Uncle Jimbo explains it all to you.
What, you were going to trust the New York Times?
Monday, November 30, 2009
Not in my name
So the media bottom feeders insist that they only cover the Tiger Woods accident because the "public" demands it.
I guess they are right. Well, right if by "public" you mean the 1 or 2% of Americans who tune into cable news shows. And if by "demand" you mean "will sit through the speculative blather as they wait for news about Afghanistan policy or the health care debate."
Me, I'm a Tiger Woods fan. And contra John Feinstein Tiger doesn't owe me jack.
I guess they are right. Well, right if by "public" you mean the 1 or 2% of Americans who tune into cable news shows. And if by "demand" you mean "will sit through the speculative blather as they wait for news about Afghanistan policy or the health care debate."
Me, I'm a Tiger Woods fan. And contra John Feinstein Tiger doesn't owe me jack.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Steyn on the climate change scams
Cooking the books on climate
The more frantically two prominent global-warming alarmists talked up "peer review" as the only legitimate basis for scientific criticism, the more assiduously they turned the process into the Chicago machine politics of international science.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Anatomy of a smear
R. S. McCain is still on the Clay County beat:
Shame and Blame in Kentucky
Thanks to an anonymous source in an Associated Press story and a flurry of speculation by bloggers, however, this quiet community was imagined to be a seething cauldron of hatred stoked by Fox News, talk radio and Republican politicians. Clay County's state Sen. Robert Stivers told the Lexington Herald-Leader that "many in the media owe the county an apology." As Morgan Bowling said Tuesday afternoon, at times it seemed as if pundits were trying to turn Bill Sparkman into a "sacrificial lamb for ObamaCare."
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Well, well, well
Looks like the good people of Clay County, Kentucky are not a bunch of blood-thirsty Beckazoids.
Early reactions:
R. S. McCain really deserves some credit for doing the reporting that the MSM just would not do in the early days of the story.
Other reactions:
Weekly Standard has a great round-up of the rush to judgement when this death was first reported.
Follow it on memeorandum All eyes on Excitable Andy.
The Kentucky State Police Post 11 in London, with the assistance of the FBI, the U.S. Forest Service, the State Medical Examiner's Office and the Clay County Coroner's Office, has concluded the investigation into the death of William E. Sparkman, Jr.
The investigation, based upon evidence and witness testimony, has concluded that Mr. Sparkman died during an intentional, self-inflicted act that was staged to appear as a homicide.
Early reactions:
R. S. McCain really deserves some credit for doing the reporting that the MSM just would not do in the early days of the story.
Other reactions:
Calling For Sparkman Apologies
When will the Left retract the Kentucky census worker case smear?
Confederate Yankee
Gateway Pundit
Census Worker Killed Himself and the Credibility of Leftwing Bloggers
Weekly Standard has a great round-up of the rush to judgement when this death was first reported.
Follow it on memeorandum All eyes on Excitable Andy.
Someone worth remembering
1930s journalist Gareth Jones to have story retold
Correspondent who exposed Soviet Ukraine's manmade famine to be focus of new documentary
In death he has become known as "the man who knew too much" – a fearless young British reporter who walked from one desperate, godforsaken village to another exposing the true horror of a famine that was killing millions.
Gareth Jones's accounts of what was happening in Soviet Ukraine in 1932-33 were different from other western accounts. Not only did he reveal the true extent of starvation, he reported on the Stalin regime's failure to deliver aid while exporting grain to the west. The tragedy is now known as the Holodomar and regarded by Ukrainians as genocide.
Jones had the story of a lifetime and tried to tell it. The "best minds" in journalism did their best to help preserve Stalin's cover-up. Some of them even won prizes for the effort.
