Bill O'Reilly

Ford’s Theatre flunks O’Reilly’s Lincoln book

The National Park Service finds that the Fox host's best-selling new book is riddled with factual errors

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Ford's Theatre flunks O'Reilly's Lincoln book Bill O'Reilly (Credit: AP)

[UPDATE 11/12/11: A second expert reviewer trashes O'Reilly's book, finds more errors.]

A reviewer for the official National Park Service bookstore at Ford’s Theatre has recommended that Bill O’Reilly’s bestselling new book about the Lincoln assassination not be sold at the historic site “because of the lack of documentation and the factual errors within the publication.”

Rae Emerson, deputy superintendent at Ford’s Theatre, which is a national historic site under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service, has penned a scathing appraisal of O’Reilly’s “Killing Lincoln: The Shocking Assassination that Changed America Forever.” In Emerson’s official review, which I’ve pasted below, she spends four pages correcting passages from O’Reilly’s book before recommending that it not be offered for sale at Ford’s Theatre because it is not up to quality standards.

For example, “Killing Lincoln” makes multiple references to the Oval Office; in fact, Emerson points out, the office was not built until 1909.

At one point O’Reilly writes of generals Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee, “The two warriors will never meet again.” In fact, according to the review, Grant and Lee met for a second time in 1865 to discuss prisoners of war.

The book says that Ford’s Theatre “burned to the ground in 1863.” In fact, the fire was in 1862, according to the review.

I’ve reached out to O’Reilly’s publisher, Henry Holt, for comment, and I will update this post when I hear back.

O’Reilly’s book, co-authored with Martin Dugard, has spent six weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and is currently in the #2 spot, behind only Walter Isaacson’s blockbuster biography of Steve Jobs. Publisher Henry Holt said late last month that the title had sold nearly 1 million copies, the AP reported. The company also announced O’Reilly has agreed to write two more books, one of which will be a history of a not-yet-specified president.

O’Reilly’s book has received friendly media coverage from big outlets ranging from the New York Post to NPR. (Though the NPR piece had to be corrected because O’Reilly misstated the number of handwritten copies of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.)

One dissenting take came from University of New Hampshire history professor Ellen Fitzpatrick, who questioned the book’s sourcing in a Washington Post review.

‘Killing Lincoln’ also resurrects an old canard debunked long ago by serious historians: that Secretary of War Edwin Stanton was involved in the plot to kill Lincoln, in the hope that he might ascend to the presidency. There is no credible evidence to support such an assertion, nor do O’Reilly and Dugard provide any. (In fact, ‘Killing Lincoln’ offers no direct citations for any of its assertions. In a three-page summary under the heading ‘Notes,’ the authors assure readers that they have consulted “hundreds” of sources; they list the secondary sources they have relied on.)

The book is also getting hammered in customer reviews on Amazon, with some charges of historical inaccuracy and an average rating of just two stars out of five.

***

Here is the full National Park Service review:

Ford’s Theatre National Historic Site

Review of Killing Lincoln, Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard

Reviewer for Ford’s Theatre National Historic Site, Rae Emerson, Deputy Superintendent

Eastern National – Cooperating Association

History

Eastern National, formerly known as Eastern National Park and Monument Association, is a 501(C) (3) not-for-profit “cooperating association,” that supports the National Park Service. Cooperating associations are recognized by Congress as a means to assist the educational and interpretive mission of the National Park Service. Cooperating associations provide various services, primarily by procuring, distributing and selling educational material in retail outlets located in national parks . . . .

Products

The products sold at Eastern National bookstores are a combination of Eastern National-produced items and merchandise purchased through outside vendors, including books, reproductions, apparel, and collectibles. All products sold in Eastern National retail outlets are evaluated by National Park Service interpreters for historical accuracy, quality, and relevance to park themes. Strict standards are maintained to ensure we offer the finest quality products that will enhance visitors’ experiences. As a cooperating association, Eastern National sells only products that the National Park Service has approved.

Reference: Eastern National

Product Selection Criteria – Ford’s Theatre National Historic Site

  • Relevance to park’s themes
  • Historically accurate
  • Publication has relevant citations
  • Reflects scholarship; the use of primary resources with documentation

Factual errors in publication

The following errors are noted in chapters the reviewer was well versed in the subject matter. Other chapters may also have similar findings noted by subject matter experts or other reviewers. These observations are not included.

