Barbara Boxer breaks down and cries

Following in the footsteps of Nancy Hopkins, the MIT biology professor who had a nervous breakdown when Larry Summers touched on the subject of sex and biology recently, California’s junior senator has done gone hysterical her own self: Sen. Barbara Boxer says she is the real victim of last week’s confirmation hearing for Secretary of … Continue reading “Barbara Boxer breaks down and cries”

Following in the footsteps of Nancy Hopkins, the MIT biology professor who had a nervous breakdown when Larry Summers touched on the subject of sex and biology recently, California’s junior senator has done gone hysterical her own self:

Sen. Barbara Boxer says she is the real victim of last week’s confirmation hearing for Secretary of State-designate Condoleezza Rice, yet continued yesterday to question the national security adviser’s honesty.

“She turned and attacked me,” the California Democrat told CNN’s “Late Edition” in describing the confrontation during the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing.

Poor little Miss Boxer, the cool girls are all so mean to her.

Felons provide Gregoire her margin of victory

The Seattle Times is a liberal paper, a virtual house organ of the Democratic Party in Seattle. But even it can’t ignore the fact that the number of illegal votes cast by felons in Washington exceeded the Democratic Party candidate’s 129-vote margin of victory: The Times, reviewing felony convictions as far back as 1997, identified … Continue reading “Felons provide Gregoire her margin of victory”

The Seattle Times is a liberal paper, a virtual house organ of the Democratic Party in Seattle. But even it can’t ignore the fact that the number of illegal votes cast by felons in Washington exceeded the Democratic Party candidate’s 129-vote margin of victory:

The Times, reviewing felony convictions as far back as 1997, identified 129 felons in King and Pierce counties who were recorded as having voted in the Nov. 2 election. Another 23 likely voted. Several methods were used to confirm the findings.

And felon voting was just the tip of the electoral iceberg in this election.

H/T Soundpolitics.

The feminist disconnect on Condoleezza Rice

Seattle Times columnist Collin Levey gets the disconnect between the feminist silence on Condi and the feminist outrage against Summers: It’s now painfully clear that feminist groups aren’t mainly concerned about the actual success earned by real women. (Among other things, that would involve noting that women can succeed without feminists’ help.) Instead, the focus … Continue reading “The feminist disconnect on Condoleezza Rice”

Seattle Times columnist Collin Levey gets the disconnect between the feminist silence on Condi and the feminist outrage against Summers:

It’s now painfully clear that feminist groups aren’t mainly concerned about the actual success earned by real women. (Among other things, that would involve noting that women can succeed without feminists’ help.) Instead, the focus remains on the dogma of oppression and the insistence that any woman given real clout by a Republican administration is really just “showcasing.”

The feminists complain that women aren’t equally represented down the ranks in the administration, the same complaint that Summers addressed at Harvard. In fact, females now get about as many jobs in Republican administrations as under Democrats — and GOP women candidates have had a more winning record in some recent years than female Dems.

You only have to look a little bit over the horizon to see the changes coming in the current generation. Women now outnumber men in colleges, medical schools and even law schools.

Women’s progress under Republican administrations doesn’t count, in other words.

UPDATE: Creationist nutbag Hugh Hewitt joins the feminist attack on Summers, while defending fellow creationist nutbag Dobson’s paranoia about secretly gay SpongeBob SquarePants. Is this world so bereft of meaning that we have to lambaste cartoon characters? Falwell’s assault on the Teletubbies was bad enough, but this is ridiculous.

Hook ’em

The Misanthropyst is confused about the rituals of our people. Jenna’s giving the Hook ’em Horns sign that is the clan symbol of us Texas Longhorns. Of course it’s a mystery to yankees, it’s supposed to be.

The Misanthropyst is confused about the rituals of our people. Jenna’s giving the Hook ’em Horns sign that is the clan symbol of us Texas Longhorns. Of course it’s a mystery to yankees, it’s supposed to be.

President’s message to the world

From the President’s inaugural address today: Today, America speaks anew to the peoples of the world: All who live in tyranny and hopelessness can know: the United States will not ignore your oppression, or excuse your oppressors. When you stand for your liberty, we will stand with you. Democratic reformers facing repression, prison, or exile … Continue reading “President’s message to the world”

From the President’s inaugural address today:

Today, America speaks anew to the peoples of the world:

All who live in tyranny and hopelessness can know: the United States will not ignore your oppression, or excuse your oppressors. When you stand for your liberty, we will stand with you.

Democratic reformers facing repression, prison, or exile can know: America sees you for who you are: the future leaders of your free country.

The rulers of outlaw regimes can know that we still believe as Abraham Lincoln did: “Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves; and, under the rule of a just God, cannot long retain it.”

The leaders of governments with long habits of control need to know: To serve your people you must learn to trust them. Start on this journey of progress and justice, and America will walk at your side.

And all the allies of the United States can know: we honor your friendship, we rely on your counsel, and we depend on your help. Division among free nations is a primary goal of freedom’s enemies. The concerted effort of free nations to promote democracy is a prelude to our enemies’ defeat.

Yes.

See video here.

