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Wash. Times defends "fact-based" editorials comparing Obama to Nazis

August 17, 2009 2:54 pm ET — 16 Comments

Responding to an August 14 New York Times article, The Washington Times editorial board defended its comparisons of President Obama's policies to Nazi euthanasia programs, claiming "it was fair game to anticipate how his team might seek to implement those proposals." Also, The Washington Times claimed that its editorials were "consistent, fact-based and principled" despite espousing numerous false and misleading claims.

Washington Times links Nazi euthanasia to Obama

Shortly after the election, Washington Times predicted continuance of "America's T4 program." A November 23, 2008, Washington Times editorial titled, "No 'final solution,' but a way forward," asserted that "Adolf Hitler in the late 1930s started the T4 Aktion (Action) program ... to exterminate 'useless eaters,' babies born with disabilities" and that "the program expanded to include older children and adults with disabilities, and anyone anywhere in the Third Reich was subject to execution who was blind, deaf, senile, retarded, or had any significant neurological condition, encephalitis, epilepsy, muscular spasticity or paralysis." The editorial then referenced America's "current climate as a budding T4 program" and claimed that "America's T4 program" would continue under the Obama administration:

America's T4 program -- trivialization of abortion, acceptance of euthanasia, and the normalization of physician assisted suicide -- is highly unlikely to be stopped at the judicial, administrative or legislative levels anytime soon, given the Supreme Court's current and probable future makeup during the Obama administration, the administrative predilections that are likely from that incoming administration, and the makeup of the new Congress.

Instead, it will be up to everyone who sees the current climate as a budding T4 program to win the hearts and minds of deniers, many or most of them people of good will who have let "choice" become a blind substitute or palliative for the stark fact that a "mercy death" at any age is the killing of human life. Period. That won't be a final solution to end the deaths, but it may stanch them and stop the forward progression of extermination (there is no other word for it) from prenatal to postnatal to child to adult that is so seductively "rational" -- and horrifying. [The Washington Times, 11/23/08]

Washington Times claimed health IT provision "in the spirit of" Germany's Aktion T4 program. In a February 11 editorial, The Washington Times compared a provision in the stimulus package that provided for electronic medical records to the "Nazi version of efficiency" in which "elderly people with incurable diseases, young children who were critically disabled, and others who were deemed non-productive, were euthanized." The Times asserted that a quote it attributed to "a program instituted in Hitler's Germany called Aktion T-4" is "fully in the spirit of the partisans of efficiency." The quote as the Times provided it read: "It must be made clear to anyone suffering from an incurable disease that the useless dissipation of costly medications drawn from the public store cannot be justified." The paper's website also published the editorial alongside a photograph of Hitler. [The Washington Times, 2/11/09]

Washington Times defends Nazi comparisons as "fair game"

Claimed to "anticipate" how Obama "might seek to implement those proposals." The New York Times reported on August 14 that the "[t]he stubborn yet false rumor that President Obama's health care proposals would create government-sponsored 'death panels' to decide which patients were worthy of living," citing the November 23, 2008, Washington Times editorial as a source of the false rumor. According to The New York Times, "The specter of government-sponsored, forced euthanasia was raised as early as Nov. 23, just weeks after the election and long before any legislation had been drafted, in an outlet with opinion pages decidedly opposed to Mr. Obama, The Washington Times." The Washington Times responded in an August 17 editorial titled, "Criticized for our Principles," that "then-President-elect Obama had discussed health care extensively on the campaign trail, so it was fair game to anticipate how his team might seek to implement those proposals."

Despite falsehoods, Washington Times defends its editorial accuracy

Washington Times claimed its editorials on health reform have been "fact-based." Claiming that "it is also an error to describe our editorial position as dogmatically anti-Obama," the August 17 Washington Times editorial asserted that its editorials on the health care debate have been "consistent, fact-based and principled." But the Times has published numerous editorials critical of progressive health care proposals that offered false and misleading claims.

