Hannity Offers
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Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
Many people are dancing around the benefits of Carlson's interview. He is encouraging Americans to re-examine their personal and tribal foundational beliefs and principles. Tucker's nascent appreciation of the benefits of Socialism may lead Americans to question their fear of Socialism - something heretofore repudiated and vilified by the right.
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Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
Many people are dancing around the benefits of Carlson's interview. He is encouraging Americans to re-examine their personal and tribal foundational beliefs and principles. Tucker's nascent appreciation of the benefits of Socialism may lead Americans to question their fear of Socialism - something heretofore repudiated and vilified by the right.
@kluurs said in Hannity Offers:
Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
Many people are dancing around the benefits of Carlson's interview. He is encouraging Americans to re-examine their personal and tribal foundational beliefs and principles. Tucker's nascent appreciation of the benefits of Socialism may lead Americans to question their fear of Socialism - something heretofore repudiated and vilified by the right.
I think it would be difficult to trace back any of Tucker's appreciation for certain details of Russia to socialism. Authoritarianism maybe.
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There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
How is it you can see this most salient of points, but our Northern neighbor has totally overlooked it?
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Remember the famous Walter Cronkite interview of Adolf Hitler?
The Tucker thing wouldn't have been quite as bad if he hadn't spent the previous months questioning why we were so pro Ukraine. I seem to think he once described Putin as a defender of traditional Christian values.
Presumably, by 'traditional Christian values' he wasn't referring to crucifixion.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Hannity Offers:
Remember the famous Walter Cronkite interview of Adolf Hitler?
No, but I remember the famous Peter Arnett interview of bin Laden.
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@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
How is it you can see this most salient of points, but our Northern neighbor has totally overlooked it?
@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
How is it you can see this most salient of points, but our Northern neighbor has totally overlooked it?
Not overlooked it, but rather disregarded it.
Why? Because it’s what you, the apologist, want to believe about the interview. That and the fact that like your apologetics for Carlson, it is of little if any consequence.
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@kluurs said in Hannity Offers:
Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
Many people are dancing around the benefits of Carlson's interview. He is encouraging Americans to re-examine their personal and tribal foundational beliefs and principles. Tucker's nascent appreciation of the benefits of Socialism may lead Americans to question their fear of Socialism - something heretofore repudiated and vilified by the right.
I think it would be difficult to trace back any of Tucker's appreciation for certain details of Russia to socialism. Authoritarianism maybe.
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
@kluurs said in Hannity Offers:
Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
Many people are dancing around the benefits of Carlson's interview. He is encouraging Americans to re-examine their personal and tribal foundational beliefs and principles. Tucker's nascent appreciation of the benefits of Socialism may lead Americans to question their fear of Socialism - something heretofore repudiated and vilified by the right.
I think it would be difficult to trace back any of Tucker's appreciation for certain details of Russia to socialism.
AuthoritarianismStalinism maybe.He loved the Stalin era architecture of the downtown Metro stations. I bet too he was awe struck by the towering wedding cake skyscrapers Stalin bequeathed the city.
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@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
If Hitler had reached out for an interview, would Cronkite have said no?
The question you should ask is whether Cronkite would have asked him tough questions, or whether, like Carlson, he'd allow him to ramble on for the most part unchallenged.
Obviously, Carlson isn't really a journalist any more than is Jon Stewart.
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@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
If Hitler had reached out for an interview, would Cronkite have said no?
The question you should ask is whether Cronkite would have asked him tough questions, or whether, like Carlson, he'd allow him to ramble on for the most part unchallenged.
Obviously, Carlson isn't really a journalist any more than is Jon Stewart.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
If Hitler had reached out for an interview, would Cronkite have said no?
The question you should ask is whether Cronkite would have asked him tough questions, or whether, like Carlson, he'd allow him to ramble on for the most part unchallenged.
Obviously, Carlson isn't really a journalist any more than is Jon Stewart.
I am sure you will get the sort of questioning you are after when he is prosecuted for war crimes, and he is on the stand. Failing that, I don't think many of us subscribe to any journalist-as-hero narratives.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
If Hitler had reached out for an interview, would Cronkite have said no?
The question you should ask is whether Cronkite would have asked him tough questions, or whether, like Carlson, he'd allow him to ramble on for the most part unchallenged.
Obviously, Carlson isn't really a journalist any more than is Jon Stewart.