Errors are identified by chapter, followed by passage where error is noted, then followed by a fact comment, which is followed by the reference for the fact comment.

Prologue

“He furls his brow . . . .” furl – nautical term to compact, roll up; furrows – narrow grove, depression on any surface, i.e., furrows of a wrinkled face

Chapter 15

“The two warriors will never meet again.”

Fact comment:

On April 10, 1865 Generals Lee and Grant met a second time at Appomattox Court House, Virginia. At that second meeting General Lee requested that his men be given evidence that they were paroled prisoners – to protect them from arrest or harassment. 28,231 parole passes were issued to Confederates.

Reference:

Appomattox Court House National Historical Park

Chapter 19

“After it (Ford’s Theatre) was burned to the ground in 1863 . . . . . . . “

Fact comment:

December 30, 1862, fire broke out and gutted the interior leaving only the blackened walls standing.

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; p. 11)

Chapter 21, 27, etc.

“Grant meets with Lincoln in the Oval Office.”

“Lincoln sitting in his Oval Office . . .”

Fact comment:

Oval Office built in 1909 during Taft’s administration.

Chapter 30

“On the nights when the Lincolns are in attendance  . . . . . . . . . and a portrait of George Washington faces out at the audience, designating that the president of the United States is in the house.”

Fact comment:

Messenger arrived at the theatre from the White House about 10:30 a.m. (April 14, 1865) to reserve the presidential box for the performance that evening.

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; p. 53)

“Ford added an additional touch to these normal decorations of the presidential box when he placed a gilt-framed engraving of Washington its central pillar for the first time.”

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; p. 54)

“So Ford’s Opera House, as the theater is formally known, is his (Booth) permanent address.”

Fact comment:

During the period from December 1861 – February 1862, Ford rented the theatre to George Christy, who advertised the building as “The George Christy Opera House”.

After renovating the theatre in February 1862, the theatre reopened in March 1862 under Ford’s name: Ford’s Atheneum.

In February 1863 work started to rebuild the theatre after the December 30, 1862 fire. The theatre known as “Ford’s New Theatre” reopened on Thursday, August 27, 1863 and later referred to as Ford’s Theatre.

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; pages 7– 13)

“The state box, where the Lincolns and Grants will site this evening, is almost on the stage itself . . . . . . . . . . distance traveled would be a mere nine feet.”

Fact Comment:

The presidential party occupied two boxes, # 7 and #8 which, when combined, are referred to as the presidential box; the state boxes are build on the stage proper; the distance from the state box to the stage is 11 and ½ feet to 12 feet depending on what end the box is measured. This difference is based on the rake or slant of the stage towards the audience.

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; pp. 46, 51, 55)

“Booth has performed here often and is more familiar with its hidden backstage tunnels . . . . .”

Comment:

Booth played twelve performances from November 3 – 14, 1863. He will not perform again at Ford’s Theatre until March 18, 1865.

“In the southeast corner (of the stage) was a two-foot wide stairway along the south wall which led to the basement. This stairway also provided access to the orchestra pit and unhindered passageway from stage-right to stage-left through the basement and by the stairs along the north wall, to the small exit door at the rear alley. The passageway on stage-right varied in width according to the manner in which the scenery was piled along the north wall to the rear door. Generally this passageway was kept clear to provide for an orderly movement of stage scenery and for the unencumbered entrance and exit of actors awaiting their cues in the adjoining greenroom in the north wing. “

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; pp. 36, 47)

“The show (Our American Cousin) has been presented eight pervious time at Ford’s . . . . . . .

Face comment:

Our American Cousin was performed seven times prior to April 14, 1865: Jan 11 and 12, 1864; Mar 11 and 12 1864; Aug 4, 1864; Aug 6, 1864; Feb 25, 1865

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; pp. 111 -121)

Chapter 39

“Booth’s second act of preparation that afternoon was using a pen knife to carve a very small peephole in the back wall of the state box. Now he looks through the hole to get a better view of the president.”

