Originally posted by: hellokeith
Factcheck is owned and run by a former Obama employer. That disqualifies it from making broad and uncorroborated statements about Obama's past.
BULLSHIT!!! You should try checking facts some day... for a change. You might learn something. :roll:
Factcheck.org was founded and is directed by Brooks Jackson and operated by the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania.
Registrant:
Brooks Jackson
Annenberg Public Policy Center, UPenn
320 National Press Building
Washington D.C. 20045,
202-879-6708.:
bjackson@appcpenn.org
From the Annenberg Center's "About" page:
About the Center
The Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania has been the premier communication policy center in the country since its founding in 1993. By conducting and releasing research, staging conferences and hosting policy discussions, its scholars have addressed the role of communication in politics, adolescent behavior, child development, health care, civics and mental health, among other important arenas. The Center?s researchers have drafted materials that helped policy-makers, journalists, scholars, constituent groups and the general public better understand the role that media play in their lives and the life of the nation. The Policy Center maintains offices in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.
APPC's work has informed the policy debates around campaign finance, children's television, internet privacy, tobacco advertising and the tone of discourse in Washington. Scholars at the Policy Center have offered guidance to journalists covering difficult stories, including terrorist threats, suicide and mental health. The Center's discussions of key public policy issues have brought together industry representatives, advocates, government officials and the scholarly community. Its research has examined what messages work best to reduce the spread of HIV and drug use, how to improve candidate discourse and specific strategies for parents to use to monitor their children's media exposure. APPC has developed materials to help educators and schools do a better job of teaching youth about civic responsibility, democracy and the Constitution.
To further our mission, we are launching this new web site. It is designed to give scholars, the media and the general public expanded access to the work that we began in 1993. We intend to make that complete body of research, including extensive data sets and topline surveys, available as quickly as possible. If there are any questions about materials not yet posted on the site, please contact our Philadelphia office at the number listed at the bottom of this page, or send an email to kriley@asc.upenn.edu.
Also, we invite you to learn more about the work of the Annenberg Public Policy Center by reading our newsletter, On the Record, available by clicking the On the Record link in our Library to the left.
Center History
When the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) was established in 1993, its founders, Ambassadors Walter and Leonore Annenberg, sought to increase the impact of the scholarship produced at Penn?s Annenberg School for Communication, the Policy Center?s home. It was their hope that the APPC would apply its knowledge about communication to improve the well-being of those in the U.S. and throughout the globe. In the subsequent years, APPC research has been put to use in studies of adolescent health, HIV and AIDS, media content analysis and political civility.
Funding for APPC comes through an endowment established by the Annenberg Foundation, as well as the generous support of federal agencies and foundations.
APPC projects are overseen by a staff of 54 people.
From FactCheck.org's "About" page
About FactCheck.org
Our Mission
We are a nonpartisan, nonprofit, "consumer advocate" for voters that aims to reduce the level of deception and confusion in U.S. politics. We monitor the factual accuracy of what is said by major U.S. political players in the form of TV ads, debates, speeches, interviews, and news releases. Our goal is to apply the best practices of both journalism and scholarship, and to increase public knowledge and understanding.
The Annenberg Political Fact Check is a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. The APPC was established by publisher and philanthropist Walter Annenberg in 1994 to create a community of scholars within the University of Pennsylvania that would address public policy issues at the local, state, and federal levels.
The APPC accepts NO funding from business corporations, labor unions, political parties, lobbying organizations or individuals. It is funded primarily by the Annenberg Foundation.
Brooks Jackson
Director, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Brooks Jackson is a journalist who covered Washington and national politics for 34 years, reporting in turn for The Associated Press, the Wall Street Journal and CNN. At CNN he pioneered the "adwatch" and "factcheck" form of stories debunking false and misleading political statements starting with the Presidential election of 1992. His investigative reporting for The AP and the Journal won several national awards. He is the author of two books: Honest Graft: Big Money and the American Political Process (Knopf, 1988) and Broken Promise: Why the Federal Election Commission Failed (Twentieth Century Fund: 1990).
Viveca Novak
Deputy Director, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Viveca Novak is a journalist who covered politics and government in Washington for nearly 20 years, reporting in turn for Common Cause Magazine, National Journal, the Wall Street Journal and Time magazine. At Time she was a co-winner of Harvard University's Goldsmith Prize as well as the Clarion Award for investigative reporting into the campaign finance scandals of President Clinton's 1996 re-election campaign. She is co-author of Inside the Wire , about the Guantanamo Bay detention center (Penguin Press: 2005). She holds an M.S. in journalism from Columbia University and an M.S.L. from Yale Law School.
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, PhD
Director, Annenberg Public Policy Center
Dr. Kathleen Jamieson, Elizabeth Ware Packard Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, has written extensively on the press, politics, and presidential campaigns. Her research into deceptive political TV ads produced techniques that are now in common use in TV "adwatch" stories. Among the many books she has authored are: Dirty Politics: Deception, Distraction, and Democracy (Oxford University Press, 1992) and Everything You Think You Know About Politics...and Why You're Wrong (Basic Books, 2000).
Current Staff
Lori Robertson
Editor, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Lori Robertson is a journalist who covered the media for nine years as an editor and writer for American Journalism Review, a bimonthly media watchdog magazine. At AJR, she won the Bart Richards Award for Media Criticism and an honorable mention in the National Press Club?s Arthur Rowse Award. Previously, she was the administrative director of the Casey Journalism Center on Children and Families, a resource center for journalists covering at-risk kids. She has written for various publications as a freelancer and is a 1993 graduate of Duquesne University with a B.A. in advertising.
