podesta-emails

podesta_email_00697.txt

podesta-emails 3,489 words email
P17 V11 P18 D6 P23
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*​**Correct The Record Thursday February 5, 2015 Afternoon Roundup:* *Tweets:* *Correct The Record* @CorrectRecord: .@HillaryClinton <https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton> said #paidleave <https://twitter.com/hashtag/paidleave?src=hash> "helps all of us" #FMLA22 <https://twitter.com/hashtag/FMLA22?src=hash> #HRC365 <https://twitter.com/hashtag/HRC365?src=hash> http://blogs.wsj.com/japanrealtime/2014/09/12/hillary-clinton-talks-up-paid-family-leave/ … <http://t.co/G0RLGEgTen> [2/5/15, 12:29 p.m. EST <https://twitter.com/CorrectRecord/status/563388835267358721>] *Headlines:* *Washington Post blog: Reliable Source: “Former first ladies in the house! Hillary Clinton attends Ford’s Theater play ‘The Widow Lincoln’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/reliable-source/wp/2015/02/05/former-first-ladies-in-the-house-hillary-clinton-attends-fords-theater-play-the-widow-lincoln/>* “Seems the former FLOTUS is interested in her historic predecessor: the production focuses on the life of Mary Todd Lincoln, the enigmatic wife of President Abraham Lincoln. Clinton, spies say, arrived with a small group (sans Bill) and sat in the orchestra section.” *Washington Post blog: PostPartisan: Jonathan Capehart: “Hillary Clinton’s consolation prize for Brooklyn” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/02/05/hillary-clintons-consolation-prize-for-brooklyn/>* “The borough could lose the convention but gain the campaign.” *Bloomberg: “Why Starbucks's CEO Is Resisting Calls For Him to Run for the White House” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-02-05/starbucks-ceo-howard-schultz-no-2016-run-for-me>* [Subtitle:] “The Democrat says he is content to ‘see what Hillary does.’” *Los Angeles Times: “The Envelope 'Virunga' details a complicated story of oil exploration in Congo” <http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/la-et-mn-virunga-20150205-story.html>* “The film was seen by Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton at a special screening last weekend and has already screened for the United Nations, British Parliament, the European Parliament, on Capitol Hill and for many of SOCO's investors; ‘Virunga’ illuminates ‘true African heroes,’ says Von Einsiedel.” *Slate: “NBC’s Bad Memory” <http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/television/2015/02/brian_william_s_false_memories_of_rpg_fire_in_iraq_will_nbc_hold_its_anchor.html>* [Subtitle:] “The network repeatedly criticized Hillary Clinton for her false memory of ‘sniper fire.’ Will it hold Brian Williams to the same standard?” *Washington Post blog: In The Loop: “Scholars rank Kerry dead last in terms of effectiveness.” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/wp/2015/02/05/scholars-rank-kerry-dead-last-in-terms-of-effectiveness/?tid=sm_tw_pp>* “Madeleine Albright and Hillary Clinton tied for fourth at 8.70 percent.” *Articles:* *Washington Post blog: Reliable Source: “Former first ladies in the house! Hillary Clinton attends Ford’s Theater play ‘The Widow Lincoln’” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/reliable-source/wp/2015/02/05/former-first-ladies-in-the-house-hillary-clinton-attends-fords-theater-play-the-widow-lincoln/>* By Emily Heil February 5, 2015, 12:28 p.m. EST Hey, isn’t that… former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, attending a Wednesday-evening performance of the new play “The Widow Lincoln” at Ford’s Theater? Seems the former FLOTUS is interested in her historic predecessor: the production focuses on the life of Mary Todd Lincoln, the enigmatic wife of President Abraham Lincoln. Clinton, spies say, arrived with a small group (sans Bill) and sat in the orchestra section. *Washington Post blog: PostPartisan: Jonathan Capehart: “Hillary Clinton’s consolation prize for Brooklyn” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/02/05/hillary-clintons-consolation-prize-for-brooklyn/>* By Jonathan Capehart February 5, 2015, 10:37 a.m. EST Amie Parnes of the Hill reports that the as-yet-announced presidential campaign of Hillary Rodham Clinton will likely be headquartered in Brooklyn. One knowledgeable Democratic strategist told me that the consultants prefer the Big Apple’s largest borough to someplace in Westchester because it would be easier to get to and out of. But putting the campaign in Brooklyn would have another benefit: consolation prize. Any day now, the Democratic National Committee will announce its choice for its 2016 presidential nominating convention. Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Columbus, Ohio, are the finalists. By now, you know I think Philadelphia should get the quadrennial jamboree. I recognize the power of having Clinton officially accept the nomination (assuming she runs and secures the required delegates) in her home state 24 years after her ex-president husband did the same in the Big Apple. Still, there are significant issues with hosting the convention in Brooklyn, which is why the money is on the City of Brotherly Love. That’s why the leak about Clinton considering Brooklyn for her campaign headquarters is so intriguing. The borough could lose the convention but gain the campaign. It could dodge the bullet of the four-day convention (and the headaches for all concerned that would entail) but bask in the glow of a 16-month presidential operation. There are issues with putting the campaign there, too. Being the capital of hyper-expensive Hipstervania is one. Actually, that might be its biggest knock. That, and being the center of action for HBO’s “Girls.” But in touting Brooklyn for the convention, New York City Council Member Vincent Gentile gave a rationale for why Clinton should make the borough her HQ. “One in seven Americans can trace their roots to Brooklyn so history shows Brooklyn is at the crossroads of our country,” he said last year. “We are a true mosaic of our country and of the world. Clearly Brooklyn is America and America is Brooklyn.” Can’t argue with that. *Bloomberg: “Why Starbucks's CEO Is Resisting Calls For Him to Run for the White House” <http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-02-05/starbucks-ceo-howard-schultz-no-2016-run-for-me>* By Ali Elkin February 5, 2015, 12:15 p.m. EST [Subtitle:] The Democrat says he is content to “see what Hillary does.” Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz says he does not have designs on the White House, according to a Time cover story published Thursday. “For his part, Schultz insists he’s not interested in running for office at the moment and has neither the temperament to make the compromises necessary to embark on a Democratic political career nor the desire to be a third-party candidate. ‘I don’t think that is a solution. I don’t think it ends well.’ ... For now, Schultz says, he’s content to ‘see what Hillary [Clinton] does.’” Entertainment magnate David Geffen told the magazine that he thinks Schultz has what it takes. “I first told Howard he should run back in 2008,” Geffen said. “We were having a very intense conversation about things that were happening in the country, and Howard had a strong point of view about various things ... We both felt there was a lot of corruption in government and a lack of conviction to put things right.” Anti-tax activist Grover Norquist also weighed in on the possibility of Schultz running. “'You should run for office' is what people in this country say to you when they mean ‘I like your ideas. I wish people in Washington thought like you did,'” he said, according to the magazine. “That’s what Ralph Nader’s friends said to him, and when he ran, they screamed at it and said, ‘Hey, you are funneling money away from the mainstream of the party!'” *Los Angeles Times: “The Envelope 'Virunga' details a complicated story of oil exploration in Congo” <http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/la-et-mn-virunga-20150205-story.html>* By Janet Kinosian February 5, 2015, 7:20 a.m. EST When filmmaker Orlando von Einsiedel first arrived in eastern Congo to film what ultimately became the Oscar-nominated documentary "Virunga," he'd hoped to showcase an inspiring story of about 500 lionhearted park rangers who risk their lives to protect UNESCO World Heritage Site Virunga National Park — one of the world's most iconic and bio-diverse spots — and the threatened mountain gorillas that reside within. What he found appeared to be far more complicated — SOCO International, a British-based oil and gas exploration company, was in the Democratic Republic of Congo with a government concession for oil exploration beneath the park. The film was seen by Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton at a special screening last weekend and has already screened for the