(This update courtesy of the Media Research Center.)
Canadian-born and raised Peter Jennings, who in a September 6 appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman, admitted his mother “was pretty anti-American,” so he was “raised with anti-Americanism in my blood,” told the Philadelphia Inquirer's Gail Shister this week that he carries in his back pocket a copy of the Constitution, “for inspiration.”
But even after living in the U.S. for nearly 40 years, Jennings has yet to become a U.S. citizen and his children are citizens of three nations: Canada, Britain and the United States, though Shister warned, “Jennings says he's been thinking for more than a decade about becoming an American citizen, 'if the country deems me worthy of it.'”
Is Jennings U.S. citizenship-worthy? He'd be wise to avoid asking his more conservative viewers.
Here is an excerpt from Shister's story in the September 25 Philadelphia Inquirer:
…Though he feels “more American than Canadian,” ABC's Peter Jennings has never applied for dual citizenship since moving to the United States in 1964.
“There are a lot of complicated reasons, many of them private and having to do with my family,” says Jennings, 64, in town yesterday to hype his new book, In Search of America, and to anchor World News Tonight from Independence Mall.
Jennings' mother, Elizabeth (for whom his daughter is named), “was deeply concerned that I stay Canadian,” the Toronto-born newsman says. “She thought a lot of people went away from Canada and forgot their roots.”
Because Jennings' father, Charles, was a prominent figure in the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., “my mother wanted me to honor that in a pretty permanent way. I don't think that will always be the case.”
Jennings says he's been thinking for more than a decade about becoming an American citizen, “if the country deems me worthy of it.”
“It would be a very big step for me, because I value the American idea so much. I don't know whether I've made enough of a contribution to America…. I wish to be a worthy citizen.” (He really talks like that.)
Jennings' children, Elizabeth, 22, and Christopher, 20, are citizens of three countries Britain (their place of birth), Canada, and the United States, adopted home of their mother, author Kati Marton, a former WCAU reporter.
If they wanted to, Jennings says, his kids could add a fourth country Hungary, Marton's birthplace. (FYI: She was his third wife. He's been married to ABC producer Kayce Freed since 1997.)
Jennings, a highly emotional man to those who know him well, freely admits he's “having a love affair” with America….
Hokey? How's this? Jennings carries in his back pocket a copy of the Constitution, “for inspiration.”…
END of Excerpt
Click here for Shister's TV column in full.
Stephanopoulos Again Shows His Left-Wing Stripes
George Stephanopoulos showed on Sunday that he's more upset by anyone daring to criticize liberal Democrats than he is by what those people said in the first place, no matter how outrageous. He scolded Republican Senator Don Nickles for a “pretty harsh charge” against a Democrat who said from Baghdad that President Bush would “lie” to justify a war and charged that Bush himself had “basically” accused Democrats “of treason.”
On This Week, after Congressmen David Bonior (D-Mich.) in Baghdad claimed past U.S. bombing in Iraq had caused kids to get leukemia, “a horrendous, barbaric, horrific thing that's happened,” and Congressman Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) confirmed that he thought President Bush would lie in order to justify going to war, Republican Senator Don Nickles of Oklahoma told Stephanopoulos: “I'm really troubled by what I just heard. Congressman McDermott said, well I think the President would mislead the American people and basically he's taking Saddam Hussein's lines, they both sound somewhat likes spokespersons for the Iraqi government.” Stephanopoulos, who had not rebuked either Congressman, retorted: “That's a pretty harsh charge!”
Minutes later on the September 29 program, Stephanopoulos recalled how Bush had said “the Senate is not interested in the security of the American people.” Stephanopoulos acted appalled, telling Nickles: “That's basically accusing them of treason.”
Bonior and McDermott appeared at the top of This Week from Baghdad in a pre-taped interview that displayed obvious editing by ABC. Every question from Stephanopoulos challenged their premises about Iraqi cooperation and how inspections had worked in the past and would in the future.
At one point, as viewers watched sweat spots grow by the second on his orange shirt, Bonior delivered this anti-U.S. diatribe:
“The only nuclear piece that we've been able to detect here and we're not looking as inspectors because we don't know how to do that, that's not our job but what we have seen is an incredible, unconscionable, is leukemias and lymphomas for children who have been affected by this uranium that has been part of our weapon system that was dropped here during the last war. And that is a real tragedy. It needs to be addressed and we ought to take that issue up on its own because we've seen it not only here in Iraq, these weapons coated with uranium that atomize and cause these serious health problems, but we've also seen this happen in Kosovo and in Serbia and we need to look at that as a country to see if we want to be using these types of weapons that cause these kinds of serious cancers. In Basra, when women have children they used to ask is it a boy or a girl after the birth, now they ask is it normal or is it abnormal. This is horrendous, barbaric, horrific thing that's happened and the country needs to know about that. The world community needs to know about that.”
Without any reaction to that, Stephanopoulos turned to McDermott: “Finally, Mr. McDermott, before you left for Baghdad, you said 'the President of the United States will lie to the American people in order to get us into this war.' Do you really believe that?” McDermott confirmed:
“I believe that sometimes they give out misinformation. Lyndon Johnson did it in the Vietnam War. Both David and I were in that war and there was no Gulf of Tonkin incident. The President lied to Congress about how many people he was going to put into Vietnam or whether in Laos or whether in Cambodia. It would not surprise me if they came with some information that is not provable and they shifted. First they said it was al-Qaeda, then they said it was weapons of mass destruction. Now they're going back and saying it's al-Qaeda again. When will that stop? Why don't they let the inspectors come so that we can disarm Saddam Hussein. Both David and I want to disarm him. That's gotta be very clear. He's not a very good guy.”
Stephanopoulos pressed: “But do you have any evidence the President has lied?” McDermott repeated:
“I think the President would mislead the American people.”
With that, Stephanopoulos thanked the two for appearing and switched to Senator Don Nickles in studio. Stephanopoulos began by asking him about the view of the liberal duo that the U.S. should wait for a report from UN inspectors who want to spend a couple of months doing inspections inside Iraq. Instead, Nickles jumped on the two members of the United States House of Representatives for aiding the enemy while inside enemy territory:
“I'm really troubled by what I just heard. Congressman McDermott said, well I think the President would mislead the American people and basically he's taking Saddam Hussein's lines, they both sound somewhat like spokespersons for the Iraqi government.”
Stephanopoulos scolded: “That's a pretty harsh charge.” Nickles defended himself: “Well, what they just said is pretty harsh…”
A bit later, without ever suggesting that Democrats had taken Bush's comments out of context, Stephanopoulos asked Nickles to defend Bush's charge that “'the Senate is not interested in the security of the American people.' That's basically accusing them of treason.” And later, during the roundtable segment, George Will reacted with outrage to what hadn't inflamed Stephanopoulos:
“Let's note, that in what I consider the most disgraceful performance abroad by an American official in my lifetime something not exampled since Jane Fonda sat on the anti-aircraft gun in Hanoi to be photographed Mr. McDermott said in effect, not in effect, he said it, we should take Saddam Hussein at his word and not take the President at his word. He said the United States is simply trying to provoke. I mean, why Saddam Hussein doesn't pay commercial time for that advertisement for his policy, I do not know.”