Wash. Times reversed meaning of Obama's comments, falsely claiming he "admitted" doctors will bear brunt of spending cuts. A June 16 Washington Times editorial falsely claimed that Obama told the American Medical Association that "[t]oday's Medicare rates will be applied broadly in a way that means our cost savings are coming off your backs." In fact, Obama said in his speech to the AMA: "Now, I know that there's some concern about a public option. Even within this organization there is healthy debate about it. In particular, I understand that you are concerned that today's Medicare rates, which many of you already feel are too low, will be applied broadly in a way that means our cost savings are coming off your backs. And these are legitimate concerns, but they're ones, I believe, that can be overcome" [emphasis added].

Wash. Times editorial misleadingly cropped Summers' remarks on increasing cost-effectiveness to finance health coverage. An April 21 Washington Times editorial suggested that in his April 19 Meet the Press appearance, White House National Economic Council director Larry Summers advocated cutting health care expenditures "by almost 30 percent" using "cost-effectiveness" regulations. The Times described the use of such regulations as "a major amputation to the system" and "rationing." In fact, immediately after the portion of his comments quoted by the Times, that "some experts ... estimate that we could take as much as $700 billion a year out of our health care system," Summers said that "we wouldn't have to do anything like that; we wouldn't have to do a third of that in order to pay for a very aggressive program of increased coverage."

Wash. Times suggested stimulus would mandate that government will decide "what care will be limited, and who will be denied what services." In the same February 11 editorial that compared the stimulus bill's health information technology provision to Nazi euthanasia, The Washington Times falsely claimed that the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology "will be in charge of collecting and monitoring the health care being provided to every American" and that the bill "appears to institutionalize ... a body free of political influence to make the hard choices regarding how these efficiencies will be realized -- what care will be limited, and who will be denied what services." In fact, the provision established "a nationwide health information technology infrastructure that allows for the electronic use and exchange of information" in order to create "an electronic health record for each person in the United States by 2014," thereby reducing "health care costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care, duplicative care, and incomplete information" and providing "appropriate information to help guide medical decisions at the time and place of care."

The provision also establishes two committees, neither of which is tasked to "make the hard choices" regarding "what care will be limited, and who will be denied what services." Instead, the provision establishes an "HIT Policy Committee" to "make policy recommendations to the National Coordinator relating to the implementation of a nationwide health information technology infrastructure" and an "HIT Standards Committee" to "recommend to the National Coordinator standards, implementation specifications, and certification criteria for the electronic exchange and use of health information."

From the August 17 Washington Times editorial:

Our first editorial that was criticized appeared Nov. 23, which the New York paper wrote was "long before any legislation had been drafted," implying that we were jumping the gun on the issue. But then-President-elect Obama had discussed health care extensively on the campaign trail, so it was fair game to anticipate how his team might seek to implement those proposals. We returned to the topic in February, but the New York Times failed to mention the context, which was a proposal in the stimulus bill then being rushed through Congress that would have established a national database recording every visit to a doctor's office in the interests of promoting "efficiency."

We were concerned that "efficiency" was being used as a code word for health care rationing, and wondered then why congressional Democrats were trying to sneak this major piece of health care legislation through in the stimulus bill if it was as harmless as they made it out to be. Both of our editorials argued that if the government assumed the right to decide who was entitled to what care in the pursuit of "efficiency," the functional result would be to take life-or-death decisions away from families and doctors and place them in the hands of government bureaucrats. We have yet to hear a convincing argument to the contrary.

The New York Times described our paper as "an outlet decidedly opposed to Mr. Obama," which at the very least is an insult to our news division, which examines the pretenses of politicians regardless of partisan affiliation. But it is also an error to describe our editorial position as dogmatically anti-Obama. The Washington Times editorial board stands for a set of principles that frequently differs with the president's philosophies. Those disagreements are about issues, not individuals. When the administration merits praise, we are happy to acknowledge it. When it deserves criticism, we choose not to be silent.

During the past six months, our editorial team has written dozens of editorials covering all aspects of the health care debate. Our stance on the issue has been consistent, fact-based and principled. Perhaps that is why our editorials have struck a chord. We look forward to continuing to shape the debate on this issue and other critical matters of public policy. We owe nothing less to our loyal readers and to the American people, and we thank the New York Times for calling attention to our work.

