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Chapter 4 the Right-Wing Media Enablers of Anti-Islam Propaganda
Chapter 4 The right-wing media enablers of anti-Islam propaganda Spreading anti-Muslim hate in America depends on a well-developed right-wing media echo chamber to amplify a few marginal voices. The think tank misinforma- tion experts and grassroots and religious-right organizations profiled in this report boast a symbiotic relationship with a loosely aligned, ideologically-akin group of right-wing blogs, magazines, radio stations, newspapers, and television news shows to spread their anti-Islam messages and myths. The media outlets, in turn, give members of this network the exposure needed to amplify their message, reach larger audiences, drive fundraising numbers, and grow their membership base. Some well-established conservative media outlets are a key part of this echo cham- ber, mixing coverage of alarmist threats posed by the mere existence of Muslims in America with other news stories. Chief among the media partners are the Fox News empire,1 the influential conservative magazine National Review and its website,2 a host of right-wing radio hosts, The Washington Times newspaper and website,3 and the Christian Broadcasting Network and website.4 They tout Frank Gaffney, David Yerushalmi, Daniel Pipes, Robert Spencer, Steven Emerson, and others as experts, and invite supposedly moderate Muslim and Arabs to endorse bigoted views. In so doing, these media organizations amplify harm- ful, anti-Muslim views to wide audiences. (See box on page 86) In this chapter we profile some of the right-wing media enablers, beginning with the websites, then hate radio, then the television outlets. The websites A network of right-wing websites and blogs are frequently the primary movers of anti-Muslim messages and myths. -
The Oklahoma Publisher Official Publication of the Oklahoma Press Association
The Oklahoma Publisher Official Publication of the Oklahoma Press Association www.OkPress.com Vol. 91, No. 6 www.Facebook.com/okpress 16 Pages • June 2020 INSIDE Cleveland American adopts BETTER NEWSPAPER CONTEST WINNERS: Cleveland American 06/03/2020 Copy Reduced to 35% from original to fit letter page Take a look at all the 2019 winners of the OPA Better Newspaper Contest. tabloid size for the summer PAGES 4-8 The Cleveland American got smaller, actually feels bigger ADDITIONAL AWARD a little smaller when it switched as you hold it and flip through Wednesday THE JUNE 3, 2020 WINNERS: See who won the to tabloid size on June 4. page after page,” he said. “A A NEW LOOK additional annual awards in this “Being our 100th Anniver- 10-page broadsheet suddenly CLEVEL ND FOR SUMMER! Volume 100 | Number 48 year’s contests. sary, we wanted to wrap up becomes 20 pages.” 1 SECTION, 20 PAGES MERICAN ¢ PUBLISHED IN CLEVELAND, PAWNEE COUNTY, PAGE 9 our year-long celebration with Another benefit, said Fergu- 75 OKLAHOMA SINCE SEPTEMBER 1919 something different and spe- son, is that ads appear bigger IN MEMORIAM: cial,” said Rusty Ferguson, pub- on a tab page, so clients may Remembering our friends and lisher of The Cleveland Ameri- think they’re getting more for colleagues that we lost the can. their money. previous year. It’s not the first time the The tab size also allows Fer- PAGES 12-13 newspaper switched to a tab, guson to use more color. “It said Ferguson. In the summer suddenly doubles when you DONATE TO ONF to receive of 2013, the weekly newspaper flip the paper sideways — so this Will Rogers print. -
Kult-Duo Geht Ins Finale
9.1. - 15.1.2020 ABSCHIEDSPROGRAMM VON SPITZ & STUMPF KAISERSLAUTERN Mark Forster ZWEIBRÜCKEN Kult-Duo Patric Heizmann LUDWIGSHAFEN i e r f / k c u r d s Hochzeitsmesse e r d n e A : geht ins Finale o t o F SONNTAGS-BRUNCH am 26. Januar Große AuswahlanKöstlichkeiten –und für nur18,50 Euro ist für alleGeschmäcker etwas dabei. Schlemmen Sie bei unsvon 10:00 bis14:30Uhr.Vorbestellung erforderlich! Altstadtplatz15•67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim Tel. 0621 67180582 •[email protected] www.zur-alten-turnhalle.de HUNGER? 