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Thursday, October 30, 2003

Warming up for Tuesday's "Luskin is a stalker" day:




1 comments

Donald Luskin's thin skin:

From 28 months ago (June '01):

Thursday, June 7 2001: In RealMoney's Columnist Conversation (a premium content feature of TheStreet.com), Don Luskin posts a message saying he's quitting. This gets picked up and relayed on the Yahoo board for TSCM.
Luskin B'Slaps Cramer on RM
by: stockwatch234

Don Luskin
I'm outta here
6/07/01 3:56 PM ET
Well, Cramer, you'll have to duke it out in the kitchen without me. I quit. I'm through contributing articles here every day for no pay, and taking nothing but abuse.

Want to talk about performance? All of yours that I can see is the TSCM which I sold at $65. You have no way to make up the losses to whomever bought it from me.

Good bye and good luck.
Following that event, Don Luskin posted on various MetaMarkets message boards. MetaMarkets was Luskin's failing mutual fund business at the time. (All links are broken, but we include them for documentary thoroughness).
From a board with a theme of: Shooting Back
http://community.metamarkets.com/threadList.jhtml?b=48
Post URL (on MetaMarkets) is:
http://community.metamarkets.com/thread.jhtml?b=48&hm=15&sb=17&st=11&qsb=17&qst=11&rr=2&qct1=55&id=28777&qc1=6
Re: Good Job Don!!!!!
Post rated (max 5)
By Don Luskin (rating 3.78) on 20:55 06.07.01

Dirk,

TSC CC was reduced long before I stood up for principle and called a spade a spade there. That's why I left. Whatever you may think of my performance as an investment manager, that really has nothing to do with it. It's an issue of integrity.

My performance, good or bad, is there for all to see on this site. Cramer's performance is nothing but an unaccountable myth that he gets to create so that people like you will be bamboozled into buying his act. Why don't you demand that he show his true performance in detail, including costs?

And what's wrong with pointing out the truth that he has destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars of wealth on his ego trip, TheStreet.com? But I guess it's easier for you to pick on me. Because I'm accountable and accessible. Cramer's too busy polishing his apple on CNBC to respond to people like you. And you love him for it.

-=-=-=-=-
Don Luskin
MetaMarkets.com
Board theme: The Trading Desk
http://community.metamarkets.com/threadList.jhtml?b=46
Post URL:
http://community.metamarkets.com/thread.jhtml?b=46&hm=15&sb=17&st=11&qsb=17&qst=11&rr=2&qct1=55&id=28722&qc1=23
AAA,

The failure of RealMoney's "Columnist Conversation" is fascinating, isn't it? It seems on the surface to be such a good idea. A spontaneous, interactive forum for ideas to interact with each other iteratively.

Unfortunately, in the last couple of months it has become infected by a human virus. Several members of CC have decided to use it to aggrandize themselves by attacking others -- I am not the only victim.

Interactivity is a blessing and a curse, I guess. Too bad. This is just another way that the dream of TheStreet.com has come crashing down.
-=-=-=-=-
Don Luskin
MetaMarkets.com
Then this big posting by Don Luskin appeared on his site explaining why he left TheStreet.com
link: http://community.metamarkets.com/thread.jhtml?b=1029&id=29033
Don tells the inside story of why he told James Cramer to "Take this job and shove it!"

Why I Quit TheStreet.com

Don't you hate it when people say that something they did was "more in sorrow than in anger"? It always means they were really angry. But it can also mean they were sorrowful, too. Indeed, for some people -- like me -- the two emotions are inseparable. It's the sorrow that makes me so angry.

That's how I felt about quitting TheStreet.com last week. Well, it wasn't exactly "quitting." I never worked for them to begin with. Since about a year ago I've written 120 commentaries for TheStreet.com and RealMoney.com, and made hundreds of contributions to their Columnist Conversation bulletin board. And my partner Dave Nadig has been a leading participant in their StreetPros.com live trading diary feature. But they weren't paying Dave or me for our contributions. In fact, in a manner of speaking, for a while we were paying them -- MetaMarkets bought more banner advertisements on TheStreet.com than any other website.

But there's no amount they could have paid us to make us stick around. Over the last few months James Cramer began attacking me in his columns, and in Columnist Conversation. I don't mean just disagreeing with my ideas. I live for a good debate! I mean attacking me personally -- directly assaulting my integrity and my honesty. Maliciously. Recklessly. And in a way that was damaging to my reputation.

Here's just a small sample. In posts on Columnist Conversation, he publicly called my writings "gibberish," and "cocktail party chit-chat." He cheered when stocks that I like went down -- for example, he crowed, "Excellent!" when the gold stocks I had written about had a slightly bad day. Two weeks ago he posted a note on Columnist Conversation calling me "disingenuous" and saying he had to dispute my ideas "if only to soothe my own conscience if not our readers' pocketbooks." Of course, calling me "disingenuous" is just a coward's way of calling me a liar.

Despite my protests, TheStreet.com's editors -- while privately expressing to me mortification at what was happening -- stood by helplessly while the attacks continued and intensified. At TheStreet.com, nobody questions James Cramer.

Until last Thursday, when I told James Cramer to "Take this job and shove it" -- in public, on his own website. I quit angrily -- I am angry at the way I was libeled after all that Dave and I have contributed. And judging by the number of supportive emails Dave and I have gotten from TheStreet.com's readers over the last year -- and especially over the last several days -- our contributions were highly valued.

But while I am indeed angry, I did quit as much in sorrow -- sorrow for the doomed business that TheStreet.com has become, and sorrow for the spectacle of self-destruction I saw from James Cramer. I used to be an ardent admirer of both.

Only a little more than two years ago, TheStreet.com and James Cramer were great inspirations for Dave and me when we first started MetaMarkets. They embodied an inspiring vision for a revolution in investment journalism, built around the unique properties of the Web as a news medium, and the unique personality of James Cramer as both a journalist and a professional investor. But like so many visions of the last several years, TheStreet.com is now in shambles, just another dotcom penny stock waiting for the coup de grace while all its most talented people drift away one by one. And James Cramer is now, in his own words, "just another journalist" -- one who uses TheStreet.com as his vanity press, chasing away valuable and popular colleagues who were contributing to this public company at no cost.