This never happened when Cronkite was around
Best reaction is Jim Treacher's:
Others comment on the Perky one:
It even has its own thread on memeorandum
Katie Got Back
Others comment on the Perky one:
Ace of Spades
Ed Driscoll
Weasel Zippers
It even has its own thread on memeorandum
Monday, November 23, 2009
Good stuff here
Palinphobes hate first, ask questions later
This story is too good to miss:
Slate magazine is just one of the countless media outlets convulsing with St. Vitus’ Dance over that demonic succubus Sarah Palin. In its reader forum, The Fray, one supposed Palinophobe took dead aim at the former Alaska governor’s writing chops, excerpting the following sentence from her book:
“The apartment was small, with slanting floors and irregular heat and a buzzer downstairs that didn’t work, so that visitors had to call ahead from a pay phone at the corner gas station, where a black Doberman the size of a wolf paced through the night in vigilant patrol, its jaws clamped around an empty beer bottle.”
Other readers pounced like wolf-sized Dobermans on an intruder. One guffawed, “That sentence by Sarah Palin could be entered into the annual Bulwer-Lytton bad writing contest. It could have a chance at winning a (sic) honorable mention, at any rate.”
But soon, the original contributor confessed: “I probably should have mentioned that the sentence quoted above was not written by Sarah Palin. It’s taken from the first paragraph of ‘Dreams From My Father,’ written by Barack Obama.”
Sunday, November 22, 2009
On not living up to one's reputation
According to the MSM
Yet Neo-neocon looks at her most recent article and pronounces it "curiously naive".
Unfortunately, Neo has the facts to back up that verdict.
Elizabeth Drew has been one of the country's most knowledgeable and keen-eyed observers of the American political scene in the 40 years that she has written from the nation's capital.
Yet Neo-neocon looks at her most recent article and pronounces it "curiously naive".
Unfortunately, Neo has the facts to back up that verdict.
IG-gate
The truth seeps out:
UPDATE: The plot thickens:
A congressional investigation of the volunteer organization AmeriCorps contains charges that D.C. schools chief Michelle Rhee handled "damage control" after allegations of sexual misconduct against her now fiance, Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, a former NBA star and a prominent ally of President Obama, The Washington Examiner has learned.
The charges are contained in a report prepared by Sen. Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, and Rep. Darrell Issa, ranking Republican on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
UPDATE: The plot thickens:
Just hours after Sen. Charles Grassley and Rep. Darrell Issa released a report Friday on their investigation into the abrupt firing of AmeriCorps inspector general Gerald Walpin, the Obama White House gave the lawmakers a trove of new, previously-withheld documents on the affair. It was a twist on the now-familiar White House late-Friday release of bad news; this time, the new evidence was put out not only at the start of a weekend but also hours too late for inclusion in the report.
The new documents support the Republican investigators' conclusion that the White House's explanation for Walpin's dismissal -- that it came after the board of the Corporation for National and Community Service, which oversees AmeriCorps, unanimously decided that Walpin must go -- was in fact a public story cobbled together after Walpin was fired, not before.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Who was Lee Harvey Oswald?
Edward Jay Epstein:
The Warren Commission concluded– rightly I now believe– that Oswald fired all the shots that killed the President. But conspiracies do not necessarily require multiple rifleman to accomplish their purpose. And what the Warren Commission could not absolutely rule out, as two of its members pointed out to me, was the possibility that Oswald had acted at the behest of others. After all, he had advertised his willingness to undertake a high-profile assassination by circulating photographs connecting himself to the shooting of General Walker. Any party who was monitoring his activities in Dallas, New Orleans or Mexico City could have discerned from them that he was a potential assassin awaiting a mission. With his mind set on such violent actions as hijacking a plane, blowing up the FBI office, or killing "any American," not much would be required to prod him to violence. He had sought liaisons in dangerous quarters and someone could have provided him with an inducement.
Buckle your seatbelts
It going to be a bumpy read.
The McCainosphere catches rogue fever
Thanks to the round-up, i found this priceless gem:
That just cries out for a Photoshop wizard to pick up the torch.
The McCainosphere catches rogue fever
'Free Medicine, Juanita,' Reid Announced
Thanks to the round-up, i found this priceless gem:
What I find especially amusing is Sullivan’s notion that he is in a position to demand an accounting from Sarah Palin on anything, particularly given his bizarre, embarrassing and highly vocal fascination with Trig Palin’s parentage. I believe he still styles himself a Catholic and a kind of “generalissimo” of “true” conservatism, but the last thing we need – and certainly, a thing we need never pay any serious attention to – is Francisco Franco in a pink uniform.
