Libya lights up presidential detractors from all sides. And your point is?

The Yahoo headline says it all: “Obama taking heat from all sides for Libya action.”

Writer Jim O’Sullivan explains in his National Journal piece, the article for which the Yahoo headline trumpets, that President Obama is taking a bipartisan bitching over his decision to take part in the UN action aimed at keeping strongman Mummar Quadaffi from slaughtering innocent civilians.

Such news is hardly a revelation. While Obama did seem to waffle a bit at first on the possibility of military action he has delivered a plan to go in and hopefully get out while perhaps saving thousands of Libyan lives. Why? Because Quadaffi is about three-quarters a bubble off  the level and whether he does major damage to his own people and to the oil fields of Libya are — like it or not — in the national interest of the U.S. Yes, Oil.

Getting Obama to admit that oil is a big factor in his decision will not likely happen. Just as such admissions weren’t forthcoming from the Presidents Bush in first Iraq and then, uh, Iraq.

The U.S. Air Force said two airmen are safe after ejecting over northeast Libya Monday afternoon from a F-15E Strike Eagle such as this one. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Aaron Allmon)

The big difference between Obama and, at least the latter Bush, is that Obama doesn’t have near the propaganda machine the Republicans had in the run up and early stages of the Iraq War. Why the GOP would inspire the populace to draw and quarter anyone who made ill remarks  against the president while he was out of the country and we were at war (such as Obama was this weekend in Brazil), if Bush was in office. All of this thanks to the mouthing of Limbaugh, Beck, Coulter, Malking, O’Reilly, Hannity, and Fox News in general, ad nauseam (really ad nauseam). Remember the Dixie Chicks? They were blacklisted just because Natalie Maines was brave enough to say what thousands of other Texans said everyday, that they were ashamed George “Gee Dubya” Bush was a Texan.

A journalistic axiom is that if you piss off enough people on either side of an issue then you must certainly be doing your job. Well, on one side Obama has Dennis Kucinich going off like a little pop pistol and Sen. Richard Lugar on the other side is all ablaze — as much as the lethargic  Republican can be lit up  — over the president’s apparent use of the War Powers Act. So far, Obama has seemed to satisfy the law.

It, of course, it goes without saying that the opposition to the president will not ever, ever, lavish the “Black Man in the White House” with praise. Everything Obama does and says is wrong, according to the opposition. His wife wants to tell us what to eat. His children are  terrorist babies. His dog bites rich white guys.

So to sum up the “news” that Obama is being castigated from all sides, does the phrase “No s**t, Sherlock” ring a bell?

 

In the news world it’s “root hog, or die”

Quite a piece it has been since I heard those quiet tappings from the keyboards, the telephones, the occasional neighbor talking too loudly to his source, the buzz of CNN on the TV screen, and people pissing me off because they stopped to shoot the shit right behind me as I try to finish a story on deadline. I am talking about the sights, sounds and, yes the emotions, of the daily newspaper newsroom.

Actually, next month it will be six years that I stopped working full-time as a newspaper reporter. I left under what is called a “confidential agreement.” You can draw your own conclusions, but sure as shootin,’ I don’t want to pay back the eight weeks severance I got when I left on that ugly April day.

Over time, though, you see that those feelings you once held so tightly and rightly about how you went about your job and how the means turned out looking differently from the ends sometimes, especially to the readers.

The three local TV stations we had where I worked — we had three TVs in the newsroom and we watched them each night at 6 & 10 — were mediocre small market news operations. Like many small markets I have seen, they always tried to claim their news superiority was more than it really was. Particularly galling, was the phrase several of the news anchors used “”As we first reported.” The trouble I had with the phrase was 99 and 1/2 percent times, the “first reporting” meant that they were first to report it on the air. As to where the story originated, it was almost always something the TV stations stole from the newspapers.

I followed a couple of important stories in that town and market over the seven years I worked for this paper. More often than not, when news broke on these stories, it was I who did the breaking. I fancied myself a better writer than reporter for a number of years until I became really good at the reporting end of it. I am not bragging. It was just a fact that I was an above average reporter who had that “nose for news”  and who kept on top of his “stuff.” That is why the TV people would piss me off. I was the one who broke the stories.

These days, since I do little real reporting and I tend to “bury the lead” more than I would like, I often look differently at TV news knowing that — normally — the area’s local daily or strong weekly newspapers supply the TV with their stories. The “pretty boys and girls” put the underpaid newspaper beat reporter’s words into tons of mousse and hairspray. Sorry, I know I am just being mean there. I know a number of local TV reporters who are nice people and very competent. But I also know some who are as worthless as a beer bottle in a gunfight.

To be perfectly honest, the place where I now reside doesn’t have a very good, prominent, daily newspaper. The paper is blessed with a few good reporters/writers, but the old, established daily, suffers from a severe lack of leadership. The best newspaper reporter in the World can only carry a medium-to-small-medium-sized newspaper so far.

