Prosecutor Paulose has political problems

With all the recent news about various U.S. Attorney controversies, I’ve neglected to report much on the new U.S. Attorney for Minnesota, Rachel Paulose. This one’s a little different from some of the controversies — inasmuch as Paulose does not stand accused of allowing politics to dictate prosecutorial decisions — but it’s interesting anyway. Paulose, […]

This Week in God

First up from the God Machine this week is an interesting story about the intersection of evangelicals, politics, and blogging. Political reporter David Brody is punching his keyboard with two fingers, checking the Web for mentions of his stories. Up pops a liberal blog quoting one of his recent interviews. He’s delighted — until he […]

No longer gay — but still crazy

Guest Post by Morbo How far gone do you have to be before the “ex-gay” movement gives you the boot? Quite far, apparently. Consider the case of Richard Cohen. Cohen (not the syndicated columnist) spent several years being feted by the Religious Right as the ex-gay movement’s poster boy. He claimed to become straight after […]

The naked truth in Missouri: Dems weren’t behind embarrassing photos

Guest Post by Morbo The right-wing campaign against CNN reporter Michael Ware is a textbook example of how their smear machine works: Make any manner of wild allegations, offer no proof to back them up and wait for the mainstream media to begin reporting it. There’s no need to be concerned that the allegations are […]

Someone please wrap a head scarf around Tony Perkins’ mouth

Guest Post by Morbo Every weekday, Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, takes the latest Republican Party taking points, adds some stuff about Jesus to them, and e-mails them to his supporters. It must be the world’s easiest job. A recent Perkins salvo attacked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for wearing a head scarf […]

Friday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits. * CNN is reporting that Monica Goodling will formally resign from the Justice Department tomorrow. That makes quite a bit of sense — if she pleads the Fifth, the DoJ necessarily had to let her go. * Speaking of the purge, Alberto Gonzales appears to be moving in the wrong […]

Prioritizing civil rights protections — for whites

For literally decades, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division has had a hiring committee, made up of veteran career lawyers, who screened thousands of resumes, interviewed candidates, and made recommendations that were rarely rejected. Attorneys who were hired to the Division were not only excellent lawyers, but had demonstrated a firm commitment and years of […]

CNN explains the Pelosi controversy

I’m sorry to keep harping on the media’s coverage of Speaker Pelosi’s trip to Syria, but I’m at a loss to explain how ridiculous the reporting has been, particularly among television journalists. Atrios flagged a quote this morning from CNN that I assumed he misheard. Alas, I checked the transcript and it was exactly right. […]

Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Hackville) — Part II

Yesterday, we talked about how unbelievably wrong Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) was in attacking fired U.S. Attorney Carol Lam. Hatch insisted on national television that Lam 1) was lax on immigration cases; 2) was a law professor; 3) had no prosecutorial experience; and 4) was a top aide for one of Bill Clinton’s presidential campaigns. […]

Threading the stem-cell needle? Not so much

We haven’t talked much about stem-cell policy lately, in large part because the issue (and medical research and hopes for potential life-saving treatments) is probably at a standstill until we get a new president in 21 months. There’s bi-partisan support for lifting Bush’s restrictions on federally-funded research, but there aren’t enough votes to override a […]