Fact comment:

“Despite all attempts to prove, without success, that the hole in the door to box 7 was bored by Booth that same afternoon, a recent letter from Frank Ford of New York City (to Olszewski, April 13, 1962) may clarify the fact. In part, his letter states:

As I told you on your visit here in New York, I say again and unequivocally that John Wilkes Booth did not bore the hole in the door leading to the box President Lincoln occupied the night of the assassination, April 14, 1865  . . .

The hole was bored by my father, Harry Clay Ford, or rather on his orders, and was bored for the very simple reason it would allow the guard, on Parker, easy opportunity whenever he so desired to look into the box rather than to open the inner door to check on the presidential party . . ..

Reference:

Restoration of Ford’s Theatre (Historic Structures Report, George J. Olszewski, Ph.D, Historian, National Capital Region, National Park Service; 1963; pp.55 -56)

 

Final disposition:

Publication (Killing Lincoln) not recommended as a sales item in the Eastern National Bookstore located in the Museum at Ford’s Theatre National Historic because of the lack of documentation and the factual errors within the publication.

Justin Elliott

Justin Elliott is a reporter for ProPublica. You can follow him on Twitter @ElliottJustin

Letterman, O’Reilly finally agree on something

The TV hosts express solidarity by way of an incredibly awkward palm slap VIDEO

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Letterman, O'Reilly finally agree on something (Credit: CBS)

Bill O’Reilly stopped by “Letterman” last night to promote his new book on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. While the he was there, the two hosts got to chatting about current events. And though they didn’t agree on everything, Bill and Dave found some common ground in their mutually held view that, in retrospect, the invasion of Iraq in 2003 was ill-advised. This led to what we imagine is one of the more awkward high-fives ever televised.

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O’Reilly quarrels with Tavis Smiley, Cornel West

Fox News host trades barbs with guests over Wall Street, poverty

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O'Reilly quarrels with Tavis Smiley, Cornel West (Credit: Fox News)

Bill O’Reilly is no stranger to conflict on his nightly program — but, even by his standards, last night’s interview with Tavis Smiley and Cornel West was a wild one. The Fox News host invited the liberal commentators and civil rights advocates, to talk about the disparity in opportunity between the haves and the have-nots in America. The tenor was combative from the get-go, but things really came to a head when O’Reilly claimed that no Wall Street executives ever committed crimes in the lead up to the 2008 financial crisis.

Icons that would shock today's right

From Dr. Seuss to the Statue of Liberty, these American mainstays would have been decried by modern conservatives

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Icons that would shock today's right(Credit: Wikipedia)

Boogeymen are everywhere these days, if you believe the conservatives’ Perpetual Paranoia Machine. A few years ago, WorldNetDaily and the American Family Association warned that Barney the Dinosaur was trying to “surreptitiously indoctrinate young children into [homosexuals'] lifestyle.” Then, Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly warned that “secular progressives” were waging a “War on Christmas” and pressing the “legalization of narcotics, euthanasia, abortion at will [and] gay marriage.” Now, schools are busy banning books for their “filthy” messages, while Fox and Friends warns that SpongeBob is leading a sinister plot to convert kids to Al Gore’s eco-crusade.

Welcome to America at the edge of insanity, where even the most innocuous items are now considered diabolical threats to the culture.

Exceptions like “Slaughterhouse Five” aside, the products that generate the most manufactured outrage and hysteria today tend to be new — puppets, celebrities’ vanity tomes, cartoons and other detritus in our cultural waste dump. However, it stands to reason that if the same Perpetual Paranoia Machine applied its standards of manufactured outrage across the board, it would end up targeting many of the most long-standing “American” symbols for elimination.

Pondering which of those symbols is an important thought experiment — it locates our relative position on the psychological map, telling us just how extreme our sociopathy is at this moment of chaos. So without further ado, here are the top 10 most universally “American” symbols that would be labeled as seditious, unpatriotic anti-American agitprop if they had been first introduced today.

10. The Collected Works of Dr. Seuss

For most of the last half-century, being a kid meant reading and loving the collected works of Theodor Seuss Geisel — aka Dr. Seuss. Think back to your earliest years, and you are likely to recall Geisel’s legendary catalog. His works are as integral to American childhood as fireworks on July 4 — and thankfully, Geisel published his books before the advent of Fox News. For if this New Deal liberal had published them today, they would likely be burned in televised Tea Party rallies.