What was originally so revolutionary at TheStreet.com was the idea of a working institutional investment manager sharing his ideas with an audience, in detail and in real time. Prior to James Cramer, market journalism was produced by journalists, not market practitioners. Like the scene in The Wizard of Oz in which Toto throws back the curtain on the all-too-human wizard, James Cramer revealed to all the world how real money managers on Wall Street actually work. Through James Cramer's unique manic sensibility, readers were admitted to a previously secret world. There they met the people who move markets and learned to speak their arcane lingo -- and they shared the joy of James Cramer's victories, and the agony of James Cramer's defeats.

All in real-time, on the Web. James Cramer wouldn't have been possible without the Web. No other medium is both as rich and as real-time, and James Cramer needed both attributes in order to put on his show. Newspapers and magazines may be richer in detail, but they are not real-time. Television and radio may be real-time, but they are impoverished in their depth and detail. The Web and James Cramer were made for each other.

But there were troubling issues from the very beginning. Because James Cramer was a working professional investor, his objectivity and integrity as a journalist were frequently challenged. Whenever he wrote about a stock he owned or was actively trading, he was always vulnerable to charges that he was "talking his book" or "pumping and dumping." In one well-known case, there was even a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation. But James Cramer was exonerated in that case and, as far as I know -- despite many accusations -- has never once used his position as a public spokesman to manipulate securities prices.

The whole notion of a market journalist/practitioner has the potential for conflict of interest at its very heart. And don't I know it -- because Dave and I are in exactly the same position. And we always go to great lengths to keep our noses clean -- including the complete real-time disclosure of every trade we make and every position we have advised our clients -- two mutual funds -- to take.

But that potential conflict of interest is precisely what makes it such a valuable model for financial journalism -- the conflict of interest assures that the practitioner/journalist knows what he is talking about, or at least has put his money where his mouth is! Consider the manifest drawbacks of the alternative: financial journalism created by people who have no direct experience or knowledge of this very complex field, and no direct financial incentive to get it right. Inconceivable! And yet that's how 99.9% of financial journalism is produced. James Cramer, Don Luskin and Dave Nadig are among the very few exceptions.

I admired James Cramer when he defended himself against conflict of interest charges in a March, 1999 article for the online magazine Slate, called "A Message to My Enemies." He wrote, "The off-line journalists want me to stop writing and trading. OK, let's say I stop trading. Would I be as good at writing about the market as I am now? No way. I would be just another journalist scrounging info. To these folks, the fact that I was editor in chief of my college paper more than two decades ago would be a big plus, but the fact that I am actually doing this stuff is a big minus. Especially because in the third quarter of 1998 I lost money! Holy cow!"

But since the end of last year, James Cramer has become, to use his own words, "just another journalist." He retired as a professional investment manager, and now simply invests for his own account. Is he as good at writing about the market? It's a matter of opinion, but here's mine: "No way."

And what has happened to TheStreet.com as a business? Even when James Cramer was a practitioner/journalist and not "just another journalist," TheStreet.com struggled to make a go of it. At first they charged a subscription fee. Then when it seemed that the only way to make a mark on the Web was to give content away for free, they tried that, and of course it didn't help. Then they tried subscription fees again, but only for certain premium content categories. And now they're trying to charge even higher fees for emails with James Cramer's latest trades. Judging from TheStreet.com's stock price -- under $2 per share, and down from a high of 71-1/4 in March 1999, and trading for about the value of cash on hand -- it's not going to be a world-beating strategy to turn TheStreet.com into an online market newsletter based on James Cramer's hot picks.

But there was a time when James Cramer thought that TheStreet.com would indeed beat the world. Take a look at what James Cramer himself had to say about his company in February, 1998 -- a year before it went public.

  • "...already we can see massive profitability in year two."
  • "...our cost structure is nil."
  • "Ultimately we have to win. There can be no question."
  • "I imagine that TheStreet.com could be a television, radio and newspaper all rolled into one, charging premium ad rates and skimming the cream from everybody."
  • "I want to replace The [Wall Street] Journal by the millennium. I can tell you that we will succeed in that goal."

I remember what it was like in February, 1998. I read these words of James Cramer -- and similar words by so many other Internet entrepreneurs -- and I was inspired by them, as silly as they may seem today. Dave and I got so excited about the brave new world they were talking about that we became Internet entrepreneurs ourselves. So I know what a tough road this has turned out to be, and I have a lot of sympathy for how difficult it must be for James Cramer to live with the disappointment of having this beautiful dream so thoroughly defeated. Maybe that's one of the reasons why he's treated us so shabbily.

James Cramer has his own version of all this, of course. And he's got a high enough public platform that he can repeat his version over and over, and lots of people will end up thinking that's the way it happened. His version, based on what he's written on his site and in private emails to me, is that I quit TheStreet.com because of my performance as an investment advisor. I guess he's hoping that his legions of loyal and unquestioning fans will accept "the big lie," and simply forget the libel to which Dave and I were subjected -- abuse which would drive out any self-respecting contributor.

Well, as to performance, our performance as adviser is here for all the world to see every day on the Web sites of our mutual fund clients. But whatever it is, our fund clients show it in more detail than any funds I know, against multiple benchmarks, and for any time period you feel inclined to check out. Even more, as adviser, we explain that performance by showing you every single trade we make. All archived right back to the beginning.

What can I say about our performance? We've had good times, and we've had bad times. I've never made any secret of that. I couldn't have. It's structurally impossible the way we've set up our business.

But the world doesn't have very good data on Cramer's performance as a manager. Free from the SEC rules that govern mutual fund advertising, James Cramer has often represented his own performance in vague and mythologized terms -- emphasizing the good and rationalizing the bad, of course. Like any professional in this business for as long as we've all been in it, he's had his share of both. When James Cramer's dismal 1998 performance was leaked to the press, the revelation that he had done so badly and had not disclosed it threatened TheStreet.com's impending IPO.

You can see something that purports to be a stylized version of the performance of James Cramer's personal portfolio in a table on the RealMoney website. Even with the advantages of not having to present the returns in regulated format, and conveniently leaving out the "cash drag" factor from the money he chooses not to invest, the portfolio still hasn't performed well since its inception on April 1. Perhaps not by coincidence, that date corresponds roughly to the bottom in the NASDAQ, which was just when our performance, as adviser, took a turn for the better. It is ironic, and perhaps more than coincidence, that James Cramer began his attacks on me -- which he justifies after the fact as being based on our poor performance -- just when things started to turn for us, and when they were going so poorly for him.

