Why is this writer still given a prestigious forum in the New York Times? Today's hopeless screed completely overlooks that George W Bush has left the Middle East less safe, not safer, for his tenure. The Bush/Cheney regime so loved by Kristol has ill-served Israel as has it Likudniks at home and abroad. Not recommended.
This story presents all sides, and even the White House was contacted for their response. Typically, they have no truck with opinions of "the people" but I wish these Green Mountaineers the best in their quest. Excellent story.
Having GOP propaganda rags cover the Democratic candidates is never a good idea. And the Politico has shown itself, time and time again, to be a GOP propaganda rag. I wouldn't trust anything it says about Obama and Clinton. Also note, no mention of John Edwards' campaigning -- it's a two-way race at the Politico.
The writer gives a first-person perspective on Willard Mitt Romney's approach to the clause in the Constitution that prohibits a religious test for civil office: if your religion is represented among Americans in enough numbers, you'll get a Cabinet seat in a Romney Administration. For a man who claims his own religion should not be a test for the Presidency, this is a strange stance to take about Muslims.
This is a first-person account of Mario Cuomo's call for American lawyers to hit the streets, for the same reason their colleagues in Pakistan have done: the collapse of constitutional governance. Not at all covered by Traditional Media.
This writer, the Dean of the DeeCee Press Corps, only last week said he would not be writing about either the Giuliani or Clinton marriages. Didn't take him long to return to his dream topic, did it? And it wasn't Rudi's marriages Dean Broder couldn't stay away from, obviously.
Broder completely overlooks the financial hole the RNCC finds itself in, and uncritically stenographs Tom Cole's whistling past the graveyard. Not fact-based, not contextual, not balanced.
The author is a trusted source on the TANG story, writing about it before the Rather episode, and has set several worthwhile links in his post. Additionally, he has welcomed additional links, including those by Paul Lukasiak, a longtime student of this controversy.






