Walter Cronkite Dies at 92

Jeff Mock

Active member
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NEW YORK — Walter Cronkite, the premier TV anchorman of the networks' golden age who reported a tumultuous time with reassuring authority and came to be called "the most trusted man in America," has died. He was 92.

CBS vice president Linda Mason says Cronkite died at 7:42 p.m. Friday with his family by his side at his home in New York after a long illness.

He was the face of the "CBS Evening News" from 1962 to 1981, when stories ranged from the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to racial and anti-war riots, Watergate and the Iranian hostage crisis.

It was Cronkite who read the bulletins coming from Dallas when Kennedy was shot Nov. 22, 1963, interrupting a live CBS-TV broadcast of the soap opera "As the World Turns."
 
In 1999, Walter Cronkite appeared at the United Nations to accept the Norman Cousins Global Governance Award from the World Federalists Association. He told those assembled, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, that the first step toward achieving a one-world government – his personal dream – is to strengthen the United Nations.

"It seems to many of us that if we are to avoid the eventual catastrophic world conflict we must strengthen the United Nations as a first step toward a world government patterned after our own government with a legislature, executive and judiciary, and police to enforce its international laws and keep the peace," he said. "To do that, of course, we Americans will have to yield up some of our sovereignty. That would be a bitter pill. It would take a lot of courage, a lot of faith in the new order."

In his acceptance speech, Cronkite added, "Pat Robertson has written in a book a few years ago that we should have a world government, but only when the Messiah arrives. He wrote, literally, any attempt to achieve world order before that time must be the work of the devil. Well, join me. I'm glad to sit here at the right hand of Satan."

It looks like he got his wish!
 
Quote:


"It seems to many of us that if we are to avoid the eventual catastrophic world conflict we must strengthen the United Nations as a first step toward a world government patterned after our own government with a legislature, executive and judiciary, and police to enforce its international laws and keep the peace," he said. "To do that, of course, we Americans will have to yield up some of our sovereignty. That would be a bitter pill. It would take a lot of courage, a lot of faith in the new order."

In his acceptance speech, Cronkite added, "Pat Robertson has written in a book a few years ago that we should have a world government, but only when the Messiah arrives. He wrote, literally, any attempt to achieve world order before that time must be the work of the devil. Well, join me. I'm glad to sit here at the right hand of Satan."

It looks like he got his wish!



I betcha he 'aint laughing NOW... Despite his enthusiasm, Satan might not be the ideal host, even for a liberal /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
Let’s also not forget that when Walter went to Vietnam he would interview troops.

In those interviews he allowed the addition of gun fire in the back rounds when it wasn’t there in the interview…no agenda my butt.

Non Bias MY A$$...
 
Excellent piece on the REAL Uncle Walter:

http://townhall.com/columnists/DianaWest/2009/07/24/cronkites_offensive_history

Cronkite's Offensive History
Diana West
Friday, July 24, 2009

It's time for a post-Cronkite post-mortem, but not on the late "icon" himself -- the "most trusted man in America," the "voice of God," "the gold standard," the "proxy for a nation," or, in plainer English, the lush-lived celebrity "anchor" who died this month at age 92. No, the Cronkite post-mortem that's needed is for the zombies who conjured up the hollow rapture and the living dead who fell for it.

Harsh words? You bet. But I don't know how else to begin to assess a nation that sees fit to celebrate, crown, even worship a man who said his "proudest moment" was when he declared on CBS, having misinterpreted the 1968 Tet offensive as a victory for North Vietnam, that the Vietnam war was unwinnable for the United States. "If I've lost Cronkite, I've lost middle America," almost every Cronkite obituary approvingly quoted President Lyndon B. Johnson as having said in response -- never mind that Cronkite was flat-out wrong in his reporting.

This was the infamous "stalemate" broadcast in which Cronkite editorialized in unprecedented manner: "It is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then will be to negotiate, not as victors, but as an honorable people who ... did the best they could." Despite his obit-omnipotence, Cronkite alone wasn't responsible for LBJ's offer again to negotiate with Hanoi, his decision not to run for re-election, the ultimate flagging of America's commitment to South Vietnam, or one million-plus boat people who fled the communist regime, but the famed broadcaster was without doubt a key influence in persuading the nation, particularly its elites, to accept, if not court, American defeat in Vietnam.