Joe Miller
Staff Writer, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Joe Miller earned his BA in philosophy from Hampden-Sydney College, his MA in philosophy from Virginia Tech, and his PhD in political philosophy from the University of Virginia. He joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in April, 2007 after working as a writer with the Mack/Crounse Group. Previously he was an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the United States Military Academy and at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and a Visiting Fellow at the Callaghan Centre for Conflict Studies at the University of Wales at Swansea.
Emi Kolawole
Staff Writer, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Emi Kolawole earned her B.A. in international relations and theater studies from Wellesley College and studied abroad at both the Panthéon-Sorbonne and the National Theater Institute. She joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in November, 2005 after working as a news researcher at Congressional Quarterly on issues of defense, foreign policy, intelligence and homeland security. Previously, she was a production assistant at PBS's "NOW With Bill Moyers," and worked in the Washington area office of a defense contractor.
Justin Bank
Staff Writer, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Justin Bank earned both his B.A in Political Science and Public Communication and his M.A in Applied Politics at American University. He joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in October, 2005 with various experiences across the public affairs spectrum. He has worked in the newsroom at the New York Post, assisted the Director of Communications for the AFL-CIO affiliated seniors advocacy group the Alliance for Retired Americans, and has worked for a boutique public relations firm specializing in health care policy.
Jessica Henig
Staff Writer, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Jessica Henig earned her BA in history of science from Smith College, and her MA in English from the University of Maryland. While at Maryland, she taught digital literature and rhetorical writing. Prior to joining the Annenberg Public Policy Center in May 2007, she worked for the National Academies Press. She has also worked for the National Institutes of Health and as a freelance researcher and editor.
D'Angelo Gore
D?Angelo Gore earned his B.A. in journalism at Temple University and joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in October 2007. He has previously interned with the Philadelphia Daily News as a copyeditor/fact checker and served as a contributing writer for the Washington Informer covering local news in Washington, D.C.
Rachel Weisel
Research Intern, Annenberg Political Fact Check
Rachel is originally from St. Louis, Missouri, and currently a Political Science and Communication and Public Service major at the University of Pennsylvania, Class of 2010. She has previously worked as a Research Assistant for the Annenberg Public Policy Center in Philadelphia.
Brigitte Y. Tapp
D.C. Office Manager, Annenberg Public Policy Center
Brigitte Y. Tapp worked previously as office administrator for a subcontractor on the $3-billion Woodrow Wilson Bridge project. She also has been an executive administrative assistant in the D.C. government's Office of Prevention and Youth Services, and at the National Association of Broadcasters and the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council. She is a member of the National Association of Executive Secretaries and Administrative Assistants (NAESAA), the National Association of Female Executives (NAFE), the National Association of Office Managers, and the International Association of Administrative Professionals (IAAP), Capital Chapter.
Past Contributors
James Ficaro
Researcher, Annenberg Political Fact Check (September 2005 - December 2006)
James Ficaro earned his B.B.A. in Finance at the University of Texas in 2003. After finishing his undergraduate work, James moved to D.C. and received his Masters in Public Policy from the George Mason University School of Public Policy in 2005. He joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in September 2005 with previous experience on Capitol Hill and as a Professor in the Communication Department of George Mason University. James left FactCheck at the end of December, 2006 to pursue a law degree.
Matthew Barge
Researcher, Annenberg Political Fact Check (March - November 2005)
Matthew Barge earned his B.A. in Government at Georgetown University. He joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in March, 2005 with previous experience at the National Republican Senatorial Committee and as a volunteer for the Democratic presidential campaign of Gen. Wesley Clark. He has worked on several congressional campaigns and at a public opinion research firm in Washington, DC. Matthew left Factheck in November 2005 and later joined the staff of a national youth non-profit organization in Los Angeles.
Jennifer Ernst
Staff Writer, Annenberg Political Fact Check (June 2004 - October 2005)
Jennifer Ernst earned her B.A. in political science at American University in Washington, DC. She joined the Annenberg Public Policy Center in June, 2004 with previous experience in the office of US Sen. Chuck Hagel, as well as the non-profit sector. After working in the Communications Department of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, she spent time in Brussels, Belgium working as a policy researcher for NGO Voice, a network of humanitarian aid organizations. Jennifer left FactCheck to accept a job as a nonpartisan legislative analyst with the Colorado state legislature in October, 2005.
Stephen Simas
Research Intern (Spring/Summer 2007)
Stephen earned his B.A. in Political Science at the George Washington University in May, 2007. He was the Deputy Field Director of Sen. Lincoln Chafee?s 2006 re-election campaign and spent two years working in his Senate office.
Kevin Collins
Research Intern (Summer, 2005)
Kevin Collins is a Political Science major at the University of Pennsylvania. He is President of the Annenberg Undergraduate Political Communication Society and an editor of the associated research journal.
Jordan Grossman
Research Intern (Summer, 2005)
Jordan Grossman, of Potomac, Maryland, is a University of Pennsylvania student, class of 2008, majoring in American History and Communication and Public Service. He is an editor of the Annenberg Undergraduate Political Communication Society research journal, PoliComm, and a member of the Benjamin Franklin Scholars program.
Nathan Hake
Research Intern (Summer, 2005)
Please tell us exactly who or what entity listed, above, is or was Obama's employer, and even if you can make that connection, please explain why any of them is any position to be biased regarding the facts of Obama's citizenship.
Clue -- It would mean that both the Annenberg Public Policy Center and the University of Pennsylvania would have to risk their very public credibility by contradicting facts that can and will be confirmed by real, existing documents.
