Mods, please delete or lock... OrooOroo has decided to take the ultimate thread crap...

SaltBoy

Diamond Member
Aug 13, 2001
8,975
11
81
Sure, the article's biased, but who cares? I loathe Streisand... :disgust:

BABS SEES CRASH CONSPIRACY

By RICHARD JOHNSON with PAULA FROELICH and CHRIS WILSON
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SHE'S quoted bogus Shakespearean passages, misspelled the name of Sen. Dick Gephardt, and issued a position paper identifying Saddam Hussein as the "president of Iran." Now liberal activist Barbra Streisand is privately saying that Sen. Paul Wellstone's plane crash was "no accident."

"I was shocked but, knowing a bit about her, not surprised by her statement," a witness told The Post's Braden Keil. "She said there's more to this than meets the eye."

Wellstone, his wife and daughter, and five others died on Oct. 25 in a small plane crash as they were making campaign stops in his home state of Minnesota. If his replacement, Walter Mondale, doesn't win tomorrow's election, the Democratic Party could lose conrol of the Senate.

Streisand expressed her paranoid conspiracy theory to an audience of interior designers bidding on the chance to decorate a planned addition to her Malibu estate.

The singer, who recently sold her triplex on Central Park West for half of what she originally asked three years ago, gave up looking for another apartment in New York and is sending her furniture out west, where she is building a separate building to house the antique items.

"She's asked five top West Coast designers to bid on a project to incorporate her New York furniture into a farmhouse-like addition on her Malibu estate," said the source.

In a letter to the five candidates bidding for the job, she tells the prospects she won't have time to discuss anything until after the election.

"She then says they better be voting Democratic and goes into a long political missive about reproductive choice, the Supreme Court, the environment and the power of the right wing," adds the source.

Babs' Web site - which hawks everything from soup mugs to golf balls - consists largely of her political statements, with a big section defending her screw-ups.

Last year, her site urged fans to be more energy-efficient even while she criss-crossed the country on fossil fuel-sucking private jets, roamed the roads in gas-guzzling limos and SUVs, and vacationed on big power boats.

Streisand also urged her fellow Americans to set air conditioners at 78 degrees. One source told Keil that Babs kept the 16 rooms in her unoccupied Central Park West triplex as cold as a meat locker.

And don't forget the time Streisand urged everyone to conserve energy by hanging laundry outside on lines, rather than use electric clothes dryers. But when asked if Streisand herself was using a backyard clothesline, her spokesman said: "She never meant that it necessarily applied to her."



 

GoingUp

Lifer
Jul 31, 2002
16,720
1
71
I hate that woman to no end....

Wonder if shes in Milwaukee passing out cigarettes to homeless people like the democrats did in 2000 for their votes
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,380
8,509
126
i think that woman has had too much cocaine in her life
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
Now liberal activist Barbra Streisand is privately saying that Sen. Paul Wellstone's plane crash was "no accident."

The republicans have built this huge weather producing machine that no one knows about. The used it up there in Minnesota knowing the pilot of the plane could not handle the inclement weather conditions that day.
 

bGIveNs33

Golden Member
Jul 10, 2002
1,543
0
71
Actually.... Wellstone was behind in the polls... republicans wouldn't want him dead.
 

Desslok

Diamond Member
Jun 14, 2001
3,780
11
81
Damn she caught us! It was part of the vast right wing conspiracy that Hillary Rodam found out about and tried to expose
rolleye.gif
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,380
8,509
126
Originally posted by: Desslok
Damn she caught us! It was part of the vast right wing conspiracy that Hillary Rodam found out about and tried to expose
rolleye.gif

well shes the smartest woman in the world so of course she would know about it
 

Mookow

Lifer
Apr 24, 2001
10,162
0
0
Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: Desslok
Damn she caught us! It was part of the vast right wing conspiracy that Hillary Rodam found out about and tried to expose
rolleye.gif

well shes the smartest woman in the world so of course she would know about it

What's that "wo" thing doing there?
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,795
84
91
sorry, even babs isn't stupid as conservative whore Ann Coulter.


by Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times [US]
July 22, 2002

If Ann Coulter were a singer, she'd be Ethel Merman. Even her photos are blunt and loud. In the cover shot of Coulter's book, Slander: Liberal Lies About the American Right , she displays the most chilling stare this side of Honey Bunny in "Pulp Fiction."

But despite the vast, left-wing conspiracy working against her, Coulter has appeared on every show this side of "Meet the Osbournes" to plug the book. Slander is No. 1 on the Publishers Weekly list, No. 1 on the New York Times list, No. 3 on amazon.com and No. 1 in the hearts of liberal-bashing Americans from coast to coast.

Seems like a good time to point out just a few of the hateful proclamations, misleading assertions and incorrect statements in the book.

On p. 4, Coulter establishes her tone--and her propensity for twisting quotes like Twizzler sticks to suit her needs--when she writes: "The infernal flag-waving after 9/11 nearly drove liberals out of their gourds. For the left, 'flag-waving' is an epithet. Liberals variously call the flag a 'joke,' 'very, very dumb,' and--most cutting--'not cosmopolitan.' ''

The "joke" quote is attributed to director Robert Altman, who was primarily criticizing the Bush administration. Also, Altman was talking not about genuine displays of patriotism, but the commercialized omnipresence of the flag. As he later told People magazine, "I don't think [the American flag] should be on brassieres."

Hmmm. Sounds likes an opinion Coulter would applaud.

As for the "very, very dumb" remark, the article Coulter cites is a New York Times piece about a controversy in Honolulu last November when an American flag was raised atop the Iolani Palace, the 19th century seat of the Hawaiian monarchy. Reacting to the suggestion that Hawaiians aren't as patriotic as other Americans, University of Hawaii-West Oahu professor Dan Boylan said, "This is when people start acting very, very dumb in their patriotism and flag-waving. I'll take Dan Inouye's empty sleeve as patriotism long before I'll take a passing bumper sticker on my car that says, 'America Forever.' "

Boylan was referring to former U.S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, who lost an arm in World War II. And I don't see how you can view his statement as anything but intelligent and pro-American.

Finally there's Coulter's charge that "liberals" call the flag "not cosmopolitan." Once again she lifts a statement out of context and makes a huge generalization about millions of people: those dreaded liberals.

The source Coulter cites, yet again, is a New York Times article. (Coulter hates the New York Times, but she uses it as a research tool more often than an undergrad with a double major.) Noting that the American flag didn't have a huge presence in New York prior to 9/11, historian David Nasaw said, "New York has just been too much of a cosmopolitan town for flag-waving. It is the home of the UN, and a place filled with tourists, with immigrants, with people doing trade."

How Coulter decided that Nasaw is a "liberal" is beyond me. In any case, she either fails to understand or chooses to ignore the fact that Nasaw was using the primary definition of cosmopolitan, i.e., "belonging to all the world." He wasn't saying it was uncool to display the flag, as Coulter charges. And he was talking about New York before 9/11.

So to varying degrees, all three quotes are misrepresented by Coulter as emblematic of the vitriolic rantings of anti-American "liberals."

How utterly bogus.

*****

Coulter peppers her prose with terribly faulty analogies, e.g., "Hiring [George] Stephanopoulos [to do television] would be the equivalent of a major network hiring Chuck Colson immediately after Watergate."

Well, no. Chuck Colson was convicted of obstruction of justice, a felony, and served seven months in prison. Stephanopoulos' biggest crime was writing a self-aggrandizing tell-all book.

Coulter also has a habit of chastising liberals for their methodology and then using the same techniques to make her own points. She argues that it's wrong for liberals to compare Rush Limbaugh to the major news organizations because Limbaugh is "a noted polemicist" engaging in "satirical commentary," yet when Coulter needs examples to back up her claims that news organizations target conservatives, she routinely quotes columnists. Um, aren't they supposed to have opinions?

A careful analysis--hell, a casual read--of Coulter's book reveals that she often shines the spotlight on her own mistakes. On p. 51 she writes, "[F]or the media to . . . call you an 'airhead' [Katie Couric on Ronald Reagan]--well, that makes strong men tremble and weak men liberals."