If great recent performance were the criterion for writing for TheStreet.com, eventually everyone would get fired -- including James Cramer. It would be like Darth Vader's human resources strategy: kill any colonel who loses a battle. In James Cramer's own case, of course, he makes an exception.

And besides, the performance that counts in this case is the performance of the ideas that get published. And I'll put the performance of Dave's and my published ideas up against anyone's, including James Cramer's.

But none of that really has anything to do with the issue: whatever you may think about our performance, it doesn't give James Cramer the right to repeatedly libel me in public.

But he's got his story, and he's sticking to it. In an email he sent to me over the weekend, he had the shameless gall to tell me, "I would have been thrilled to have you back. In fact, I was going to bet on you, I think you are just now beginning to get it right. I had this idea of sending money to your firm, saying, I think Luskin has been hit hard enough. It could have been story book, cause I believe you will come back."

Now I get it! How could I have been so stupid? I should have known all along that when he was publicly libeling me that this was just his own very special way of telling me that we were about to turn around, and that he wanted to invest with us. Of course, in all the emails he's never even tried to justify -- nor has he even acknowledged the existence of -- his attacks (perhaps his libel lawyers have advised him not to). Instead, he says that what I need to do to get this blessing he "would have been thrilled to" give me is to publish what he calls a "mea culpa" on his site.

Next thing you know, he'll want me to kiss his hand and say, "Be my friend, Godfather." Needless to say, I emailed James Cramer back and told him what he could do with his story book.

So, yes, I'm angry. I think anyone in my position would be. But I'm sorrowful, too. Sorry to see TheStreet.com, which could have been a great company, failing. And I'm sorry to see James Cramer, someone who I once thought was a great man, reduced to this. Sure, I'd write for TheStreet.com again, as long as it lasts -- I owe that much to the memory of what might have been. But for that to happen, it won't be me publishing the mea culpa.

-=-=-=-=-
Donald L. Luskin
MetaMarkets.com




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Wednesday, October 29, 2003

We support Atrios:

We've run "Donald Luskin" through the anagram generator, tried to come up with other plays on his name, even explored some animated graphics, but haven't found the right way to mock Luskin for his absurd legal action against Atrios. But we wanted to make this post to let our readers know that we think Luskin is completely bonkers and should quit this nonsense now, before it gets nasty.


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Tuesday, October 28, 2003

Donald Luskin's perception of reality:




Inspired by a recent post from Calpundit.


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Your tax dollars at work:

We found a superb image from space of the Southern California wildfires - mostly showing where the smoke is heading. It's very large (700+ kbytes, 1700x2200 pixels) but worth the download time. You can find it here:


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Look on the bright side:




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Sunday, October 26, 2003

Not much difference:

Subject's name? Elian Gonzalez Terri Schiavo
Dispute taking place in Florida? yes yes
Much emotional press coverage? yes yes
Maudlin essay by Peggy Noonan? yes not yet
Is dispute over uncharted legal/ethical terrain,
or is the process for resolution well established?
well established well established
Is this about the right of a family member to decide what's best? yes yes
Legal guardian of subject? male head of household male head of household
Did court rule in favor of legal guardian? yes yes
Why? primacy of nuclear family
over extended family's wishes
primacy of nuclear family
over extended family's wishes
Are conservative busybodies trying to intervene? yes yes
They are weakening the institution of? the family the family
Their motivation is? political and religious religious
Posturing (or worse) by Republicans? yes yes
Diane Sawyer crawling on the floor with subject? yes Good Morning America (27 Mar 00) not unless Terri rolls off the hospital bed



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Friday, October 24, 2003

Another sorry nominee:

From the Los Angeles Times, we read: (excerpts, emphasis added)
STORY ONE:

Janice Rogers Brown, one of the most conservative members of the California Supreme Court, is expected to face a tough fight in the U.S. Senate over her nomination to a federal appeals court.

President Bush nominated Brown in July for a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, a prestigious court that regularly decides challenges to administration policy and is considered a steppingstone to the U.S. Supreme Court.

UC Berkeley emeritus law professor Stephen Barnett said Brown is conservative "but not monolithically so," and is "increasingly controlling" a tendency to insert her political views into rulings.

... McGeorge School of Law professor Clark Kelso has at times criticized Brown's dissents as too biting and personal. But he said that should not keep her off the D.C. circuit. Compared with the rulings of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, Brown's dissents are mild, said Kelso, a Republican.


STORY TWO:

California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown, President Bush's nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia, ran into skeptical questioning Wednesday from Senate Democrats for speeches in which she referred to the New Deal era as "the triumph of our socialist revolution" and disputed whether the Bill of Rights applied to the states.

Three years ago, Brown described herself in another speech as a "true conservative" who believes that "where the government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said she found Brown's pronouncements troubling.

In a 1999 speech at Pepperdine University titled "Beyond the Abyss: Restoring Religion on the Public Square," Brown disputed the doctrine of separation of church and state and questioned whether the Bill of Rights, including the 1st Amendment, applied to the states.

This view harkens back to a lively dispute among constitutional scholars in the first half of the 20th century. The 1st Amendment begins with the phrase, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press"

After the Civil War, the Reconstruction Congress wrote the 14th Amendment, which was intended to extend the Bill of Rights to the states. The amendment said that states may not "abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States" or deny them "life, liberty or property without due process of law."

The amendment set off a century of debate in the Supreme Court on whether states were truly barred from infringing the basic guarantees of the Bill of Rights.

"The historical evidence supporting what the Supreme Court did here is pretty sketchy," Brown said in her Pepperdine speech. "The argument on the other side is pretty overwhelming'' that the 14th Amendment failed to apply the Bill of Rights to the states.

"It is unfathomable to me that in 2003 anyone would seriously argue that Alabama, for example, could declare an official religion," said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.
"President Bush nominated Brown" may be technically true, but who is really behind these oddball nominees? John Ashcroft? Ted Olson? A gnome at the Federalist Society?

And another thing. Brown refers to the New Deal as a "triumph of our socialist revolution", which is a popular line with conservatives even though it's completely false. Socialism is government ownership of businesses. The New Deal had a teeny bit of that with the Tennessee Valley Authority, but overall the New Deal was about regulated welfare capitalism. Regulation in the form of agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (established in 1934). Welfare in the form of Social Security Insurance (among other things).

UPDATE: Saturday's New York Times has an editorial that is extremely critical of Brown: "President Bush, who promised as a candidate to be a "uniter, not a divider," has selected the most divisive judicial nominees in modern times."


