By Debra J. Saunders
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
When Al-Jazeera bought Current TV for $500 million in
January 2013, former Vice President Al Gore, who co-founded Current, praised
the deal. Both Al-Jazeera, a network owned by Qatar's oil-rich royal family,
and his far-left Current TV, Gore said, were founded "to give voice to
those who are not typically heard; to speak truth to power; to provide
independent and diverse points of view; and to tell the stories that no one
else is telling."
Last week, Gore and Current TV shareholders sued
Al-Jazeera for fraud because, Gore attorney David Boies told reporters,
"Al-Jazeera America wants to give itself a discount on the purchase price
that was agreed to nearly two years ago."
The dispute raises the question: Can oil and sanctimony
mix?
After he lost the White House, Gore resumed his role as
anti-global-warming activist in the film "An Inconvenient Truth." As
a senator, Gore wrote the 1992 book "Earth in the Balance," in which
he argued that global warming represented such a dire threat that only a
"wrenching transformation of society" could spare the planet, such as
a government mandate to eliminate the internal-combustion engine in a 25-year
period.
It's almost 25 years later, and the wrenching
transformation instead seems to be that Gore and company cannot get enough
Middle East oil money.
Liberal fans of Current TV, you got used.
Launched in 2005, Current TV provided safe landing for
current and former Democratic politicians. In the past few years, the network
hired former Democratic Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, former Democratic New
York Gov. Eliot Spitzer and California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who apparently
had no trouble juggling two jobs.
Alas, the viewing public did not tune in to watch current
and former Democratic politicians pontificate like politicians. About 31,000
viewers were tuning in daily.
Current TV nonetheless was worth millions because cable
and satellite companies granted the network access to some 40 million
households. And why was that? New York Times media reporter Brian Stelter
credited Gore with pushing cable and satellite providers to include his
untested network "through a combination of personal lobbying and arm-twisting
of industry giants."
When cable bigs such as Time Warner started to squawk
about dropping the barely watched Current TV, Gore and company sold their lefty
investment to Al-Jazeera.
After the deal was announced, you might think that Gore
would have chosen to modulate his criticism of the oil industry, given his
personal debt to Qatar crude. Wrong. That month, Gore went on NBC's
"Today" to promote his book "The Future: Six Drivers of Global
Change." In the book, Gore wrote, "Virtually every news and political
commentary program on television is sponsored in part by oil, coal and gas
companies" -- as if that's a bad thing.
Gore told host Matt Lauer it's wrong to criticize him,
because Al-Jazeera is "a really distinguished and effective news-gathering
organization."
Now Al-Jazeera America has even fewer viewers -- 17,000
during prime time nightly -- than Current TV. And lawyers are involved.
So Al Gore and company are suing Al-Jazeera for fraud.
But who gets to sue Gore?
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