By Brent Bozell
Wednesday, January 02, 2013
The D.C. police investigation of NBC hotshot David
Gregory for waving around an empty ammo magazine on "Meet the Press"
easily proves two things. First, D.C.'s "ammunition control" laws are
ridiculous. But more importantly, once again, we find the arrogance of the
national press knows no boundaries.
Let us stipulate that this kind of law is just plain
stupid. Empty ammo magazines are less threatening than mosquitoes. The point
is, however, that liberals like David Gregory do subscribe to this kind of
idiotic law -- for everyone else.
Was Gregory so ignorant that he didn't know he was
breaking a D.C. law? Nope. We learned NBC contacted the D.C. police and asked
for permission to wave the props, and the cops said no. Then Gregory did it
anyway. So not only did he believe he was above the law, he broke it so he
could produce maximum buzz for his Sunday show.
Naturally, other media elites leaped to his defense.
Newsweek's Howard Kurtz acknowledged Gregory's opportunism, but chided the
police for being sticklers: "Was the moderator of Meet the Press caught on
tape, armed and dangerous, liberating a few Slurpees from a 7-Eleven? No ...
Was it a stunt? Yep, and an eye-catching one ... But a police probe over what I
assume was an empty ammo clip is a total waste of time."
Kurtz even made a little video for his site the Daily
Download where he took a stand against reality: "Nobody's saying that he's
above the law!" Earth to Howard: when you call even a cursory police
investigation a "total waste of time," you're saying Gregory's above
the law.
Somehow, Kurtz was "stunned at the vitriol"
against Gregory for feeling he could violate the law because he waved a liberal
talking point in the face of the NRA's Wayne LaPierre.
This kind of arrogant confrontation with conservatives
was Gregory's chosen path to media power. He threw epic fits of egotism at the
Bush White House at the late, great Tony Snow. In 2006, after Gregory demanded
that Bush's "failure" in Iraq should be "put before the
voters," Snow outraged him by saying "I think you've admirably
expressed the Democratic point of view."
Gregory mounted his high horse and struck a Napoleonic
pose: "Don't try to dismiss me as making a Democratic argument, Tony, when
I'm speaking fact! You can do that to the Democrats; don't do it to me!"
At least Kurtz noticed that when Gregory sat down with
President Obama a week after his smackdown with LaPierre, it suddenly became a
no-news snoozefest. Gregory brought no showy props to the White House to
embarrass Obama. Instead, he asked the president whether he had enough courage
to fight for liberals against gun rights: "You know how hard this is. Do
you have the stomach for the political fight for new gun control laws?"
On Benghazi, Gregory could only ask with a very
un-Russert-like vagueness, "After the attack in Benghazi, is there a need
for more accountability so that this doesn't happen again? And do you know who
was behind the attack at this point?" Gregory also asked Obama if he threw
his friend Susan Rice "under the bus," without acknowledging Rice's
campaign of lies on five Sunday shows, including his own.
Back on Sept. 16, the same Gregory that yelled in the
White House briefing room about Bush's "failures" of vision in Iraq
couldn't quite locate any failures in questioning Rice: "Was there a
failure here that this administration is responsible for, whether it`s an
intelligence failure, a failure to see this coming, or a failure to adequately
protect U.S. embassies and installations from a spontaneous kind of reaction
like this?" (Rice said, "I don't think so.")
Now back to Obama: the laugh track should have kicked in
when Obama mentioned the movie "Lincoln" and Gregory nauseatingly
asked, "Is this your Lincoln moment?" Obama's always encouraged
Lincoln parallels, no matter how ridiculous, but he laughably insisted,
"Well no, look. I never compared myself to Lincoln."
Even NBC knew it was foisting a liberal double standard
on its viewers. Here is NBC's Peter Alexander describing Gregory on the
"NBC Nightly News" on Dec. 23: "Facing a barrage of tough
questions for the first time since the deadly massacre in Newtown, on 'Meet the
Press,' the NRA's CEO Wayne LaPierre forcefully defended his call for armed
officers in every school."
Seven days later, on the same newscast, NBC's Kristen
Welker noticed Gregory helpfully offered Obama the floor for "weighing
in" against Republicans: "Weighing in from the White House, the
president, who appeared on 'Meet the Press,' pushed Republicans to give on
taxes."
This is the reason why liberal journalists shouldn't be
so shocked at the "vitriol" against Gregory and his fellow Obama
courtiers in the press. Everything they do -- legal and illegal, ethical and
unethical -- looks designed to embarrass and defeat conservatives.
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