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June 2007

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From:
"Gorelick, Steve" <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Sun, 24 Jun 2007 07:45:45 -0400
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Hello from Berlin to Peter, Colleagues and Students:

 

Ah, Greg Palast.

 

Every time I read him I get the same feeling. There is a scene in the
Godfather when the character Virgil Sollozzo (Al Lettieri) asks Captain
McCluskey (Sterling Hayden) to frisk Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) while
they are packed in a car. McCluskey leans over the seat and struggles
and strains to find a weapon while they both contort themselves.  When
he is done, McCluskey says something like: "I'm getting too old for
this."

 

Greg Palast makes me feel old. Because while his style of delivering
news - a mix of persuasive facts and evidence and snotty, cruel
tabloid-style comments - might be the way of the future, I won't be
joining him for the ride.

 

For a moment, I'll set aside the issue of language and civility. I may
simply have to come to terms with the fact that my probably quaint ideas
about how you do and do not talk to others - even through a news article
- are probably 19th century relics. 

 

But what about the stories themselves? How do they hold up?

 

This is not an easy question, precisely because of the way he writes
them. Absolutely dead-on evidence of possible official misconduct is
almost always there. But that evidence is often sprinkled piecemeal into
the polemic. I suppose I am tired of having to decode Palast's stories
and separate the wheat from the chaff. In fact, I just read the story
that Peter so kindly forwarded and I felt a little like I was reading a
computer file in which the words have become accidentally jumbled. I
eventually got the clear line of argument and evidence, and I eventually
got appropriately indignant, but not without some effort. I'm not sure
that clear arguments and evidence emerge most effectively out of tabloid
snark-talk. 

 

Neither do I find Palast that witty. That is my problem.  It seems that
in a violent and angry and unsubtle age, sledgehammer "wit" has become
the new "subtle." I am sure it will find its readership. To Palast's
credit, it has.  It's just not my cup of Diet Pepsi. 

 

Which leads to the meanness. I do feel more and more quaint these days.
Perhaps some crimes and corruption do call for making fun of people in
highly personal ways. Maybe when the subject of a story starts to cry,
and that subject is implicated in corrupt acts, it is appropriate to
make fun of their crocodile tears. I really don't know. I just know I
don't have it in me. I can see carefully and devastatingly building a
case of crimes and corruption. Just not the personal stuff.

 

Whenever I read Palast and his fascinating stories, I always have the
same fantasy: Why can't he put out two columns? Column #1 would be for
those who enjoy the unfunny polemic in which the evidence is buried and
Column #2 would have only the evidence. That way his piece would impact
both his loyal readers and those of us who share the indignation but not
the taste for his style of reporting.

 

Steve


________________________________

From: HCJ [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Peter
Parisi
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2007 2:56 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Fwd: The Tears of a Clone --Greg Palast's feisty investigative
journalism


I don't know how many of the younger members of this list have heard of
Greg Palast, an American-born investigative journalist who works for the
BBC and the Guardian newspaper. His reporting is also collected in books
like "Armed Madhouse," which has been a New York Times bestseller. 
 
Here is a recent piece by him. I thought you would find it interesting
as an example of an unusual journalistic approach. Palast adopts a
feisty, even nasty voice, which he links to hard-core investigative
reporting and tough questioning.  
 
The question of forging a journalistic style that mixes passionate
indignation with solid facts is ever more important as the mainstream
profession struggles to find a voice that will engage citizens --
especially young citizens, who increasingly get their news from "fake
news"& satiric journalism. The American Journalism Review's current
cover story provides a measure of the concern < Http://www.ajr.org/>. It
asks what the profession can learn from Jon Stewart. But it's no easy
thing to combine the professional code of objectivity with
excited/exciting reporting emerging that carries an attitude and isn't
afraid to call absurdity and evil what they are. 
 
In this context, what do you all think of Palast's work? Is it a viable,
affective journalistic approach? 
 
One more thing -- The enclosed piece is about the issue of the GOP using
"caging lists" to disenfranchise voters, particularly African-American
voters. The piece has the details, but here's the striking thing. If you
get interested in this problem, and go to Lexis-Nexis to see what has
been in the papers, you will find essentially _no_coverage by the US
press. (The single, puzzling exception was the Grand Rapids (Michigan)
Press. Go figure. But try searching "caging lists" and "election" and
see what you get. 
 
Maybe the problem of "caging lists" is total nonsense. Read Palast's
piece and see what you think. But it isn't nonsense, and the
extraordinary silence of virtually the entire journalism establishment
demonstrates how the press keeps truly controversial issues (like the
possibility that the 2004 election was fixed) completely out of public
discussion (even as it does many laudable, excellent projects). 


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Greg Palast < [log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> >
Date: Jun 18, 2007 12:51 PM
Subject: The Tears of a Clone - Conyers Closes in on Karl and his
Rove-bots...
To: [log in to unmask] 



The Tears of a Clone


Conyers Closes in on Karl and his Rove-bots ...


