It is as I said yesterday: The First Amendment hasn’t meant a whole lot lately. Campaign finance reform came along and limited the free speech of citizens and the media was all for that. Now it’s being turned on them. These are the kind of things you would hope would wake them up as to what’s happening with the judicial branch in this country. So Mr. Pearlstine acknowledges that: Hey, Constitution is the Constitution. The judge is a judge; a court’s a court; a ruling is a rule. Just because we disagree with it doesn’t mean anything. There’s also something he didn’t say, and that is that the prosecution or the court can really lay out a huge fine as well if they don’t comply — and that would, of course, have ramifications, stockholders, stock price, depending on the size of the fine. Now, that Little Pinch, Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. — his dad was Punch; he’s called “the Little Pinch” — Pinch, publisher of the New York Times said, “‘We are deeply disappointed by TIME’s decision to deliver the subpoenaed records.’ He noted that one of their reporters served 40 days in jail in 1978 in a similar dispute. ‘Our focus is now on our own reporter, Judith Miller, and in supporting her during this difficult time.’ The judge yesterday agreed to hold a hearing next week to consider arguments against jailing these two, but he expressed skepticism that any new arguments would change his mind. ‘It’s curiouser [sic] and curiouser. I don’t understand why the reporters are asking for more time,’ the judge said. ‘Seems to me the time has come. Much more delay and we will be at the end of the grand jury.'”
Novak has been drawn into this, too, because some are saying that, “Hey, Bob, what kind of conversations did you have with this special prosecutor that led to all this?” And Novak said (summarized), “I didn’t have any. I’m not talking about it because to think they’re going to jail because of me is absurd, and it’s not the case,” and he feels very disappointed that they are going to jail. I, frankly, think it’s absurd, too. I know it’s the law and the judge can rule as he rules, but I’m going to tell you something, folks: The press does have constitutional protection. I know the Supreme Court has ruled that they can’t protect sources in criminal cases, and that’s what’s governing this. This is a criminal case. This is the release of a name of a CIA “super-secret agent.” But I just, something about this jailing journalists and this sort of thing. There’s another case out there, and I just barely mentioned this earlier this week, and this one is far more troubling to me than this one is. Wen Ho Lee, who worked at the Los Alamos nuclear facility out in New Mexico, and if you remember the case, this guy based on news reporting alone was assumed to have been a traitor. This guy, we all thought this guy was a traitor sending nuclear secrets back to Red China, the ChiComs, and the reason for this? Four reports — Washington Post, New York Times among them — and their confidential anonymous sources, and they ran with this, and they went to trial, and it turns out that Wen Ho Lee was no more guilty of treason than your pet dog.
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RUSH: Ed in Dayton, Ohio, you’re next. Welcome to the program, sir.
CALLER: Hi there, Rush.
RUSH: Hi.
CALLER: Glad to talk to you.
RUSH: Thank you, sir.
CALLER: I’ve got a point about — a moment ago you were talking about Wen Ho Lee.
RUSH: I was, yes.
CALLER: I think he was basically the cover after the Clinton administration had basically allowed China to get access to the W-80 warhead data, and then they allowed Loral to sell the warhead BUS technology? I think they had to do something to look like they cared about national security, so basically they threw the book at him through reporters.
RUSH: Could be. Somebody leaked information to these reporters that focused on Wen Ho Lee. It was about some missing tapes. It was about the missing secret tapes from the Los Alamos facility. I don’t want to even speculate on who it might have been. These are unnamed sources; these are anonymous sources, and you just don’t know. That is the whole point. The point is they were dead wrong, and they destroyed this guy’s life for a while and ruined his reputation, and it was all baloney. It was all total BS. As to your point that it might have been Clinton going after Wen Ho Lee because of Loral and the campaign finance problem they had with Chinese money, I’m not sure that’s the case because the mainstream press didn’t find anything wrong with that to begin with. The majority of mainstream press coverage about campaign donations from China and the Loral Space people helping out Chinese rocket industry, missile industry, didn’t make big news. Clinton was not really routinely questioned about it so if there were those concerns in the Clinton administration it would have to have been for historical legacy purposes because it wasn’t a big deal other than in the New Media — and, of course, the press and the Clinton administration, Democrats back then, as they do now, consider the new media a bunch of crackpots and not worth anybody’s time. So it would be tough to nail down who these unnamed sources are. One thing you can be sure of, if it is somebody in the Clinton camp, there’s a lot of insulation between whoever it really was and the president himself.
Mr. Snerdley has sent me a note here. He says, “With your experiences with the mainstream press, how can you remain so objective and not want to see some of them tossed in jail?” I think jail time is for people that need to be distanced from mainstream society. You know, jail time is for people that commit crimes against other people, and they need to be sequestered for the protection of society at large and this sort of thing. I don’t really regard journalists and their anonymous sources in a circumstance like this especially with all that’s known about this Valerie Plame case. We know who she is. We already know who she is. Judith Miller never even wrote a story about this, Mr. Snerdley, and she’s threatened with jail here over not revealing a source. She didn’t even write a story about it; she was preparing one but she never wrote it and so she’s caught up going to jail here. I think it was ridiculous to send Martha Stewart to jail. There are other ways of meting out punishment to these kind of people. But this is just over the top. I don’t think I’m being inconsistent at all. I think, you know, whether it be eminent domain or whether it be the Ten
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