On November 5, 2009, Maj. Nidal Hasan opened fire at a troop readiness center in Ft. Hood, Texas, killing 13 people. Within hours of the killings, the world knew that Hasan reportedly shouted "Allahu Akbar!" before he began shooting, visited websites associated with Islamist violence, wrote Internet postings justifying Muslim suicide bombings, considered U.S. forces his enemy, opposed American involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan as wars on Islam, and told a neighbor shortly before the shootings that he was going "to do good work for God."
There was ample evidence, in other words, that the Ft. Hood attack was an act of Islamist violence.
Nevertheless, public officials, journalists, and commentators were quick to caution that the public should not "jump to conclusions" about Hasan's motive. CNN, in particular, became a forum for repeated warnings that the subject should be discussed with particular care.
"The important thing is for everyone not to jump to conclusions," said retired Gen. Wesley Clark on CNN the night of the shootings.
"We cannot jump to conclusions," said CNN's Jane Velez-Mitchell that same evening. "We have to make sure that we do not jump to any conclusions whatsoever."
Fast forward a little more than a year, to January 8, 2011. In Tucson, Arizona, a 22 year-old man named Jared Lee Loughner opened fire at a political event, gravely wounding Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, killing a federal judge and five others, and wounding 18. In the hours after the attack, little was known about Loughner beyond some bizarre and largely incomprehensible YouTube postings that, if anything, suggested he was mentally ill.
Yet the network that had shown such caution in discussing the Ft. Hood shootings openly discussed the possibility that Loughner was inspired to violence by…Sarah Palin. Although there is no evidence that Loughner was in any way influenced by Palin, CNN was filled with speculation about the former Alaska governor.
[But they're still not jumping to any conclusions about Ft. Hood-- Editor]
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Editors Notes: This comment came in from Thomas J. Miller 2012 Presidential Candidate.
"Just for the record, there were 14 lives lost at Fort Hood. One of the victims was a pregnant woman, her unborn child was the one person the media does not acknowledge."
Thomas J. Miller
Just for the record, there were 14 lives lost at Fort Hood. One of the victims was a pregnant woman, her unborn child was the one person the media does not acknowledge.
ReplyDeleteThomas J. Miller
Terrorism is terrorism. Does not really matter who dies or who kills. Your statement legitimizing the death of the 11 year old girl yesterday because another child died in a separate incident of terrorism in the past is truly short sighted and politically motivated. What a shame for you.
ReplyDeleteI don't think they were legitimizing the death of anyone. The way I read it was that they said 14 died. The unborn was not counted as a person because it was not yet born.
ReplyDeleteFort Hood Video - watch it before it's pulled off the net...
ReplyDeleteIt is EXCELLENT!
http://downloads.cbn.com/cbnnewsplayer/cbnPlayer.swf?aid=11991