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KLZ

How about "legitimate" or "forcible" murder?

by: Jason Salzman

Thu Aug 23, 2012 at 09:16:15 AM MST

Colorado's conservative talk-radio hosts are unified in denouncing of Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin's statement that the female body has a natural ability to repel the sperm of rapists.

But they've been a bit more iffy on the question of how serious it was for Akin, who's vowing not to drop out of the Missouri Senate race, to distinguish between "legitimate" rape from other kinds.

"If you're a guy, and you throw the word 'legitimate' in front of rape, you're in trouble," KLZ radio host Jason Worley told listeners Monday. "You're already in trouble."

In trouble? As if you were asked to take out the trash by your wife and you forgot?

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 413 words in story)

Do KLZ radio hosts know the difference between protecting consumers and killing them?

by: Jason Salzman

Fri May 18, 2012 at 10:49:56 AM MST

I spend a lot of time criticizing conservative talk-radio hosts, and some people think I'm beating my head against the keyboard.

Too bad for me. Here I go again.

I can't accept that KLZ host's Ken Clark and Jason Worley agree with Sen. Ted Harvey when he says, on the radio, that Rep. Morgan Carroll's bill requiring hospitals to post a list of services that they do not provide is like "putting yellow stars on the door of religious hospitals."

Even if you disagree with her bill, proposed legislation like Carroll's and Nazi Germany have zero in common with one another.

You may think it's ridiculous that I even write the above paragraph, but that's what we bloggers have been reduced to, particularly because the legacy media is mostly ignoring the Colorado GOP's Nazi talk this year.

The Nazis killed people and Carroll's bill informs them. Carroll's bill would've helped consumers make a purchase. That's it.

Even if you're anti-abortion, Carroll's bill can't be remotely linked to genocide in any way.

So, if you're Ken Clark and Jason Worley, how could you possibly listen to this exchange without objecting?

Sen. Kevin Grantham (at 16:30 in the podcast):  "Ken, I kind of wonder if Patrick Malone would have made the same statement, or did even ask the same question to Rep. Carrol when she was running her Senate Bill 93, wondering whether she is going to have a legacy... or she's worried about her legacy as a bigot for what she's doing to hospitals and to private religious hospitals.  Doesn't that make her a bigot as well?" 

Asked to explain, Grantham said that SB 93 would require "religious hospitals to post the services they do not provide," which would be a requirement targeted specifically at catholic hospitals. This is not correct, since it would apply to all hospitals, but Grantham maintained that the bill was targeted specifically at abortion issues and other life issues.

Later, in a discussion about how the Democrats' strategy on civil unions will backfire, Harvey said:

Sen. Ted Harvey (at 39:32): I don't like to repeat the negative and talk about what their talking points are.  And what my talking points are is that this is an attack on religion.  This is [an] attack on the right of conscience, and the ability of people to exercise their faith the way that they believe is best for them. And I think that the people of faith are seeing this for what it is, and it's a direct attack on them and they are now not sitting on the couch, not sitting in the pews, and just trying to live their lives and take their kids to school, and go to work and do those kinds of things. They are truly scared of what this is we're talking about. We're talking about an entire party in the United States that thinks it's okay to force people of religious faith to do something against their religion. And that's never happened in the United States before.  You heard Kevin [Grantham] talking about Senate Bill 93 where it forced hospitals to put on their door a yellow star, for all practical purposes.  To say, 'this is who we are, and we have to tell you who we are.'  Never in American history have we had a major political party say that that's okay.  And that is what you are seeing right now. And people of faith across the country  are rising up and saying, 'No, not in our country.' SB-93 is like putting yellow stars on the door of religious hospitals.
Discuss :: (0 Comments)

How would you recruit Hispanics, if you were the GOP?

by: Jason Salzman

Mon Apr 23, 2012 at 08:17:43 AM MST

At the top of the home page of Colorado Hispanic Republicans' website sits this quote by President Ronald Reagan:
"Latinos are Republicans. They just don't know it yet."

It's not a quote that I'd slap across the top of my website if I were trying to make friends with Hispanics, but I have to admit I'm not a Republican.

But what would you do if you were a Republican, and it was your job to convince Democratic Hispanics to vote for your people in November?

It's a good question, and a group of Republicans tried to answer it in an honest and illuminating discussion on KLZ's Grassroots Radio Colorado April 11.

Radio host Ken Clark didn't sugar coat the GOP's problem in his first question to Pauline Olvera, a board member of Colorado Hispanic Republicans, whose website features the Reagan quote above.

"So the biggest problem I've seen in the Hispanic community and the black community is that they share our values; they just hate the Republican Party," said Clark. "So what are you doing about that?"

Olvera gave a big broad answer, as she's done before on the radio, practically bereft of specifics, saying her organization is trying "to connect with those communities' values of 'faith, family, and freedom.'" (Olvera is also a vice chair of the Denver Republican Party.)

Then Solomon Martinez, the Northern Colorado Chapter Chair for Colorado Hispanic Republicans, explained how Hispanics mindlessly cling to the Democratic Party because that's the way they've always been. He cited his own parents.

How does he deal with these stubborn Hispanic Democrats?

