October 27, 2008
I'm gonna call it karma

In my early journalism days as a reporter I interviewed Sen. Ted Stevens about a proposal to that he was pushing that would open a spaceport in Alaska. He wasn't happy about the resulting article -- or me. Today, Stevens was found guilty on seven corruption counts. Now, there's probably no connection between the two […]

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October 26, 2008
Missing the point

The Washington Post has a report on the cover of today's paper that offers an incomplete and cursory analysis of Sen. Barack Obama's online fund-raising. Concerns about anonymous donations seeping into the campaign began to surface last month, mainly on conservative blogs. Some bloggers described their own attempts to display the flaws in Obama's fundraising […]

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October 25, 2008
Journalistic modus operandi

Michael S. Malone -- a longtime journalist -- has a piece up over at Pajamas Media decrying the one-sided media coverage of this presidential campaign. I encourage you to read the entire the entire thing, but I want to highlight a couple bits. But nothing, nothing I’ve seen has matched the media bias on display […]

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October 24, 2008
Are they this insane?

Last week some House Democrats held a hearing on a plan that would do away with 401(k) plans and replace them with what I'll call Social Security v2. A plan by Teresa Ghilarducci, professor of economic-policy analysis at the New School for Social Research in New York, contains elements that are being considered. She testified […]

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October 24, 2008
Snark of the day

From Mona Charon comes an appropriate response to the news that former Bush 43 spokesman Scott McClellan is voting for Obama. "By this act he has simultaneously raised the mean IQ of both parties."

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October 24, 2008
The case for diversity

Over at National Review's "The Corner," Jonah Goldberg makes a succinct case for ideological diversity in newsrooms. The post was prompted by CNN's Drew Griffin's misquoting of a National Review article by Byron York that I mentioned here. Before Byron's post closes the issue for all time, I'd just like to make a quick point. […]

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October 23, 2008
It's not always in how they cover it

Media bias is not always in how newspapers or the major TV networks cover an issue. Sometimes it is the choice whether or not to cover a story in the first place. The latest case in point is Rep. Tim Mahoney (D-Fla.). Mahoney replaced disgraced GOP congressman Mark Foley who had sent inappropriate text messages […]

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October 23, 2008
Buying the election

Sen. Barack Obama's campaign raised $150 million last month. By the time the last check clears and the campaign goes into slumber mode until the next election (should he win), Obama will have spent more money than George W. Bush and John Kerry spent in 2004 combined. How this is supposed to "save" public financing […]

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October 22, 2008
Which came first?

The Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism released its latest report on media coverage of the presidential campaign and its results should come as no surprise to anyone who's been conscious the past one and a half months. The media coverage of the race for president has not so much cast Barack Obama in a […]

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October 21, 2008
NBC, MSNBC lie

I posted earlier today on Sen. Joe Biden's comments that Barack Obama would face a manufactured crisis and screw it up. NBC and MSNBC have decided to report on the incident -- and they're using a completely different statement by Biden. They're juxtaposing a line Biden said at some other time about Obama having "steel […]

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