenty of pasture, even for the controversial travel ban.
LAPLANT: Maybe he didn't handle it the right way. But is there ever going to be a right way to handle that? If it keeps us safe, maybe that's what we gotta do.
WALLACE: Do you think that's in line with our values as a country?
LAPLANT: There's a small group of radicals that make everyone look bad. There's no good way of handling this.
WALLACE: But these aren't the opinions of a staunch Republican. Brian Laplant was a Democrat his entire life. Did you vote for Obama?
LAPLANT: Do I have to admit that?
WALLACE [LAUGHING]: I think you just did.
LAPLANT: I did. I did. I voted for him two times. I was – I thought – well, I was a Democrat. Well, now really I don't know what I really am.
WALLACE: He's still a farmer. Up every morning at 4 a.m. to milk his herd of 85 cows, a job that doesn't end until the sun goes down.
LAPLANT: You can't just quit this.
WALLACE: But Brian says leaving the Democratic Party was an easy choice.
LAPLANT: Well, we always thought the Democrat was for the working people. I don't think that's the case anymore, they forgot about us.
WALLACE: Hillary Clinton didn't even come here this year.
LAPLANT: Thinking it was a lock. The center of the country is where we work with our hands, we actually got our president this time around.
HOLLY LAPLANT: I mean, being a woman and supporting Trump, people are like, “Oh, my gosh, how can you? That’s terrible.”
WALLACE: Brian’s 22-year-old daughter Holly also helped break the Democrats hold on this family.
[TO HOLLY LAPLANT] I think a lot of people in the media, like me, that got this wrong, got it wrong because we thought that women would be offended by some of the things he said. Did any of the things he –
LAPLANT: No, no. He's just a guy. I don't know how well you guys know Wisconsinites, but we're pretty brash people. You know, we drink beer, like the cold. I mean, we are just who we are. He – to me – he fits really well with us.
BRIAN LAPLANT: He's a business man. And the country should be ran like a business and it hasn't been for a long time.
WALLACE: But some of Wisconsin's larger dairies worry that this week's sweeping changes to immigration policy could hurt business. John Pagel also supports Donald Trump, but says his dairy can't survive without Hispanic immigrants.
JOHN PAGEL: When everybody else is off for Christmas, somebody is still here working. The cows need to be milked everyday at the same time. They're filling the void of the jobs that a lot of other people don't want to do anyway. They love their work, they love to work. They make a good living and they send money back home for their families that need it. It's a big deal.
WALLACE: Pagel says many of his employees are scared that they'll be deported, but he still supports the President.
PAGEL: Let's fix the system so that they can fill the jobs that we need.
WALLACE: Back at the Laplant’s farm, Holly just finished two years of school and is hoping that one day she'll take over the farm from her dad.
HOLLY LAPLANT: I'm a farm girl, I don't want to move away.
WALLACE: She's also firm in her support for President Trump.
[TO LAPLANT] What about the tweeting? Do you like that he tweets or do you think he gets himself in trouble?
LAPLANT: It's just his way. I don't know. He doesn't have to change who he was from previous just because he is now the president. Should he try to do things a little differently? Yes. But he doesn't have to completely change who he is. I mean, that kind of defeats the purpose of us voting for him in the first place.
BRIAN LAPLANT: He's ruffling a lot of feathers, which is kind of what we were looking for. I don't know, people just need to give him a chance. We did that with Obama, we gave Obama him a chance. So now let's give this guy a chance.
WALLACE: What advice do you have for him?
LAPLANT: Think he’ll call me?
WALLACE: He might, you never know.
[LAUGHTER]
LAPLANT: Actually, that would be the greatest thing that could ever happen to agriculture, if we could get him on a small dairy. Have him come out, walk around with his boots on, like you.
WALLACE: Exit polls show that 63% of Wisconsin voters had a negative opinion of Donald Trump on Election Day, but 21% of those who viewed him unfavorably voted for him anyway.
LAUER: That's fascinating. Were those people hoping that Trump would come through for them or were they voting against Hillary Clinton?
WALLACE: Those people felt like someone was speaking to them for the first time. The thing that he said that just struck me, like struck a nerve for me, was when he said that people that work with their hands had been ignored for so long and he came out and was finally talking to them.
CARSON DALY: And it was the perception that it was Democrats that were, you know, hold them down on jobs and now they had that switch and they feel like Mr. Trump was the answer.
WALLACE: Yeah, and I guess the heartening piece for his critics is that nothing is lost on him. None of his missteps are lost on these voters.
LAUER: Nicolle, fascinating stuff. Thank you very much.
DALY: Thanks, Nicolle.  
6

