This is my personal view and comments on the issues and events that I feel a need to talk about or express my view. You don't have to agree, but lets carry on a adult, discussion and maybe you will see it the right way, mine. ;)
Gen. Meyers can even see the bias, why can't the public?
Published on June 7, 2005 By ShadowWar In Current Events
June 6, 2005 – The media ought to focus on the very real, vicious acts of violent extremists, and not on vague allegations of Koran abuse, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said to reporters here today. (They should also focus on the successes and positive stories)

Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers said the "press in general seems to relish always emphasizing the negative." (Talk about stating the obvious, even you, the reading public has to agree that the vast majority of the press is negative)

He said one frustration is that it always takes longer to get the facts. The Newsweek piece alleging that guards in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, had flushed a Koran down a toilet relied on an anonymous source.

Checking it out required DoD to sort through more than 1.6 million documents and long hours of studying and verifying the facts. But the damage to American prestige had been done by the time U.S. officials could conclude there were isolated cases of Koran abuse - none of which involved flushing the Muslim holy book down a commode.

Myers said people should contrast that with the enemy. "What does the enemy do on a daily basis? And what does the press report about the enemy?" Myers asked. "On a daily basis in Iraq, what the enemy does is kill innocent men, women and children."

Myers noted that Jordanian-born violent extremist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said that he would kill innocents to try to spark a civil war between Sunnis and Shiias. Extremists under his direction have launched some of the bloodiest attacks in Iraq. Zarqawi and his henchmen have chopped off their victims' heads and put the murders on the Internet for the world to see.

"That's abhorrent behavior," he said. "That's what the press ought to be focused on -- not a couple of incidents where an overzealous guard or interrogator abused a Koran."

Myers said that even in the few cases where Koran abuse is found, America will investigate and punish those found responsible under the rule of law.

"The first time you hear a story," Myers told the reporters, "you ought not to assume the worst." (Or maybe you should research it yourself and expand your mind. You would be suprised at how much fun it can be to show for yourself how a nationally known news sourse is so wrong, and would have been easy to check for themselves but they didn't even bother to try, or ignored people telling them the story was not a good one to use. )

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