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December 8, 2011

Helen Thomas Denounces DC Greed, Fear, War-Mongers

By Andrew Kreig

Pioneering White House correspondent Helen Thomas told a National Press Club audience Dec. 7 that the country is endangered by what she called pervasive government leader greed, fear of losing their jobs, and subservience to war-mongers.

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Pioneering White House correspondent Helen Thomas told a National Press Club audience Dec. 7 that the country is endangered by what she called government leaders' greed, fear, and subservience to war-mongers.

"I came here in 1943," she told a dinner audience of 30, "and I don't think I've ever seen our country so bereft of ideals and ideas. I don't see anything on the horizon that can pull us out. I hope I'm wrong."

Shown at top in a 2009 photo, she described current leaders as weak and selfish. The self-described liberal doled out criticism to all sides. "Republicans," she said, "have one goal: To get Obama. But when they see the country falling apart, that's all they can do?"

"As for Obama," she continued, "I think he's weak. He has no courage." She said the country urgently needs "a stand-up guy who'll do the right thing."

What are some examples? "The first priority should be jobs." Also, "Make people pay their taxes, and stop the wars." She estimated at least 700 U.S. military bases around the world.

"We're killing all of these people [in undeclared wars]. Why? Is it any surprise that people will fight back for their country? There's no doubt we want to eliminate Iran. Why wouldn't they want to defend themselves?"

Thomas, 91, spoke to the Sarah McClendon Group, a speaker society named after a late White House correspondent from Texas who fought similar battles as Thomas for many years to win Washington acceptance of women as serious journalists in male-dominated media and government circles.

McClendon Group Chairman John Edward Hurley introduced Thomas as a heroine in journalism who is being smeared for her blunt talk -- and is thus in the tradition of many previous speakers appearing before the McClendon Group. Hurley is a director of my Justice Integrity Project among his multiple civic group leadership posts in Washington in church, veterans and historical groups.

For nearly a quarter of a century, the McClendon Group (featuring best-selling Vulture's Picnic author Greg Palast Dec. 14) has met at the Press Club, but with its own, independent speaker selection process.

It focuses especially on speakers regarded as too controversial to speak even to journalism groups. They have included Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) before his current campaign, former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Joe Wilson, retired CIA analyst Ray McGovern, former NSA analyst Kenneth Ford and others undertaking research incongruent with conventional political wisdom. 

A Kentucky-born child of immigrants from Lebanon, Thomas began work as a "copy girl" at United Press after graduating from college in Detroit.

She went on to cover every President from Eisenhower to Obama. In doing so, she gained a reputation as one of the hardest-working and most outspoken correspondents. Author of six books, she also broke many sex barriers as a White House correspondent for UP's successor UPI.

Among her successes was working with McClendon and a few other pioneers to persuade the Press Club to drop its ban against women, which ended in 1971 as women argued they could not do their jobs if the Club kept them away from newsmakers.

Thomas recalled a prior incident before the ban was lifted: "A woman came into the bar. And all the members got up in arms and wanted to throw her out. But it turns out that she was an inspector for the Alcohol Beverage Control Board. And they quickly changed their tune." Thomas became the Press Club's first female officer, one of many such firsts.

Working far longer than most of her contemporaries who retired long ago, Thomas resigned in 2000 from UPI because of its purchase by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, the right-wing Korean tycoon and Unification Church leader who had been convicted by the United States of tax evasion.

She worked as a columnist for Hearst Newspapers until 2010, when she was forced to retire from journalism after a rabbi quoted her as advocating an end to Israeli abuses against Palestinians, among other opinions.

A variety of news and other communications organizations joined in the widespread criticism of Thomas. The Society of Professional Journalists, for example, ended its annual lifetime achievement award rather than continue calling it the "Helen Thomas" award.

"Yes, I cried for a couple of weeks," she recalled. "Then I decided I would write. I have the right to say what I think."

Looking back this week, Thomas reiterated her controversial theme: That Palestinians should not be deprived of their land, water and freedom.

Regarding changes she has observed in Washington, she said many of the nation's brightest minds came to Washington long ago out of what she called a desire to help the country during the Depression and World War II.

"They weren't coming to Washington just to get a job," she said. "They had big hearts." The country, she said, "was flat on its back....Old people were dying of hunger."

"Everything is going down the drain" she said of today. "Congress is so weak now. They do nothing....Democrats are scared to death. They don't want to open their mouths. They want to keep their jobs."

A photo above shows Thomas on her birthday in 2009 in the front row seat she occupied with pride for many years. That included three years when the Bush administration ignored her questions. The day President Bush lifted his ban by letting her ask him something at a press conference she responded with a tough question on why he started the war in Iraq without proof of weapons of mass destruction.  

This week, on the 70th anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack, she again spoke bluntly by estimating that the Obama administration will keep 100,000 contractors in Iraq after the much-touted withdrawal of most combat troops. "They [private contractors] make a lot more than 'GI Joe,'" she said. "Where does the money come from?"

The greatest challenge to Thomas during the Q&A was from a middle-aged woman who arrived late and demanded to know why Thomas wasn't more frightened of Iran. Thomas reiterated her belief that U.S. militarism in the region is provoking more dangers for the public here than it's preventing.  

The questioner, sitting next to me, then asked me who published me. I responded and asked about her own interest. She identified as an employee of one of the nation's largest defense contractors [or war contractors, as they were known before Orwellian concepts of NewSpeak] and left a few moments later.

Thomas said she regards as especially ominous a recent plan for the United States to place 2,000 troops in Australia, which she described as part of a dangerous plan to confront China. "I think we ought to get the hell out of all these places...Why do we keep sending other people to die?"

Regarding the future, she did find a ray of hope: "I want people to rise up, and they are....We should all hit the streets and call for revolution."



Authors Website: http://www.justice-integrity.org

Authors Bio:

Andrew Kreig is an investigative reporter, attorney, author, business strategist, radio host, and longtime non-profit executive based in Washington, DC.

His most recent book is "Presidential Puppetry: Obama, Romney and Their Masters," the first book about the Obama administration's second term. The book grew out of his work leading the Justice Integrity Project, a non-partisan legal reform group that investigates official misconduct.

In a diverse career, he has advocated for the powerful, and investigated Mafia chiefs, Karl Rove, and top Obama administration officials. The major "Who's Who" reference books have listed him since the mid-1990s.

He holds law degrees from Yale and the University of Chicago, and a b.a. in history from Cornell. His experience includes work as law clerk to a federal judge, as an attorney at a national law firm, and as president/CEO of a worldwide high-tech trade association.

The contact for interviews, lectures, and review copies is Mary Byers at Eagle View Books. The author has lectured on five continents, held research fellowships at three major universities, and appeared on more than 100 radio, television and cable news shows as an expert commentator.


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