Except Couric never actually called Reagan an airhead. On p. 133 of her own book, Coulter writes that what Couric said was: "The Gipper was an airhead. That's one of the new conclusions of a new biography of Ronald Reagan that's drawing a tremendous amount of interest and fire today." (The book's author, Edmund Morris, had said his first impression was that Reagan was "an apparent airhead.")

So for Coulter to write that Couric was the one labeling Reagan an airhead, would be, let's see, what's the word? Oh yeah. A lie.

More fun with Ann tomorrow.


Part 2: Coulter's 'Slander' a lazy mix of errors, invective
Posted on Sunday, July 28 @ 16:29:32 EDT by JohnBrown
Submitted by sv3n


by Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times [US]
July 23rd, 2002

Part 2 of a 2 part series

In her book Slander: Liberal Lies About the American Right , the hyperventilating conservative pundit Ann Coulter states that one of the "unbending rules of the universe" is that "It is horrendous to attack a woman for her looks."

Yet in the very next paragraph, Coulter writes, "A blind man in America would think the ugliest women ever . . . are Paula Jones, Linda Tripp, and Katherine Harris. This from the party of Bella Abzug."

Now that's impressive. With a two-paragraph spread, Coulter just might have set the record for hypocritical invective.

And Coulter must think Rush Limbaugh is "horrendous," seeing as how Limbaugh has mocked the looks of Hillary and Chelsea Clinton and Sally Jessy Raphael, among others.

Speaking of Limbaugh, Coulter tells her readers, "Locating some minor accuracy by Rush Limbaugh ... turned out to be more difficult than I imagined ..." and goes on to speculate about the "off chance that anyone ever ... locate some minor inaccuracy ..." in Limbaugh's work.

Minor inaccuracy? Limbaugh's committed dozens of MAJOR gaffes over the years, e.g., "It has not been proven that nicotine is addictive."

Yippee! Smoke 'em if you got 'em.

*****

An ongoing theme of Slander is that liberals never want to talk issues--that it's all about name-calling and making emotional arguments.

Ahem. From Coulter's own book:

P. 26: "The [Ku Klux] Klan sees the world in terms of race and ethnicity. So do liberals!"

P. 157: "The good part of being a Democrat is that you can commit crimes, sell out your base, bomb foreigners, and rape women, and the Democratic faithful still think you're the greatest."

p. 123: "Everyone knows it's an insult to be called a liberal, widely understood to connote a dastardly individual."

p. 181: Katie Couric is "the affable Eva Braun of morning TV."

Good thing Coulter isn't like those liberals who resort to cheap generalizations and insanely inaccurate accusations.

*****

Coulter demonstrates sloppy bias when she writes, "When ABC was considering scrapping Ted Koppel's 'Nightline' in early 2002 because of its low ratings, the most common reaction was, 'Is that still on?' "

Of course, the primary reason ABC considered dropping "Nightline" wasn't ratings--it was the chance to hire David Letterman. As for "the most common" reaction, Coulter's jibe makes her seem silly and uninformed. Yes, dear, "Nightline" is still on. Tell all your friends.

Coulter is equally disingenuous--or is it lazy?--when she reports what she perceives to be a typical example of liberal bias in the media:

"[Jesse] Jackson's son also got his own television show--while actually serving in Congress. A CBS-owned Chicago television station, WBBM-Channel 2, gave the Democratic congressman his own talk show, 'Chicago Focus With Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.' ''

Wrong again. True, it was once announced that Jackson would be getting a weekly show on Channel 2, but the program never came close to getting on the air. It's been two years since the idea died.

And it's just plain funny when Coulter charges that "the entire information industry works overtime to suppress conservative books . . .publishers don't like conservative books, the major media ignore them, and bookstores refuse to stock them." On the very next page, Coulter cites a long list of best-selling books by conservative authors. So the "entire information industry" is suppressing books by conservative writers, yet many of these books have been top sellers. It's a miracle.

*****

In an effort to illustrate media slant, Coulter writes: "In the New York Times archives, 'moderate Republican' has been used 168 times. [But] there have been only 11 sightings of a 'liberal Republican.' "

But the American Prospect Weblog Tapped did a search of the New York Times archives and found 524 mentions of "liberal Republicans."

I guess some conservatives just aren't that good with a computer.

*****

Coulter repeatedly drags up two tired urban legends about Al Gore --the "invented the Internet" and "Love Story" tales--and passes them off as fact, even though both have been thoroughly debunked.

And she makes the claim that unlike Gore, George W. Bush was no fortunate son: "When Bush was admitted to Yale, his father was a little-known congressman ... His father was a Yale alumnus, but so were a lot of other boys' parents. It was Gore, not Bush, who had a famous father likely to impress college admissions committees."

Right. Dubya was a Phillips Academy preppie whose Yalie father was a congressman and whose Yalie grandfather was a two-term U.S. Senator. I'm sure the whole Bush clan was lighting candles every night while waiting to hear if Georgie boy was going to be admitted.

Coulter reminds me of the little girl in "Hey Arnold!" who shouts in Arnold's face that she hates him--though she secretly loves him.

Maybe that's how Ann feels about liberals. Maybe deep down, she's got a crush on us. It's kinda cute.

 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,795
84
91
FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2002
ANN COULTER, WITH HELP FROM HER FRIENDS: No doubt about it. According to Coulter, life is tough if you?re a conservative, constantly targeted by ?the left.? How tough is it? Here?s the question Katie Couric asked when she ?berated? poor Arlen Specter (see yesterday?s HOWLER for background):

COURIC: You know, you angered a lot of feminists when you accused Anita Hill. In fact, you detail how she changed her testimony during questioning, during the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings. And you accused her of publicly, quote, ?flat out perjury.? Any regrets?
?Any regrets!? What a zinger! Somehow, Specter soldiered on. ?I think it was an impolitic thing to say,? he replied. ?But I think that it was warranted on the facts. And in this book, I go into great detail as to how I came to that conclusion and why, and how another key member of the Judiciary Committee agreed with me.? According to the NBC transcript, Couric berated him further:
COURIC: Uh-huh.
SPECTER: And it was necessary in my view to find out what happened as best we could. There was a very late challenge to Clarence Thomas, and I thought that as a matter of fairness, we had to try to find out the facts.

Couric asked no follow-up question, asking next about Marc Rich?a topic ?the left? will always raise whenever it wants to score points.
Amazing, isn?t it? Couric asked a single, mild question about a subject which Specter had brought up himself. She posed no follow-up question. But this is one of Coulter?s first examples?on page two of her book?of the way ?the public square is wall-to-wall liberal propaganda.? Of course, her misused readers have no way of knowing how mild Couric?s questioning actually was. Coulter?dissembling, as she does through her book?provides a phantasmagoric account of this exchange. How did Coulter describe the session? Let?s review. We?re not making this up:

COULTER (page two): In this universe, the public square is wall-to-wall liberal propaganda. Americans wake up in the morning to ?America?s Sweetheart,? Katie Couric, berating Arlen Specter about Anita Hill ten years after the hearings?
As a description of Couric?s exchange with Specter, that is pure pathology. But then, Coulter baldly misleads her readers on virtually every page of this laughable, corrupt book.
But Coulter is appearing on TV shows now to peddle her book, and her hosts are too lazy, too incompetent, too bought-off and scared to challenge her crackpot dissembling. Last night, Bill O?Reilly?s worthless performance qualified him for a spot down the row from Ted Williams. At Slate, meanwhile, Mickey Kaus?too lazy and indifferent to the public interest to dirty his hands with actual research?says that a certain part of Coulter?s book ?appears to be completely accurate.? In fact, the part of the book to which Kaus refers is also absurdly misleading and bogus. We?ll look at the topic in question next week (sneak preview offered below).

We?re reminded of the hoary old joke about Moses playing golf. (Easily offended people, stop reading.) In Heaven, the Holy Trinity invites Moses to fill out a foursome. Needless to say, God the Father has the honors; Jesus and the Holy Spirit tee off next. Moses watches as they hit a succession of Biblically-themed, perfect hole-in-one trick-shots. After the Dove of Peace takes the Holy Spirit?s ball in his mouth and drops it neatly into the hole, Moses can?t hold it in any longer. ?Are we here to play golf,? Moses asks, ?or are we really just here to f*ck around??