By Greg Palast  |  June 18, 2007
Special to BRAD BLOG
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.bradblog.com/--Q-p--E-4696> 

Boo-hoo! I made Tim Griffin cry.

He cried. Then he lied.

You remember Tim. Karl Rove's right hand (right claw?) man. The GOP's
ragin' cagin' man.

Griffin is the Rove-bot exposed
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.youtube.com/watch--Q-v--E-IkvWkwv7UVo>  by our BBC Newsnight
investigations team as the man who gathered and sent out the infamous
'caging' lists to Republican state chairmen during the 2004 election. 

Caging lists, BBC discovered, were used secretly as a basis to challenge
the right to vote of thousands of citizens - including the homeless,
students and soldiers sent overseas. The day after BBC broadcast that
the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, John Conyers, sought our
evidence on Griffin, Tim resigned his post
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.bradblog.com/--Q-p--E-4620>  as US Attorney for Arkansas. That job was
a little gift from Karl Rove who made room for his man Griffin by
demanding the firing of US prosecutor Bud Cummins. 

Last week, our cameras captured Griffin, all teary-eyed
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.bradblog.com/--Q-p--E-4690> , in his humiliating kiss-off speech
delivered in Little Rock at the University of Arkansas where he moaned
that, "public service isn't worth it."

True. In the old Jim Crow days in Arkansas, you could get yourself
elected by blocking African-Americans. (The voters his caging game
targeted are - quelle surprise! - disproportionately Black citizens.)

But today, Griffin can't even get an unemployment check. When he
resigned two weeks ago following our broadcast, the cover story was that
the voter persecutor-turned-prosecutor had resigned to work for
Presidential wannabe Fred Thompson. But when Thompson's staff was asked
by a reporter why they would hire the 'cagin' man,' suddenly, the 'Law
and Order' star decided associating with Griffin might take the shine
off Thompson's badge, even if it is from the props department. 

Griffin, instead of saying that public service "isn't worth it," should
have said, "Crime doesn't pay." Because, according to experts such as
law professor Robert F. Kennedy Jr., 'caging,' when used to target Black
voters' rights, is a go-to-prison crime. 

By resigning, Tim may not avoid the hard questions about caging - or the
hard time that might result. When I passed the first set of documents to
Conyers (a real film noir moment, in a New York hotel room near
midnight), the soft-spoken Congressman said that, resignation or not,
"We aren't done with Mr. Griffin yet..." 

Tears Not Truth

Back in Little Rock, when asked about caging, Rove's guy linked a few
fibs to a few whoppers to some malefactious mendacity. That is, he lied.

"I didn't cage votes. I didn't cage mail," Griffin asserted. 

At the risk of making you cry again, Tim, may I point you to an email
dated August 26, 2004
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.bradblog.com/--Q-p--E-4594> . It says, "Subject: Re: Caging." And it
says, "From: Tim Griffin - Research/Communications" with the email
[log in to unmask] RNCHQ is the Republican National Committee
Headquarters, is it not, Mr. Griffin? Now do you remember caging mail?

If that doesn't ring a bell, please note that at the bottom is this:
"ATTACHMENT: Caging-1.xls". And that attachment was a list of voters.

In last week's pathetic farewell, Mr. Griffin averred that the
accusation he was involved in caging voters, "Goes back to one guy -
whose name I won't mention." (FYI, Mr. Griffin: My mother calls me,
"Gregory.") 

Yes, I first reported the story for BBC London
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ne
ws.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/3956129.stm>  - back in 2004
which, as Griffin correctly noted, it was ignored by my US press
colleagues until, as Tim put it, "I became embroiled in the US Attorney
thing." By 'the US Attorney thing,' I assume you are referring to your
involvement in firing and smearing honest prosecutors and grabbing one
of their salaries for yourself. 

You say, Mr. Griffin, that the unmentionable reporter, "Made [it] up out
of whole cloth." You flatter me, Mr. Griffin. We could not possibly be
so creative at The Beeb as to construct the thousands of names of voters
on your caging lists. 

And by the way, we don't have just one of your "caging" emails, but
scores of them.

I want to take this opportunity to thank you for sending them to us -
even if that was not your intent. You copied your caging missives to '
[log in to unmask] Mr. Doster was Chairman of the Florida Bush
campaign - but that address was not his but John Wooden's pretending to
be the Bush campaigners. Wooden then sent your notes to me. 

Rove in Range

By the way, Mr. Griffin, if you want an explanation of 'caging voters,'
just read an email dated February 5, 2007 by...Tim Griffin. 

In that email, Griffin references the Bush campaigns mailing out
thousands of letters. The letters returned ('caged') as undeliverable
were used as the GOP's supposed evidence that these were "thousands of
fraudulent voter registrations." These voters were subject to challenge.
However, these caging lists of "fraudulent" addresses, like the 2000
"felon" lists which in fact contained no felons, contained no fraudulent
voters. But that wouldn't necessarily save them from the massively
successful Republican voter-challenge campaign. 

