Help wanted

— The Conservative Underground says: The Conservative Underground is currently looking for contributing writers who share our progressive philosophy of no holds bar, in-you-face, take-no-prisoners, cultural crusade conservatism. Do you think that you’re good enough to carry the insignia of a cultural warrior? I don’t know what it pays, but here’s an example of their … Continue reading “Help wanted”

The Conservative Underground says:

The Conservative Underground is currently looking for contributing writers who share our progressive philosophy of no holds bar, in-you-face, take-no-prisoners, cultural crusade conservatism. Do you think that you’re good enough to carry the insignia of a cultural warrior?

I don’t know what it pays, but here’s an example of their work:

Dear Oubai
Solace and Compassion for Lefty Losers
Dear Oubai:
Ever since Le Pen defeated the socialist candidate for Prime Minister, I?ve been suffering unusual anxiety attacks and a terrible case of back acne. I mean, where am I gonna threaten to move to now if Bush wins re-election ?!

Power to the (non-white) People,

Balec Aldwin

Dear Balec:

There?s always Austria?no wait?Holland? nope taken too? lets see? Italy ? nope, taken? umm?. How ?bout Russia? nope?Flat tax and all? wait, wait? I got it: Hell! How would hell do ? Great in the winter time, besides Marx and Stalin usually make for great party conversations.

O.

New blog

— leaning to the right is a new blog by a California Republican momma who bashes Gray Davis and the lack of patriotic assimilation by immigrants, and praises the Opinion Journal feature boosting Western Civilization. I’d say she’s off to a good start.

leaning to the right is a new blog by a California Republican momma who bashes Gray Davis and the lack of patriotic assimilation by immigrants, and praises the Opinion Journal feature boosting Western Civilization. I’d say she’s off to a good start.

Dick knows death wish

— Once you fall prey to a group with a death wish, like California Republicans, you know one when you see one, and Dick Riordan sees one at the L. A. Times: “I don’t think any paper should have a monopoly, and The Times has a death wish for Los Angeles,” he said. “It would … Continue reading “Dick knows death wish”

— Once you fall prey to a group with a death wish, like California Republicans, you know one when you see one, and Dick Riordan sees one at the L. A. Times:

“I don’t think any paper should have a monopoly, and The Times has a death wish for Los Angeles,” he said. “It would like to see the city destroyed, and 99% of the local news it prints is negative, and that hurts the city. “I’m not suggesting that The Times ought to engage in boosterism or dishonest reporting,” said the lawyer and venture capitalist, whose personal worth is thought to exceed $100 million. “I’m just against the paper’s intellectual dishonesty and political correctness.”

The Times must be worried, given the belated and snarky nature of their coverage of the biggest media story to hit LA since the Chicago Tribune bought the Times. And that’s good; the Times is the closest thing we have to a real newspaper in California, and it’s not near close enough. They’ve been skating by for years thanks to a monopoly in the local market and no serious competition at the state level. There are some good regional papers here — the San Diego Union-Trib and the Sac Bee (on state politics,) but they aren’t read outside their local market. Nothing builds a fire under the ass of a fat. sloppy monopoly like a little competition.

Howard Owens

— This new blog shows promise. He’s a former legislative aide and long-time newspaperman, with interesting insights an impeccable taste in blogs.

— This new blog shows promise. He’s a former legislative aide and long-time newspaperman, with interesting insights an impeccable taste in blogs.

Shared reality

— Steven Den Beste’s common-sense observation that bloggers link blogs they like has the Font Kiddiez’ knickers in a bunch. See this pretentious crap: SDB suggests that webloggers cluster themselves into like-minded groups, and cross-link accordingly. Disagreements (including here) are what he calls “religious” in nature: “A-list” vs. warblogger, “E/N” vs. “A-list”, etc. Does Steve’s … Continue reading “Shared reality”

— Steven Den Beste’s common-sense observation that bloggers link blogs they like has the Font Kiddiez’ knickers in a bunch. See this pretentious crap:

SDB suggests that webloggers cluster themselves into like-minded groups, and cross-link accordingly. Disagreements (including here) are what he calls “religious” in nature: “A-list” vs. warblogger, “E/N” vs. “A-list”, etc. Does Steve’s structuralist argument hold up? Are his characterizations fair or accurate? Do you slot yourself into a group? Are the blogs you link to in a similar vein as yours?