Coulter is a crackpot, a clown?and a balls-out dissembler. Her procedures are an insult to the American public interest. And so we have a simple question for lazy O?Reilly and worthless Kaus. Nobody made you host a TV show. Nobody forced you to go on the web. But boys, are you here to perform your actual duties? Or are you really just here to f*ck around?

SNEAK PREVIEW: Did Couric call Reagan an ?airhead?? (No.) Did she attribute that claim to biographer Edmund Morris? (Yes.) As you probably know, Coulter is currently riding this topic as she angrily tours the country. It?s the topic O?Reilly snored through last night. Kaus pretended to review this same topic.

Predictably, the background to the silly story can?t be gleaned from Coulter?s book. Details to follow next week. But as a sneak preview, let?s recall what was going on in the final week of September 1999, as Morris? book was about to appear. During that period, many people were saying that Morris had called Ronald Reagan an ?airhead.? (They weren?t exactly wrong, by the way.) Coulter savages Couric?s work on September 27 and 29, 1999. But during this period, many others were saying that Edmund Morris called Reagan an airhead. Here?s someone Coulter forgot to cite. No, he?s not on ?the left:?

SEAN HANNITY, 9/27/99: Welcome back to Hannity & Colmes. I?m Sean Hannity. Coming up, the authorized biography of Ronald Reagan calls him, quote, an airhead. And it is upsetting a lot of the former president?s supporters. That debate, that controversy, is straight ahead.
SEAN HANNITY, 9/30/99: Still to come, former Reagan Attorney General Edwin Meese. He sounds off on that controversial book that calls President Reagan an airhead. That debate straight ahead as Hannity & Colmes continues.

Last night on O?Reilly, Coulter condemned Couric for making the same sorts of statements. She said the statements showed that Katie Couric is ?a pleasant morning television host who hides behind her charm and beauty to engage in systematic propaganda of all sorts of left-wing ideas.? But Hannity?and many other talkers?were saying the very same things at the time. Coulter, dissembling, left that part out. Needless to say, Bill was clueless.
WALL-TO-WALL PROPAGANDA: Two quotes from September 27, 1999. Included is one of the very remarks for which Ann has been trashing poor Katie:

KATIE COURIC, 9/27/99: Good morning. The Gipper was an airhead. That?s one of the conclusions of a new biography of Ronald Reagan that?s drawing a tremendous amount of interest and fire today, Monday, September the 27th, 1999.
SEAN HANNITY, 9/27/99: Welcome back to Hannity & Colmes. I?m Sean Hannity. Coming up, the authorized biography of Ronald Reagan calls him, quote, an airhead. And it is upsetting a lot of the former president?s supporters.

According to Coulter, Couric was pushing the left?s propaganda. Hannity? He?s been disappeared.
NEXT: Why were journalists saying these things? More notes on Ann Coulter?s bad problem.


THURSDAY, JULY 11, 2002

WRONG FROM THE START: Unsurprisingly, Ann Coulter?s bald-faced dissembling starts on page one, with the very first claim in her book. She complains about the way ?the left? calls Tom DeLay naughty names like ?the Hammer.? (The Washington Times archive is full of examples of conservatives calling DeLay ?The Hammer.? The Washington Post article which Coulter cites quotes Christian conservative Marshall Wittman calling DeLay ?Dirty Harry.?) But Coulter?s quintessential, trademark dissembling is found in her follow-up claim. How badly does ?the left? treat DeLay? Just because he believes in God, they even compare him to Hitler:

COULTER (page 1): For his evident belief in a higher being, DeLay is compared to savage murderers and genocidal lunatics on the pages of the New York Times. (?History teaches that when religion is injected into politics?the Crusades, Henry VIII, Salem, Father Coughlin, Hitler, Kosovo?disaster follows.?)
As usual, Coulter is baldly deceiving her readers. Because we?re familiar with the lady?s bad problem, we looked up that quote from the New York Times. It comes from a column by Maureen Dowd, ?The God Squad,? written on June 20, 1999.
In fairness, Dowd does spend five paragraphs on DeLay. She slams him for killing gun control legislation after the Columbine shootings. She criticizes him for statements he made at a rally of ministers. ?This is the season of cheap virtue,? Dowd writes. ?Politicians are rushing to take God?s name in vain.?

But that?s the end of the day for DeLay. Guess which ?politicians? she?s directly discussing by the time she gets to that turrible quote? She isn?t discussing DeLay any more. She?s discussing George Bush?and Al Gore:

DOWD: The season of sanctimony isn?t confined to the legislative branch. According to Time, George W. Bush decided to run for President at a private prayer service with his family last January: ?Pastor Mark Craig started preaching about duty, about how Moses tried to resist God?s call, and the sacrifice that leadership requires. And as they sat there, Barbara Bush leaned over to the son who has always been most like her and said, ?He?s talking to you, George.??
You?d think W. would be aware of the perils of religiosity after he had to spend all that time clarifying his 1993 comment that people who do not accept Jesus Christ as a personal Saviour cannot go to Heaven.

In his announcement speech in Carthage, Al Gore joined the God Squad, intoning that ?most Americans are hungry for a deeper connection between politics and moral values; many would say ?spiritual values.? Without values of conscience, our political life degenerates.?

Faith is an intensely personal matter. It should not be treated as a credential or reduced to a sound bite. History teaches that when religion is injected into politics?the Crusades, Henry VIII, Salem, Father Coughlin, Hitler, Kosovo?disaster follows.

Was ?the Times? comparing DeLay to Hitler? More directly, it was comparing Al Gore.
But so it goes on every page, all through Coulter?s pathological book. Meanwhile, Mickey Kaus thinks this is just fine. We have a strange question: Why is that?

A REAL PAGE-TURNER: Coulter keeps it up on page two. To cite just one example of several, she starts in on favorite mark Katie Couric:

COULTER (page two): Americans wake up to ?America?s Sweetheart,? Katie Couric, berating Arlen Specter about Anita Hill ten years after the hearings.
The implication is clear; Couric won?t stop flogging Anita Hill. And she won?t stop ?berating? Republicans. And so we looked up Coulter?s reference, a Specter appearance on the March 6, 2001 Today. The solon was there to promote a new book. ?Nice to have you,? Couric said. ?What motivated you to write this book?? And you guessed it; Specter cited his desire to discuss the Anita Hill matter:
SPECTER: Because I wanted to tell what is happening behind the scenes. I have been criticized for more than three decades for my work as one of the young staff lawyers on the Warren Commission where I came up with the single bullet theory, and I thought it was important to write it all down just exactly why I came to that conclusion and why the commission accepted it. I go into some of the background on the Professor Anita Hill/Justice Clarence Thomas controversy, take up some questions which never got to the public, such as why we never called Angela Wright, who was a young woman who had a story very similar to Anita Hill?s. I go into the background of what happened on Judge Bork?s confirmation hearing and one of the big concerns that I had about Judge Bork on his technical approach and lack of humanitarianism, when he upheld the decision which said that women who worked for a lead company either had to consent to be sterilized or to lose their jobs, which I thought was exactly wrong.
After one question on the Warren Commission and two more questions about the Bork hearings, Couric asked exactly one question about the Anita Hill case.
As we?ll see, this gong-show dissembling litters this book. Why does Mickey Kaus seem to like it?

IN SIMPLE ENGLISH, THEY DID CLEAR BUSH: Some pundits are insisting that the SEC never cleared Bush of insider trading. Sorry, that?s just Kafkaesque. It is true that, in 1993, the SEC told the Bush campaign that it shouldn?t say that Bush was ?exonerated? by its probe. But seven years later, the SEC?s internal documents emerged. Reviewing those documents, it is perfectly clear that, if we?re still speaking English, the agency?s gumshoes did clear Bush. (You can review the docs yourself. Go to www.publicintegrity.org.)

Why was Bush investigated? According to the charge, Bush sold his Harken stock in June 1990 because he had insider knowledge that Harken was going to report unexpectedly large second-quarter losses. Unambiguously, the SEC found that Bush had no such knowledge at the time of his sale. In fact, the agency?s gumshoes found that no one at Harken knew, at that time, about the size of the impending losses. ?y June 22 (the date when Bush sold), no actual revenue or loss information was available for the second two months of the quarter ended June 30,? one of the SEC summaries noted. ?The staff?s investigation indicates that, at most, Bush was aware that Harken was forecasted to lose approximately $4.2 million in the second quarter.? The actual loss turned out to be $23.2 million. The SEC docs assert, again and again, that neither Bush nor anyone else at Harken knew about these impending losses at the time of his sale.