For example, 1957′s “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” — which criticizes the commercialization of the holiday season — would be held up by Bill O’Reilly as an example of the vicious War on Christmas. Likewise, 1971′s “The Lorax,” which is a parable about the downsides of hyper-industrialization and environmental degradation, would be at least as viciously denigrated as Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth.” And had 1984′s “The Butter Battle Book” been introduced during the “War on Terror,” it would have gotten Dr. Seuss put on a no-fly list and labeled a seditious, al-Qaida-loving traitor.

9. The Golden Rule

Treat others as you would want them to treat you. This idea, which undergirds the concept of human rights, is as old as organized religion, and is a proud basis for America’s dominant Judeo-Christian traditions. In the Old Testament, scripture says to “love thy neighbor as thyself,” while New Testament says “Do to others as you would have them do to you” — and we teach this to kids at the earliest age.

But had someone published these words for the first time today, that person would seem like a radical left-wing ideologue. After all, America is a country whose definition of “class warfare” is making the rich pay the same tax rates as everyone else. It is a nation that gets angry at leaders who suggest redistributing some of the wealth.

In the context of that me-first-screw-everyone-else culture, and in the context of drone warfare, rendition, torture, warrantless wiretapping, Wall Street predation and budget cuts to social services, the Golden Rule would be vilified as a Marxist idiom — and its proponents would, at best, be depicted as coffeehouse communists who refuse to live in the real world. More likely, they’d be attacked as unpatriotically justifying blowback against the United States for our military actions across the world.

8. The South Carolina State Flag

Though you wouldn’t know it from the every-presidential-campaign-year brouhaha over the flying of the Confederate stars and bars, South Carolina’s state flag happens to be a crescent moon flying over a palm tree. This design is rooted in pure, chest-thumpingly proud Americana, having something to do with the Revolutionary War, the Stamp Act and a military official named William Moultrie. But had it been a new design proposed today, South Carolina would likely be accused by conservatives of trying to create a terrorist cell in the heart of Dixie.

Take a look at South Carolina’s flag next to, say, Saudi Arabian iconography and you see that it’s a flag that could easily double up as the national symbol of an Islamic country in a Middle Eastern desert. The crescent moon, of course, is an Islamic symbol already featured on many Muslim nations’ flags, and the palm tree has long been a symbol of an oasis in a Sahara-like desert.

No doubt, South Carolinians would vehemently deny the charge that its flag suggests any kind of tolerance for Muslims. This is a state that seems totally psyched about its long heritage of bigotry — a state that continues to fly symbols of slavery on its public grounds. But there’s little doubt that outfits like WorldNetDaily would make the same Islamophobic claims about the South Carolina flag that it’s made about other public symbols.

7. The Statue of Liberty

As any elementary school trip to New York City teaches, the Statue of Liberty is a symbol of warmly welcoming the world’s refugees to America. Indeed, Lady Liberty is so synonymous with a pro-immigration stand, she is the home of a famous plaque memorializing the 1883 poem, “The New Colossus,” which says, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”

Yet, had this statue been first erected today with the same message, it would generate an orgiastic anti-immigrant protest that would make last year’s Park51 pandemonium look tame. With talk of building walls at the border and with mass deportations of undocumented workers on the rise, this age of xenophobia would have zero tolerance for any kind of state-sanctioned sculpture enthusiastically welcoming the world’s “wretched refuse” and “the homeless, tempest-tost.”

6. Labor Day

Try to imagine an America without Labor Day. Then, try to imagine a modern-day president of the United States signing a bill creating a national holiday to honor unions — and try to imagine that bill being seen as a necessary election-year compromise.

Most likely, you can’t imagine this, even though this is exactly what happened in 1894 when President Grover Cleveland signed such a measure as a peace offering after he deployed federal troops to violently crush the Pullman strikes. You can’t imagine this, because a president today wouldn’t merely be lambasted for considering such a national holiday — he’d probably be impeached for treason in a nation that now euphorically celebrates ever more vicious attacks on organized labor and makes political folk heroes out of union-busting governors.

