Vets Take On the Media and the Democratic Machine, and Win
Wed January 2nd, 2008 19:58 MSTHere is the promised review of
How Swift Boat Veterans, POWs and the
New Media Defeated John Kerry
by Scott Swett and Tim Ziegler
Expect one surprise after another in this brilliant and important book. In 2004, John Kerry’s run for the presidency suddenly energized thousands of Vietnam vets. This man, who said his fellow veterans had “raped, cut off ears, cut off heads,…randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan…” wanted to be President! (page 13)
This is the true story of how those vets fought against the vast battalions of the elite media…and against all odds, won. Swett, an insider from the start, and Ziegler nail journalists to the wall time after time. I have never read so many shocking instances of outright bias – or fraud – or stupidity – by the mainstream media.
Early on, the Swift Boat veterans held a historic press conference, where one after another of Kerry’s brothers-in-arms condemned him. You probably didn’t hear about it - it was all but ignored by the media.
“They [Swiftees] assumed that the media would validate their credentials and report their charges to the public. John O’Neill later admitted ‘We were naïve.’ …
“CBS was the only network that did anything, and they did a complete hatchet job…”
“By October, O’Neill no longer had any illusions about what to expect from the old media gatekeepers. The leading liberal networks and newspapers would try to discredit any information harmful to Kerry. Other Swift Vets and POW’s were astonished at the hypocrisy of news organizations they had once admired. While loudly praising the vital role of a free press, the old media imposed a nearly Soviet level of political censorship on the content of news reports.”
When you read the book, you too will be astonished. And you will be amazed at what you never heard, such as the evidence strongly suggesting that John Kerry acted as an agent of the enemy, and that he covered up a less-than-honorable discharge from the Navy.
A CBS report opined “But if you think this is just a concerned group of veterans, think again.” (page 99)
So who were the Swift Boat veterans? This book counters the myths about the vets, who are usually pictured in movies as druggie losers or enraged psychopaths. In particular, it clears up slanders against the Swiftees and their organization, proving they were part of a spontaneous grass roots uprising. The veterans were from all walks of life, Democrat, Republican or just plain ornery.
Expect howls of outrage… expect ad hominem attacks— that the authors are liars and the Swiftees… Bush operatives. Swett and Ziegler give the facts to prove this wrong.
Every practicing journalist in America needs to read this book and then ask and answer some hard questions.
Everyone else in America needs to read it to realize how many times the mainstream media seeks to mislead instead of inform.
You can buy the book directly from the authors here.
I think we must always keep in mind that the Swiftvets’ story, for the left, had less to do with Kerry than it did with challenges to their beliefs, and the triumph of people they already disliked. Consider Robert’s incoherence at the last post; it’s about left and right and he uses the same old lingo.
It was one of the last skirmishes in the culture war being briefly played out in Hillary’s run for President. The passing of a generation, finding themselves weakened by time and their ideas attenuated, they’re just lashing out at those who frustrate them.
We vets had no axe to grind until Kerry thought he could perform a pas de deux with us without making even a simple explanation.
Hey, did you guys ever find those WMD in Iraq?
No, but we found your father, the guy who lost the paternity suit.