So let?s see. Bush is accused of selling due to insider info. The SEC finds that he didn?t have that info. Go ahead and say they were wrong if you like. But we?re living in a Kafkaesque world if that means that they ?didn?t clear? Bush. (For the record, none of this has a thing to do with that 1989 Aloha transaction.)

In today?s Wall Street Journal, Al Hunt lowers the bar for accusers. ?Whether [Bush] violated the spirit of the securities law in his 1990 Harken Energy transaction obscures a larger point,? Hunt writes (emphasis added). So let?s see. If you?re accused of trading due to insider info, and it turns out that you didn?t have that info, you haven?t violated the letter of the law, but somehow you?ve trampled its spirit. The last time we saw scribes playing this game, it involved a small spot known as Whitewater.

TOMORROW: More on Ann Coulter?s bad problem.


WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 2002

ANN COULTER'S PROBLEM WITH THE TRUTH: At Fox, on-air personalities enjoy a good laugh when fiery Ann Coulter comes calling. Monday morning, she regaled the gang at Fox and Friends with her tale of a grand NEXIS search. Coulter was complaining about the way the press pretends that those Dems are so brainy:

COULTER: ?Cerebral Bill Bradley,? for example, I mean that?s the most striking example. You run a Lexis-Nexis search?as I did?on Bill Bradley and you would think his first name was ?Cerebral.? His name never got mentioned [inaudible] ?Cerebral Bill Bradley.?
The whole thing sounded like so much fun, we decided to run the same search. So we sent the phrase ?cerebral Bill Bradley? through the NEXIS file for the period from 1/1/99 through 4/1/00?the fifteen months when Bradley was running for president. Bradley was, without any question, a press favorite during the bulk of his run. The cerebral solon got oodles of coverage during the period in question.
Our finding? According to current NEXIS files, the phrase ?cerebral Bill Bradley? appeared in American newspapers exactly six times in that fifteen-month period. The phrase didn?t appear in any magazine. Here are the six lonely cites in the file. Note the big papers involved here:

Sandy Grady, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, 3/18/99

Sandy Grady, Bergen County Record, 3/23/99

Robert Jordan, Boston Globe, 4/23/99

Sandy Grady, Raleigh News and Observer, 11/10/99

Sandy Grady, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, 11/6/99

Editorial, Albany Times-Union, 3/10/00

That?s right, folks. If it weren?t for Sandy Grady, there would hardly have been a ?Cerebral Bill Bradley? at all. According to NEXIS, the only major rag in which the phrase appeared was the Bradley-loving Boston Globe, where the phrase appeared exactly once. The phrase never appeared in the Washington Post or the New York Times. And, of course, the phrase never appeared in Time, U.S. News, or Newsweek. Not even the National Review.
Again, this isn?t meant to suggest that ?Dollar Bill? got bad coverage from the press. This is meant as a commentary on dissembling Ann Coulter and the problem she has with the truth. Let?s face it?Coulter never ran any such search as the one she described to her simpering pals. But making it up is the norm for Ann Coulter?and her friends in the media choose not to notice, willing to put up with her ?hackwork? and her clowning.

By the way, wasn?t it only a few years back when pundits were troubled by this sort of thing? In October 2000, for example, a certain columnist was very disturbed by the way Al Gore just kept making things up. ?It?s as if every time Clinton drops his pants, Gore tells a lie,? she slanderously said. This same scribe complained about ?Gore?s endless boasts,? and she said, ?[m]aking stuff up is surely one of Gore?s leading negatives in this campaign.?

That outraged columnist was, of course, Ann Coulter. And guess what? Coulter exaggerates, embellishes, embroiders and misstates on virtually every page of her new oddball book. (She also embellished almost all of Gore?s ?boasts.?) She misrepresents the things people say; she invents NEXIS searches that back up her tales. At Fox and Friends, they think it?s smart. But when will serious folks in the press corps take notice of Ann Coulter?s problem?

MAYBE SHE REALLY MEANT?: In our usual excess of fairness, we decided to go the extra mile; we ran ?cerebral Bradley? through NEXIS, too, looking for extra citations. Result? Five cites in American papers and magazines, two of them openly mocking. Here?s an example of the way the press kept trying to build up those Dems:

SUSAN ISAACS, Newsday, 1/20/00: He?s not just accessible. He?s a boon companion. Vital. Real, albeit larger than life. John McCain is so dynamic the other candidates?stilted Gore, cerebral Bradley, careful-of-everything-you-say-so-you-don?t-screw-up Bush, pompous Hatch, goofy Forbes?are zombies in comparison.
That?s right. Isaacs was saying how great McCain was compared to ?cerebral [Bill] Bradley.?
On Fox and Friends, Coulter was making it up. But then, she makes it up on all through her daft book. Oh, by the way?we just ran ?Dollar Bill Bradley? through the same NEXIS base. Fifteen months gave us 32 cites?and a few hundred more if you take ?Dollar Bill? on its own. Coulter knew not to say it on Fox. But Bill Bradley already has a first name, and that pet name is ?Dollar,? not ?Cerebral.?

TOMORROW: More notes on Ann Coulter?s bad problem.


TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2002

SOMETIMES YOU FEEL LIKE YOU?RE READING A NUT: To his credit, Christopher Caldwell didn?t play nice in his review of Ann Coulter?s new Slander. ?he has produced a piece of political hackwork,? he says, writing in Sunday?s Washington Post. ?The deeper into her subject she gets, the more she resorts to the tools of calumny and propaganda she professes to critique.? Caldwell hails from the Weekly Standard, but he?s willing to play it straight about Coulter?s pathologically inaccurate book. How hard-hitting is Caldwell?s critique? He finally turns to the type of language a person must use to describe Coulter?s work. At one point in Slander, according to Caldwell, Coulter ?enter the territory of those leftist nuts who say we?re living in a dictatorship because Noam Chomsky isn?t on the front page of the New York Times every single day?

No, he doesn?t quite say that Coulter?s a ?nut??but he comes admirably close. Indeed, there is no polite way to describe the nonsense found throughout Coulter?s book. Simply put, Coulter?s accounts of all matters, large and small, are almost pathologically bogus. Unfortunately, cable producers?always pleased to make a joke of our discourse?have no present plans to take notice.

Consider just one of the ludicrous moments in Slander. In Chapter 9, Coulter complains about the press corps? use of the terms ?Christian conservative? and ?religious right.? According to Coulter, ?[t]he point of the phrase ?religious right? or ?Christian conservative? is not to define but to belittle.? And lefties, of course, get a pass:

COULTER (page 166): Despite the constant threat of the ?religious right? in America, there is evidently no such thing as the ?atheist left.? In a typical year, the New York Times refers to either ?Christian conservatives? or the ?religious right? almost two hundred times. But in a Lexis/Nexis search of the entire New York Times archives, the phrases ?atheist liberals? or ?the atheist left? do not appear once. Only deviations from the left-wing norm merit labels.
In a footnote, Coulter extends her complaint. ?In a one year period (roughly corresponding to calendar year 2000), the New York Times found occasion to mention either ?Christian conservatives? or the ?religious right? 187 times. Not once did the paper refer to ?atheist liberals? or ?the atheist left.?? To Coulter, of course, this is all a sign of gruesome bias. She goes on to claim that the terms ?religious right? and ?Christian conservative? are now used ?[j]ust as some people once spat out the term ?Jew? as an insult.?
It certainly makes for high excitement, but does it make any sense? Do newspapers use ?Christian conservative? as an emblem of hatred, and avoid ?atheist left? due to liberal bias? If so, we have big news to share. If Coulter?s NEXIS search has proven these things, then the once-conservative Washington Times is spilling with lib bias, too.

In the calendar year 2000, how often did the New York Times refer to ?Christian conservatives? or the ?religious right?? A NEXIS search of that year presents 182 references. But the Washington Times?a much slimmer paper?had 151 such cites that same year. And how about those other terms??atheist liberals? or ?the atheist left?? Incredibly, Coulter was right in one of her claims; the New York Times never used either term. But guess what? The Washington Times never used the terms, either. If Coulter has sniffed out a vast left-wing plot, Wes Pruden is in on it too.