Later on in the comments they get huffy about some of my trollish remarks on the content-free faux pioneers of the blogosphere. It’s actually kind of funny, in sad sort of a way, especially the calls for MetaFiltration Unity.

Another great war profiteer gathering

— Happy Fun Pundit Steve hosted a great party for war profiteers at his palatial digs in San Leandro. We immoral philistines feasted on pheasant tongues, shark fins, caviar, and Dom Perignon provided by the bounty of our hawkishness, served to us by liveried servants as we basked in the hot tub and disco-danced in … Continue reading “Another great war profiteer gathering”

Happy Fun Pundit Steve hosted a great party for war profiteers at his palatial digs in San Leandro. We immoral philistines feasted on pheasant tongues, shark fins, caviar, and Dom Perignon provided by the bounty of our hawkishness, served to us by liveried servants as we basked in the hot tub and disco-danced in camos with live ammo. OK, not exactly like that, but between Mr. and Mrs. Random Jottings, the keeper of Plato’s cave, the erudite Craig Schamps, the brilliant Peter and Christina, and the formidable Joanne Jacobs, we pretty well solved all the world’s problems once and for all. I hope everybody got home safely.

Steve was at the recent Media/Blogger conspiracy summit in Los Angeles sponsored by the founding editors of the Right Wing False Consciousness Collective, and Joanne was just in London conferring with the Samizdata, so we all have our marching orders from WarBlog Central Command now, and new insight into the true nature of Antiwar.com, so the juggernaut is unstoppable. Peace-loving types had best quake with fear.

Warbloggers are clearly some of the best-read and smartest people in the planet, which must have something to do with why the Prison-Industrial Complex has chosen us to do its dirty work.


Update: John took pictures.

All about me

— I’ve updated my bio page with links to an essay, some press quotes, and letters to the editor that I’ve had published. Have I said that Blogs have made the editorial pages of newspapers obsolete? Well, if they haven’t, we’re at least on equal footing.

— I’ve updated my bio page with links to an essay, some press quotes, and letters to the editor that I’ve had published. Have I said that Blogs have made the editorial pages of newspapers obsolete? Well, if they haven’t, we’re at least on equal footing.

Tit for Tat with Nunberg

— For the past few days, I’ve been doing some tit-for-tat in e-mail with Geoff Nunberg over his quick survey of elected-official labeling in newspapers. Numberg’s major errors are the most obvious ones: Goldberg said the Big Three nightly newcasts identify conservatives as out-of-the-mainstream more than liberals. Nunberg’s survey, while interesting, doesn’t address the charge, … Continue reading “Tit for Tat with Nunberg”

— For the past few days, I’ve been doing some tit-for-tat in e-mail with Geoff Nunberg over his quick survey of elected-official labeling in newspapers. Numberg’s major errors are the most obvious ones: Goldberg said the Big Three nightly newcasts identify conservatives as out-of-the-mainstream more than liberals. Nunberg’s survey, while interesting, doesn’t address the charge, because he examined print media instead of the Big Three. The language of television is very different from the language of print, and you don’t learn much about one by studying the other. He also limited the published study to a handful of elected officials with very well-established ideological credentials, people for whom labelling is redundant.

In a more extensive survey on his web site, Nunberg publishes results on Supreme Court justices and lobbying groups that support Goldberg’s claim. It seems to me that the effects of labeling are most pronounced when the media labels or doesn’t label the people that it interviews as experts on various political subjects. Most of these people — and I’m one of them, with a long list of interview credits in print and broadcast — are partisan lobbyists and consultants.

It was my experience that the L. A. Times always identified me as a “fathers’ rights lobbyist” while identifying people who lobbied for the other side as “child support analyst” or some similarly neutral-but-authoritative-sounding-title. I have examples. There are no neutral parties in the political process, but you wouldn’t know that from watching network news.