Sunday, December 23, 2012

Do Jews Really Control the American Media?


National Prayer Network

JEWS CONFIRM BIG MEDIA IS JEWISH

By Rev. Ted Pike
28 Jun 06
Jewish control of the media is a taboo topic. In Congress, among evangelicals and mainline conservative talk radio, it is never mentioned. It is discussed only in snatches on far Right alternative talk radio.
This is astonishing, considering that almost every substantial library in America contains a number of books confirming such Jewish control. These include Neil Gabler’s An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood and Hoberman and Shandler’s Entertaining America: Jews, Movies, and Broadcasting.
These encyclopedic histories of Jewish control of the American media outdo any efforts by so-called “anti-Semites” to document an astonishing, frightening fact: The majority of media news and information to the American public comes from Jews.
An authoritative Jewish website, “Judaism Online,” (www.simpletoremember.com) in its article, “Jewish Success in the American Media,” documents Jewish media preeminence. It does so not from motives of anti-Semitism, but from Jewish pride. Its 2002 list of many Jewish superstars in the media today is printed, in part, below.
Of course, there are more Gentiles than Jews in the America media, as in America at large. But notice how many Jews are in control of media giants. This helps explain why the Jewish media is so relentlessly anti-Christian, constantly pushing immorality and the liberal, Zionist political agenda.
Why are Christians always marginalized in films and TV? Why is the Palestinian perspective not included in the news? Face the forbidden truth: the media speaks with a Jewish voice.
Television Networks:
CBS:
Sumner Redstone - chairman of board and CEO of CBS and Viacom, "world's biggest media giant" (Economist, 11-23-02). Viacom owns Viacom Cable, CBS, and MTV all over the world, Blockbuster Video Rentals, and Black Entertainment TV
Mel Karmazin - CBS corporation president and CEO
Leslie Moonves (great-nephew of Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion) - president of CBS Television
David Poltrack - executive vice-president, Research and Planning
Jeff Fager - executive director of “60 Minutes II.”
NBC:
Jeff Zucker - president of NBC Entertainment
Neil Shapiro - president of NBC News
Jeff Gaspin - executive vice-president, programming NBC
Max Mutchnik and David Kohan - co-exec. producers of NBC’s “Good Morning, Miami”
Lloyd Braun - chair of NBC Entertainment.
ABC:
Michael Eisner - major owner of Walt Disney, Capital Cities, and ABC
David Westin - president of ABC News.
FOX:
Rupert Murdoch (Jewish mother, hence legally Jewish) - owner of FOX TV, New York PostLondon Times, and News of the World
Sandy Grushow - chair, FOX Entertainment
Peter Chernin - second in command at Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., owner of FOX TV
Gail Berman - president of FOX Entertainment.
CNN:
Wolf Blitzer - host of CNN’s Late Edition.
Hollywood Movie Studios:
Ted Pike's comment: The prestigious Encyclopedia Judaica, in its article “Motion Pictures,” pg. 449, says: “Thus all the large Hollywood companies, with the exception of United Artists...were founded and controlled by Jews.”
Sony Corporation of America: Howard Stringer - chief
-Columbia Pictures: Amy Pascal - chair
Warner Bros.: Barry Meyer - chair; Jordan Levin - pres. of Warner Bros. Entertainment.
Miramax Films: Harvey Weinstein - CEO
Paramount: Sherry Lansing - president of Paramount Communications and chair of Paramount Pictures’ Motion Picture Group.
DreamWorks: Stephen Spielberg, David Geffen, Jeffrey Katzenberg (owners)