Why do newspapers write about ?Christian conservatives?? Because they exist, and because they?re important. And why don?t we read about the ?atheist left?? Because the group doesn?t exist. That?s why the New York Times doesn?t mention the group; that?s why the Washington Times doesn?t mention it, either. Everyone in America knows this is true?until they read Coulter?s cracked book.

But then, such nonsense fills every page of this book. There is no other pundit?of the left, right or center?who engages in such pathological foolishness. Caldwell, a conservative, was prepared to say ?Nut.? Why won?t Mickey Kaus say it also?

TOMORROW: Mickey Kaus spent ten seconds, tops, researching Katie Couric?s recent ?catfight.?

STRAWMEN OF THE WORLD, COLLAPSE: As we?ve often said, the power to paraphrase is the power to spin. Andrew Sullivan employs the tool in his eponymous website this morning. He improves what Nicholas Kristof says in today?s New York Times:

SULLIVAN: Nick Kristof, after yet another murder of Jews by a Muslim hater, worries about American religious bigotry. ?If we want Saudi princes to confront their society?s hate-mongers, our own leaders should confront ours,? he preaches. Our bigotry is as bad as theirs, he opines. Excuse me? When conservative Christians start murdering thousands of Muslim and Jewish civilians in the Middle East, it will be. Until then, there is simply no equivalence between anti-Muslim bigotry in the U.S. and anti-Western and anti-Semitic terrorism in the Arab world.
Can you spot the inventive paraphrase? Just to help, we put it in bold. But where exactly in Kristof?s column does he say that ?our bigotry is as bad as? that in the Arab world? The answer is simple?he doesn?t say it at all. Let?s face it: If Kristof actually said such a thing, Sully would rush you the quote.
By the way, inventive paraphrase dominates Slander. Coulter?s the reigning queen of the two-word quote, which she then surrounds with absurd accounts of what the person in question supposedly ?said.? It?s a favored technique of dissemblers worldwide. Absurd examples from Coulter?s book will appear here as soon as tomorrow.


MONDAY, JULY 8, 2002

AND NOW FOR THE REST OF THE STORY: In 1990, George W. Bush sold 212,000 shares of stock in the Harken Energy Corporation. Soon thereafter, Harken announced a large second-quarter loss, and its stock price tumbled a bit. (It had already dropped, by a larger amount, when Iraq invaded Kuwait.) Because Bush sat on Harken?s audit committee, the timing of Bush?s stock sale was questioned. In 1991, the SEC investigated, concerned about insider trading.

Over the years, there has been good news and bad news for President Bush regarding his sale of that stock. First a bit of slightly bad news: In his 1994 gubernatorial debate with Ann Richards, Candidate Bush misstated the contents of an SEC letter about its probe of his sale. Bush?s campaign had asked the SEC to issue a statement about the matter. In a letter to Bush?s lawyer, the SEC said, ?the investigation has been terminated as to the conduct of Mr. Bush, and?at this time, no enforcement action is contemplated with respect to him.? But the letter also said that this ?must in no way be construed as indicating that the party has been exonerated or that no action may ultimately result.? Despite this, Bush explicitly said, during the Richards debate, that he had been ?exonerated? by the SEC?s probe. Why, you could almost say he embellished the facts! Richards corrected his error.

On the other hand, there was good news for Bush in September 2000, which some scribes now seem to be glossing. Responding to a Freedom of Information request by the Associated Press and the Dallas Morning News, the SEC released a boatload of documents about its probe of Bush. On September 6, 2000, the AP?s Pete Yost quoted a summary by investigators. ?It appears that Bush did not engage in illegal insider trading,? the gumshoes had written in 1992, ?because it does not appear that he possessed material nonpublic information or that he acted with [intent to defraud] when he sold the Harken stock.? According to Yost, ?[t]he investigators noted that Bush did not initiate the sale of his stock, that he was approached by a broker and checked with the company?s general counsel about the propriety of the sale before carrying it out.? Additionally, the AP asked NYU law prof Stephen Gillers to review the SEC docs. According to Yost, Gillers ?said the agency made a sound judgment legally and ethically to close the insider trading probe without interviewing Bush.? On September 7, the Dallas Morning News drew similar conclusions from its own review of the SEC documents. (Headline: ?Records show what Bush knew before stock sale; Regulators concluded in 1992 that he did nothing improper.?) Had the SEC taken a dive for Bush, whose pappy was prez at the time of the probe? ?We?re dealing with investigators here who are not political appointees,? Gillers told the AP?s Yost. More from Yost: ?Gillers said the evidence contained in the SEC documents was ?fairly persuasive against proceeding? against Bush.?

For the record, none of this speaks to a separate question, recently raised in two Paul Krugman columns. When Bush sat on Harken?s audit committee, did he know about a shaky 1989 deal involving Aloha Petroleum, a Harken subsidiary? On Saturday, Paul Kedrosky of the National Post wrote that ?[w]hile it seems clear from SEC documents that Mr. Bush didn?t know about the problems with Aloha, it also seems clear he should have known.? Yesterday, Krugman seemed to suggest that Bush may have known. ?If Mr. Bush didn?t know about the Aloha maneuver, he was a very negligent director,? Krugman wrote. Is there any evidence that Bush knew about the Aloha maneuver? The SEC documents suggest that he didn?t. Is it fair to say that he should have known? On that, we don?t have a clue. But Aloha is, at least on face, a separate matter from the charge concerning insider trading. When the SEC investigated Bush?s sale of stock, Aloha was not directly at issue.

Here at THE HOWLER, we?re not legal eagles. We can?t competently judge the docs for ourselves. But several matters have been conflated in recent reporting about Harken happenings. If the AP, the DMN, and Gillers were right, the SEC found strongly for Bush concerning the question of insider trading. Did Bush do something wrong at Harken? Here at the HOWLER, we don?t have a clue. But those who want to suggest wrongdoing need to account for the SEC?s findings. Clinton was slimed by bad-faith business reporting. The press shouldn?t make it a habit.

WILLING TO DO AND SAY ANYTHING? On the other hand, Candidate Bush was stretchin? and strainin? in that debate with Ann Richards. First there was his overstatement about the SEC?s letter. At another point, he memorably said, ?I proudly proclaim I?ve never held office. I have been in the business world all my adult life. I have met a payroll. I know what it means to risk capital.? What made this presentation so comical? Bush had ?never held office? for one major reason; when he ran for office in 1978, the voters had (narrowly) turned his bid down. That was Bush?s race for Congress; he had also explored the possibility of running for the Texas state senate in 1972, and for governor in 1990. Meanwhile, Bush embellished his description of Richards, slamming her as a career politician. ?If Texans want someone who has spent her entire adult life in politics, they should not vote for me,? he said. Hmmm. Richards first ran for office at age 43. Bush, by contrast, was 32 when he spent a year running for Congress.

Why do these otherwise unremarkable stretchers leap up off the page today? Because of the way the press corps covered the Bush-Gore race six years later. The script was known to one and all?Candidate Gore will do and say anything. Gore is inclined to embellish and lie. In order to ?prove? that nasty charge, embellishing journalists made themselves useful, inventing ?misstatements? by Gore. To cite one world-class example of press corps dissembling, the Boston Globe?s Walter Robinson sifted through decades of statements by Gore, searching for ways to call him a liar. Unable to find enough actual howlers, he stretched and strained and made a bunch up. How absurd was Robinson?s work? Baldly deceiving the Globe?s misused readers, he even pretended he didn?t know why Gore claimed ?seven years of journalistic experience.? (Duh! Gore spent two years as an army reporter, then five more years at the Nashville Tennessean.) Bizarrely, Robinson even claimed that Gore was ?creating myths? in praising his father?s civil rights record?and, of course, he strained to find troubling misstatements in Gore?s three dozen public debates. He played silly games in that area too; at one point, Robinson quoted Michael Dukakis in a 1988 debate, telling Gore, ?Please get your facts straight. If you want to be president of the United States, you better start by being accurate.? But here?s what Robinson didn?t mention; examination of the exchange with Dukakis shows that what Gore had said was perfectly reasonable. In the debate in question, Gore criticized something The Duke had said; the same criticism was later made by Jack Kemp and Bob Dole, and was widely made by mainstream pundits. But Globe readers had no way to know this. Craftily, Robinson let his readers assume that Gore must have made something up.