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Scalia speaks boldly at a Santorum-friendly venue:

Supreme Court Justice Anton Scalia made a splash yesterday in a speech where he derided recent court rulings on gay sex.
The ruling, Scalia said, "held to be a constitutional right what had been a criminal offense at the time of the founding and for nearly 200 years thereafter."

Scalia adopted a mocking tone to read from the court's June ruling that struck down state antisodomy laws in Texas and elsewhere.

Scalia wrote a bitter dissent in the gay sex case that was longer than the ruling itself.

On Thursday, Scalia said judges, including his colleagues on the Supreme Court, throw over the original meaning of the Constitution when it suits them.

"Most of today's experts on the Constitution think the document written in Philadelphia in 1787 was simply an early attempt at the construction of what is called a liberal political order," Scalia told a gathering of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
We've never heard of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, but took a quick look at their website, and lo and behold, what is their featured Book of the Month? Everyday Graces by Karen Santorum.

Santorum. That sounds familiar. Could it be? Yes, she is the wife of Republican Senator Rick Santorum.

Loony birds of a feather, flock together.


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Wednesday, October 22, 2003

Good news from Iraq!

Troubletown is good this week.


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Tuesday, October 21, 2003

Puke watch:

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
          10

Limbaugh
announces
he's going
into rehab
for 30 days.
11
12
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15
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19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
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            1
2
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8



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Friday, October 17, 2003

Neil Cavuto is a schmuck:

Neil Cavuto speaks out:
Take a look at the tax tables, you ingrates. Read the charts, you trough-feeding, social-program pushing pimps. The very boondoggles you hold dear are funded by the so-called ingrates you sneer.

So get over the name game and get to the real blame: yourselves -- the ones who want to make government bigger.

Wealthy people aren't the problem. Most weren't born with it. They created it. While you were busy railing, they were busy building. And now they're the ones paying.
People create their own wealth? For people with incomes up to, say, $300,000, a person's talent, skill, and effort is properly compensated. But above that it's more a matter of luck (like when you got stock options and the vagaries of the market) or self-dealing (when executives determine their own pay and benefits).


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Ann Coulter deconstructed:

We try to avoid reading anything by Ann Coulter. Mostly because we find her style hard to "get a grip on" since it bounces around from true statement to falsehood to snide remark to falsehood to rhetorical question to ...

And even the (largely) true statements are presented in a condescending manner.

But Coulter has penned an essay about Limbaugh's drug use that has been cited by Joe Conason in Salon (and linked to from Drudge), so we sat down and read the damn thing.

As usual, it was no fun, but we decided to at least see if we could analyze the structure of the essay. We expected, and were not surprised, to find the usual mix of material. If one is predisposed to think the worst about liberals (and accept Coulter's negative assertion after negative assertion), then one probably doesn't experience any cognitive dissonance. But for the rest of us, it's tedious to have to keep a ledger of: assertions-that-are-false; mostly-true-statements; rhetorical flourishes; and so on. For example, here is the breakdown (by word count) of the elements in Coulter's essay:



Half of the essay is false.

And here is a table with more detail. (Please note that classification into TRUE or FALSE is a bit crude, but it has to be due to the nature of Coulter's writing style. Also, we tried to be as generous as possible in declaring statements TRUE.)

SUMMARY TRUE or FALSE? TEXT WORDS
liberals are attacking Limbaugh TRUE So liberals have finally found a drug addict they don't like.

liberals could find no excuses for Rush Limbaugh.

19
liberals found excuses for the Lackawanna Six FALSE And unlike the Lackawanna Six – those high-spirited young lads innocently seeking adventure in an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan – 19
liberals accuse conservatives of hypocrisy TRUE The reason any conservative's failing is always major news is that it allows liberals to engage in their very favorite taunt: Hypocrisy! 22
liberals have no morals FALSE Hypocrisy is the only sin that really inflames them. Inasmuch as liberals have no morals, they can sit back and criticize other people for failing to meet the standards that liberals simply renounce. It's an intriguing strategy.

But the only perfect man hasn't walked the Earth for 2,000 years. In liberals' worldview, any conservative who is not Jesus Christ is ipso facto a "hypocrite" for not publicly embracing dissolute behavior the way liberals do.

74
liberals avoid the charge of hypocrisy FALSE By openly admitting to being philanderers, draft dodgers, liars, weasels and cowards, liberals avoid ever being hypocrites.

(Evidently, Clinton wasn't a hypocrite because no one was supposed to take seriously the notion that he respected women or believed in God.)

40
liberals are hypocrites FALSE And yet, the wily hypocrite does not support flaws! 9
Clinton was a hypocrite TRUE At least Rush wasn't walking into church carrying a 10-pound Bible before rushing back to the Oval Office for sodomy with Monica Lewinsky. He wasn't enforcing absurd sexual harassment guidelines while dropping his pants in front of a half-dozen subordinates. 40
mainstream media ignored Limbaugh until this drug story FALSE After years of the mainstream media assuring us that Rush was a has-been, a nobody, yesterday's news – the Rush painkiller story was front-page news last week.

The airwaves and print media were on red alert with Rush's admission that, after an unsuccessful spinal operation a few years ago, he became addicted to powerful prescription painkillers.

55
snide remark n/a (Would anyone care if Howell Raines committed murder?) 8
mainstream media ignored Limbaugh's big radio contract FALSE Rush Limbaugh's misfortune is apparently a bigger story than his nearly $300 million radio contract signed two years ago. That was the biggest radio contract in broadcasting history. Yet there are only 12 documents on LexisNexis that reported it. The New York Times didn't take notice of Rush's $300 million radio contract, but a few weeks later, put Bill Clinton's comparatively measly $10 million book contract on its front page. Meanwhile, in the past week alone, LexisNexis has accumulated more than 50 documents with the words "Rush Limbaugh and hypocrisy." That should make up for the 12 documents on his $300 million radio contract. 104
Limbaugh's anti-drug position is yesterday's news FALSE Rush has hardly been the anti-drug crusader liberals suggest. Indeed, Rush hasn't had much to say about drugs at all since that spinal operation. The Rush Limbaugh quote that has been endlessly recited in the last week to prove Rush's rank "hypocrisy" is this, made eight years ago: "Drug use, some might say, is destroying this country. And we have laws against selling drugs, pushing drugs, using drugs, importing drugs. ... And so if people are violating the law by doing drugs, they ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up." 100
rhetorical question n/a What precisely are liberals proposing that Rush should have said to avoid their indignant squeals of "hypocrisy"? Announce his support for the wide and legal availability of a prescription painkiller that may have caused him to go deaf and nearly ruined his career and wrecked his life? I believe that would have been both evil and hypocritical.