MTV Entertainment: Brian Graden - president
Turner Entertainment: Brad Siegal - president
Radio:
Clear Channel Communications: Robert Sillerman - founder
PBS: Ben Wattenberg - moderator, PBS ThinkTank
Publishers:
Ted Pike comments: The Encyclopedia Judaica, in its article “Publishing,” lists the following publishing houses, as of 1971, owned or controlled by Jews: Viking, Knopf, Random House, Modern Library, Simon and Schuster, Harcourt, Brace & Co., Greenberg Publishers, Ziff-Davis, Crown Publishers, Dial Press and Dryden Press. Publishing houses either founded by or with a Jew as editor-in-chief include: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, Abelard-Schumann, Basic Books, Grosset & Dunlap, Federal Writers Project, Gaer Associates, Macmillan & Co., Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Citadel Press, Chanticleer Press, Arthur Frommer, Inc., Hart Publishing Co., Lantern Press, Oceanea Publications, Twayne Publishers, Arco Publishing Co., Grossman Publishers, and Stein & Day.
Publishing houses involved in book clubs, reprints, or children’s literature either founded by or controlled by Jews include the Literary Guild, Book of the Month Club, Limited Editions Club, Heritage Club, Junior Heritage Club, Readers Club, Jewish Book Guild, Military Science Book Club, Natural History Book Club, Book Collector’s Society, Art Book Guild, Science Book Club, Beech Hurst Press, A. S. Barnes & Co., Sagamore Press, Thomas Yoseloff Inc., The Modern Library, World Publishing Co., Little Blue Books, Pocket Books Inc., Avon Publications, Popular Library, Schocken Books, Golden Books, and Golden Press.
In its article on New York City, the Judaica adds to the list of publishing houses owned by Jews, Liveright & Boni, and Anchor Books.
Today Random House, Doubleday, and Anchor Books, while Jewish owned and controlled, participate in the world’s largest publishing consortium, Bertelsmann A.G., benefiting from its staggering distribution advantages. End of Ted Pike’s comments.
Bertelsmann’s American operations are headed by Joel Klein, chair and CEO.
David Manaker is executive director for HarperCollins.
Newspapers:
Samuel Newhouse Jr. and Donald Newhouse own Newhouse Publications, which includes 26 newspapers in 22 cities. The Conde Nast Magazine Group includes the New YorkerParade, the Sunday newspaper supplements, American City Business Journal, business newspapers published in more than 30 major cities in America, and interests in cable television programming and cable systems serving one million homes.
Wall Street Journal: Peter R. Kahn, CEO
New York Times, Boston Globe, and other publications: published by Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr.
New York Daily News: Mortimer Zuckerman, owner
Village Voice, New Times and network of alternative weeklies: Owned by David Schneiderman
Washington Post: Donald Graham, chair and CEO, son of Katharine Graham Meyer, former owner of Washington Post
San Francisco Chronicle: Ron Rosenthal, managing editor; Phil Bronstein, exec. editor
AOL-Time Warner Book Group: Laurence Kirshbaum, editor
Magazines:
US News & World Report: Mortimer Zuckerman, owner and chair of the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish-American Organizations, one of the largest pro-Israel lobbying groups
New Republic: Marty Peretz, owner and publisher (NR openly identifies itself as pro-Israel.)
Barron’s: Peter R. Kahn, CEO
National Review: Michael Ledeen, editor
Business Week: Bruce Nussbaum, editorial page editor
Newsweek: Donald Graham, chair and CEO, and Howard Fineman, chief political columnist