But while Robinson was straining for all he was worth, trying to gimmick up groaners by Gore, did he mention those stretchers by Bush in debate? You?re dreaming if you have to ask. Robinson was typing a rigid press script; therefore, he didn?t examine past statements by Bush. That?s right, kids. Robinson examined twenty-three years worth of statements by Gore, and no years worth of statements by Bush. Then he marveled at the fact that Gore seemed to have more ?misstatements.?

Remember, no one dissembles as much as the press corps. Thrilling details to come in the book.

WHY CHILDREN HAVE TURNED OFF TO BASEBALL: Have you noticed? Journalists won?t give Ted Williams credit for his work in TV newsreels. The place: Scottsdale, Arizona, February 1958. I was ten years old, in town from Boston, to see how the Red Sox were looking. On Ted?s first day in camp, I was alertly sitting behind the dugout when a TV producer signed me up for a spot. The ensuing shoot went much as planned. When Teddy ran out onto the field, I yelled, ?How about an autograph, Mr. Williams?? Ted doubled back and signed my card. That evening, viewers in the Boston area thrilled at our easy interaction.

Don?t even ask about the time I saw Jim Bunning no-hit the Red Sox. Williams made the final out, flying deep to the track in Fenway. Adult fans applauded Bunning, but like other kids in the park, I was hurt. Since that day, I?ve always wondered what kind of a man would pitch his no-hit gems on the road. (Bunning?s second no-hitter, against the Mets, was pitched at Shea Stadium?on Father?s Day!) Years later, of course, Bunning?s cruel tendencies took final form. He reappeared as a heartless pol, supporting the Contract with America.


FRIDAY, JULY 5, 2002

THE LATEST BAD MEN IN BLACK SEQUEL: Could they really be of this earth? Where on this earth could you find such unintelligent life forms? In this morning?s Baltimore Sun, that tired old script-reading pundit, Jules Witcover, robotically mouths the same tired lines his colleagues have all mouthed before him:

WITCOVER: Al Gore, in a recent closed meeting in Memphis with key supporters, vowed that if he runs for president again in 2004, he?ll listen to his own counsel rather than that of consultants, of whom he had a small army in 2000.
?I?d just let it rip,? he said, and ?let the chips fall where they may. ... To hell with the polls, tactics and all the rest.?

That?s a familiar refrain from losing candidates. They imply that it was bum advice from others that cost them the election in question.

Predictably, Witcover?s robotically scripted remarks ran beneath a scripted headline. ?Al Gore seeks to reinvent himself,? the mandatory Gore headline said.
Note the dimness of Witcover?s ?reasoning.? In a closed meeting, Gore is said to have said that he?ll ignore the polls if he runs for the White House again. To Witcover, this means that Gore has ?impl[ied] that it was bum advice from others that cost [him] the election.? But of course, nothing in Gore?s quoted statement actually leads to that naughty conclusion. If the second-hand ?quote? from Gore?s meeting is accurate?and Witcover, of course, doesn?t know if it is?then all Gore really said is this: I paid too much attention to polls. Why would that lead a sane human being to say Gore is blaming consultants?

The answer is perfectly obvious. No sane person reasons this way, but pundits like Witcover are there to type scripts, not to behave like real humans. And, according to the press corps? well-rehearsed scripts, Gore must always be reinventing himself; any unattractive way you can restate his words is perfectly OK after that. In the last week, every pundit in the land has raced to type this new approved script. Where on this earth could our editors find such complete lackeys, such consummate copyists?

Are the Witcovers actually of this earth? Could any human be so dim and so scripted? Last evening at Arundel Mills mall, we were turned away from Men in Black. But with life forms like Witcover running around, do we really have to go to the mall to suspect that ETs now have landed?

PUNDITS SAY THE MOST SIMILAR THINGS: But then, here was Charlie Cook?s utterly hapless assessment. Cook types scripts for the National Journal:

COOK: Listening to former Vice President Al Gore?s graceless remarks over the weekend, when he effectively blamed his 2000 presidential campaign loss on ?polls, tactics and all the rest,? one question kept coming back to me: ?Does he really believe what he?s saying???[F]rom my vantage point it seems that Gore was the weakest link in the Gore/Lieberman campaign?not his pollsters, his strategists, his tacticians or his other consultants.
To Cook, when Gore blames his loss on ?polls and tactics,? he is actually blaming his pollsters and tacticians. Sometimes, work like this makes us flash to Men in Black. But sometimes, after a week of such efforts, we give up and we say, Dumb and Dumber.

http://www.dailyhowler.com/n070802.shtml




Tapped:
Continuous commentary for the week of June 24-June 30 from The American Prospect Online.

Web Exclusive: 6.24.02
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Mon, June 24 | Tues, June 25 | Wed, June 26 | Thurs, June 27 | Fri, June 28 | Sat, June 29 | Sun, June 30


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Friday, June 28

AND ANOTHER THING... Brilliant David Greenberg column on the history of conservative efforts to add "Under God" to the Pledge. [posted 5:10 pm]
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NOTE TO DENNIS HASTERT, DAVID KEENE, AND OTHERS. The judge who wrote the dastardly opinion on the Pledge was appointed by a Republican. So if, like most Beltway conservatives, you think we should do our best to keep such men off the bench, the proper response is obvious: Oppose George W. Bush's nominees! Now that kind of bipartisanship Tapped could live with. [posted 4:30 pm]
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FACT CHECK ANN COULTER! Okay, this isn't from Slander. It's from Coulter's appearance on Hardball, guest-hosted by Mike Barnicle. We missed this gem, but reader R.L. passed it along:

I will guess that the judges who said the Pledge of Allegiance violates the constitution were appointed by Democrats and not Republicans. I haven't looked at the decision. I haven't even heard about the decision because I've been busy today, but that's a wild guess I'm going to make....Oh, I'm just waiting to see if anyone will take any bets on me on whether the judges who wrote the decision were appointed by a Democrat or Republican.
We think we can safely assume the implication here. In actuality, of course, only one of the two judges was appointed by a Democrat -- Judge Stephen Reinhardt, a Carter appointee. The other was Judge Alfred T. Goodwin, who was appointed by that great liberal, Richard Nixon. This really speaks volumes about just what a hack Coulter is; it requires no elaboration on our part. But perhaps now the chat shows will stop billing Coulter as a "constitutional lawyer." No wonder the profession is held in such low regard. [posted 4:30 pm]
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TAPPED GETS RESULTS! A number of bloggers have responded to our call to take up the cudgel against Cal Thomas. How gratifying! Hats off to MaxSpeak, Atrios, Dodgeblog, Adam Magazine, and Writer of Fortune. [posted 4:30 pm]
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THE BIG, BAD, UNITED STATES. This column from the Times of London puts together quite a strong litany of complaints about the United States. It concludes:

By weakening Mr Bush, discrediting the US economic model and undermining America's moral authority, these scandals will confirm a trend which began with the Axis of Evil speech and Mr Bush's over-enthusiastic embrace of Ariel Sharon. By threatening to go to war against countries which have never attacked the United States, and boasting about his power to dispose of any political regimes not to his liking, Mr Bush has lost the respect of both America's military enemies and its allies. Now the loss of international respect for the United States is moving a step further.
America has forfeited its global military leadership by blustering against President Saddam Hussein and failing to curb Mr Sharon. It has forfeited its global diplomatic leadership by abrogating treaties on climate change and criminal justice. It has forfeited its globaleconomic leadership by protecting its steel companies and increasing subsidies to farmers. Now America is forfeiting its global business leadership by failing to enforce proper financial practices and ethical standards. This loss of American leadership will probably be the most enduring legacy of the scandals on Wall Street.

These European attacks on the U.S. always put Tapped in an awkward position. That's because opinions about the extent too which they're correct vary significantly within our own ranks. We're not sure that the latest corporate scandals will be the end of U.S. hegemony (we rather doubt it), but we do know that the piece is worth reading for U.S. liberals, if only to find out for yourself how strongly you agree (or disagree). [posted 1:40 pm]
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THE COURT ON JUDICIAL ELECTIONS. Buried under the much higher profile of the Supreme Court decision on vouchers was another important ruling on judicial elections. The court ruled that some restrictions on what judges can say while they are campaigning are unconstitutional. The core issue here -- how can judges rule fairly on cases if their positions are made known as part of an effort to get elected? -- does present a conundrum, so Tapped thought we'd try and sort it out a bit.

