Pinnochio By Bruce Walker

By all accounts, Walter Cronkite was a kindly, almost
avuncular figure.  Many members of the journalist community have written
eulogies of his decency and humility.  He had a long, happy
marriage.  These things should count to us conservatives, who yearn for human
life to be more about how it is lived than in the personal politics of each
individual. We ought to respect, for example, the genuine marital love that
Barack has for Michelle or, for that matter, the love that Jimmy Carter has for
Roselyn.  If we fail to honor those good aspects of our political
opponents, then we run the grave risk of becoming that hideous creation of the
Left, homo politicus.

The Left will never, ever give to Jessie Helms, who like
Cronkite arose from the world of journalism from the mid-South, the same
respect that I give to Cronkite.  Helms lived an exemplary life, showing
vast and real compassion for mankind.  Yet his politics trumped all else,
in the eyes of the Left, and so he has been consigned to odium.  Ronald
Reagan, today, is revered by the Left and his almost transcendent decency
acknowledged, but this came only after decades of vile personal attacks and
sadistic mockery.

Among those who tormented President Reagan was Walter
Cronkite himself, who in May, 1984 said: “Had Mr. Reagan had to pass a verbal
aptitude test, I’m afraid his response would put him in remedial
English.”  Anyone who bothered to know about Ronald Reagan, and the many
good books about him showing his manuscript notes on politics, history, and
philosophy, would have known that Ronald Reagan studied, thought, and wrote
much more seriously than, say, the philandering King Kennedy of Camelot.

But Walter Cronkite, as a journalist, never appeared
concerned with truth.  Almost all of Washington knew that Kennedy was
unfaithful, everyone knew his father was a crooked anti-Semite, and the rumors
of Kennedy deals with the mob and the corrupt machines of Daley and West
Virginia was notorious – notorious, and almost ignored by the anchor of CBS
Evening News.  Perhaps that was a better America, in which every personal
scandal was not dredged through the tedious news cycle.  But much of
America looked to Cronkite to be our guardian of truth, and he was most
certainly not.

Unlike NBC News, which Huntley, a relative conservative, and
Brinkley, a genuinely honorable Leftist, or ABC News, which had a truly
thoughtful Howard K. Smith, whose commentaries were provocative, CBS News was
as completely predictable as the rising sun.  Those of us who can recall
the only three broadcast media sources – the three networks – saw only the
Left, but at CBS News there was hardly the pretense of any other viewpoint.

Moreover, CBS produced documentaries during Cronkite’s
prestigious years at CBS News which were as mendacious as anything seen in the
Leftist media today.  This bias manifested in outright lying on many
issues. The infamous CBS documentary "The Selling of the Pentagon"
for example, had an Assistant Secretary of Defense’s answers to several
questions edited and replaced as answers to other totally unrelated questions.
That network’s award winning "Hunger in America" began with a solemn
announcement from a hospital that "This child has just died of
hunger," when nutrition had nothing to do with the infant’s death.

The ABC documentary, "Arms and Security: How Much is
Enough?" – broadcast a few days before the 1972 Presidential Election –
was filled with gross errors. The program announced as fact that 60% of the
federal budget was alleged to be spent on defense, when the actual percentage
was 38%. The need for a supersonic bomber was dismissed because the B-52 was
already supersonic – which it was not. The documentary was filled with other
errors that revealed either no research at all, or a deliberate bias to
understate the need for a strong national defense.  ABC News was a
competitor of CBS News.  This corporate rival had just lied to the
American people.  What did Cronkite do to protect us from the corrupt
practices of a corporate rival?  He took great umbrage when corporations
in other parts of the private sector appeared to collude, but ignoring the
egregious sins of his company’s competitors did not bother him at all.

Richard Nixon was a corrupt president whose resignation was
needed by our nation.  Walter Cronkite certainly thought so. 
Presidents should not lie to the American people.  Cronkite was joined by
a number of conservative journalists and, famously, by principled Republicans
like Barry Goldwater.  Bill Clinton also lied to the American people. He
looked us dead in the eye and lied to us.  He lied under oath.  He
lied to his cabinet (unless Slick Willie was lying about that as well), but
Cronkite, conspicuously, defended this particular president who lied to the
American people. 

Does this matter?  Yes: Cronkite was anointed and
tacitly accepted the title of “the most trusted man in America.”  His
demeanor, his voice, his professional appearance all bespoke that honor. 
Yet when corporations, like CBS and ABC, lied to us, Cronkite was silent. 
When presidents, like Kennedy and Clinton, deceived us, Cronkite said nothing
at all.  When men, like Goldwater and Reagan, spoke – in that goofy phrase
of the Left “truth to power” – Cronkite dismissed their message and demeaned
their very real courage.

I will not judge and cannot know whether Walter Cronkite was
simply hopelessly myopic, woefully ignorant, or what Eric Hoffer would have
called a “true believer.”  Nor will I descend to the Leftist sickness of ad
hominem
destruction of men whose personal lives merit respect.  But,
sadly, for a generation of Americans searching for answers, when the most
trusted man in America said “and that’s the way it is,” it wasn’t – at
all.

                  © 2009 Bruce Walker — All Rights Reserved 

________________________________________________________________________

Bruce Walker is the author of two books:  Sinisterism:
Secular Religion of the Lie
, and his recently published book, The
Swastika against the Cross: The Nazi War on Christianity
.

http://outskirtspress.com/swastika_against_the_cross  

http://outskirtspress.com/Sinisterism

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4 responses to “Guest Commentary: And That’s The Way it Wasn’t – Walter Cronkite”

  1. Philip France Avatar
    Philip France

    I applaud Mr. Walker for an excellent article and I should commend him for his civility toward the recently-deceased Mr. Cronkite.
    As a commentator without portfolio, I am grateful that this liar has crossed the River Styx.
    Walter Cronkite betrayed a public trust and is the evil godfather of the truth deficit in modern journalism.
    Will the eternal God judge Mr. Cronkite for the deaths of over 58,000 of our bravest Americans? Will he judge Mr. Cronkite on the basis that his bias and false reporting led to the torture and deaths of MILLIONS of Vietnamese and Cambodian human beings? I hesitate to say that I hope so, but I do.
    We suffer at the hands of his acolytes, namely Chris Matthews, Keith Olbermadmann, Brian Ross, Charles Gibson, Katie Couric. The only comforting thought is that the previously-mentioned “news” anchors have abysmal ratings. Cronkite didn’t. It is exponentially more sinful that the public trust that had been placed in him was betrayed by his radical bias.
    May he rot in eternal torment.

    Like

  2. Ray Hicks Avatar

    You’re nuts.

    Like

  3. Philip France Avatar
    Philip France

    What about my nuts? They’re none of your business.

    Like

  4. Ray Hicks Avatar

    Far as I can tell, you don’t have any.

    Like

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