Weekly Standard: William Kristol, editor, also executive director, Project for a New American Century, (PNAC)
The New Yorker: David Reznik, editor; Nicholas Lehman, writer; Henrick Hertzberg, “Talk of the Town” editor
Miscellaneous:
Ivan Seidenberg - CEO of Verizon Communications, Comcast-ATT Cable TV, with Ralph and Brian Roberts as owners.

Norman Ornstein, American Enterprise Institute - regular columnist for USA Today, news analyst for CBS and co-chair with Leslie Moonves of the Advisory Committee on Public Interest Obligation of Digital TV Producers, appointed by Clinton.
Dennis Lebowitz - head of Act II Partners, a media hedge fund.
Barry Diller - chair of USA Interactive, former owner of USA Entertainment.
Kenneth Roth - executive director of Human Rights Watch.
Richard Leibner - head of N. S. Bienstock talent agency, which represents 600 news personalities such as Dan Rather, Dianne Sawyer, and Bill O’Reilly.
Ari Fleischer - Bush’s former press secretary
Stephen Emerson - every media outlet’s first choice as an expert on domestic terrorism.
Terry Semel - CEO of Yahoo!, former chair, Warner Bros.
Mark Golin - VP and creative director for AOL.

Warren Lieberford - president of Warner Bros. Home Video Division of AOL-Time Warner.
Ted Pike comments: Judaism Online’s list presents only the most outstanding, well-recognized Jews in the American media. I could name hundreds more from the top ranks of Jewish media leadership. Such names are readily available from corporate directories such as Standard and Poor's and Lexis Nexus.
Yes, some of the Jewish superstars listed above are political conservatives. Yet studies of top-level Jewish media executives prove they are overwhelming liberal. The famous Lichter-Rothman poll in the early 1980s found that top media executives were radically out of step with the moral values of the American public.
97% affirm a woman's right to an abortion if she pleases. 80% disagree that homosexuality is wrong. 86% believe homosexuals have the right to be schoolteachers. 51% believe adultery is permissible. Of 104 top executives polled, 59% were "raised in the Jewish religion."
Does it matter who dominates the media? It does! The media shapes not only our children's values and actions but our own. The Jewish media has normalized sexual degeneracy, profanity and all kinds of sin. It also leads us into war to make the Mid-East safe for Israel. This happened in Afghanistan, Iraq and, tomorrow, Iran.
If an anti-Christian agenda were being advanced by Moonies or Scientologists, dominating the most powerful positions of media leadership in America, there would be a howl of protest. Americans would demand Congressional hearings and investigations. But because the Jewish media has forbidden identification of itself as Jewish, vilifying such as anti-Semitism, a deafening silence prevails. Meanwhile, relentless evil continues to control the spigot of information from which America drinks.

Rev. Ted Pike is director of the National Prayer Network, a Christian conservative watchdog group.
For many more articles on the dangers of Jewish activism, come to www.truthtellers.org.
TALK SHOW HOSTS: For interview with Ted Pike on this subject, call 503-631-3808.
National Prayer Network, P.O. Box 828, Clackamas, OR 97015


Earth, Wind & Fire - Reasons

The Stylistics - You Make Me Feel Brand New

The Stylistics - People Make The World Go Round

O'JAYS - For The Love Of Money (O'Jays Greatest Hits Album)

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Anaheim: A tale of two cities - Fault Lines - Al Jazeera English

Anaheim: A tale of two cities - Fault Lines - Al Jazeera English

Egypt and the Politics of the Arab Spring


Comment 

As we look at events in Egypt from afar, we see a people struggling to regain their humanity after decades of political oppression, partly due to the former regime's association with the Great Satan America and her imp Israel. The new regime headed by the Muslim Brotherhood is naturally eager to see its long fought goals implemented, even though these goals may be anathema to the secularists, and most certainly to the remnants of the old regime. We have no doubt the opposition consists of the old reactionaries and the secularists which makes strange bedfellows and naturally the Morsi Islamists are paranoid. The tragedy is that the Brotherhood is simply the best organized political force in the land and has some right to carry out its long fought agenda. Is this not the democratic process? We empathize with the secularists because if we were under an Islamic regime, our head would be one of the first to roll because of our free thinking beliefs that transcend so called traditional Islam. We pray that Egypt can escape the excesses of the Islamic regime in Iran but it is somewhat doubtful because once there is motion in the ocean, the waves keep coming. President Morsi seems a practical man who backed up with his decree of dictatorial powers recently, but we see he is clearly headed for a constitution based on Sharia law. He can only escape the Iranian model by giving recognition to the cries of the secularists for inclusion of their human rights, but Islam has been the antidote to colonialism in the Arab Spring, and we doubt it will disappear because the secularists desire some form of Western style democracy. We can see a new Egypt only after a long process of political struggle, including after remnants of the old regime are purged from the judiciary and especially the army which had become a ruling political/economic caste under previous 

regimes, especially with its annual billions in aid from the Great Satan to continue Zionist colonialism in 

occupied Palestine.