We've never subscribed to the myth that judges are impartial beings. They're not. We need to know what they think on a range of issues before voting for them. If we're going to have judicial elections, we should allow judicial candidates to talk about issues facing the court, and not just their own personal qualifications. They all come with their own political backgrounds, beliefs, philosophies. So why not pull back the curtain and have it all be out in the open? And if we're going to allow judicial candidates to talk about the issues, that should be considered an even greater incentive for public financing of judicial elections -- which will be necessary to remove the perception that the candidates are taking stances to please their big contributors.

We know that many progressives think we should treat judicial elections differently, and try to take the politics out of them. But we believe that underneath the surface of that argument is the view that judicial elections are fundamentally wrong and that "merit" selection (i.e. appointment of judges by politicians) is better. But while that might be true in an ideal world, we think merit selection is just as tainted as the election route. After all, those who are ultimately selected have also done their best to curry favor, in a myriad of ways, with those who select them. [posted 11:35 am]
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ELECTION YEAR ISSUES. Congress had a busy day yesterday -- mostly in election year posturing. We are ever so happy to report that they had the time to rename the post office in Frank Sinatra's home town of Hoboken, New Jersey after him. One of the few bills they've passed that might become law. [posted 11:30 am]
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BEST PIECE ON THE PLEDGE SO FAR. Is by Scott Rosenberg in Salon. (Hint: Rosenberg explains why the Ninth Circuit ruling was absolutely correct.) Tapped recommends that Ralph Neas of People for the American Way -- which, unlike the ACLU, has been unwilling to stand up for the rights of the minority in this case -- read his piece immediately. [posted 11:25 am]
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THE BUSH TWINS SHOULD READ WASHINGTONIAN. If they had, they'd know -- from the mag's recent "Great Nights Out" issue -- that Stetson's is a Democratic bar. [posted 10:00 am]
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WHO'S "ROD PAIGE?" His bio in this Washington Post article says he's Secretary of Education, but Tapped has never heard of him. (Note to literalists: We're joking.) [posted 10:00 am]
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TWO HOT RACES. The Wellstone-Coleman Minnesota senate race remains neck and neck according to the latest polls. The spoiler Green Party candidate polled at 3 percent -- enough to make a heck of a difference. Only 5 percent of the voters polled had no opinion in that race that could tip the balance in the Senate. Meanwhile, in North Carolina, Elizabeth Dole seems to have a slight edge over the likely Democratic nominee, Erskine Bowles. Also to her advantage according to the Times -- though not, we think, to the advantage of voters in the state -- is the fact that the primary election, originally scheduled for May 7, has been postponed indefinitely because of legal challenges to the state's redistricting plan. That's good for Dole because it puts off the general election, and it appears that the more exposure Dole gets statewide the less people like her. [posted 10:00 am]
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TIME STANDS STILL FOR ANN COULTER. Okay, this isn't exactly a "fact check" of Coulter's new book. It's almost too obvious for that. Nevertheless, we couldn't resist pointing out something this glaring. On page four of her book Slander, Coulter writes that "after the September 11 attack on America, all partisan wrangling stopped dead," and soon continues:


The bipartisan lovefest lasted precisely three weeks. That was all the New York Times could endure. Impatient with the national mood of patriotism, liberals returned to their infernal griping about George W. Bush -- or "Half a Commander in Chief," as he was called in the headline of a lead New York Times editorial on November 5, 2001. From that moment on, the left's primary contribution to the war effort was to complain.
Sorry, Ann, but last we checked, November 5 was just under two months after September 11. [posted 9:30 am]
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WE CAN'T BELIEVE THIS. You can say a lot of things about the Pledge of Allegiance ruling released the other day. But never did Tapped believe that anyone -- even Cal Thomas -- would say this:

On the eve of our great national birthday party and in the aftermath of Sept. 11, when millions of us turned to God and prayed for forgiveness of individual and corporate sins and asked for His protection against future attacks, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has inflicted on this nation what many will conclude is a greater injury than that caused by the terrorists.
So although he hedges slightly, it seems that Thomas basically thinks the pledge ruling is worse than 9/11. This is simply stunning -- and at least as bad as dumb statments by Falwell/Robertson on the right or Chomsky on the left. The blogosphere ought to get itself whipped into a frenzy about this one. [posted 9:20 am]
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MORE BUNKUM FROM THE MARRIAGE MOVEMENT. The National Marriage Project at Rutgers University has just released its annual survey, The State of Our Unions: The Social Health of Marriage in America 2002, and once again a member of the Institute for American Values (IAV) is using a tiny study as an opportunity to spread bogus assertions that seem intended to freak single women out. (Click here for TAP's debunking of IAV board member Sylvia Ann Hewlett's recent book.) "Once a woman gets into her 30s," study author and IAV Council on Families member David Popenoe told Reuters yesterday, "it's more likely that she will have to marry a man who was married earlier. It's more likely that she will marry a man who brings kids (into the marriage) and more likely that she will have a child by herself."

Alas for Popenoe, that's simply not the case. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, having a child outside of marriage is almost entirely a behavior of younger women: "83 percent of births to teenagers in 2000 were out-of-wedlock ... with the proportion declining to 13 percent for women 30 years and over," concluded the Bureau. So according to the national data, a woman in her 30s is much less likely, not more likely, to "have a child by herself" than a younger woman. Tapped, who grew up in an intact family and supports marriage as much as the next single gal, would like to make a modest proposal to the members of the marriage movement: The next time you feel a need to spout off about your research, do a quick comparison check of the national data first. Because with mistakes like this, you're just undermining your own cause. [posted 9:10 am]
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Thursday, June 27

WE PLEAD GUILTY. To having, on several occasions over the past several weeks, tried desperately to extract larger meaning from the World Cup, a practice that Reason's editor Nick Gillespie finds not always very illuminating. Yes, we learned the lesson from Monty Python that "life is like a game" is not exactly the cutting edge of wit or wisdom. But we couldn't resist, dammit! (Warning: There might even be a tad more in store before we burn out on this pop sociological fixation.) Gillespie's piece is also good for his debunking of the notion that soccer has failed to catch on in this country -- in fact, as he illustrates, to a significant extent it already has. [posted 4:25 pm]
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THE ARTICLE YOU'VE ALL BEEN WAITING FOR. The American Prospect's revealing profile of Steven Hatfill, the bioweapons expert whose apartment was recently searched by the FBI in connection with the anthrax probe, is now up. For that matter, we've also got two more excellent web-only pieces today: Adam B. Kushner eviscerates Bush's latest Mideast moves, and Brendan O'Neill reports from England on why U.S. and British troops in Afghanistan hate each other. Don't miss it! [posted 3:00 pm]
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SUPREMELY BAD IDEA. The Supreme Court today said that school vouchers are constitutional. As might be expected, the responses to this landmark decision divided neatly along ideological lines. Predictably enough, we agree with Ralph Neas, president of People for the American Way, when he states, "This decision represents a serious crack in the constitutional wall between church and state." Tapped thinks we would have much preferred the Ninth Circuit's ruling in this case. How amazing, though, that the politics of church and state are suddenly front and center, after having been completely off the radar for so long. Maybe that Paul Kurtz profile in The New York Times that we mentioned earlier this week wasn't so poorly pegged after all. [posted 3:00 pm]
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PILLOW TALK. USA Today has uncovered a new way to curry favor with lawmakers -- putting their spouses on corporate boards. Mrs. Richard Shelby served on the board of a defense contractor, a clear conflict of interest with her husband's job. Similar conflicts were noted with numerous other spouses including Wendy Gramm, Elaine Chao, Anne Bingaman, Ruth Harkin, and Richard Blum. Okay, time for the Dick Van *** double bed arrangement for these couples.... [posted 3:00 pm]
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GIVE THEM THIS: AT LEAST THEY KEEP TRYING. To debunk Geoffrey Nunberg's recent article on media bias in The American Prospect, that is. This time, the would-be debunkers are the conservative Media Research Center, who have done a study in which they claim that the word 'conservative' was used four times more frequently than the word 'liberal' in the last five years on certain network news programs -- and that this means that "reporters are actually four times more likely to label conservatives than liberals." Nunberg isn't having any of it. [posted 2:35 pm]
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FACT CHECK ANN COULTER, PART II. We've got some competition! One Scoobie Davis has devoted an entire blog to Slander. He's already come up with a few things from the book's first chapter, although they seem to fall under the heading of "gross exaggeration/distortion" rather than "outright lie." Check out his analysis here. [posted 1:15 pm]
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HERE COME THE BAD ARGUMENTS ABOUT THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE. Guess what, folks: The fact that the Declaration of Independence refers to a "Creator" is not a very good argument when it comes to asking whether it's constitutional for the Pledge of Allegiance to invoke God. Why? Well, the itsy bitsy fact that the Constitution came later and was a deliberately and markedly secular document. The Declaration isn't irrelevant -- far from it. But neither is it the law of the land. What we're talking about here is the Constitution's establishment clause, and references to the Declaration in this context tend to muddy the waters and confuse the issue. Can somebody tell that to James Taranto? [posted 1:10 pm]
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BUT DON'T TELL ME ANYTHING I DON'T WANT TO HEAR. National Review's Rich Lowry wants to do a column about "how logging is good for forests" and has invited readers of The Corner to email him evidence to that effect. The pundit mind in action! Blogger Charles Murtaugh spanks'em here. [posted 12:20 pm]
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FACT CHECK ANN COULTER, ADDENDUM. Several readers have suggested that, rather than buy Coulter's book -- and put money in her pocket -- participants in our "Fact Check Ann Coulter!" reader contest check the book out at the local library. We heartily agree. [posted 12:20 pm]
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COULD IT BE WORSE? This is not looking like a story with a happy ending. First, some measure of campaign finance reform is signed into law. Now, months later, the obits can almost be written.