Or is it simply that Rush should not have become addicted to painkillers in the first place? Well, no, I suppose not. You've caught us: Rush has a flaw.

86
Limbaugh is an extremely capable radio host TRUE When a conservative can be the biggest thing in talk radio, earning $30 million a year and attracting 20 million devoted listeners every week – all while addicted to drugs – I'll admit liberals have reason to believe that conservatives are some sort of super-race, incorruptible by original sin. 47
Limbaugh wasn't a junkie UNPROVEN In fact, Rush's behavior was not all that dissolute. There is a fundamental difference between taking any drug – legal, illegal, prescription, protected by the 21st Amendment or banned by Michael Bloomberg – for kicks and taking a painkiller for pain. 39
some claim there is no difference between recreational drugs and prescription drugs TRUE There is a difference morally and a difference legally. While slamming Rush, Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz recently told Wolf Blitzer, "Generally, people who illegally buy prescription drugs are not prosecuted, whereas people who illegally buy cocaine and heroin are prosecuted." 41
rhetorical question n/a What would the point be? Just say no to back surgery? 11
Ted Kennedy was immoral and didn't get prosecuted TRUE I haven't checked with any Harvard Law professors, but I'm pretty sure that, generally, adulterous drunks who drive off bridges and kill girls are prosecuted. 25
Ted Kennedy supports immoral behavior FALSE Ah, but Teddy Kennedy supports adultery and public drunkenness – so at least you can't call him a hypocrite! 18
snide remark n/a That must provide great consolation to Mary Jo Kopechne's parents. 10
Newsweek (Evan Thomas) had a vicious story about Limbaugh FALSE I have a rule about not feeling sorry for people worth $300 million, but I'm feeling sentimental. Evan Thomas wrote a cover story on Rush for Newsweek this week that was so vicious it read like conservative satire. Thomas called Rush a "schlub," "socially ill at ease," an Elmer Gantry, an actor whose "act has won over, or fooled, a lot of people." He compared Rush to the phony TV evangelist Jim Bakker and recommended that Rush start to "make a virtue out of honesty."

As is standard procedure for profiles of conservatives, Newsweek gathered quotes on Rush from liberals, ex-wives and dumped dates. Covering himself, Thomas ruefully remarked that "it's hard to find many people who really know him."

120
Coulter was ignored by Newsweek TRUE Well, there was me, Evan! But I guess Newsweek didn't have room for the quotes I promptly sent back to the Newsweek researchers. I could have even corrected Newsweek's absurd account of how Rush met his current wife. (It's kind of cute, too: She was a fan who began arguing with him about something he said on air.) 58
liberals have a double standard FALSE (Liberals can lie under oath in legal proceedings and it's a "personal matter." Conservatives must scream their every failing from the rooftops or they are "liars.") 26
snide remark n/a Thomas also made the astute observation that "Rush Limbaugh has always had far more followers than friends." Needless to say, this floored those of us who were shocked to discover that Rush does not have 20 million friends 38
Evan Thomas is insignificant (compared to Limbaugh) TRUE So the guy I really feel sorry for is Evan Thomas. How would little Evan fare in any competitive media? Any followers? Any fans? Any readers at all? And he's not even addicted to painkillers! This week, Rush proved his motto: He really can beat liberals with half his brain tied behind his back. 54


The analysis above does not cover other aspects of Coulter's essay: most notably her dichotomy between "bad" street drugs and "forgivable" prescription drugs.


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Thursday, October 16, 2003

A suggestion:

We got this from reader Chris:
Contact:
Barry E. Krischer
The State Attorney's Office
401 North Dixie Highway
West Palm Beach Florida 33401

Main Telephone Number: (561) 355-7100
FAX Number: (561) 366-1800
Email Address: StateAttorney@sa15.state.fl.us

Ask that Rush be prosecuted under the trafficking statutes, as would be any other citizen found in possession of a large amount of Oxycontin (oxycodone).


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Gregg Easterbrook likes to confuse you:

Gregg Easterbrook penned an OpEd that ran in the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday. The thrust of the piece was that Bush isn't so bad on the environment. Let's analyze the essay:

Category     Our comment
General   Michael Leavitt has been nominated for EPA administrator.  
Data that has absolutely nothing to do with Bush 1. Air polution is down 48% since 1970.  
  2. Acid rain is down 41% since 1980.  
  3. Nitrogen oxide emissions are down 33% since 1990.  
  4. Emissions from aging power plants are down 40% since 1980.  
  5. All forms of water pollution have been declining for decades.  
  6. The number of lakes and rivers that are safe for fishing and swimming have doubled since 1970.  
  7. Toxic emissions from industry have declined 50% since the mid-1980s.  
  8. The forested acreage of the United States has been expanding, not contracting, for more than a decade.  
  9. No U.S. animal species has fallen extinct since full implementation of the Endangered Species Act in the late 1970s.  
  10. All environmental trends have been positive for years or decades.  
  11. Twenty years ago, from 1979 to summer 1983, Los Angeles had 467 Stage One alerts, from 1999 through this summer, Los Angeles recorded just one Stage One ozone alert.  
Criticism of Bush 1. Senators Lieberman and Jeffords.  
  2. There are critics of Bush's "new source rule" for aging power plants.  
  3. There are critics of Bush's new forest policy.  
  4. The New York Times.on the "new source rule".  
  5. The Los Angeles Times spins most environmental news negatively.  
Criticism of Bush (by Easterbrook) 1. Bush has failed to address global warming and SUV fuel economy.  
Lukewarm support of Bush 1. Bush's new forest policy leaves most important decisions to local managers from the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management. Though they may abuse their new discretion, it's also possible they will use it wisely. Hardly a ringing endorsement.
  2. Bush's forest policy is hard to project — but regardless, something had to be done to reduce the wildfires plaguing the West. Something? Anything? That's a defense without any reference to wisdom of the policy.
Bush has no choice 1. Bush made it easier to drill for oil and gas on public lands because the public is unwilling to make a commitment to energy conservation. Debatable.
Support of Bush 1. All forms of air pollution except greenhouse gases declined under Bill Clinton and continue to decline under George W. Bush. We believe that pollution has gone up (a bit) in places like Southern California - largely due to the increase in SUVs.
  2. The forested acreage of the United States has been expanding continues to expand under Bush.  
  3. He ordered that diesel fuel be reformulated to reduce its inherent pollution content.  
  4. He ordered that new diesel trucks and buses meet significantly stricter emissions standards.  
  5. He imposed new emissions standards on a range of previously unregulated machines.  
Easterbrook on the critics 1. The Bush environmental record has been relentlessly distorted. No evidence presented in essay.
  2. Democrats are bashing the president for political reasons.  
  3. Environmental lobbies are exaggerating the case against Bush. No evidence presented in essay.
  4. Democrats and environmentalists only serve to discourage the president from proposing higher vehicle mileage standards or meaningful global warming rules. That is highly debatable.