--Marvin X

As Charter Nears Passage, Egyptians Face New Fights

Tara Todras-Whitehill for The New York Times
Egyptian women walk into a polling station. Millions went to the polls to pass judgment on an Islamist-backed constitution, whose passage would represent an important milestone in Egypt’s chaotic two-year transition to democracy. More Photos »
CAIRO — An Islamist-backed constitution appeared headed for approval on Saturday, propelling Egypt’s deeply divided political factions into a new phase in the battle over the country’s future.

Wissam Nassar for The New York Times
Egyptian women waited Saturday in Giza to vote on an Islamist-backed draft constitution. More Photos »
As millions went to the polls for the final round of a referendum, all sides predicted that the charter would win approval, marking an important milestone in Egypt’s chaotic two-year transition to democracy. By late Saturday, results from over 60 percent of the polling places put the “yes” vote at more than 70 percent, according to the Muslim Brotherhood.
But the hastily drafted document leaves unresolved many questions about the character of that democracy, including the Islamists’ commitment to individual freedoms and their opposition’s willingness to accept the results of the political process without recourse to violent street protests.
The charter’s path to the referendum has also taken Egypt to the brink of civil strife, exposing the alienation of the Christian minority, the political opposition’s refusal to negotiate and the Muslim Brotherhood’s willingness to rely on authoritarian tactics.
How those tensions are managed and the new constitution is put into effect will determine whether Egypt returns to stability or plunges further into discord, and much of the region is watching the outcome of that definitive Arab Spring revolt.
Neither supporters nor opponents of the charter said they expected an immediate end to the partisan feuding that has torn at the country in the month before the vote.
The Islamists allied with President Mohamed Morsi said they intended to rebuild trust by using the new charter as a tool to battle remnants of former President Hosni Mubarak’s government. Old laws and prosecutors, the Islamists say, are protecting loyalists and holdovers while they obstruct change from within the bureaucracy and conspire with the opposition to stir up unrest. Leaders of the anti-Islamist opposition, however, said they hoped to carry the momentum of their struggle against the draft constitution into the parliamentary elections set to be held two months from now. They accused the Islamists of using the specter of a struggle against remnants of Mr. Mubarak’s government as a pretext to demonize the opposition and take over the machinery of the state.
“If we accept the legitimacy of working within the system, they have to agree that the opposition is legitimate,” said Amr Moussa, a former foreign minister under Mr. Mubarak and a presidential candidate who has re-emerged as an opposition leader during the constitutional debate. “The ancien régime is finished. They are imagining things. They are imagining that if you say no to the constitution, as I have done, then you are part of a conspiracy to topple them.”
Both sides of the ideological divide appeared to dig in.
“A crack has emerged in Egypt; there’s a gap, there’s blood and deaths, there’s extremism,” said Ahmed Maher, who helped jump-start the revolution as a leader of the secular April 6 Youth Group and then served as a delegate in the constituent assembly that wrote a draft of the charter. “Something has happened between Egyptians that would make the results bad no matter what the outcome” of the constitutional vote, he said, predicting further clashes before the parliamentary elections.
Adding to the uncertainty about what may come next, Mr. Morsi’s vice president, Mahmoud Mekki, resigned Saturday. The draft constitution would eliminate his position, and Mr. Mekki, a former judge, said that he had originally submitted his resignation in early November before a series of crises postponed it.
“The nature of political work does not suit my nature as a judge,” he said.
The turnout for Saturday’s voting appeared to be low, as it was last week. At one polling place in the dense Mohandeseen district near Cairo, the station was empty at midday. The low turnout may have reflected a lack of enthusiasm or perhaps a consensus among Egyptians that after last week, the charter’s approval was a foregone conclusion.
Mr. Morsi’s advisers said that after the ballots were counted in the coming days he would deliver a televised address calling for unity and reconciliation. His critics said that to be credible he would need to strike a tone different from that of his previous address. In that speech, he blamed a conspiracy of foreign agents, Mubarak cronies and his political opponents for a deadly night of street fighting between his supporters and other protesters.
In what Mr. Morsi’s advisers called a significant step toward reducing tensions, the president was planning to appoint some of his opponents to the Islamist-dominated upper house of Parliament. Although largely powerless, it will act as the main legislature until the coming re-election of the lower house, which was dissolved by the courts.
Advisers to Mr. Morsi, who has the power to name 90 of the 270 seats, said he was expected to announce a roster of upper house appointees that would include eight representatives selected by the leaders of Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant churches. That was more than the number of representatives chosen by Egypt’s highest Muslim authority, Al Azhar. At least four other appointees are Christian as well, his advisers said.
Most members of Egypt’s Christian minority, about 10 percent of the population, have opposed the draft constitution since the Coptic Church withdrew its representatives from the constitutional assembly in a dispute over the role of Islamic law in Egyptian jurisprudence.
The leaders of the main opposition coalition have refused to negotiate with Mr. Morsi or take seats in the upper house. His Islamist allies will still dominate, they say. Islamists won more than 70 percent of the seats in the parliamentary elections in late 2011. But their opponents see an opportunity to gain seats in the coming Parliament because of the backlash against Mr. Morsi’s heavy-handed attempts to force the draft constitution to a vote. Mr. Morsi pushed ahead over the objections of his opponents, judges and the Coptic Church.
Mr. Moussa and others have said they hope the coalition forged to fight the draft constitution can hold together as a bloc in the elections. But if the anti-Islamist bloc does hold together, some worry it will force the mainstream Islamists of the Muslim Brotherhood into closer collaboration with the ultraconservative Salafis, reinforcing sectarianism and polarization.
Moataz Abdel-Fattah, a political scientist and former delegate in the constitutional assembly, said neither side appeared willing to respect the views of the other.
“We have an elite running its affairs according to a strategy of stubbornness,” he said. “Everybody is trying to understand what the other side wants so that they can ask for the exact opposite.”

