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28 Dec 2005 16:37:01 -0000

weekly-spin

The Weekly Spin, December 28, 2005

 

 

 

 

 

THE WEEKLY SPIN, December 28, 2005

 

Sponsored by the nonprofit Center for Media and Democracy:

http://www.prwatch.org

 

To support our work now online visit:

https://www.egrants.org/donate/index.cfm?ID=2344-0|1118-0

 

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The Weekly Spin features selected news summaries with links to

further information about media, political spin and propaganda.

It is emailed free each Wednesday to rs.

 

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THIS WEEK'S NEWS

 

== SPIN OF THE DAY ==

1. Coke's PR Connects Canada and Colombia

2. 'Hearts and Minds': U.S. Wins Some, Loses Some

3. A Cancer Risk Conveniently Lost in Translation

4. Iraq Information Operations Increase

5. Chalabi Unites Iraq

6. The Unseen Hand of the Marketplace of Ideas

7. Rent-a-Researcher

8. From Geeky Kid to Iraq's Rich Fake News Flack

9. U.S. Launches Sell Job for Mad Cow-Suspect Beef in Japan

10. 'Bye to Hi,' U.S Middle East Propaganda Failure

11. Americans Oppose Fake News in Iraq

12. Pat Boone and Wal-Mart: Ain't That a Shame

13. It's Easy Being Green (washed)

 

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== SPIN OF THE DAY ==

 

1. COKE'S PR CONNECTS CANADA AND COLOMBIA

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20051227.wcoca1227/BNStory/Na\

tional/

After students at two Canadian universities, McMaster and the

University of Guelph, voted down campus exclusivity deals with

Coca-Cola, " the world's largest soft-drink company has launched a

counter-offensive in hopes of heading off further boycotts. " In

December, Coke reps visited McMaster and the University of British

Columbia. One Coke PR coordinator stressed that " these boycotts are

actually affecting workers in the local area " and said allegations

that the company is complicit in human rights violations in Colombia

are false. Coke's PR manager in Colombia, Pablo Largacha Escallon,

also took part in the Canadian tour. " There is a humanitarian crisis

in Colombia, but [student activists] have made it a

Coca-Cola-centric thing when it's a Colombia-centric thing, " he

said. Coke has also " recently hired a labour-relations director and

plans to issue a human-rights policy next year. " Twenty North

American campuses are now " Coke free, " but " hundreds more could

follow suit soon in England. "

SOURCE: Associated Press, December 27, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4331

 

2. 'HEARTS AND MINDS': U.S. WINS SOME, LOSES SOME

http://news./s/afp/20051217/pl_afp/asiaquake1yearus_051217040539

Wall Street Journal editorial board member Bret Stephens writes that

U.S. assistance to Pakistan following the devastating October 8

earthquake is " one of America's most significant hearts-and-minds

successes so far in the Muslim world. ... The Chinook has become

America's new emblem in Pakistan, a byword for salvation in an area

where until recently the U.S. was widely and fanatically detested. "

But the secretary general of the Indonesian Council of Ulemas, " the

highest Islamic authority in the world's most populous Muslim

nation, " said U.S. aid following last year's tsunami has not

improved America's standing there. " The Muslim perception is very

much dependent on American foreign policy in the Muslim world, not

only in Aceh but also in Iraq, Palestine and Afghanistan, " he told

AFP. The director of a Sri Lankan think tank agreed, but faulted

Washington. " There was no visible campaign to carry [initial praise

from aid efforts] forward, " he said.

SOURCE: Agence France-Presse, December 17, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4330

 

3. A CANCER RISK CONVENIENTLY LOST IN TRANSLATION

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113530126572230084.html

A groundbreaking public health study by Chinese doctor Zhang

JianDong in 1987 was used by U.S. regulatory agencies " as evidence

that a form of " the chemical chromium " might cause cancer. " Ten

years later, " a 'clarification and further analysis' published under

his name in a U.S. medical journal said there was no cancer link to

chromium. " But " Dr. Zhang didn't write the clarification " - it was

" conceived, drafted, edited and submitted to medical journals by "

ChemRisk, a firm hired by PG & E, " a utility company being sued for

alleged chromium pollution " by California residents. ChemRisk was

previously paid $7 million to help " save industry hundreds of

millions of dollars in cleanup costs for chromium pollution in New

Jersey. " ChemRisk claims Dr. Zhang signed off on the

" clarification, " but records show the final version was not

translated into Chinese for his review. Dr. Zhang died in 1999, but

his son said, " It's impossible that he would have overthrown " his

earlier work linking chromium and cancer.

SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, December 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4329

 

4. IRAQ INFORMATION OPERATIONS INCREASE

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/25/AR2005122500659_\

pf.html

" The military has paid money to try to place favorable coverage on

television stations in three Iraqi cities. " The military gave one

station " about $35,000 in equipment, " is " building a new facility

for $300,000, " and pays $1000 to $2400 a month " for a weekly program

that focuses positively on U.S. efforts. " An Army National Guard

commander confirmed his officers " suggest " stories for the weekly

program and review it, before it is aired. The payments are not

disclosed to viewers. At least two bloggers have been embedded with

U.S. military units; Michael Yon with the Army in Mosul and Bill

Roggio (who was credentialed by the American Enterprise Institute)

with the Marines in Anbar province. Insurgent propaganda has

included " rifle-toting guerrillas " in Ramadi telling reporters " to

publish accounts claiming the city had been taken over, " and

" erroneous tips from insurgents to reporters, " including video

purporting to be of a December 3 attack in Fallujah.

