• more about

    #loudobbs

    Lou Dobbs Loves Immigrants Now, Everyone

    People Who Hate Immigration Already Fundraising for Lou Dobbs' Presidential Campaign

    The 2012 Republican Primary Is the Jobs for Journalists Program America Has Been Demanding

    read more: #judithmiller, #loudobbs, #cnn, #newyorktimes

    Judith Miller Did It For You, the Little People

    MillerJudith_S.jpgWhen two world famous journalists sit down for a chat, you can expect some hard-hitting questions and take-no-prisoners grilling — and Lou Dobbs, interviewing Judith Miller last night, didn't disappoint:

    DOBBS:[...]But the fact that it has taken so long, with the principals all known, with the case sitting before, this — and the cost of millions and millions of dollars, and frankly I will not forgive Fitzgerald for what he did to you.

    If you could find a question in that statement, we're quite sure it would be a very hard-hitting one! But he wasn't done — Dobbs continued to go for the jugular:

    DOBBS: It's — first, the idea of 85 days in jail is something that most of us cannot comprehend. It is — give us your — the sense of what you had to endure?

    MILLER: Well, it was the most soulless place I've ever been. I think we don't realize how much we take things for granted like color, silence, the right to take two aspirin when you feel you have a headache. It was demeaning. It was degrading. It was very lonely.

    Yes, after a career spent traipsing around post-war Iraq and witnessing public hangings in Sudan, nothing prepared Judy Miller for the hell that is a city jail in Virginia.

    Why, in the end, was poor Judy trapped in this soulless, colorless, and unconscionably loud place? For you, dear reader. For you.

    MILLER: The public won't know. That's why I was sitting in jail. For the public's right to know.
    [...]
    MILLER: Thank you very much. And I hope we have a federal shield law that would protect all of us, so that no other journalist has to make the choice that I did.
    DOBBS: And again, not for the benefit of the journalists, but the benefit of the public.
    MILLER: No, it's not about us, it's about the public's right to know.

    Yes, the public's right to know. What the public has a right to know was never made quite clear, but after the jump, we'll try to narrow it down.

    What the public does not have a right to know:
    Who Judy's confidential sources are
    What was said in her meetings with those confidential sources
    Why she was in jail a year after getting a waiver from Scooter Libby
    Whether she's going to write about her involvement in the investigation
    Any details of her testimony

    What the public might have a right to know:
    Times Managing Editor John Geddes knows 85 good jokes.

    Lou Dobbs Tonight Transcript [CNN]


    Contact information for this author is not available.