Black Studies Crisis at Temple University


photo



Friday, December 21, 2012

Greetings,

The Organization of African American Studies Graduate Students at Temple University would like to offer our gratitude and sincere appreciation to the students, alumni, and the great number of people in our local and national community for your continued support. Our organization will continue to challenge the administration of Temple University to implement a proper democratic process towards the restoration of a permanent chair for our department. Temple University speaks much of its multiculturalism and diversity. We demand the University to practice what it promotes. We continue to demand that the university commit itself to the hiring of a new chair in the Department of African American Studies by Fall 2013. We continue to demand that the administration allow the department to democratically elect the new chair. Finally, we continue to demand that an investigation be made into the actions of Teresa Soufas (Dean of the College of Liberal Arts) concerning her authoritarian, unequal, and unfair treatment of matters pertaining to our department.

On November 14, 2012 we forwarded our letter to the President, Provost, and Board of Trustees of the University listing these demands and explaining their rationale. As of today December 17, 2012 we have yet to receive a response to the letter from any of these individuals. As further evidence of the inattentiveness of Temple University to our concerns, Dean Soufas has responded to media inquiries, yet continues to ignore us. 

As you continue to offer your voice and attention in solidarity and support of this struggle please continue to do the following:

1. Forward our letter and accompanying documents to media, alumni, and any/all advocates of African American Studies;

2. Email Temple University’s administration; and

3. Publicize these events in whatsoever environments you find yourselves.

For reference purposes, the original letter sent by our Organization as well as the ongoing attempts dating back years at clarifying the position and mission of our department to the deafening silence of Temple University and its administrators are attached.

Lastly, we would like to emphasize that our department has not wavered from its commitment to developing and advancing the discipline of African American Studies even while facing this most recent administrative backlash.

