July 2017

Institute for Local Self-Reliance, Center for Rural Strategies, Public Knowledge, Common Cause, and Generation West Virginia
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Marietta, Ohio
http://ruralassembly.org/blog/2017/6/15/appalachian-ohio-west-virginia-c...

Agenda

8:30 – Registration and Displays

8:30 – Keynote Speaker – Chris Mitchell

10:30 – Breakout Sessions

  • Broadband 101
  • State and Federal Broadband Policy
  • Technology Solutions for Appalachia
  • Organizing for Community Broadband

Noon – Lunch on your own, Displays

1:30 – Panel (Moderator – Marty Newell) “Community Ownership Models”

  • Letcher County, KY Broadband Board; Coschocton County, OH Broadband Project;
  • Garrett County, MD Broadband Project; Pikeville, KY Fiber-to-the Premises Project

2:30- FCC Commissioner Clyburn Hearing

3:30 – Wrap-up and Call to Action

Presenters as of 6/15/17

  • Marty Newell – Center for Rural Strategies, Whitesburg, KY.
  • Kate Forscey – Public Knowledge, Washington DC
  • Todd O’Boyle – Common Cause, Washington DC
  • Natalie Roper – Next Generation WV, Charleston, WV
  • Joel Mulder - ex2 Technology, Omaha, NE
  • Harry Collins, Chairman – Letcher County Broadband Board
  • Vice Chair - Letcher County Broadband Board
  • Gary Fisher, County Commissioner – Coshocton County, OH, Broadband Project
  • Cheryl DeBerry – Garrett County, MD, Broadband Project
  • Philip Elswick, Pikeville, KY Fiber-to-the-Premises Project
  • Chris Mitchell – Institute for Local Self-Reliance
  • Mark DeFalco – Appalachian Regional Commission

TOWN HALL INFORMATION
Time: Event is 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. Doors open at 5 p.m.
Location: Marietta High School Auditorium, 111 Academy Dr., Marietta, OH 45750
Open to the public
Seating is first come, first served



CNN: The Network Against the Leader of the Free World

CNN and its president, Jeff Zucker, are in the middle of their most intense bout yet: an unlikely public fight with the leader of the free world. It is rare that a single news organization attracts the level of ire mustered by President Donald Trump, who over the weekend posted on Twitter a video that portrayed him wrestling a figure with the logo of CNN for a head. But the president’s denunciations — in stinging tweets and slashing speeches, in phrases like “fraud news” and “garbage journalism” — have far outstripped his criticisms of other prominent news outlets, like The New York Times or The Washington Post. And his attacks have spawned a cottage industry of Trump supporters who have declared a digital war of sorts against CNN, including gotcha videos of network employees and threatening messages sent to anchors’ cellphones.

White House advisers have discussed a potential point of leverage over their adversary, a senior administration official said: a pending merger between CNN’s parent company, Time Warner, and AT&T. President Trump’s Justice Department will decide whether to approve the merger, and while analysts say there is little to stop the deal from moving forward, the president’s animus toward CNN remains a wild card.

President Trump war with the media goes global

President Donald Trump took his fight with the news media to the world stage on July 6, hammering CNN and his political enemies in the press as “fake news” at a press conference with Polish President Andrzej Duda in Warsaw. President Trump gave the first question of the press conference to Daily Mail editor David Martosko, a Trump ally who has been considered for various administration posts. That led CNN White House reporter Jim Acosta to allege a set-up. Martosko asked President Trump about the controversy that exploded around CNN July 5, when the network published a story claiming to know the identity of the man who created a video the President tweeted, which showed him tackling a wrestler with the CNN logo emblazoned over his face. President Trump didn’t miss a beat, saying that the network “has some pretty serious problems.” “They have been fake news for a long time,” President Trump said. “They’ve been covering me in a very dishonest way.”

At the press conference, President Trump also slammed NBC, noting that he once pulled big ratings for the network, which aired his program “The Apprentice." Then-NBC president Jeff Zucker now heads CNN. “NBC is equally as bad, despite the fact that I made them a fortune, they forgot about that,” President Trump said. “But I will say that CNN has really taken it too seriously and I think has hurt themselves very badly. Very, very badly. What we want to see in the United States is honest, beautiful, free, but honest press. We want fair press. We don’t want fake news, and by the way, not everybody is fake news. Bad thing. Very bad for our country.”

The Reddit user behind Trump’s CNN meme apologized. But #CNNBlackmail is the story taking hold.

The Reddit user said he never intended his anti-CNN meme — you know, the one tweeted by President Donald Trump in which the now-president beats up CNN in a wrestling match — to become a call for violence against journalists. #CNNBlackmail was the top trending Twitter topic July 5, thanks to the efforts of a furious Trump Internet, who had concluded that the user’s apology was forced by a “threat” from CNN. Their evidence? A story CNN itself published, detailing its attempts to contact and identify the anonymous Reddit user ahead of their apology, whose offensive posting history suddenly became part of a national news story.

The part of the article that infuriated the Trump Internet — and people on both sides of the political spectrum, who questioned the ethical standards of the network’s decision — had to do with how CNN described its reasoning for not identifying the Redditor by name. Reporter Andrew Kaczynski wrote that CNN had spoken with the person behind the account, and would not identify the user because “he is a private citizen who has issued an extensive statement of apology,” who had promised not to continue flooding the Internet with offensive memes. But, he wrote, “CNN reserves the right to publish his identity should any of that change.”