United Nations, British Parliament, the European Parliament, on Capitol Hill and for many of SOCO's investors; "Virunga" illuminates "true African heroes," says Von Einsiedel. Between poachers and a military rebellion devastating the country's eastern region, 130 rangers have died since the mid-1990s. "Virunga" is really several important films woven into one. What was the initial story you arrived to tell? I'd worked a lot in Africa as an investigative journalist, and I'd come across incredibly inspiring people amid these rather depressing stories on violence and injustice. "Virunga" was originally a human story about the park rangers risking their lives to protect mountain gorillas and trying to rebuild their country [known as Zaire until 1997] after 20 years of war and conflict. That's the story I went there to tell. So you knew or didn't know about SOCO International when you first started to film? I had no idea. But when I got there I learned very quickly of the park's concern about the oil company and I saw that what I could contribute to the fight was technology. In terms of the film, it started to look like three separate films: an investigative PBS "Frontline"-type film, a National Geographic film and a kind of war movie. This suddenly became something that was so much bigger than anything I'd ever done before. But I always felt they were so interrelated they had to be told together. Park director Emmanuel de Merode, who opposes all such oil exploration, was ambushed last year, shot four times. Is he OK? The thing with Emmanuel — and I spent a year with him on the ground — is he is the real deal. He is exactly what he is in the film, and his resolve is as steel and incredible. After he was shot and nearly killed, he was back at work in about 35 days. He's made of truly tough stuff. Another featured ranger, Rodrigue Katembo, you say acted as an undercover agent, really. How did you connect with him? He said he'd been approached by people claiming to represent SOCO and was offered money to work against the park. He quickly learned how to use the undercover cameras and very quickly started bringing back this incredible footage. He was also jailed for 17 days after he stopped some people [who said they were] working on behalf of SOCO from building a radio antenna for mobile phones inside the park; the next day he was arrested, beaten up and tortured. He said he was told that if he ever opposed the oil exploration again, next time he'll be killed. [SOCO International officials could not be reached for comment, but in a 2012 Associated Press article about the situation, the company responded, "SOCO vigorously denies any allegations of impropriety ... {and} does not permit the giving or receiving of bribes." The company's website states that "SOCO's operations inside Virunga National Park ceased on 22 July, 2014 and elsewhere {near Lake Edward} on 11 August, 2014."] What have you heard from them — has there been significant pushback? We wrote them and said here's our list of allegations. What's your response? And they wrote us back a 20-page legal letter denying everything and basically saying if you screen this film we reserve the right to sue you. Then they wrote to the festivals we were going to screen it at and said, "If you screen this film, we believe it's defamatory and we might sue you." And then when it first came out they wrote to loads of journalists who reviewed it and they said, "Take the reviews down from the Internet; if you don't we will sue you." Just incredibly aggressive. The gorillas are so joyous and gentle in the film. Not quite what I expected. They are so very, very gentle. Their forest has been bombed for four or five months repeatedly and the first humans the gorillas come across afterward are the rangers, and rather than become angry and lash out, "What have you been doing to us?" they just want to gently and lovingly touch them. What has been the rangers' response and reaction to all the attention and awards directed at the film? I think they understood that we were all working together to create this tool that could show the world what was happening in the park. It's not just to protect it for the Congolese people, but also for humanity. If this iconic place isn't protectable, what is? *Slate: “NBC’s Bad Memory” <http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/television/2015/02/brian_william_s_false_memories_of_rpg_fire_in_iraq_will_nbc_hold_its_anchor.html>* By