During the appearance he made in Arkansas last week
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.bradblog.com/--Q-p--E-4690> , Griffin said he'd never heard of
'caging.' "I had to look it up," he said. Griffin discovered that
"caging" is "a direct mail term."

I don't doubt Griffin's ignorance. Griffin's just a good ol' boy, a
former military lawyer, who wouldn't know direct mail terminology from a
hole in the ground. Until he went to work for the RNC. 

So where did Tim get this direct mail term he used in his emails? Well,
before Karl Rove signed on with George W. Bush, he owned Karl Rove & Co
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.sourcewatch.org/index.php--Q-title--E-Karl_Rove_%26_Company>  ....a
direct mail firm. Rove made millions making up lists of voters, doing
more 'caging' than a zoo-keeper.

Am I saying caging-expert Rove had something to do with the allegedly
illegal caging games of his boy Griffin? Does a bear...? 

Mr. Griffin wouldn't answer BBC's requests for comment. So I suggested
to an Arkansas local, Luther Lowe, a former army reservist and himself a
victim of a challenge to his vote, that at the Little Rock send-off for
Griffin, he ask the fallen US Attorney about Rove's involvement in
caging. Lowe did so, politely. Griffin wove, ducked, blathered and
blubbered. But wouldn't answer. 

Maybe a subpoena would encourage a Griffin response. And a grant of
immunity from the Conyers committee. That's Rove's nightmare. Because
unless Griffin joins Alberto Gonzales in Club Amnesia, Griffin has a lot
to tell us about Mr. Rove and targeting Black voters. 

Will he? It's not Conyers' style to hunt down Rove. The congressman is
not, despite what Republicans say, a partisan hit man. He is, however,
one tenacious legislator who told me he would like his committee, "to
follow where the evidence leads." 

But that's not necessarily going to happen. Conyers told me he sees the
evidence in the prosecutor firing investigation leading to the much
bigger, nastier issue of voter suppression - in simpler terms, fixing
elections. 

Unfortunately, many on his committee from both parties see the hearings
as limited to the single issue of the firing of prosecutors. They want
to scrutinize the elephant's trunk but refuse to acknowledge it's
attached to an elephant: election rigging. Racially poisoned,
direct-mail driven, computer implemented election rigging. 

But Conyers may get there yet, to the issue of elections manipulation. I
didn't get that from the Chairman (too circumspect to let his future
intensions slip out). I got it from the Big Bubba. When I ran into Ol'
Silver Eyes himself at an Air America soiree, Bill Clinton (man, he's
gotten thin!) told me, "When we really get going on these prosecutor
hearings, when we really dig deep, we're going to get right to the issue
of voter suppression." 

But what do you mean "we," Bill? Conyers is dean of the Congressional
Black Caucus, which has an abiding concern and painful experience with
illegal vote suppression of all types: caging, purging, challenging,
lynching. But whether Conyers can convince his committee, mostly members
of the Congressional White Caucus, to "dig deep" on vote suppression, is
an open question. 

In the meantime, Conyers has convinced his committee to drop subpoenas
on Harriett Miers (the lady tight with Griffin, Rove and, notably,
George W. Bush) and Sara Taylor, Rove's Gal Friday. Conyers,
methodically, determinedly, is circling in on Rove, "Bush's Brain," a
man known to surrender the corpses of his allies in place of his own
(eh, Mr. Libby?). No wonder Griffin's in tears. 

So here's a hanky, Mr. Griffin. This unnamable reporter would rather you
save your tears for Randall Prausa. The African-American soldier was on
active military duty when he ended up on one of your caging lists, what
you term a suspected 'fraudulent' voter subject to GOP challenge because
he was not home to get his fraudulent, 'Welcome, voter,' letter from the
GOP. 

Can you guess, Mr. Griffin, why Prausa wasn't at home? Well, unlike
Messrs. Rove and Bush, Prausa was serving his country overseas.

And that's what caging is all about. If you're Black, you get shipped to
Baghdad and you lose your vote. Mission Accomplished, Mr. Griffin.
Mission Accomplished, Mr. Rove. 

===

The confidential Griffin e-mail, "Subject: Re: Caging," is reproduced in
Greg Palast's New York Times bestseller, ARMED MADHOUSE: Sordid Secrets
and Strange Tales of a White House Gone Wild. Available at
www.GregPalast.com <http://www.gregpalast.com/> 

Also: Catch the film of Randi Rhodes and Greg Palast on "Bush's and
Giuliani's favorite vultures," the men with connections to the Bush
Administration who have siphoned off the money meant for Africa's
poorest. Video online here
<http://mailings.gregpalast.com//lt/t_go.php?i=34&e=MTY3NjQ=&l=-http--ww
w.gregpalast.com/randi-rhodes-hunts-bushs-vultures-with-bbcs-greg-palast
/> . 











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-- 
Peter Parisi, Ph.D.
Dept. of Film & Media Studies
Hunter College
695 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10021
212-772-4949
"People don't change. They just find out who they are." -- Ray Skean 


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