SOURCE: Washington Post, December 26, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4328

 

5. CHALABI UNITES IRAQ

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10575121

Iraqi voters may not agree on much, but 99.5 percent of them agreed

not to vote for Ahmed Chalabi in the country's December 15 election.

Once hailed by U.S. neoconservatives as the " George Washington of

Iraq, " Chalabi's humiliating defeat at the polls makes him something

of an embarrasment now. " The election results in Iraq may present

Chalabi’s ardent U.S. supporters with a quandary: Chalabi, as well

as other losing candidates, is alleging fraud in the election, even

though the Bush administration hailed the vote as a historic step

for democracy in Iraq, " reports Aram Roston.

SOURCE: MSNBC, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4327

 

6. THE UNSEEN HAND OF THE MARKETPLACE OF IDEAS

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/23/politics/23lobby.html

" Susan Finston of the Institute for Policy Innovation, a

conservative research group based in Texas, is just the sort of

opinion maker coveted by the drug industry, " writes Philip Shenon.

" In an opinion article in The Financial Times on Oct. 25, she called

for patent protection in poor countries for drugs and biotechnology

products. In an article last month in the European edition of The

Wall Street Journal, she called for efforts to block developing

nations from violating patents on AIDS medicines and other drugs.

Both articles identified her as a 'research associate' at the

institute. Neither mentioned that, as recently as August, Ms.

Finston was registered as a lobbyist for the Pharmaceutical Research

and Manufacturers of America, the drug industry's trade group. Nor

was there mention of her work this fall in creating the American

Bioindustry Alliance, a group underwritten largely by drug

companies. "

SOURCE: New York Times, December 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4326

 

7. RENT-A-RESEARCHER

http://www.slate.com/id/2133061/fr/rss/

" Earlier this month, " writes Jennifer Washburn, " Sheffield

University in Britain offered $252,000 to one of its senior medical

professors, Aubrey Blumsohn. According to a copy of a proposed

settlement released by Blumsohn, the university promised to pay him

if he would agree to leave his post and not make 'any detrimental or

derogatory statements' about Sheffield or its employees. For several

years, Blumsohn had been complaining of scientific misconduct. His

concerns primarily revolved around a $250,000 research contract

between Sheffield and the Ohio-based Procter & Gamble

Pharmaceuticals. Blumsohn claimed that the company had denied him

access to key data and then tried to ghostwrite his analysis of it. "

Worse still, the university acted as an enforcer for the company in

its efforts to conceal data and manipulate research conclusions.

SOURCE: Slate, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4325

 

8. FROM GEEKY KID TO IRAQ'S RICH FAKE NEWS FLACK

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,11069-1958479,00.html

The Times Online reports, " The transformation of the geeky but

ambitious Christian Martin Jozefowicz, who just a few years ago was

growing up in a modest terraced house in Godalming, Surrey, to the

charming, baby-faced multimillionaire Christian Bailey now rubbing

shoulders with some of the most powerful figures in Washington - and

who next year will probably face questions on Capitol Hill about his

company - is one of the more extraordinary stories to have emerged

from the Iraq war. This month it was revealed that Mr Bailey’s US

company, the Lincoln Group, was the recipient of a Pentagon contract

to help to fight the information war in Iraq. It then emerged that

the company was paying Iraqi journalists to plant optimistic news

'stories' in Iraqi papers that had been written by the US military. "

SOURCE: Times Online, December 24, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4324

 

9. U.S. LAUNCHES SELL JOB FOR MAD COW-SUSPECT BEEF IN JAPAN

http://www.usmef.org/TradeLibrary/News05_1222a.asp

Japan recently lifted the ban it placed on U.S. beef after the 2003

discovery of mad cow disease in America. This prion disease has

killed more than 150 people worldwide and is spread among cattle by

feeding them slaughterhouse waste byproducts. Yet the U.S. livestock

industry continues this lucrative practice, and the U.S. government

refuses to institute food safety testing of beef. The New York Times

quotes CMD's John Stauber, co-author of Mad Cow USA, saying, " From

the standpoint of human and animal safety this is a disastrous

decision by the Japanese. They have taken a huge step backward. " The

U.S. Meat Export Federation has launched a PR campaign to win back

Japanese consumers, who surveys show do not trust U.S. beef. The

campaign includes " advertisements, trade shows, town hall

educational meetings and endorsements from Japanese who eat U.S.

beef. " For example, White Sox second baseman Tadahito Iguchi

" credits power to launch his 1,000 career hits and score 14 home

runs in his rookie season to U.S. beef. "

SOURCE: U.S. Meat Export Federation news release, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4323

 

10. 'BYE TO HI,' U.S MIDDLE EAST PROPAGANDA FAILURE

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_T\

ype1 & c=Article & cid=1135291812612 & call_pageid=968

" The U.S. State Department announced yesterday it was suspending

publication of Hi Magazine, its glossy, monthly attempt to win the

hearts and minds of young Arabs, part of a communications troika it

established following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. ... The

magazine had been derided by commentators in the Arab world as

'schlock'' or 'brainwashing'' and one had dubbed it the CIA's

official publication. The decision to suspend publication was made

by Karen Hughes, Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy ...