The reader is presented with eleven items that have nothing to do with Bush's environmental policies. It's 20% of the essay [Total words: 1015, Nothing to do with Bush: 214]. Easterbrook is a journalistic disgrace.


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No half measures:
I pledge allegiance to the sacred Flag
of the blessed United States of America,
and to the hallowed Republic for which it stands:
one Nation under God, sacrosanct,
With Rapture and Prayer for all.


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Pay the price!

Nicholas D. Kristoff writes in the New York Times about what we should do now that we are in Iraq. He admits that Bush misled the United States into war, but what's done is done. We're in there and might as well do what we can to make the best of the situation. Kristoff's position is that we should "pay for our occupation" and keep our troops there. Excerpt:
... [hold] our noses and [pass] the president's budget request for Iraq and Afghanistan."
Hold our noses. But nowhere does he talk about Bush paying a political price for his (mis)leadership.

Our position is that it's probably best to get out fast and leave the situation in the hands of the U.N., but we recognize that there is an argument for staying in there.

Those (like Kristoff) who say Americans should "pay the price" (financially and in lives lost) should also demand that Bush pay a price as well.

If Congress is going to pony up the $87 billion, they should at least include a provision that requires Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Perle, Wolfowitz, and Rice to wear hair-shirts for the rest of his term. Real hair-shirts.

Or barring that, an official declaration by the administration that they were wrong about Iraq's connections to al Qaeda, the state of Iraq's nuclear program, the existence of chemical weapons, the decision to bypass the U.N., the use of bogus intelligence, and so on.

If Americans are going to pay a price, so should Bush.


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Wednesday, October 15, 2003

A nice pair:

Spectator wears headphones
- out of touch with what's going on -
makes a foolish decision.
President only gets information from his advisors
- out of touch with what's going on -
makes foolish decisions.



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Tuesday, October 14, 2003

A note about images:

We've received complains that some of the images are not loading. It is a problem with our hosting and - for the moment - is a problem that comes and goes. We are considering moving images elsewhere, but that's a big job and we are hoping to resolve the problem with our hosting service. We apologize for any problems.


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New weblog:

There is a weblog called The Gotham City 13 which has some original political cartoons by Jesse. Worth a look.


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Monday, October 13, 2003

Newsweek "frames" the Limbaugh story:

The following are excerpts from Newsweek's article by Evan Thomas about Limabugh and his drug use: (emphasis added)

Evan Thomas writes We reply
... for the past several years, [Limbaugh was] living in a private hell of pain and compulsion. It's not yet known if he took the pills for pain or for other reasons (e.g for weight loss or for fun)
IN THE END, he was betrayed by his own housekeeper. Poor Rush, "betrayed" by someone. His own housekeeper. How unfair!
Limbaugh’s exposure as a pain-pill addict began when Wilma Cline, 42, who had worked at Limbaugh’s $30 million Florida estate from 1997 to July 2001, showed up at the Palm Beach County state attorney’s office late last year eager to sic the cops on her former boss. Poor Rush, the lady wanted to "sic the cops" on him.
Her motive remained murky ... Bullshit. 100% top-grade bullshit. She was worried about taking the rap should Limbaugh get caught. That was in the news reports, Evan.
The man behind the curtain is not the God of Family Values but a childless, twice-divorced, thrice-married schlub whose idea of a good time is to lie on his couch and watch football endlessly. We all know schlubs are harmless.
Journalists who have spent time with Limbaugh have been struck by the contrast between Rush the Radio Know-It-All and the private, ill-at-ease Limbaugh. Yep, we should all reach out and comfort a multi-millionaire who complains when moms on welfare have "luxuries" like a microvave oven. (We vividly remember that rant from a while back.)
Limbaugh’s own mother remarked on his somewhat passive-aggressive reticence as a child. Little Rush was “very quiet”. Let's bring in the mother to tug on the heartstrings. "Little Rush"?
[His mother said] at Halloween, “he really didn’t care much for trick or treating. He would rather stay at home." And Halloween is coming up in just a few weeks. It's too sad for words.
... Limbaugh’s father never quite approved of his career path, and ... Rush would be depressed and deflated every time he got off the phone with his dad. Poor, poor, Rush.
... despite his on-air bombast, Limbaugh is known for his politeness, even gentleness at times Gentle, polite Limbaugh --- NOT!
Limbaugh’s dependence on painkillers began after an unsuccessful back surgery in the late ’90s. Prove it.
Gary Bauer, president of the conservative organization American Values, drew a distinction between a crack addict and Limbaugh’s brand of addiction. “From a moral standpoint, there’s a difference between people who go out and seek a high and get addicted and the millions of Americans dealing with pain who inadvertently get addicted It sure looks to us like Limbaugh was seeking a high. News reports citing the housekeeper do not make references to Limbaugh being in pain and therefore needing pills.



UPDATE: Yes, we found what we were looking for in our computer archives!

Here is the picture that accompanied a New York Times article about welfare moms in California. (enlarged 200%) -



The thrust of the story was that the state of California was paying such families to move out of the state. This picture was of someone who was living in an apartment in the central valley. Rush Limbaugh seized on the story - and the accompanying picture - to complain that this lady was living the high life. Basing his analysis solely on the picture, Limbaugh was outraged that there was a dishwasher and a microwave oven in the kitchen.

[The New York Times story ran on Monday, 18 June 2001, and Limbaugh made comments on his radio show that same day. From the NYTimes abstract: Tulare County, Calif, which is one of poorest counties in US has been paying average of $1,600 per month to more than 750 welfare families to move almost anywhere in country ...]

We were driving around listening to Limbaugh at the time and were startled at his mean-spiritedness. Complaining about a microwave oven? Look at the picture. It's under the counter. Those things cost about $80. What would satisfy Limbaugh? Welfare recipients living in a tent with no heat?