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    • Author by Bad News (August 17, 2009 3:24 pm ET)
      3 1
      America's first Black President?
      Men with Guns standing outside his Events.
      Fox News pushing Hate at every Opportunity.
      Will there ever be Peace in America's Communities?

      Speak truth to power.


      Mr. News
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (August 17, 2009 4:35 pm ET)
      3  
      Who was the saintly George W. Bush compared to?

      Mother Theresa?

      It's amazing what a degraded state the American media is in. The closest thing we have to Nazis in this country is the right-wing noise machine. Without a doubt.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (August 17, 2009 5:20 pm ET)
      2  
      At this point, I have nothing but contempt and disdain for every single right-wing corporate whore, all of their media enablers, and anyone that goes out of their way to make profit on the backs of poor and/or weak people!

      From Fox-Noise to Rush Limbaugh and to all the various other actors in the right-wing troupe of idiots (like Joe the fake plumber), morons (like Caribu Barbie), and thugs (like Ann Coulter)

      If this country falls apart... I lay 99% the blame squarely at the feet of every one of these Un-American, Un-Patriotic, inhuman scum!

      The other 1% goes to everyone else that has allowed this to occur in the first place.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by only_myschly3567 (August 17, 2009 5:44 pm ET)
      2  
      Wow... Surely this is the end of any credibility the Washington Times had regarding domestic politics...
      Report Abuse
      • Author by bip84124092 (August 18, 2009 7:08 am ET)
           
        Why does C-Span's Washington Journal continues to treat the WT as a mainstream publication? Not a day goes by that they don't read something from the editorial pages of the Washington Times without identifying it as conservative. The paper calls itself a "conservative" publication. They often have WT journalists on making comments on public policy but the public has no idea their view is slanted to te right. Often times people will call them on it and once Brian Williams became extremely defensive and said it was "balance" to the New York Times. Washington Journal deliberately gives the impression the Washington Times is a neutral publication and many of the callers have no idea what it really is. That is the sorry state of the media, C-Span included.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by dab55555 (August 17, 2009 5:49 pm ET)
      1  
      How can these editorials be fact based if they are projections of what the writers think the President will do.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by citizenbyright (August 17, 2009 6:01 pm ET)
      1  
      And what would you expect from a paper owned by News World Communications, which is owned by the Unification Church ala the Rev. Sun Myung Moon? (They also own UPI now I believe)

      The Moonies aren't generally seen as being in bed with the ultra-right wing 'conservatives', at least not at ground-level, but I have noticed a few disturbing articles that have slipped by in the last several years.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by Ronpaulite (August 17, 2009 6:16 pm ET)
          1
        Are you all that blind?!?!?

        Can you not see that this organization is an extrmely Fascist machine that is attempting to silence what little diversity we have in our media.. This organization is a joke!

        Look, I voted for Obama. But it becomes more and more clear with each passing day that he works for the same interests Bush served. Groups like this and the media are simply tricking you all into thinking there is a smidgen of difference between Bush and Obama. they are keeping you distracted with the left right game while they siphon away all your wealth to the bankers and the globalist machine
        PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DON'T FALL FOR IT, TAKE A STAND, WAKE UP!!!

        This has nothing to do with parties or political affiliation and everything to do with the fact that most of us are being deceived

        Learn for yourself...please
        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAaQNACwaLw
        Report Abuse
    • Author by MickD (August 17, 2009 6:14 pm ET)
         
      Boo-hoo, we're right, waaaah.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Looking_4_Truth (August 17, 2009 7:45 pm ET)
      1  
      Considering that Sun Myung Moon, the founder of Washington Times, has had a long and profitable relationship with Nazis and death squads for years, anything coming from that outfit should be taken with a grain of salt, or better yet, just ignored completely. Maybe he wants to bring back one of his alleged cronies, SS officer Klaus Barbie. I'm sure they have plenty of experience with Nazis and right-wing philosophies.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by sanity-irrelevant (August 17, 2009 11:06 pm ET)
         
      For some reason or another, every time I posted this comment at the Wash Times, I kept losing the formatting. Even when I used notepad. Anyhow, here it is.
      ..............