The U.S. government has been spending $4.5 million (U.S.) annually

since July 2003, trying to bring its own particular take on American

life to a target Arab demographic aged 18-35. Along with Al Hurra TV

and Radio Sawa, Hi was a three-pronged $62 million (U.S.) annual

effort to counter anti-Americanism in countries such as Iraq, Egypt,

Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Yemen and others. "

SOURCE: Toronto Star, December 23, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4321

 

11. AMERICANS OPPOSE FAKE NEWS IN IRAQ

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-12-22-poll-propaganda_x.htm

" Almost three-quarters of Americans think it was wrong for the

Pentagon to pay Iraqi newspapers to publish news about U.S. efforts

in Iraq, a new USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll shows. USA TODAY reported

earlier this month that the Pentagon plans to expand beyond Iraq an

anti-terrorism public relations campaign that has included secret

payments to Iraqi journalists and publications who printed stories

favorable to the USA. ... The global program will be part of a

five-year public relations campaign costing up to $300 million. The

poll shows that most Americans don't approve of such programs. Of

the 1,003 people surveyed Dec. 16-18, 72% said it would be

inappropriate for the U.S. military to secretly pay Iraqi media to

publish stories favorable to the USA. And almost two-thirds said

such payments would bother them a 'fair amount' or a 'great deal.' "

The Pentagon has used the Lincoln Group to plant fake news in Iraq.

SOURCE: USA Today, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4320

 

12. PAT BOONE AND WAL-MART: AIN'T THAT A SHAME

http://www.nwanews.com/adg/Business/140371/

Working Families for Wal-Mart, a new nonprofit group " partly funded

by the Bentonville-based retail giant, " has " a mission to support

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. " and " famously wholesome singer Pat Boone " as a

member. Working Families is getting media help from The Herald

Group, a PR firm established by " three DC PR execs, including two

Bush Administration officials, " according to O'Dwyer's. The firm

identified Bishop Ira Combs Jr. as Working Families' leader. Bishop

Combs said, " Some friends I worked with on the 2004 Bush campaign

phoned me and asked me if I knew about any good things Wal-Mart was

doing in my community. I said Wal-Mart is supplying jobs that may

not pay a union wage but they pay twice the minimum wage. They asked

me if I would be part of this group. " Another Working Families

member, former Marine Captain Courtney Lynch, " estimated that her

consulting firm got 7 percent of its revenue from Wal-Mart this

year. "

SOURCE: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4319

 

13. IT'S EASY BEING GREEN (WASHED)

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/22/business/22adco.html

The New York Times notes that corporations including Ford, Exxon

Mobil, BP, General Electric and Alcan " appear to be spending

ever-bigger chunks of their advertising budgets to promote " what

critics call greenwashing. New ad campaigns from WPP, Omnicom Group,

and Interpublic Group tout corporate " environmental do-goodism. "

" Oil companies, under attack for reaping windfall profits from

soaring fuel prices, are trying to position themselves as part of

the solution to energy problems rather than the cause. Manufacturers

of fuel-efficient automobiles, jet engines or other green products

are recognizing that they can burnish their image even as they

promote their products. And companies in all industries are trying

to make socially conscious investors and customers comfortable about

buying their products and shares. "

SOURCE: New York Times, December 22, 2005

For more information or to comment on this story, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/node/4317

 

 

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The Weekly Spin is compiled by staff and volunteers at the

Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), a nonprofit public

interest organization. To or unsubcribe, visit:

http://www.prwatch.org/cmd/_sotd.html

 

Daily updates and news from past weeks can be found at the

Spin of the Day section of CMD's website:

http://www.prwatch.org/spin

 

Archives of our quarterly publication, PR Watch, are at:

http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues

 

CMD also sponsors SourceWatch, a collaborative research

project that invites anyone (including you) to contribute

and edit articles. For more information, visit:

http://www.sourcewatch.org

 

PR Watch, Spin of the Day, the Weekly Spin and SourceWatch

are projects of the Center for Media & Democracy, a nonprofit

organization that offers investigative reporting on the public

relations industry. We help the public recognize manipulative

and misleading PR practices by exposing the activities of

secretive, little-known propaganda-for-hire firms that

work to control political debates and public opinion.

Please send any questions or suggestions about our

publications to:

editor

 

----

 

Contributions to the Center for Media and Democracy

are tax-deductible. Send checks to:

 

CMD

520 University Avenue, Suite 227

Madison, WI 53703

 

To donate now online, visit:

https://www.egrants.org/donate/index.cfm?ID=2344-0|1118-0

 

 

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