He's a son of a bitch.     Don't forget it.   And don't let reporters like Evan Thomas mislead you.


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Saturday, October 11, 2003

David Broder, man of few words:

On last week's Meet the Press we thought that David Broder didn't have much to offer. Now we've checked the transcript and it confirms our view. He spoke only five times on substance (with an additional two remarks at the end of the show about his appearance 40 years ago). 467 words. Here they are:
ON THE PLAME SCANDAL
    The principle is pretty simple. It is the government’s responsibility to keep the government’s secrets secret. It is not the press’ responsibility. Our inclination, once we have information, is to try to verify it, to amplify as much as we can, the background and the context. But our basic obligation, then, is to share information with the public. What routinely is done, is what Bob said he did in this case, which is to say to the government agency, “Is there any reason why I ought to do what is unnatural, which is to withhold the information?” Now, I don’t know what was said specifically to Bob, as to that case. We have his word as to what it was, and he had to make the judgment as to whether they gave him a compelling reason to withhold that name.
    Well, I was at the Democratic National Committee meeting yesterday where Al Sharpton said the president is moonwalking this question, and I think he’s got it about right. It is hard to believe that if the president, when he was dealing with a finite universe of possible leakers, did not really put the heat on, that he couldn’t get an answer to his question.


ON THE CALIFORNIA RECALL ELECTION
    Well, I was told last night, by somebody who’s been tracking very much what Ron said, that the race has gotten more interesting but that there still seems to be a firm majority in favor of the recall. This is a flawed process. A man who I was talking to said, “If Leon Panetta’s name had gone on the ballot as an alternative, he would be winning this race hands down. But because of this peculiar process there, people are in a dilemma because they don’t want to keep Governor Davis as their governor, and they don’t really want to see any of these alternatives become governor.” The overriding sentiment seems to be, “Let’s shake up Sacramento,” which is bad news for Governor Davis.
    They may very well be right. And people take these elections seriously when they’re choosing a chief executive, whether it’s for the country or for the state. And the people that I talked to, when I was in California, have this concern about their state. It’s not a question for them of simple celebrity. It is a question of who can get the problems of California —begin to address those problems. So when you attack the credibility and the behavior pattern of the presumably leading candidate, you are going to have some effect on the voters.
    I don’t think it has much effect on 2004. Bush is going to have to make the case himself to the California voters as to why they should support him when they did not in overwhelming numbers last time.


ON HIS APPEARANCE ON MEET THE PRESS 40 YEARS AGO
    Oh, no.
    Thank you.


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Tony Snow says everything is A-OK:

Last week, Fox News Sunday host Tony Snow had some "parting thoughts" about Rush Limbaugh. It was a defense of the now former sports commentator. These words by Snow caught our attention:
... we also need to open our eyes. Here's the unmentionable secret: Racism isn't that big a deal any more. No sensible person supports it. Nobody of importance preaches it. It's rapidly becoming an ugly memory.
It would be nice to believe that racism is becoming only a memory, but we're not there yet. And if history is any guide, it requires constant vigilance to keep it from re-emerging.


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Friday, October 10, 2003

Where we stand:

There has been a lot of talk in the last 12 hours about Rush Limbaugh's felonious drug use (and his pressuring of an employee to obtain drugs). Scanning the web, we get the impression that conservatives like Sean Hannity are throwing down the gauntlet and demanding that, in this instance, liberals should adhere to their principles and support lenient treatment of Limbaugh. That probably means therapy/rehab instead of prison time. Our response is that we don't believe it's appropriate to extend compassion in this instance - or any other "instance". That's selective and only addresses the conservative-caught-with-his-pants-down du jour. Instance-by-instance leniency is the flip side of laws that are used to harass individuals or groups.

Our position is:
  • We believe in equal treatment under the law.

  • We support a change in drug legislation - to reduce or eliminate penalties and, where appropriate, to treat use as a medical problem.
That's it. Conservatives can agree with us or not on those two items, but beyond that we will not engage in a discussion about our liberal principles as they might apply to Limbaugh.


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Thursday, October 09, 2003

Mr. Bad Numbers:

Rush Limbaugh is flogging the ESPN-fired-me story - probably to take attention away from a very serious charge of illegaly purchasing drugs - and on his website's main page links to a National Review essay defending him on the "overrated black quarterbacks' charge.

But who is the author of the essay? None other than John R. Lott Jr., the guy who has a sorry record when it comes to dealing with statistics. A number of critical observations of Lott have been made by Calpundit (here and here), and there are about 1,500 entries when you ask Google for links to: "John Lott" unethical.

Yup, that's where conservatives go when they need statistical support - to John "There was a problem setting the date on my computer" Lott.


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Wednesday, October 08, 2003

Wisdom from the west coast:

Calpundit writes: (excerpt)
The California recall is just the latest in a lengthening string of naked power grabs that reveal the cankered soul at the top of the Republican party these days. Even leaving aside Florida 2000, we've seen unprecedented mid-decade redistrictings in both Colorado and Texas; campaigns that compare Democrats directly to Osama bin Laden; an indecent and truly morally bereft performance following Paul Wellstone's death; the end of the traditional blue slip rule for judicial nominees in the Senate — because control of both houses of Congress and the White House and most of the judiciary isn't enough for them; and the Valerie Plame affair, a scandal that, I think, is truly an "At long last sir, have you no decency?" moment.

But this has got to stop. We should be mad as hell over what's happening, and we do need to be willing to fight every bit as nasty as the Republican leadership is obviously willing to fight. It's pretty obvious they simply don't understand any other language.

Texas-style Republicanism is the engine of the radical right today, and George Bush is its leader. He should be our target, not Arnold Schwarzenegger. So stay mad, stay mad as hell, but stay smart too. November 2004 is the next battleground, and evicting George Bush from the White House is our goal. Don't forget it.
We completely agree.


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Tuesday, October 07, 2003

The result:





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On the California ballot:

From the Official Voter Information Guide:
Trek Thunder Kelly
Independent
1320 Pacific Avenue, Venice, CA, 90291
310.452.3264, trek@trekkelly.com, www.trekkelly.com

Dear Voters, Please vote for me, thus breaking the Seventh Seal and incurring Armageddon. I will legalize drugs, gambling, and prostitution so they may be taxed and regulated, the funds derived would subsidize the deficit, education, and the environment. I believe in peaceful resolutions backed by a strong military; I don't care who you marry of have sex with.