Kos wants it both ways

Re: the Kos flap, Chris Suellentrop points out that bloggers like Kos inhabit a bit of a netherland between journalism and activism: Moulitsas is a different case. He’s never pretended to be a journalist – this past October, he told National Journal, “I am part of the media. But a journalist? No. If I had … Continue reading “Kos wants it both ways”

Re: the Kos flap, Chris Suellentrop points out that bloggers like Kos inhabit a bit of a netherland between journalism and activism:

Moulitsas is a different case. He’s never pretended to be a journalist – this past October, he told National Journal, “I am part of the media. But a journalist? No. If I had put a label on it, I would say I am an activist.” – but in the year since he stopped cashing Dean’s checks, he’s gained a reputation as “the liberal Instapundit” and the most popular left-wing blogger.

Suellentrop doesn’t quite appreciate how ambiguous Kos’ position really is. He started a bi-partisan blog in 2003 called Political State Report to cover politics at the state level leading up to the 2004 election. One of the purposes of this blog (to which I contributed for a while; see this entry commenting on one of my articles) was to obtain press credentials to cover political events such as the conventions. When this was announced, I quit and asked for my postings to be removed because it was obvious that the press role was in conflict with the activist role. I was an activist, and had been for a while, and didn’t want to try and pass myself off as anything else.

So Kos has pretty consistently leveraged his activism with consulting and journalism of a sort, no matter what he’s saying now. So regardless of how you feel about Zephyr Teachout and Jerome Armstrong, Markos Moulitsas Zuniga is a study in conflicts of interest and limited credibility.

Via Jarvis.

UPDATE: Temple Stark, current editor of Political State Report, is insistent that I mention Kos is no longer associated with Polstate, other than providing hosting for it. He doesn’t want this efforts damaged by association with Kos, and I can appreciate that.

The current controversy

Another week, another blog controversy, and once again Hugh Hewitt is in the middle of it. This one deals with an alleged conflict of interest on the part of Daily Kos, and it’s been spread into the MSM by an article in the WSJ and into the nutcase media by Hugh Hewitt’s “Black Blog Ops” … Continue reading “The current controversy”

Another week, another blog controversy, and once again Hugh Hewitt is in the middle of it. This one deals with an alleged conflict of interest on the part of Daily Kos, and it’s been spread into the MSM by an article in the WSJ and into the nutcase media by Hugh Hewitt’s “Black Blog Ops” appearance on the O’Reilly show. Anybody who reads this site knows I’m anything but a fan of Markos Moulitsas Zuniga. I once contributed to a left/right blog he set up to cover the last election, but quit when I sensed it wasn’t serving my interests. Not a fan at all. That being said, the allegation that Markos’ ties to the Dean Campaign were not adequately disclosed is every bit as much a load of crap as Hewitt’s attack on the MSM for reporting on the efforts by creationists to inject religion into biology classes in Pennsylvania. Anyone who read Kos on a regular basis during the election year knew he had ties to Dean, and anyone who’s read Kos even once knows he’s a Democratic Party activist and fund raiser. Hewitt is completely off base (once again) on this controversy and he’s got no business trying to pass himself off as some sort of authority on blogs for the purpose of flogging his own book on the O’Reilly show by helping the Falafel Man trash bloggers generally. Hewitt’s popularity is a testament to the rampant stupidity in American society. He’s a man of no insight, a panderer, and a wart on our democracy.

And don’t even get me started on O’Reilly, the only man in America capable of making Air America look good. Bloggers, especially those of us in the political center and to the right, had better realize who our friends are in this world. Self-promoters like Hewitt, O’Reilly, and Armstrong Williams are not among them.

Incidentally, the attempt by the ethically-challenged former gossip columnist Chris Nolan to reduce the Kos controversy into an inside-politics conspiracy to keep Dean out the Democratic Party chairmanship is no more persuasive than another tinfoil hat theory I’ve heard that right-wingers drummed it up for a similar reason or to take the heat off Williams. Zephyr Teachout raised the issue because she thinks it has important implications for blogging, and if you look at it closely it doesn’t incriminate Kos or Dean. Her thinking was just her thinking, so if anybody looks bad it’s mainly she, not Dean, Kos, or the Party.

UPDATE: As if on cue, Zephyr digs a deeper hole for herself. What a sad case that woman is.

Personal animus

There is another way to look at the Rathergate story, however. While the left sees it as simply rushing a story onto the air before all the nasty details were spruced up and the right sees it as liberal bias, it can be seen, quite convincingly, as personal animosity on Rather’s part against the Bush … Continue reading “Personal animus”

There is another way to look at the Rathergate story, however. While the left sees it as simply rushing a story onto the air before all the nasty details were spruced up and the right sees it as liberal bias, it can be seen, quite convincingly, as personal animosity on Rather’s part against the Bush family, going back to Dan’s attempt to ambush Poppie Bush on Iran/Contra only to have his ass handed to him on a platter concerning his walking off the set in a snit when a football game threatened to run over into this time slot. While we can never tease these explanations apart completely, personal animus has to be at least part of the story.

That, and Dan’s just a weird bird with enough power to play out his personal problems on the air at the most critical juncture in a presidential campaign.