Thank you once again for your support and we will be updating you continually. For further updates contact and follow us at:
Email:           oaasgs.temple@gmail.com  
Twitter:         https://twitter.com/OAASGS


In Solidarity,

Organization of African-American Studies Graduate Students
Department of African American Studies
Temple University

Friday, December 21, 2012

Nuyorican Poets Cafe


New@Nuyo
Joe's Pub Benefit tonight!
NYTimes/NY1 hype the Nuyo 
Got No Tree
 Slam
A Yerbabuena  New Years
The Nod   
Nuyorican Poets Cafe logo
35 years of...

Sunday's New York Times says of the Nuyo: "Anyone who doubts that words alone can still pull a rowdy crowd in Manhattan has not recently visited the Nuyorican Poets Cafe on the Lower East Side." Check out the full article here

And tonight's benefit concert at Joe's Pub was featured in two NY1 news segments (an interview with the Cafe's director and a visit with Mahogany Browne at the Cafe), as well as by the New York Times.  

A limited number of $15 rush tickets to the Joe's Pub show are available to patrons on our eblast list; use code JPTIXA2 when you buy online or at the box office.
 
Upcoming Nuyorican Poets Cafe events:

  •  Tonight, the Nuyo throws a benefit concert at Joe's Pub to raise funds for a new heating system (ours was damaged during Sandy) and for our artists and students who are still recovering from the hurricane. Can't make it on the 20th but still want to help?  Donations of any size will be hugely appreciated; you can donate here.    


  • Ring in New Years' Eve at the Nuyo with YERBABUENA! The Puerto Rican roots band, led by singer Tato Torres, performs percussive bomba y plena, jíbaro folk songs & deep electric-bass grooves (tickets: $25/$30).
  • If you're a Jewyorican, Hinduyorican, Muslorican or any -ican that don't have a tree, come to the Nuyo's 2nd annual Got No Tree Poetry Slam
    on Dec 24th at 8pm; with holiday-themed features and an open mic.  Hosted by the fabulous Caroline Rothstein. Tickets are $7 and $10.      
  • THE NOD continues at the Nuyo through January.  In this solo show, Tony Drazan (director of Zebrahead, Hurlyburly and Imaginary Crimes) describes how he used a simple nod to bluff his way in and out of lucrative writing gigs and to navigate tempestuous relationships.  
Tickets and details for all shows are available at www.nuyorican.org or by calling 212-780-9386.
  
Need the perfect holiday gift for a poet or a fan of the downtown arts scene?   
A year-long Nuyo membership is only $60 (or $30 for students).  Nuyo members receive discounts on admission to all events, as well as several free tickets and invites to special members-only events!

*****   
Don't miss our regular weekly events: Open Mic Mondays (every Monday at 9pm, all art forms welcome); the Slam Open (a competitive poetry open mic, every Wednesday at 9pm except the first Wednesday of the month); the Thursday Night Latin Jazz Jam (every Thursday at 9pm) and our Friday Night Poetry Slam (10pm every Friday).   

Follow the Nuyo on Facebook or Twitter for event updates, news about our artists, submission opportunities and more.  Further information about all of our shows can be found at www.nuyorican.org.
Contact Information

The Nuyorican Poets Cafe
236 E 3rd Street
between Avenue B and C
New York, NY 10009
Info 212.505.8183
Fax 212.475.6541

The Cafe serves beer, wine, coffee, tea  and soft drinks but no food. All ages are welcome at events, but you must be over 21 w/ valid ID to drink.
______________________________
Out of respect for our artists, there is NO video or audio recording of events without prior written permission from Cafe management.
______________________________
The Cafe is wheelchair accessible, but we recommend that persons needing assistance call in advance so that we can be ready to assist you when you arrive
  
The Cafe would like to thank our sponsors:
NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, The New York City Council, the New York State Council on the Arts, Google, Bloomberg Philanthropies, The A G Foundation and 
the National Endowment for the Arts