Alec MacGillis February 5, 2015, 12:45 p.m. EST [Subtitle:] The network repeatedly criticized Hillary Clinton for her false memory of “sniper fire.” Will it hold Brian Williams to the same standard? Questions are swirling about NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams’ guarded acknowledgment Wednesday night that he had, over the years, falsely claimed to have been in a helicopter that came under rocket-propelled grenade fire in Iraq in 2003. But NBC itself has been mostly mum about the matter, and MSNBC has given it only the briefest of mentions. This is in stark contrast to the network’s coverage of a quite similar matter in 2008: Hillary Clinton’s false claim to have arrived in Tuzla, Bosnia under sniper fire in 1996, when coverage of her visit at the time showed her being greeted leisurely by an 8-year-old with a welcoming poem. From what I can tell from the transcripts at the time, Williams did not directly address Clinton’s exaggerations on the air when they were covered by NBC Nightly News. But his colleagues at NBC and MSNBC hammered away at Clinton repeatedly over several weeks for her dishonesty and carelessness. Some examples, with some especially tart comments highlighted: *Meet the Press, March 23, 2008:* Tim Russert: Yesterday in the column called “Fact Checker” by Michael Dobbs in the Washington Post, Dobbs wrote this, “Clinton’s tale of landing at the Tuzla Airport under sniper fire and then running for cover is simply not credible. Photographs and video of the arrival ceremony combined with contemporaneous news reports tell a very different story. Four Pinocchios,” which is the highest you can get, which means a whopper in terms of exaggeration. … It’s a credibility issue, truth-telling—is this a problem for Sen. Clinton? Chuck Todd: Well, it’s been the nagging things about this whole campaign. When you ask that question of honest and trustworthy, she has always consistently scored lower than Obama. … But, I, for the life of me, haven’t understood why they have pushed this story. They knew that somebody went after and re-interviewed Sinbad, who was on that trip, the former “comedian,” and I put comedian in quotes. That he was on that trip and doesn't remember it being that harried or anything like that, and yet she went out and retold the story. … They didn't need to retell the story because if they had not, then they wouldn’t have gotten this four Pinocchio thing out of the Washington Post and given the Obama campaign something to hit them with. *Today Show, March 25, 2008:* Matt Lauer: So let’s talk about this trip to Bosnia March of 1996. Here’s how Hillary Clinton described it last week: “I remember landing under sniper fire. There was supposed to be some kind of a greeting ceremony at the airport, but instead we just ran with our heads down to get into the vehicles and get to our base.” Now, I still remember winning a Little League championship single-handedly when I was 10, probably didn’t happen. But this isn’t the Little League, this is someone running for president. There were reporters on this trip and she’s using her experience as a deciding factor. How could this happen? Chuck Todd: Well, and it’s worse than that, Matt. There had been reporters questioning her story on this a few weeks ago. One even reached out to the comedian Sinbad, who was also on this trip, to get his recollection of it and it differed from the first lady. So somebody didn’t scrub that speech. It was in prepared remarks last week, and not only did she say it with certitude, but it was in her prepared text. So this was a real sort of bone-headed mistake on the campaign’s part at a time when everybody is looking at everything so carefully. Lauer: Right, and does it make people now go back and start to question everything she said? *Countdown, March 27, 2008:* Keith Olbermann: Forgetting about Bosnia. The March 17 misspeak was just she said, sleep deprivation or something. But now, two other Bosnia misspeaks have turned up. Were they sleep deprivation, too? Speaking of Bosnia, it turns out Sen. Clinton was speaking of Bosnia and gunfire and danger last December. Is that sleep deprivation chronic? *Hardball, April 7, 2008:* Chris Matthews: That said, [for Obama to run ads about] Tuzla doesn’t require any nastiness toward Sen. Clinton. It requires playing over and over again a fish story that she was under enemy fire, a very elaborate kind of story about wartime