I am sure you will get the sort of questioning you are after when he is prosecuted for war crimes, and he is on the stand. Failing that, I don't think many of us subscribe to any journalist-as-hero narratives.
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
If Hitler had reached out for an interview, would Cronkite have said no?
The question you should ask is whether Cronkite would have asked him tough questions, or whether, like Carlson, he'd allow him to ramble on for the most part unchallenged.
Obviously, Carlson isn't really a journalist any more than is Jon Stewart.
I am sure you will get the sort of questioning you are after when he is prosecuted for war crimes, and he is on the stand. Failing that, I don't think many of us subscribe to any journalist-as-hero narratives.
Chances are Putin will never stand trial for his war crimes. To expect otherwise is wishful thinking.
As for anyone here subscribing to journalist-as-hero narratives, I should think you know better. Phibes is not suggesting that and nor am I. What we are stating is that Carlson didn’t do his job when the opportunity was presented to him on a silver platter. I attribute his failure to negligence stemming from a lack of competence as a journalist. Nothing more.
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I saw Hitler
Thompson's most significant work abroad took place in Germany in the early 1930s.[2] In Munich, Thompson met and interviewed Adolf Hitler for the first time in 1931. This would be the basis for her subsequent book, I Saw Hitler, in which she wrote about the dangers of him winning power in Germany.[1] Later, in a Harper's Magazine article in December 1934, Thompson described Hitler in the following terms: "He is formless, almost faceless, a man whose countenance is a caricature, a man whose framework seems cartilaginous, without bones. He is inconsequent and voluble, ill poised and insecure. He is the very prototype of the little man."
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Remember the famous Walter Cronkite interview of Adolf Hitler?
The Tucker thing wouldn't have been quite as bad if he hadn't spent the previous months questioning why we were so pro Ukraine. I seem to think he once described Putin as a defender of traditional Christian values.
Presumably, by 'traditional Christian values' he wasn't referring to crucifixion.
I seem to think he once described Putin as a defender of traditional Christian values.
Yes, once when Carlson was recently in Hungary and pretty sure on at least one or two other occasions; clips may even have been posted here.
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@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
How is it you can see this most salient of points, but our Northern neighbor has totally overlooked it?
Not overlooked it, but rather disregarded it.
Why? Because it’s what you, the apologist, want to believe about the interview. That and the fact that like your apologetics for Carlson, it is of little if any consequence.
@Renauda said in Hannity Offers:
@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
@Horace said in Hannity Offers:
There is a fact that Putin talked to him in an unscripted long form interview. No other journalist was given that opportunity. Of course you can see it as Tucker being just the sort of useful idiot that Putin would talk to, but I don't buy that the world is a worse place because the interview occurred, or because Tucker spewed some nonsense while in Russia. The question isn't a referendum on whether Tucker could be more to anybody's taste, it's whether Tucker, for all his faults, served a useful purpose here to someone other than Putin and himself. Personally I am glad the interview took place, though of course it wasn't a game changer to any extent.
How is it you can see this most salient of points, but our Northern neighbor has totally overlooked it?
Not overlooked it, but rather disregarded it.
Why? Because it’s what you, the apologist, want to believe about the interview. That and the fact that like your apologetics for Carlson, it is of little if any consequence.
And what are you, but some bitter asshole with a good smattering of knowledge about all things Russia and the inability to do a damn thing about it? What consequence do you bring to the world? Hopefully, your spouse, children and your grandchildren are showered with understanding and love, because you bring damn little of it here.
Of what worth are you?
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Whether you like the interview or not, has anybody else from America done an interview with Putin?
@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
Whether you like the interview or not, has anybody else from America done an interview with Putin?
Why do you think that is? Others have tried, but President Putin only agreed to talk with Mr. Carlson.
I think it was because he knew that it really wouldn't be an "interview" at all.
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@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
Whether you like the interview or not, has anybody else from America done an interview with Putin?
Why do you think that is? Others have tried, but President Putin only agreed to talk with Mr. Carlson.
I think it was because he knew that it really wouldn't be an "interview" at all.
@taiwan_girl said in Hannity Offers:
@Jolly said in Hannity Offers:
Whether you like the interview or not, has anybody else from America done an interview with Putin?
Why do you think that is? Others have tried, but President Putin only agreed to talk with Mr. Carlson.
I think it was because he knew that it really wouldn't be an "interview" at all.
The BBC’s Steve Rosenberg has been repeatedly requesting an interview on a regular basis for some years now. Request denied. No reason given.