Martinez: "I tell people, 'Take the test.' There's websites you can go onto. You know, it's Republican Democrat Test. Take the test. If it still shows that you're a Democrat, then stay the Democrat Party. But you're going to find that you'll probably be a Republican, in most cases."

So now you see how the Reagan quote fits in.

It may sound condescending for Martinez to say that Colorado's Hispanics are so clueless about politics that they don't know the difference between Democrats and Republicans. But just take the Republican-Democrat test anyway. It's about being open-minded. Hispanics will probably find their inner Democrat and forget any possible condescension involved in getting them there.

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Conservative talk-radio hosts turn off not only women but also Hispanics?

by: Jason Salzman

Fri Mar 23, 2012 at 09:34:00 AM MST

Conservative talk-radio hosts are obviously a big part of the reason the Republican Party has a problem with women voters.

But they're also a serious drag on the GOP's appeal to Hispanics.

"I'm still looking for that immigrant who came to America who had a burning desire for free birth control," said KLZ talk-radio host Jason Worley on the air Wednesday. "I haven't found them yet. If we do find them, I will offer to put them on the air, so we can get the ditsy college girl from Illinois who can come on and go, 'Yah, what I'd like for freedom and liberty is, ahh, free birth control, Yeah me!'"

This elicited laughter not only from co-host Ken Clark but also from Pauline Olvera, a vice chair of the Denver Republican Party.

Olvera is also on the Board of Directors for Colorado Hispanic Republicans, a new group trying to recruit Colorado Hispanics to join the GOP.

Asked by Worley "what message is catching on in those Hispanic communities," Olvera answered:

"Well, we don't really talk about [Republican] party issues," she said.

One wonders why. Do Hispanics maybe dislike Republican issues? Worley didn't ask, and Olvera flew up to a cruising altitude of 5,000 feet and waxed broad and meaningless.
There's More... :: (0 Comments, 517 words in story)

Should elected officials talk to all journalists, progressive, conservative, or rabid?

by: Jason Salzman

Tue Mar 20, 2012 at 08:29:57 AM MST

Secretary of State Scott Gessler recently made an appearance Colorado's flagship Tea-Party radio show, KLZ's Grassroots Radio Colorado.

I was jealous because Gessler's office won't talk to me, and it's possible that even my audience of three people is bigger than KLZ's.

But it made me feel a little bit better when I found out that Gessler's also boycotting the Colorado Independent and AM760's David Sirota show, as I'll explain below.

Still, it raises the question of whether it matters much that a conservative elected official, not just Gessler but any of them, boycotts progressive media outlets. Or whether a progressive office holder should feel obligated to talk to conservative media types.

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My tax cuts versus your sick kids

by: Jason Salzman

Thu Feb 23, 2012 at 12:23:00 PM MST

I love politicians who have guts to talk about their "messaging" in public. Everyone knows it chews up huge amounts of behind-the-scenes time (and money), but the insider debate about messages doesn't spill out much.

When it does, reporters should be all over it, not to play "gotcha," but to help real people (none of whom read this blog) understand how different communications "frames" illuminate competing worldviews about government and values.

For example, on KLZ's Grassroots Radio Colorado Feb. 17, the hosts and Colorado Rep. Robert Ramirez got into an honest discussion about how the GOP should talk about poor people and budget cuts.

Ramirez started off by saying, "The Democrats have a benefit. Everything they say makes somebody feel good about something in their life. When we say, 'we got to quit spending so much, we can't take any more money to pay for those poor kids,' it doesn't sound as good."

He has a point. This makes the GOP sound like they aren't very concerned about the poor.

Ramirez went on: "We have to say something more like, we need to spend the money responsibly to be able to help people the most, and not just waste dollars in places they aren't helping anyone."

So the frame here is that government is the bad guy. It's wasting money in useless dark places, some of which may sound like they're helping kids, but they're really not.

Ramirez continued:  

But when somebody says, you're trying to kill children, you have to say, that's an interesting comment. Honestly, we have to spend the money the best way to help the most people. So it doesn't matter what they say, we have to, one, stay on message, and we have to keep the message in a positive arena, not negative against the other side. And that's the key, positive towards our message versus negative against them. Negative doesn't work.

Here, Ramirez presents a progressive counter "frame" that the GOP is "trying to kill children" by cutting government, whose programs (like generous children's health insurance) save lives and should not be axed if you care about giving impoverished kids in the world's richest nation the basic opportunity to succeed in life.  (Okay, that's a dramatic rendition of this frame, but I'm just making a point.)
There's More... :: (1 Comments, 698 words in story)

On radio, Ramirez says spite and retribution were motivating Carrera

by: Jason Salzman

Mon Dec 05, 2011 at 06:30:49 AM MST

We all know the process of hammering out new state legislative districts is difficult for everyone involved: the governor, legislators, judges, and regular people, as well as the journalists reporting on it.

So even conservative talk-show hosts, like Jason Worley and Ken Clark on KLZ's Grassroots Radio Colorado, should at least make a pass at presenting the issue with some measure of decency and fairness.

I know, it's talk radio, but still.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 1053 words in story)
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