10359244_10_1 MAIKAMMER SEITE 13 ! KULTUbR.2020 Trio l Adam Marce 10361827_20_12 13. RHEIN-NECKAR HANDMADE- & KREATIVMARKT 11./12.1. Sa./So.11-18 Uhr, Heddesheim, Nordbadenhalle, Eintritt: 4,-/3,50 € www.kreativ.events 10381411_10_1 Seit Kältetechnik DasGasthausGöres sagt Dankezuallen 70 Jahren Gästen,die unsamWannerschdach 2019 WEGERICH Tel. 06232-33431 besuchthaben sowieein großes oder 06344-9442332 Freitag,17. Januar 2020, 20 Uhr (Einlass: 19.30 Uhr) Dankeschön an dieHelfer undwünscht www.kaeltetechnik-wegerich.de BürgerhausMaikammer allenein gutesneues Jahr. Beratung -Meisterbetrieb Klimaanlagen für jeden Bedarf 67487Maikammer,Marktstraße 8 Kühlhäuser/-zellen • Gastronomiekühlungen Eintritt: 18,00 € BärbelGöres – GasthausGöres Kartenvorverkauf über www.ticket-regional.de und allen angeschlossenen Vorverkaufsstellen, u.a. bei: Büro für Tourismus Maikammer,Johannes-Damm-Straße 11,67487 Maikammer Jetzt in Harthausen Schreibwaren Pfeiffer,Weinstraße Nord37, 67487Maikammer, Media Markt Neustadt, Chemnitzer Straße 33, 67433 Neustadt an der Weinstraße, 10375628_20_3 Tabak-Weiss, Hauptstraße 61,67433 Neustadt an der Weinstraße, Büro für Tourismus, Marktstraße 50, 76829 Landau, Lutz Tickets und Event Service, Wormser Straße 22a, 67346 Speyer 10364740_10_1 10378088_20_1 L E O 9 . 1 . 2 0 D I E S E W O C H E SE IT E 3 A Zwei Klappstühle, .. -
Table 10 Papers Not Responding to the ASNE Survey Ranked by Circulation
Table 10 Papers not responding to the ASNE survey Ranked by circulation (DNR = did not report to ASNE last year, too.) Source: Report to the Knight Foundation, May 2004 by Bill Dedman and Stephen K. Doig. The full report is at http://www.asu.edu/cronkite/asne Rank Newspaper, State Weekday Ownership Circulation Staff non-white % circulation area non- for previous year white % (year-end 2002), if paper responded 1 New York Post, New York 652,426 40.3 DNR 2 Chicago Sun-Times, Illinois 481,798 Hollinger International 50.3 DNR (Ill.) 3 The Star-Ledger, Newark, New Jersey 408,672 Advance (Newhouse) 36.8 16.5 (N.Y.) 4 The Columbus Dispatch, Ohio 252,564 17.3 DNR 5 Boston Herald, Massachusetts 241,457 Herald Media (Mass.) 21.1 5.5 6 The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City, 207,538 24.7 21.1 Oklahoma 7 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Little Rock, 183,343 Wehco Media (Ark.) 22.1 DNR Arkansas 8 The Providence Journal, Rhode Island 167,609 Belo (Texas) 17.3 DNR Page 1 Rank Newspaper, State Weekday Ownership Circulation Staff non-white % circulation area non- for previous year white % (year-end 2002), if paper responded 9 Las Vegas Review-Journal, Nevada 160,391 Stephens Media Group 39.8 DNR (Donrey) (Nev.) 10 Daily Herald, Arlington Heights, 150,364 22.6 5.7 Illinois 11 The Washington Times, District of 102,255 64.3 DNR Columbia 12 The Post and Courier, Charleston, South 98,896 Evening Post Publishing 35.9 DNR Carolina (S.C.) 13 San Francisco Examiner, California 95,800 56.4 18.9 14 Mobile Register, Alabama 95,771 Advance (Newhouse) 33.0 8.6 (N.Y.) 15 The Advocate, -
NYCDOE K-8: Passport to Social Studies Trade Book List for School Year 2019-20
NYCDOE K-8: Passport to Social Studies Trade Book List for School Year 2019-20 ISBN Quantity per Grade Collection Title Unit # Full Book Title Author Publisher (13 digit) Collection K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780821578209 Be a Good Citizen Bonita Ferraro Sadlier-Oxford 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780836882803 Do You Share? Joanne Mattern National Geographic School Publishing 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780836882810 Do You Take Turns? Joanne Mattern National Geographic School Publishing 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780140508192 I Like Me Nancy Carlson Puffin Books 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780836867947 In the Classroom (My Day at School) Joanne Mattern Weekly Reader Early Learning 6 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9781575421308 Know and Follow Rules Cheri J. Meiners Free Spirit Publishing 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780823960354 Meet the Cafeteria Workers (My School) Elizabeth Vogel PowerKids Press 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780823960330 Meet the Principal (My School) Elizabeth Vogel PowerKids Press 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9780823960361 Meet the School Secretary (My School) Elizabeth Vogel PowerKids Press 1 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9781404279872 My Class Vicky Braidich Rosen Classroom 6 K Gr. K: Social Studies Trade Book Program Unit 1 9781448886920 Our Classroom Rules Nora Sotherden Rosen Classroom 1 K Gr. -
Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers
Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers Asian Native Asian Native Am. Black Hisp Am. Total Am. Black Hisp Am. Total ALABAMA The Anniston Star........................................................3.0 3.0 0.0 0.0 6.1 Free Lance, Hollister ...................................................0.0 0.0 12.5 0.0 12.5 The News-Courier, Athens...........................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Lake County Record-Bee, Lakeport...............................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 The Birmingham News................................................0.7 16.7 0.7 0.0 18.1 The Lompoc Record..................................................20.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 The Decatur Daily........................................................0.0 8.6 0.0 0.0 8.6 Press-Telegram, Long Beach .......................................7.0 4.2 16.9 0.0 28.2 Dothan Eagle..............................................................0.0 4.3 0.0 0.0 4.3 Los Angeles Times......................................................8.5 3.4 6.4 0.2 18.6 Enterprise Ledger........................................................0.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 Madera Tribune...........................................................0.0 0.0 37.5 0.0 37.5 TimesDaily, Florence...................................................0.0 3.4 0.0 0.0 3.4 Appeal-Democrat, Marysville.......................................4.2 0.0 8.3 0.0 12.5 The Gadsden Times.....................................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Merced Sun-Star.........................................................5.0 -
Ridership Soars by Matt Weiser the Bakersfield Californian June 30, 2003
Jamtrak: Ridership soars By Matt Weiser The Bakersfield Californian June 30, 2003 Editor's note: This story was revised June 30, 2003, to correct the percentage discount Amtrak offers riders who are 62 years old or older. Valley travelers are flocking to Amtrak this year in response to special offers and better service, pushing ridership on the train's San Joaquins route to record highs. Ridership on the route, which connects Bakersfield with Sacramento and Oakland, increased every month from September through April compared to the previous year. Passenger volumes dipped slightly in May, but Amtrak officials anticipate another increase in June. The route posted increases of 12 percent in April and a 20 percent jump in March. Overall ridership for the July 2002 through May 2003 period is up 5 percent. With one month still to go in Amtrak's fiscal year, the route has already carried more than 733,000 passengers, an increase of 23,000 over the prior year. "I don't think they've ever grown this fast, this long," said Richard Silver, executive director of the Rail Passengers Association of California. The San Joaquins isn't the only Amtrak route growing in California. The Capitols and Pacific Surfliner routes have also seen ridership gains. All three are operated as a partnership between Caltrans and Amtrak. But the valley route has become one of the fastest growing in the nationwide Amtrak system, and it is not unusual for its trains to be full, especially on weekends. "It's taking hundreds of thousands of vehicles off the road and saving untold gallons of gasoline," said Caltrans spokesman David Anderson. -
TRIBUNE COMPANY Is a Media Industry Leader with Operations in 25 Major Markets Nationwide, Including 10 of the Top 12