The New York Times editorial board wants us to believe that when John McCain and Russ Feingold take the rotten rules that the FEC has written back to the Senate (scroll down), they are going to inspire their colleagues to overrule them. Hold on: Have we completely forgotten how difficult it was to get the Senate to pass even this modest bill in the first place? It's hard to imagine that things could get worse in this new process, but at this point, we'd bet on it. And lawsuits to remedy what the FEC has done don't seem likely to work either. Remember, the courts are packed with conservatives. Equally flawed is the notion of restructuring the FEC. Why would a majority of lawmakers want to tamper with a regulatory structure that works perfectly for them?

The current approach to campaign finance reform looks like a dead end to Tapped. We admire the fight in McCain, Feingold, and others, but to engage this battle only within the Beltway is a loser. Still, when you think of how the average American feels about politicians and the campaign money-flinging CEO class, you can just see the misty outlines of a viable message for a presidential candidate.... [posted 11:15 am]
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LEAHY NO STONE UNTURNED. There are several reports this morning on the tough review that Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Pat Leahy gave the president's homeland security bill. Leahy was particularly concerned about exemptions that are buried in the legislation regarding laws on conflict of interest, public access to information, and whistle-blower protections. Some more details from the Times:

The administration has proposed that information that companies voluntarily turn over to the government about the vulnerabilities of critical infrastructure not be subject to public disclosure. It also wants corporate officers to be able to serve as advisers to the department and not be subject to the same screening as permanent government employees.
Mr. Leahy complained that the department would be able to set up private advisory committees that could operate in secrecy and be "staffed by outside corporate officers with financial interests in the outcome giving recommendations to the new department."

What's more, Leahy appears serious about getting changes.

Having been involved in numerous government reorganizations in its past, Tapped knows the kind of mischief that can be made under the name of "consolidation." But this issue is particularly sensitive in an administration that has already proven itself incredibly resistant to public inquiries. With the heavy push they are making to approve this new department quickly, we hope Leahy will stay the course he charted yesterday. [posted 9:45 am]
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COUNTERPUNCH DRUNK. We've severely criticized Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair's radical newsletter Counterpunch before. But this spoof, "Arafat Calls for Democratic Elections in the United States," is not bad as satire (though we're not sure about some of the "facts" alleged in the item). To quote:


"Mr. Bush is tainted by his association with Jim-Crow-style selective disenfranchisement and executive strong-arm tactics in a southeastern province controlled by his brother," said Mr. Arafat, who was elected with 87% of the vote in 1996 elections in the West Bank and Gaza, declared to be free and fair by international observers, including former U.S. president Jimmy Carter. "Our count shows that he would have lost the election if his associates hadn't deprived so many thousands of African-Americans, an oppressed minority, of the right to vote..."
Bush was not without his supporters, however. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, elected head of a country that legally discriminates among its citizens on the basis of religious belief, forbids political candidates from advocating an end to that discrimination, and disenfranchises an entire people through military occupation, dismissed the call as 'absurd.'

[posted 9:10 am]
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ONE NATION, INDIVISIBLE. It seems that it's cool this morning to make fun of the Ninth Circuit for ruling that the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional. Certainly that's what cowardly Democrats have been up to. But the fact is that, even if it doesn't matter much (we don't think the pledge is very oppressive), the ruling is eminently defensible. Don't ask Tapped, ask UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh:


So this isn't some liberal court creating some new constitutional right, or defying Supreme Court precedent. The Ninth Circuit's decision wasn't dictated by the Court's precedents, but it was certainly a plausible application of them.
We hope our readers will read the rest of Volokh's post, because it goes through the arguments in some detail and concludes that this issue will, in all likelihood, make it to the Supreme Court, where a 5-4 ruling one way or the other can be expected. And that projected margin, in itself, is proof that the Ninth Circuit wasn't behaving in a roguish manner. Quite frankly, it's just plain Orwellian to argue that the phrase "under God" in the pledge doesn't have anything to do with religion. [posted 8:30 am]
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ANN COULTER READER CONTEST! We'd almost run out of things to say about that nutty gal, Ann Coulter. But then she went and wrote another book. But it may not be much of a book. Tapped reader U.R. reports that one chapter into Coulter's book -- "I only managed to get through the first chapter," he writes, because "I can't read the book more than a few minutes at a time" -- he's already found two obvious factual errors. On page 7, Coulter writes that Jim Jeffords "opposed Reagan's tax cut, supported the elder Bush's tax hike, supported Clinton's tax hike, and opposed the younger Bush's tax cut." She's right about the first two. But we checked, and Jeffords -- like all Republicans at the time -- voted against Clinton's 1993 budget (which included the tax hike) and for George W. Bush's recent tax cut. The latter is a pretty glaring error, both because it was so recent and because Jeffords' refusal to oppose the cut was a major blow to liberals who thought his party switch would help them defeat it.

(On the same page, Coulter also writes that Jeffords "voted against Clinton's impeachment" -- which is impossible, as the Senate never voted on impeachment. The House has the power to impeach; the Senate only votes on whether or not to convict. Jeffords did, however, vote against conviction. So maybe we're quibbling.)

If Coulter is going to title her book Slander, it would be nice if she would also go to the trouble of proofreading it. But maybe she didn't have time. (She is, after all, a busy girl.) So we've decided to help Coulter out. Starting today, Tapped will hold a reader contest: Fact Check Ann Coulter. We invite our readers to slog their way through Slander and email Tapped with examples of factual errors. Include the page number; we'll take a look in our own copy and post the ones we can verify. As a reward for this difficult, dirty task, the Tapped reader who emails in the most examples will get a free year's subscription to The American Prospect. Let the fact-checking begin! [posted 7:40 am]
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TNR ONLY HAS ONE ENDORSEMENT. That would be Al Gore. But the always-enjoyable Mugger seems to think that a recent spate of TNR profiles -- on John McCain, John Kerry, and Howard Dean -- each "tout" the respective candidates. That's odd. Michael Crowley's Kerry profile wasn't particularly favorable; Jonathan Cohn's Dean profile was pretty neutral. Only Jonathan Chait's McCain piece was implicit or explicit about advocating for the guy in question. [posted 7:40 am]
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Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
57,529
3
0
Jesus Christ OrooOroo, you expect anybody to read your ramblings? Ann Coulter being a Diesal Bitch is a given. Like Babs, she only appeals to the fringe element of her respective party. In fact she'd make for a great JBS member. Also as a spokeswomen for those women who suffer from terminal PMS.