and risk and courage and survival that turned out not to be at all true. Who would hold that against Barack? I can imagine Mark Penn running series of ads over and over again. I can imagine a saturation campaign. Why doesn’t he do what Hillary would do? What’s especially striking about the comparison of the scandal over Clinton’s Tuzla’s claims—which unquestionably wounded her already listing campaign against Barack Obama—was that Williams made some of his false claims about the Iraq helicopter attack directly after Clinton was slammed over Tuzla. In a May 12, 2008 blog post, he wrote: “A young soldier, who is, like me, from the Jersey Shore, reads my blog entry last week during a break while on active duty in Iraq. The last time I saw him, I was with my friend and NBC News Military Analyst Wayne Downing, a retired 4-Star Army General. Wayne and I were riding along as part of an Army mission to deliver bridge components to the Euphrates River, so that the invading forces of the 3rd Infantry could cross the river on their way to Bagdhad. We came under fire by what appeared to be Iraqi farmers with RPG’s and AK-47’s. The Chinook helicopter flying in front of ours (from the 101st Airborne) took an RPG to the rear rotor, as all four of our low-flying Chinooks took fire. We were forced down and stayed down—for the better (or worse) part of 3 days and 2 nights.” Williams had seen what happened to Clinton just weeks earlier, yet kept telling his own fish tale. To paraphrase one of his own NBC colleagues, this isn’t Little League, it’s a nightly news anchor with an audience of millions. Will he be held to the same standards to which NBC and the rest of the media held Clinton? *Washington Post blog: In The Loop: “Scholars rank Kerry dead last in terms of effectiveness.” <http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/wp/2015/02/05/scholars-rank-kerry-dead-last-in-terms-of-effectiveness/?tid=sm_tw_pp>* By Al Kamen February 5, 2015 7:00 a.m. EST Secretary of State John Kerry, working diligently on some extraordinarily difficult foreign policy issues — China, neo-Soviet Russia, Islamic State, Iran, etc — isn’t getting even a tiny bit of credit these days from the tweedy, elbow-patched, wing-chair crowd. Foreign Policy magazine this week announced the results of its 2014 Ivory Tower survey of 1,615 international relations scholars from 1,375 U.S. colleges. One question they were asked was: “Who was the most effective U.S. secretary of state of the past 50 years? The winner? Nobel Peace Prize winner Henry A. Kissinger, who was secretary for four years during the Nixon and Ford administrations. Since the Vietnam thing didn’t turn out so well, the scholars must have been grading him on openings to China and the Soviet Union when he was at the National Security Council? Kissinger got 32.21 percent of the vote, extraordinary in such a large field. “Don’t Know” came in a relatively distant second, with 18.32 percent. James Baker — who was actually the most effective secretary in the last 50 years — came in third at 17.71 percent, just behind Dr. Know. Madeleine Albright and Hillary Clinton tied for fourth at 8.70 percent. George Shultz was sixth with 5.65 percent. Dean Rusk, who served in the Kennedy-Johnson years, came in seventh at 3.51 percent. Warren Christopher got 1.53 percent, tying Cyrus Vance for eighth place Colin Powell was picked by 1.07 percent for tenth place. Condoleezza Rice got the nod from 0.46 percent putting her in 11th place. Lawrence Eagleburger came in 12th place with only 0.31 percent. Then, dead last, is John Kerry. He also got a total of only five votes and tied Eagleburger’s 0.31 percent, but the magazine lists him at 13th. This is all truly odd. Loop Fans may recall Eagleburger was only secretary of state for six weeks, from Dec. 8, 1992 to Jan. 20 1993. To be sure, he was acting secretary for three months before that, but it’s hard to say he left a huge diplomatic footprint. (On the other hand, we always marveled at Eagleburger’s unerring ability to keep from blowing himself up as he alternated an inhaler in his right hand and a cigarette in his left.) Odder still, the survey apparently forget that Nixon’s first secretary of state was William P. Rogers. Well, Kerry’s only been at Foggy Bottom for only a couple years, so he’s got plenty of time to boost his standing. Nowhere to go but up with this scholarly crowd.
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