Ted Turner's A Socialist?
CNN founder, Ted Turner, declared in Shanghai last night - "
I'm a socialist
at heart" who is concerned that "
Internet guys have gotten so rich so
fast."
Ted Turner,
one of the world's richest men, the US leading private
land
owner and top media player was addressing Time
Warner's Global Forum
gathering of 500 Chinese and
international entrpreneurs in Shanghai leading
up to the
October 1, 50-year celebrations of Chinese communist
rule.
Turner took a swipe at Oracle Corp's chairman Larry
Ellison for his yachts.
"I'd rather use money for the
benefit of mankind rather than spend it
selfishly," he
said. Turner also owns yachts.
Time Warner chairman,
Gerald Levin, introduced Chines President Ziang
Zemin,
describing him as " my old friend."
Levin
ignored the fact that Chinese authorities blocked news-stand
sales of
a special China edition of Time magazine this
week because it included
essays by Tibetan leader, the
Dalai Lama, and by political exiles Wei
Jingsheng and
Fang Lizhi.
Meanwhile Viacom's, Sumner Redstone, warned
the gathering that international
news organisations
should avoid being " unnecessarily offensive " to
foreign
governments.
As they expand their global reach
media companies must be aware "of the
politics and
attitudes of the governments where we operate," Redstone
said.
"Journalistic integrity must prevail in the final
analysis. But that doesn't
mean that journalistic
integrity should be exercised in a way that
is
unnecessarily offensive," Mr Redstone said.
Well, at
the risk of bringing down the wrath of Redstone on my head,
here
comes my satirical view of the Chinese
administration.
(Good evening, Dan Rather reporting
tonight from central Beijing. CBS news
has learned that
the communist government here has jailed thousands
of
political critics and journalists in the past month.
But there has never
been a finer breathtaking show of
military might on parade in this capital
city. A
spectacular event. The mass parade for the 50th anniversary
of the
founding of the People's Republic of China, where
hundreds of thousands of
flowers have been used to
decorate the main avenues and squares. Oh look,
there is
a miniature W-88 nuclear warhead passing before the main
viewing
stand. Hold on! This just in to CBS news. We've
just learned that China
government officials last night
did go through with the promise to execute
hundreds of
prisoners. Police insist that the prisoners were not
dissidents,
saying that the mass executions are part of a
crackdown on crime. The
executions were carried out with
a single bullet to the back of the head.
Now back to the
parade, and this beautiful float representing Taiwan.
Floats
representing all provinces, municipalities,
autonomous regions, show the
motherland as one big happy
family. These floats in this fabulous parade
depict the
scenery across the country. This is Dan Rather returning you
to
the studio)
If Redstone's MTV is unable to strike a
licensing deal in time, China's
National Day Parade
celebrations will be carried live on the World Wide Web at
http://China10k.com Wear
red.