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Pretty poor poet:

Bush was recently in the news for having penned a poem for Laura. Here is how it was reported in the New York Daily News:
As her husband watched quietly, [Laura] recited it.

"Dear Laura," the poem began, "Roses are red, violets are blue, oh my lump in the bed, I miss you.
"The distance, my dear, has been such a barrier, next time you want an adventure, just land on a carrier."
But that was not the full poem. Here it is, courtesy of the Sunday Mirror:
"Dear Laura, Roses are red, Violets are blue,
Oh my lump in the bed, How I've missed you.
Roses are redder, Bluer am I,
Seeing you kissed by that charming French guy.
The dogs and the cat, they missed you too,
Barney's still mad you dropped him, he ate your shoe.
The distance, my dear, has been such a barrier,
Next time you want an adventure, just land on a carrier."
And the article goes on to note:
... art critic Brian Sewell attacked it as "drivel". He said: "He should have something better to do, especially considering the problems in Iraq."
He ate your shoe?

Reading this poem confirms our opinion that Bush is a dolt.


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Monday, October 06, 2003

This puts accountability right into the White House," a senior administration official said:

White House announces reorganization to deal with Iraq and Afghanistan (according to story in the New York Times). Here's a snapshot.



Feel better now?


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Saturday, October 04, 2003

A couple of quick points:

Re the Schwarzenegger article in the Los Angeles Times about his behavior towards women on the movie set (and elsewhere):
We were struck by the following sentence -

The Times did not learn of any of the six women from Schwarzenegger's rivals in the recall race. And none of the women approached the newspaper on her own. Reporters contacted them in the course of a seven-week examination of Schwarzenegger's behavior toward women on and off the movie set.

Okay, no rivals in the race were involved. Presumably that refers to all the candidates on the 2nd part of the ballot - who is to be governor if the recall succeeds. But it's unclear if the Times learned of any of the six women from the Davis organization, or from the No On Recall organization(s).
Re Joe Wilson:
Some defenders of the Bush administration over the Plame scandal like to point out that former ambassador Wilson didn't provide a written report, implying that his whole mission was peripheral to the inquiry, unprofessional, or some such thing. But here is what Wilson had to say on Nightliine this week about the process -

WILSON: Before I left [Niger], I briefed the ambassador, I also briefed somebody else at the mission of what I'd found, which essentially tracked what [the ambassador] had found. I flew back to Washington. I had to leave on a business trip the next day, so somebody from the CIA, a reports officer, came out and took verbatim notes of everything I had to say (which is the way they do it). He then crafted that into "CIA language", and circulated it.

This got us thinking. Might the CIA prefer that people not write up - and store on their PCs - information that they would prefer to keep (physically) within the organization? Is a reports officer skilled in obtaining critical information (dates, places) that a self-generated report might leave out? Is there an advantage to a "memory dump" from an envoy, which presumably is just a mess of facts, which can be analyzed like everything else (satellite photos) by the agency?

We don't know the answers, but it seems clear that disparaging Wilson's report because it wasn't written is mostly an irrelevant debating point.


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Friday, October 03, 2003

Charting the decline:

The folks over at sadlyno.com have crunched the numbers and come up with a chart of Bush's standing in the polls while president. They have generously allowed us to post it here at uggabugga:




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Earth to Uggabugga:

We have added a contact e-mail to our template. It is at the top of the page.


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3,678 words compressed into one table:

From the Los Angeles Times story about Schwarzenegger

When Who Age at time     Claim Where Told to / witnessed by Rebuttal
1975 E. Laine Stockton 19   wife of professional bodybuilder reached under T-shirt, touched bare left breast Gold's Gym husband  
1980   22   former pro beach volleyball player "grabbed and squeezed" left breast a Santa Monica street sister  
late 1980s   ~32   secretary slipped left hand under skirt and grabbed right buttock Columbia Pictures lot boss  
late 1990   28   crew member groped elevator in hotel where the cast and crew were staying boss, husband  
late 1990   ~23   crew member pulled on to his lap, asked "Have you ever had a man slide his tongue in your [anus]?" shooting "Terminator 2 family member  
2000 Anna Richardson 29   British television host circled left nipple with finger a suite at the Dorchester Hotel in London   Richardson provocatively approached Schwarzenegger, cupped right breast in her right hand and said, "What do you think of these?", sat on his lap



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Headlines: (from Google News' first page of results for the Kay report)
No illegal weapons found in Iraq, US investigator says   San Francisco Chronicle, CA
No weapons found in Iraq, report says   San Jose Mercury News, CA
US report finds no illicit arms   Boston Globe, MA
6 months later, Iraqi arms elusive   Arizona Republic, AZ
Iraq: US Inspector Says No WMD Found   Radio Free Europe
Weapons team seeks more time   Seattle Post Intelligencer, WA
'No WMD' found in Iraq   CNN International
US weapons hunters are re-examining the only discovery the Bush.... [about the 2 trailers]   Boston Globe, MA
US Weapons Inspector: No Banned Weapons Found in Iraq Yet   Voice of America
'We found nothing, despite Saddam's ambitions'   Independent, UK
Iraq investigator tells legislators no WMD   United Press International
Searcher finds no WMD in Iraq   Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA
No Illicit Arms Found in Iraq, US Inspector Tells Congress   New York Times
Hard-Charging Kay Takes Heat on WMD Issue   Kansas City Star, MO
US-Led Team Says No WMD Stocks Found in Iraq   Reuters, UK
No Weapons Found Yet   ABC News
No WMD in Iraq: US search chief   Toronto Star, Canada


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A change for the Golden State?
BEFORE



BUT THE NEXT GOVERNOR (?), ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, IS QUOTED AS SAYING: "I admired Hitler"

AFTER?

NOTE: Sure, it's a cheap shot. But we couldn't resist the opportunity this story provided.


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Thursday, October 02, 2003

A quick thought:

We eagerly await the full story about Rush Limbaugh and his alleged pill-popping. But at this early stage we feel compelled to note that when we first saw the slimmed-down Rush we were astonished. (That was, what, five years ago?) At the time there was something unnatural about him. Hard to quantify, but he did not look like a former fat guy who hit the treadmill and ate only small portions. We were in the same state of mind that we had a decade ago while reading Stephen Glass' made up stories in the New Republic. Something isn't quite right, but you aren't quite sure what. Only later when the truth gets out does it all make sense.


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