NEW YORK LOS ANGELES CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA BOSTON DALLAS WASHINGTON ATLANTA HOUSTON SEATTLE MIAMI FORT LAUDERDALE DENVER SACRAMENTO ORLANDO ST LOUIS BALTIMORE PORTLAND INDIANAPOLIS SAN DIEGO HARTFORD GRAND RAPIDS NEWPORT NEWS NEW ORLEANS HARRISBURG ALBANY ALLENTOWN GREENWICH STAMFORD NEW YORK LOS ANGELES CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA BOSTON DALLAS WASHINGTON ATLANTA HOUSTON SEATTLE MIAMI FORT LAUDERDALE DENVER SACRAMENTO ORLANDO ST LOUIS BALTIMORE PORTLAND INDIANAPOLIS SAN DIEGO HARTFORD GRAND RAPIDS NEW YORK LOS ANGELES CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA BOSTON DALLAS WASHINGTON ATLANTA HOUSTON SEATTLE MIAMI FORT LAUDERDALE DENVER SACRAMENTO ORLANDO ST LOUIS BALTIMORE PORTLAND INDIANAPOLIS SAN DIEGO HARTFORD GRAND RAPIDS NEWPORT NEWS NEW ORLEANS HARRISBURG ALBANY ALLENTOWN GREENWICH STAMFORD NEW YORK LOS ANGELES CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA BOSTON DALLAS WASHINGTON ATLANTA HOUSTON SEATTLE MIAMI FORT LAUDERDALE DENVER SACRAMENTO ORLANDO ST LOUIS BALTIMORE PORTLAND INDIANAPOLIS SAN DIEGO HARTFORD GRAND RAPIDS Creating Value: 20 Years as a Public Company 2003 Annual Report TRIBUNE COMPANY is a media industry leader with operations in 25 major markets nationwide, including 10 of the top 12. Through newspapers, television, radio and the Internet, we reach more than 80 percent of U.S. households. Revenues in 2003 totaled $5.6 billion. Broadcasting TELEVISION WBDC (WB50) KTXL (FOX40) WTXX (WB20) TELEVISION PROGRAMMING WPIX (WB11) Washington Sacramento, Calif. Hartford, Conn. New York wbdc.com fox40.com wtxx.com Tribune wb11.com Entertainment Co. WATL (WB36) KPLR (WB11) WXMI -
Working Relationship
U.S. hit IS with largest non-nuclear bomb — Page 2 @The_Derrick The Derrick and The News-Herald TheDerrick.com TheDerrickNews OCDerrick © OIL CITY, PA. FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 2017 (800) 352-1002 (814) 676-7444 $1.00 Dan Rooney dies Saving mall a priority Economic development committee to work on issue By SALLY BELL His comments came at a Thursday ident, suggested that local business Others, including Bonnie Summers, Staff writer meeting of the Cranberry supervisors. owners form a conglomerate and buy a member of the township’s compre- Also in attendance were Supervisors the mall from the owner. hensive plan steering committee, and The future of Cranberry Town- Harold Best and Jerry Brosius, along The mall is private property and its Stephanie Felmlee, a local business ship’s mall will likely be one of the with township Manager Chad Findlay. owner lives in California. On the Ve- owner, said that communication must focal points of an economic develop- The mall came up as a point of nango County parcel viewer, the own- be opened between the township and ment committee that is being formed. discussion during the public comment er is listed as SSR LLC. the mall’s owner in California to dis- “We can’t lose that mall,” said Fred portion of the meeting. The township has never owned the cuss the property’s future. Buckholtz, supervisors chair. Marilyn Brandon, a Cranberry res- mall, Best said. See CRANBERRY, Page 8 ‘They have the opportunity to refocus their lives and have another chance’ Dan Rooney, the powerful and popular Oil City Steelers chairman whose name is attached to the NFL’s landmark initiative in minority hiring, dies at 84. -
Inside the 'Hermit Kingdom'
GULF TIMES time out MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 2009 Inside the ‘Hermit Kingdom’ A special report on North Korea. P2-3 time out • Monday, August 10, 2009 • Page 3 widespread human rights abuses, to the South Korean news agency Traffi c lights are in place, but rarely is a luxury. although many of their accounts Yonhap, he has described himself as used. North Korea has a long history of inside date back to the 1990s. an Internet expert. Pyongyang’s eight cinemas are tense relations with other regional According to a report from the He is thought to have fi nally said to be frequently closed due powers and the West — particularly UN High Commission for Human annointed the youngest of his three to lack of power; when open, they since it began its nuclear Rights this year: “The UN General sons Kim Jong-un as his heir and screen domestic propaganda movies programme. China is regarded Assembly has recognised and “Brilliant Comrade”, following with inspiring titles such as The Fate as almost its sole ally; even so, condemned severe Democratic his reported stroke last year. Even of a Self-Defence Corps Man. relations are fraught, based as much People’s Republic of Korea human less is known about this leader- The state news agency KCNA as anything on China’s fear that rights violations including the in-waiting. Educated in Bern, runs a curious combination of brief the collapse of the current regime use of torture, public executions, Switzerland, the 25-year-old is said news items such as its coverage of could lead to a fl ood of refugees and extrajudicial and arbitrary to be a basketball fan. -