Labor Day today, of course, involves national festivities that (outside of the day’s union events) all but avoid mentioning organized labor. If the holiday is celebrated at all, it is celebrated as the last gasp of summer fun — and nothing more. But the history of the holiday, though buried and willfully ignored, reminds us of just how impossible it would be to legislate such a quintessentially American day in the 21st century.

5. “This Land Is My Land” and “We Are the World”

Woodie Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” is one of those iconic summer camp jingles regularly bellowed out by kids roasting marshmallows around the fire. It teaches children those universal lessons about sharing and inclusion. Which is why it would be excoriated as a subliminal plot against capitalism had it first come out today.

Think about it: Had Guthrie first released his ditty in 2011, rather than in 1945, it would surely become the top target of the arch-conservative private-property-rights movement in America. Guthrie would be promptly accused of being a land “redistributionist” looking to wage a Marxist holy war on the very concept of ownership. The protest signs at his record label’s offices — which would inevitably become bumper stickers — would be red-white-and-blue-themed placards, reading: “This Land is My Land, NOT Your Land.”

4. Bert and Ernie

America has never been a particularly gay-friendly nation, so it’s a miracle that Bert and Ernie were ever allowed on television in the first place. But they’ve been there consistently since 1969.

And yet, had the Children’s Television Workshop waited a few years more to introduce the pair to America’s kids, they probably would have faced a much more hostile reception. Modern-day America is a nation whose leading right-wing Christian groups now insist that anti-bullying laws promote homosexuality among children. Can you imagine what that same right-wing Christian movement would do to a child-focused puppet show about two adult men cohabiting in the same bedroom? Of course, Bert and Ernie are clearly depicted as sleeping in separate beds (and, let’s face it, they’re puppets who, as the show’s creators themselves have pointed out, are about as asexual as you can get), but that would hardly tamp down the anti-gay hysteria.

3. The Weekend

The epic struggle for a 40-hour work week in America culminated in the late 1930s with the passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act. Effectively, this legislatively cemented the contemporary concept known as the American Weekend.

Today, though, such a law probably could never be passed. With corporations dominating our politics so completely, and with the United States now in a race-to-the-bottom competition with slave-labor countries, the notion of a weekend — had it not already existed — would likely be cited by lobbyists and by Rupert Murdoch’s attack machine as yet another ultraliberal scheme to help lazy layabout workers live a life of undue luxury. Just as the indigent have been criticized as “welfare queens,” so too would proponents of two-days-a-week of off-time be hammered as “weekend queens.”

2. The First Amendment

The constitutional right to freely express one’s opinion and to freely worship one’s own religion — our First Amendment distinguishes our founding Constitution from so many other nations’. But had we not been lucky enough to get it on the books back in the 18th century, it’s hard to imagine it being legislated into law today.

During the so-called War on Terror, we’ve seen citizens arrested and jailed for daring to stage public protests, media-backed mobs try to prevent Islamic cultural centers from being erected, presidential candidates insist that communities can outlaw places of worship, and a president target an American citizen for assassination (without charge) for the “crime” of speech. Likewise, as corporate media conglomerates have risen to prominence, we’ve seen political messages censored off the publicly owned airwaves.

In this cauldron, had a group of legislators proposed a constitutional amendment guaranteeing a right to freedom of speech and freedom of religion where one did not yet exist, those same forces would undoubtedly align those lawmakers, accusing them of making common cause with terrorists.

1. The Holy Bible

Often touted as the catechism for right-wing religious politics, the Holy Bible is the ultimate American bestseller, appearing everywhere in our country. It’s in our churches, our bookstores, our libraries and our motel desk drawers. But had the Good Book first been published today, it’s hard to imagine it not being the target of a censorship campaign by Fox News, which would bill it as a new and dangerous Communist Manifesto.