Jorge Ramos: U.S. Is 'Our Country, Not Theirs'

By Jorge Bonilla

Further ramping up his open opposition to President Trump's immigration law enforcement policies, Univision anchor Jorge Ramos has let loose with an outrageous tirade that could best be described as equal parts nationalistic identity politics, racially-driven demagoguery, and yet another instance of the irresponsible conflation of legal and illegal immigration. 
Here's how the Univision/Fusion anchor kicked off his participation in the 2017 edition of the network's annual entertainment awards show, Premios Lo Nuestro ("Our Awards"):
JORGE RAMOS, SENIOR NEWS ANCHOR, UNIVISION: I am an immigrant, just like many of you. I am a proud Latino immigrant here in the United States. My name is Jorge Ramos, and I work at Univision and at the Fusion network. And you know exactly what is going on here in the United States. There are many people who do not want us to be here, and who want to create a wall in order to separate us. But you know what? This is also our country. Let me repeat this: OUR country, not theirs. It is our country. And we are not going to leave. We are nearly 60 million Latinos in the United States. And thanks to US, the United States eats, grows and, as we've seen today, sings and dances. So when they attack us, we already know what we are going to do. We are not going to sit down. We will not shut up. And we will not leave. That is what we are going to do.
Premios Lo Nuestro is usually just a nice bit of entertainment for fans of the many different genres of Latin music...not unlike the Billboards or the CMAs. However, as we saw during last year's pre-election RiseUp concert and GOTV rally, Univision is increasingly mixing politics and entertainment - and that's how we end up with Ramos as a presenter at a music awards show. 
Ramos' speech is amazingly strident, with an "us against them" tone that one would not expect from someone who incessantly promotes diversity from the other side of his mouth. When Ramos told the audience that "there are many who do not want us to be here", he erases any distinction between legal and illegal immigration, and irresponsibly casts immigration as an exclusively Latino issue. This is not the first time Ramos has drawn on both deceptive and discredited rhetorical devices such as these. 

What is astounding, though, is Ramos' ferociously nationalistic rhetoric. On this score, Ramos would have been in the clear had he stopped at "this is also our country". Such a statement hints at inclusion, patriotism, and a pro-forma desire to assimilate and function as an integral part of the nation as a whole. However, Ramos crossed a bright line when he decreed the United States to be "OUR country, not theirs". One does not expect to hear such nationalistic rhetoric from a hardened critic of Donald Trump and Steve Bannon, and yet this isn't the first time that a Univision anchor lets loose with a nationalist rant. Who can forget Ramos' co-anchor María Elena Salinas' remarks, when she went nuclear after Ramos' 2015 Iowa press conference incident?
Jorge wanted a piece of Trump ever since that first speech where he announced his candidacy and said that Mexico sends criminals, drug traffickers and rapists over the border. In reality, most of us that work in Spanish-language media have wanted a piece of him (Trump), have wanted to question him and challenge him and show him that his statements are baseless. Moreover, that his words are the equivalent of a declaration of war against an important sector of American society. As in any war, an aggression against one of our own brings pride and nationalism to the surface. Insult Hispanic immigrants, with or without papers, and you insult all of us Hispanics. They are not alone.
Univision would like English-language audiences to think that Ramos didn't actually say what he said. The network deceptively softened the most incendiary portion of Ramos' "bold statement" when it translated it for consumption by English-speaking audiences. "OUR country, not theirs" magically became "OUR country, not just theirs". Univision also disappeared that part of his statement from a related meme. 
Finally, Ramos' statement begs the question: Who is this "our" that he speaks of? Is it U.S. Latinos regardless of birthplace? Legal immigrants? Illegal immigrants? Supporters of comprehensive immigration reform? Is it the multiracial and multicultural "rising American mainstream"? That much isn't clear. What IS clear is that "Our", within the context of Ramos' statement, suggests a separate nationality to which U.S. Hispanics owe some sort of allegiance. Ramos, of all people, should know better than to approach the lines of racial and cultural supremacism - even if it is in furtherance of an amnesty cause that is near and dear to him. 
He STILL doesn't represent me.

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