That just cries out for a Photoshop wizard to pick up the torch.
Stunned
That's the only way to react to something like this:
Michelle Malkin has also followed this issue and now tell us:
The Obama Justice Department is having problems prosecuting terrorist cases because top department attorneys have conflicts of interest.
According to documents obtained exclusively by The Washington Times, Associate Attorney General Thomas J. Perrelli, No. 3 official in the Justice Department, had to recuse himself on at least 13 active detainee cases and at least 26 cases listed as either closed or mooted.
Michelle Malkin has also followed this issue and now tell us:
This is not the end of the story. It’s just the beginning.
Friday, November 20, 2009
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Excitable Andy, boy detective
Funny stuff over at Iowahawk
Dial 'M' For Maternity
Excerpts from the new Mike Loads gyno-mystery by Andrew Sullivan
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
This explains a lot
Philip Klein
AARP, which has given its full-throated support to Democratic health care legislation even though seniors remain largely opposed, received an $18 million grant in the economic stimulus package for a job training program that has not created any jobs, according to the Obama administration's Recovery.gov website.
A point that cannot be made often enough
From Tom Maquire:
At the root, i suspect that many so-called birthers do not really care where Barak Obama was born. But they do understand the truth of Maguire's point. So, like a good transgressive performance artist they look for a way to shock and mock. Birtherism is a way to tweak journalists for their sloth and liberals for their gullibility.
And it is clearly not a big deal in itself. However, it is symptomatic of some larger points. We know very little about the true biography of a President who was elected on the basis of his biography, and, perhaps because the gloss is so pretty and so historic, the press has not shown much inclination to seek the truth.
At the root, i suspect that many so-called birthers do not really care where Barak Obama was born. But they do understand the truth of Maguire's point. So, like a good transgressive performance artist they look for a way to shock and mock. Birtherism is a way to tweak journalists for their sloth and liberals for their gullibility.
Why Congress must investigate Ft. Hood
Under normal circumstances, congressional investigations produce more partisan heat than unbiased light. In this case that is a risk worth taking because such hearings are the least bad alternative and offer the best chance to uncover the truth.
This great article by Stephen F. Hayes and Thomas Joscelyn provides a great starting point for an enterprising legislator or staffer. Maj. Nidal should have set off more than a few alarm bells. Why did no one in authority listen?
Connecting the DotsThis is especially relevant:
Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan, 39, went on a shooting rampage at Fort Hood that claimed 13 lives and wounded more than 40. Three hours later, while the base was still in lockdown, an FBI spokesman dismissed suggestions that the attack was terrorism and said that a link between Hasan and terrorist organizations "is not being discussed."On the day of the shooting all the cable news channels kept repeating this FBI statement. I wondered at the time, "how could they be so sure so fast?" Now we know that they were fast but wrong. We deserve to know why. In addition, we deserve to know why dismissing a terrorist motive was such a high priority when an investigation had not even begun. Most importantly, we must know if the FBI was telling the truth. Did they immediately dismiss the possibility of terrorism? Or was that just PR to calm the public's nerves? The latter might be (might) justifiable, but the former is outrageous. Surely after Beslan and Mumbai, the possibility of terrorism is something the FBI should consider. This article in the Dallas Morning News raises questions about the Army's initial response:
Fort Hood captain: Hasan wanted patients to face war crimes charges Fort Hood massacre suspect Nidal Malik Hasan sought to have some of his patients prosecuted for war crimes based on statements they made during psychiatric sessions with him, a captain who served on the base said Monday. Other psychiatrists complained to superiors that Hasan's actions violated doctor-patient confidentiality, Capt. Shannon Meehan told The Dallas Morning News. One day after the Nov. 5 attack that killed 13 and wounded 29, a Fort Hood official said she had never received complaints about Hasan's job performance. Col. Kimberly Kesling, deputy commander of clinical services at the base's Darnall Army Medical Center, also said he was a "hardworking, dedicated young man who gave great care to his patients."So, did Col. Kesling receive complaints or not? If she did, why did she lie for a man who had just perpetrated an atrocity?
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