The guided-missile destroyer USS Barry launches a Tomahawk missile March 20, no doubt, to NOT find its way up Libyan strong man Col. Quadaffi's butt. (Navy photo by ICFN Roderick Eubanks)

Okay, so I bury this way deep. Last night when CNN’s foreign correspondent Nic Robertson reported Quadaffi’s compound was “blowed-up” by a cruise missile or something of the kind, I noticed the visible excitement of his back in the “USSA” anchor T.J. Holmes. Continually, it seems, Holmes would replay the moment when Robertson first reported that Q-daffy’s place went boom and he would not be hesitant to announce we saw it all first on CNN.

As the “Breaking News” went on, I was becoming rather ready to throw a shoe (a flip-flop at least) at the TV set and Mr. Anchor Holmes. But I remembered how I used to hate the TV stations for bragging about their exploits to the point where I finally said — with an editor’s approval — if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.’ When we were the ones who broke a story, we told God and everybody.

All in all, dealing with a medium which stole your stories and claimed those stories were theirs, it came down to just standing up to the local TV thieving bastards. Sorry, most weren’t like that, I only used the term “thieving bastards” first, for effect and secondly, because that’s what a very few were with which we were dealing.

In the end, no honor exists among thieves whether it be pimps, dope dealers, lawyers, Realtors, or reporters. The world is that of the subterranean and you have to dig for it, and “root hog, or die.”

 

News overload continues

The “Great News Overload” continues. So much is going on of interest, to me at least, I hardly know where first to turn.

Perhaps it is a flip-up between the nuclear crisis in Japan — a little radiation goes a long way — and Libya where the UN Security Council has approved the use of  “all necessary measures to protect civilians from military actions by forces of Muammar al-Qadhafi. Yet another way to spell this lunatic’s name.

Maybe I am in the minority but I think the decision by the UN, which is backed by the Arab League and the U.S., is a right one. I just hope that all necessary measures which includes a “no-fly” zone is a) Not too late in the game and b) Something that will not drag our country into a third combat front. It is my understanding many military types are not for it, of course, the military leaders with any sense never want to put their young men and women in harm’s way. Let’s just hope this goes right.

Radiation in Cali? I don’t think the sky is falling quite, yet. I still don’t know what all is happening with the Japanese nuclear reactors. Looks like I might watch some CNN later on today.

Have a good weekend. Here’s hoping that all your news is good. Cheesy, I say? Ah yeah buddy.

Let’s split!

Nothing is quite so disconcerting than noticing after awhile that  the bottom has split out of your pants.

I am trying to remember, did it it happen before I went to dinner at Baytown Seafood or after? Luckily, it is after normal hours at my office and no one much is around. I did see a very attractive woman walk out of the building just as I walked in. A near miss, miss, er, missus.

It’s time to go home now and none too soon.

Libya: Time for Barry to rock and roll?

While natural disasters and the “Japan Syndrome” have been taking place in Asia an old-fashioned “mellavahess” has been growing ever deeper in Libya.

Quadaffi Duck’s forces are steadily taking back some of the gains made by rebel forces amidst continuing talk, mostly outside Libya and off the African continent, promoting intervention to help the uprising. Now it’s easy as hell to say Obama should do this or that. See, I’ll show you.

Obama should order bombing of Quadaffi’s palaces and where intelligence-gatherers believe nut-boy is staying. I’m sure our intelligence has at least an idea. And since we have satellites that can determine whether a tiny camel is salsa dancing inside the head of a needle then surely those spy satellites can tell where the present-day Libyan Army is bivouacked so a couple of  Navy F-18s could scream over head and rain down their lethal arsenals. Who needs a no-fly zone when you take out the entire Libyan Air Force on the ground?

That is not to say the above is what I would do. I would probably be sweating bullets and having a nervous breakdown were I the person who determines the course of action in Libya.

France wants to go in, guns a-blazing, at least after creating a no-fly zone. France. Can you believe it? I am not a perpetual French-basher, Freedom Fries type of guy. After all, Ben Franklin and others  beat the drum for Franco assistance during the revolution. Support came in various from French folk like Beaumarchais, LaFayette, L’Enfant, Maurice Chevalier, Marcel Marceau and Pierre Alsace-Lorraine.  Even though we’ve repaid the French a couple of times over, we still owe them a debt of gratitude. But between Great Britain and France, not a lot enthusiasm exists for Libyan intervention right now.

Just today I heard on one news report some English-speaking Libyans say they need help. It is the first such words I have heard on the subject, or perhaps I wasn’t listening. We should not involve our military into more Middle East conflict or conflict period for that matter, though. But, haven’t we done that with Libya for quite some time? Think back to the Ronny Ray Guns era.

I don’t fault Obama for doing nothing in Libya. Perhaps that is the most prudent step right now. I do think this is the time for Barack Obama, the tall kid with the big ears from Honolulu to step up to the plate and say “follow me.” This country, the democratic nations, the most prosperous nations in the world all need leadership because it is lacking.

People much, much smarter than me are behind the scenes figuring out the first two or three hundred moves before the next move the United States needs to take in all the turmoil in North Africa and the Middle East, not to mention in the Japan Syndrome.

Okay, you might detest oil and the oil industrial complex. But that is what makes the Little Train That Could, Could — at least for the present that is.  We’ve got some real challenges right now. Mr. Barry O, I think it’s time to step up to the plate.