You see, when you actually read the Bible (rather than making selective political reference to it as so many often do), you find that it is filled with passages echoing progressive liberation theology, from “the meek shall inherit the earth” to its diatribes against usury. Additionally, one of its central characters seems to have anti-capitalist tendencies. As reported by the Washington Post’s Gregory Paul:

Jesus is no free marketeer. Improving one’s earthly financial circumstances is not nearly as critical as preparing for the end times that will arrive at any minute. He does offer substantial encouragement for the poor, and warns the wealthy that they are in grave danger of blowing their prospects of reaching paradise, as per the metaphor of a rich person entering heaven being as difficult as a camel passing through the eye of the needle…

To understand just how non-capitalistic Christianity is supposed to be we turn to the first chapter after the gospels, Acts, which describes the events of the early church. Chapters 2 and 4 state that all “the believers were together and had everything in common. Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need … No one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had … There were no needy persons among them. From time to time those who owned lands or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he had need.”

Now folks, that’s outright socialism of the type described millennia later by Marx — who likely got the general idea from the gospels.

Paul is exactly right — and only because the Bible is a few thousand years removed from its first publication run is it allowed to remain immune from the wrath of the Right Wing Hate Machine.

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David Sirota

David Sirota is a best-selling author of the new book "Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.

Stewart and O’Reilly debate Common’s WH invite

Comedian tells Fox host: "You have to be consistent with your outrage"

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Stewart and O'Reilly debate Common's WH inviteJon Stewart and Bill O'Reilly spar on Monday night's "O'Reilly Factor."

Jon Stewart has already publicly derided several Fox News pundits for their horror over rapper Common’s invitation to a recent White House poetry evening. Last night he went a step further, debating the matter with Bill O’Reilly on “The O’Reilly Factor.”

O’Reilly argued that people who sympathize with convicted “cop-killers” — such as Joanne Chesimard, whom Common has visited in Cuba — should not be allowed to entertain at the White House. Stewart fought back powerfully, pointing out that other singers who have performed at the White House (notably Bono, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan) have also voiced support for convicted criminals. He railed against O’Reilly’s perceived inconsistency: “There is a selective outrage machine here at Fox that pettifogs only when it suits the narrative that suits them. … You’ve got a lot of people that aren’t allowed to sit in the White House because they’ve written songs about people convicted of murder.”

Stewart finished by saying he thought the issue of Common’s White House invitation was a minor one, not worthy of the attention it has been receiving from Fox and other critics. “It saddens me to see you wasting your time,” he told O’Reilly. “It’s a poetry slam. Who gives a crap?”

 

 

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Emma Mustich is a Salon contributor. Follow her on Twitter: @emustich.

Right-wing pundits show how not to react to a catastrophe

Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh all said awful things about Japan. Will this be a teaching moment?

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Right-wing pundits show how not to react to a catastrophe

The nuclear crisis in Japan has most of the news-viewing population anxiously enthralled and deeply concerned for the well-being of the Japanese people. Network news anchors, for the most part, have responded to the catastrophe with even-keeled and sober-faced reporting and commentary. With such an overwhelming demand for coverage, pundits struggle to find a fresh angle, and some have come off sounding downright disdainful. A small collection of right-wing pundits have put on a master class these past few days in saying precisely the wrong thing during an international disaster. 

One of those voices was Rush Limbaugh, who mocked displaced Japanese people in a Diane Sawyer report because they were recycling, and thinks it’s funny that such a cataclysmic natural disaster has struck such an environmentally conscious country:

Glenn Beck, of course, drew heated criticism for insinuating on his radio show that divine intervention caused the Japanese earthquake and tsunami:

Now look, I’m not saying God is, you know, causing earthquakes. Well — I’m not saying that he — I’m not not saying that either … Whether you call it Gaia, or whether you call it Jesus, there’s a message being sent and that is, “Hey, you know that stuff we’re doing? Not really working out real well.” Maybe we should stop doing some of it.

That was on Monday afternoon, but Beck wasn’t finished pontificating about Japan. In this next video, he begins by insisting that everything is fine at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant and cites a much-buzzed-about blog post penned by an MIT researcher. (Which Salon’s Justin Elliott thoroughly debunked yesterday.) Then, Beck endeavors to illustrate how a meltdown would occur — using M&M’s.

Finally, there was Bill O’Reilly. During the Talking Point segment of his show last night, the Fox News host acknowledged that the situation in Japan was serious, but argued that it wasn’t nearly as bad as the media is making it out to be. O’Reilly’s rationale sounds patronizing as he expounds on Japan’s cultural regard for “cooperation and obedience to authority.”

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