TECHNICAL KNOW-HOW Swampscott and Quarry Reach A
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 2019 2019 2019 A year in the rear-view mirror Swampscott and quarry reach a dynamite plan By Steve Krause The agreement came as the re- impacted significantly over the ITEM STAFF sult of three months worth of com- years and we want to see some ef- plaints from Swampscott residents forts made to address those con- SWAMPSCOTT — After three about the noise, the public health cerns. We have a responsibility to months of listening to abutters the citizens of this town and we are articulate their concerns about risk from the dust, and structural damage to houses. hopeful that this will be a formative Aggregate Industry’s quarry blast- discussion. We’re looking to strike a ing, a solution to the situation was “We’ve had some very construc- tive discussions with Aggregate balance that is long overdue.” reached in October. Kurt Hines, AI operations man- Industries over the restriction of Town Administrator Sean Fitz- ager, along with members of both blasts per week and the power of gerald announced that AI had the Earth Removal Advisory agree to limit quarry blasts to two those blasts,” said Fitzgerald. “The per week. residents of Swampscott have been QUARRY, A3 Murder on a hot August night in Lynn By Gayla Cawley ITEM STAFF LYNN — It was like something out of a nightmare when a friendly youth basket- TECHNICAL ball tournament in Lynn turned into a mass shooting in August. Ward 6 Councilor Fred Hogan said he heard 15-20 shots ring out as he was walk- KNOW-HOW ing up to Warren Street Playground that Saturday night. -
AFP V. Becerra
Nos. 19-251 & 19-255 IN THE Supreme Court of the United States ________________ AMERICANS FOR PROSPERITY FOUNDATION, Petitioner, v. XAVIER BECERRA, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CALIFORNIA, Respondent. ________________ THOMAS MORE LAW CENTER, Petitioner, v. XAVIER BECERRA, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CALIFORNIA, Respondent. ________________ On Writs of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ________________ AMICI CURIAE BRIEF OF THE CATO INSTITUTE, FIREARMS POLICY COALITION, HAMILTON LINCOLN LAW INSTITUTE, REASON FOUNDATION, INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS FOUNDATION, MOUNTAIN STATES LEGAL FOUNDATION, FOUNDATION FOR INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS IN EDUCATION, FIRST AMENDMENT LAWYERS ASSOCIATION, AND DKT LIBERTY PROJECT IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS _________________________________________________ Joseph G.S. Greenlee Ilya Shapiro FIREARMS POLICY Counsel of Record COALITION Trevor Burrus 1215 K St., 17th Floor Mallory Reader Sacramento, CA 95814 CATO INSTITUTE (916) 378-5785 1000 Mass. Ave., NW [email protected] Washington, DC 20001 (202) 842-0200 March 1, 2021 [email protected] Additional Counsel Listed on Signature Page i QUESTION PRESENTED NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson, 357 U.S. 449 (1958), and its progeny held that courts should apply narrow tailoring to violations of the freedom of association. Has that requirement been overruled such that the right to associate privately does not enjoy the strong protective standard that applies to other First Amendment rights, which this Court has held requires narrow tailoring regardless of the level of scrutiny? ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page QUESTION PRESENTED ........................................ i TABLE OF AUTHORITIES .................................... iv INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE .............................. 1 INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ....................................................... 4 ARGUMENT ............................................................