On Sunday's NBC Meet the Press, moderator David Gregory touted
 the United Nations slamming the "human rights record" of the U.S. as it
 condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine: "You know, when we deal
 with Vladimir Putin, this issue of hypocrisy comes up....The United 
Nations pointedly criticized the U.S.'s human rights record over drone 
strikes, NSA surveillance, the death penalty." [Listen to the audio]
	
	Turning to Democratic Illinois Senator Dick Durbin and Republican 
Arizona Senator Jeff Flake, Gregory worried: "Does it make it hard to 
deal with the likes of Putin and Lavrov when you've got the U.N. 
criticizing the U.S. that way?"
	Durbin replied: "Listen, there are plenty imperfections in every 
government of every nation. But look at what we have here. Putin – this 
is the – I think the single most serious act of aggression since the 
Cold War....Now, are we going to stand by and say this is acceptable 
conduct? Because this isn't the end of his ambition. He'll go as far as 
we let him go."
	
	Moments later Flake rejected Gregory's concern: "There's no way you can
 have some moral equivalency of what Putin is doing and what we've done 
in the past."
	
	On the March 2 Meet the Press,
 Gregory seemed to defend Obama's poor handling of the Ukranian crisis 
by bashing George W. Bush: "Look, part of the Bush era that a lot of 
people recoiled against was the idea of talking tough and projecting 
American power as if some how feeling better about that makes the world 
better."
	
	On the March 3 Today show, New Yorker
 Editor David Remnick claimed the U.S. lacked the "historical leverage" 
to protest the Russian invasion because "Invading countries is something
 the United States knows about from really raw experience."
Here is a transcript of the March 16 Meet the Press exchange:
10:52 AM ET
(...)
DAVID GREGORY: You know, when we deal with Vladimir Putin, this issue of hypocrisy comes up. And the United Nations spoke of this, this week. The United Nations pointedly criticized the U.S.'s human rights record over drone strikes, NSA surveillance, the death penalty. Does it make it hard to deal with the likes of Putin and Lavrov when you've got the U.N. criticizing the U.S. that way?
SEN. DICK DURBIN [D-IL]: Listen, there are plenty imperfections in every government of every nation. But look at what we have here. Putin – this is the – I think the single most serious act of aggression since the Cold War.
GREGORY: Mm-Hm.
DURBIN: He ended up the final ceremony at the Sochi Olympics, which you're network covered, trying to make it a charm offensive for the world that this is a modern Russian nation. And within hours he's invading one of his neighbors, sending the same troops that were protecting the athletes at Sochi into the Crimea. Now, are we going to stand by and say this is acceptable conduct? Because this isn't the end of his ambition. He'll go as far as we let him go.
GREGORY: But how do you change the calculation? That's what I still don't see.
SEN. JEFF FLAKE [R-AZ]: Speaking of the U.N., what's important is what happened yesterday, when the U.S. and the Security Council – with China actually abstaining, not siding with Russia – actually voting to condemn what happened. That's important. What resolutions in the General Assembly or whatever are less important, certainly. And there's no way you can have some moral equivalency of what Putin is doing and what we've done in the past.
(...)