So, to use his own words, was Walter Cronkite an honorable journalist who did the best he could?

No. What may -- may -- have resulted from forgivable misimpressions due to the "fog of war" long ago crystallized into obdurate lies. Cronkite never clarified the record, never admitted that the Tet offensive -- the Vietcong's surprise holiday attack on cities across South Vietnam -- resulted in a military and political fiasco for North Vietnam.

This was becoming apparent even before the dust had settled in 1968, as we learn in Peter Braestrup's indispensable "The Big Story", one of the signal historical works of the 20th century, which meticulously analyzes the media's failure to assess Tet correctly as a defeat for North Vietnam. Even Leftist journalist Frances Fitzgerald in her Pulitzer Prize-winning "Fire in the Lake" reported that Tet had "seriously depleted" Vietcong forces and "wiped out" many of their "most experienced cadres," noting that such losses drove "the southern movement for the first time into almost total dependency on the north." Her conclusion: "By all the indices available to the American military, the Tet offensive was a major defeat for the enemy."

And the enemy agreed. In a 1995 interview with the Wall Street Journal, Bui Tin, a member of the North Vietnamese general staff who in 1975 personally received the unconditional surrender of South Vietnam, called North Vietnam's losses in Tet "staggering." Communist forces in the South, he explained, "were nearly wiped out by all the fighting in 1968. It took us until 1971 to re-establish our presence, but we had to use North Vietnamese troops as local guerillas. If the American forces had not begun to withdraw under Nixon in 1969," he added, "they could have punished us severely." And who knows? If Cronkite had not used Tet to nudge for negotiations, maybe American forces would not have begun to withdraw.

Bui Tin said North Vietnamese commander Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap told him Tet was "a military defeat though we had gained the planned political advantages when Johnson agreed to negotiate and did not run for re-election."

Well, who could blame him? The president had "lost Cronkite."

And so be it. The president lost Cronkite, the United States lost Vietnam. But why are the rest of us still stuck with Cronkite's Orwellian packaging as "America's most trusted newsman" 41 years after he totally and calamitously and obstinately blew Tet? The ongoing genuflection before "Uncle Walter" reveals something mighty weird about this body politic -- something beyond the ken of a mere journalist, something more in the line of work of a really good shrink.



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Walther Cronkite was no friend of Servicemen in Vietnam.
He had made a prediction that the Marines at Khe Shan would be defeated.
Failed to report of the 3-6,000 civilians in Hue City were murdered by the communist forces durring the Tet Offensive, yet had no reservation reporting on wrongs done by our military
He was the friend of our enemy,a comrade to the crimnal anti-war crowd here.
He was hated more by our servicemen than the enemy we were fighting.
Like news reporters today who can't wait for the polls to close durring a Presidential Campaign, he couldn't wait to the end of a war to announce the winner, he tried to effect it's outcome.
 
Quote:Walther Cronkite was no friend of Servicemen in Vietnam.


No, and he wasn't any friend of ours afterwards, either.
Jane Fonda and John Kerry don't rank very high, either.
 
There was a symposium years ago on PBS. A round table with Newsmen, Congressmen, Military personel etc ..
It was about a future war and the interactions and relationships to conducting such a war.( Symposium was in the late 70's I believe )
A question was asked of to one reporter ( anchor man on ABC I believe ) " What would you do if, as a reporter with the enemy of the USA, you discovered a plan to attack US forces ? " , 'would you try and get warning to US forces of the impending attack? " The reporter took too long in responding, so Dan Rather blurted out, come on, you know the answer. " We are not there to change events, only to report them" So no we would not warn the Ameicans."
A Marine Officer responed," if you were wounded on the field of battle you would lie their and die before I helped you"...
Dan Rather is not alone in his beliefs, neither is the Marine. Semper Fi
 
Yep, the leftist journos willingly discard any notion of the fact that the American soldier is the guarantor and protector of their freedom of the press (Hat tip: Zell Miller). They are indeed a sick, sick bunch!

I suppose I should no longer refer to them as "journos." "Anti-American, leftist, Obama cheerleaders" is more apropos.

Here's the picture to prove it:
obama-pied-piper.jpg
 


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