      The New York Times was much too kind.

      I was astonished to learn from an enemy website [media matters] that earlier the Wash Times had linked Obama's health care reforms to the Nazi's T4 Aktion euthanasia program. See EDITORIAL: Health 'efficiency' can be deadly Originally published 05:45 a.m., February 11, 2009, updated 02:07 p.m., August 17, 2009.

      If I read it correctly, euthanasia is an inevitable, or likely or probable or possible result from any government plan that might put limits on care. Well, I'm not even that clear how Nazi euthanasia relates to the health reform bill . This couldn't be the Wash Times fear mongering,eh?

      Of course, at the level of possible, just about anything is possible. It's possible that Sarah Palin will stop lying or Fox News become “fair and balanced.”

      Here's my deep, dark secret. I come from a land of a single payer. I've got a 92 year old mother, totally useless in making any active contribution to society. When she was 91, someone whispered (to avoid the attention of the death panels) that she might do better with knee surgery.

      Using an anonymous proxy remailer I sent a hypothetical to our Preserve Our Empire (POE or is it OPE) committee, very similar to the one in section 123 of HR 3200.

      Now while the US has the surgeon-general making those individual decisions (See Fox News Gregg Jarrett) Ours is headed by our Minister of Health Rationing. This was the committee – we had to Sell her to them.

      She must have won the lottery, because the committee said she could have the operation. Unfortunately, an angiogram that week by her cardiologist supposedly ruled her out as a candidate for surgery.

      We had to hold a massive bake sale program pay off the medical bill of $9000.

      The preceding is true only the existence of the committee is imaginary and the medical bill for parking was $65.

      Euthanasia is not legal in my country. It is legal in very few countries. It is hard to see how it would come to pass in an Obama administration. After all one of Obama's adviser's on death care is the deadly doctor Ezekiel Emanual.

      In a March 1997 article for the Atlantic Monthly, Ezekiel writes an eloquent, moral and logical article opposing euthanasia. It changed my mind about euthanasia.

      Frankly, I think the NY Times let the Wash Times off much too lightly. The centrist and left wing echo chambers, unlike the right wing's, have yet to fully embrace the post-modernist critique of history, science and knowledge.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by eweston8542983 (August 17, 2009 11:53 pm ET)
           
        Congrats, as strange a post as I've read in a while.
        There's a couple states that have death with dignity laws in effect.
        I don't even acknowledge post-modernism as a real art movement, much less a social movement. I've read some recent history works and found many of them worthy. Science continues to study the world and universe with some enthusiasm.
        Knowledge is tricky, wisdom trickier. Somehow not worth the effort? Not a trendy position?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by sanity-irrelevant (August 18, 2009 12:20 am ET)
          1  
          Thanks

          I go on to Emanuel's article via Ezra Klein's blog at the Washington Post. Excellent, excellent coverage on the health reform bill that explains what is going on with minimum spin. Well worth reading from the top down, even when he's wrong.

          But I was truly flabbergasted when I came across his interview with Ezra Emanuel. This was a man who understood complicated issues.

          I followed the link to the Atlantic Monthly article and had a rare experience, way outside the echo chamber. Just like Klein, in a few pages Emanuel changed my mind on euthanasia. You can read my gushing in the comments on this entry in Klein's blog.

          My guess is that Emanuel could do amazingly good things [in the judgment of everyone except the troglodytes] for the US system, if he's only given the chance.

          Report Abuse
    • Author by donaldmaddog5642 (August 18, 2009 2:13 am ET)
      1  
      Remember the actor, James Donald's last line in "Bridge On the River Kwai"? "Madness....Madness". Only that was a movie. This is real life. Everything DECENT this country stood for is being squashed by the GOP and its minions. That party now has control of the media, and THAT is the end of democracy as we know it, or, at least what we thought it to be.
      Report Abuse

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