It’s hardly fair to condemn a newspaper columnist after publishing just two op-eds. Maybe the columnist is just getting warmed up. Perhaps he or she needs a few pieces to get comfortable. Or, in the case of Bill Kristol, maybe the New York Times just made a ridiculous decision that the paper is likely to […]
About a month ago, the Huffington Post’s Tom Edsall reported that Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign may be subtly, quietly targeting Barack Obama over his teenaged drug use. Ridiculous, said the Clinton campaign, who insisted Edsall’s report was baseless. Shortly thereafter, Billy Shaheen, the then-co-chairman of Clinton’s campaign in New Hampshire, went after Obama on the […]
Just a quick note to let readers know I’m back from my weekend off, and to extend my sincere thanks to Steve M. from No More Mister Nice Blog, Ron Chusid from Liberal Values, and dnA from Too Sense, each of whom did a terrific job in my absence. They all have great content on […]
Guest Post by Ron Chusid While there has been a lot of attention paid to the ways in which George Bush’s changes to Medicare have benefited insurance companies, such as by not allowing negotiations over price, the benefits to insurance companies from Medicare Advantage plans has received less attention. Besides the political implications of the […]
Guest Post by Ron Chusid While individual endorsements probably have minimal impact on primary races, the cumulative effect of several high profile endorsements might help Obama overcome one of the disadvantages typically faced by insurgent candidates going up against an establishment candidate who has an advantage in party support. Recently Obama has received endorsements from […]
Guest Post by dnA Yesterday, Hillary Clinton put the responsibility on the Obama campaign for distorting remarks she made about the Civil Rights movement, which some say could cause a backlash among black voters in upcoming primary states. Clinton said in an interview in New Hampshire earlier this week that Martin Luther King’s role during […]
Guest post by Steve M. In the past few years, quite a bit of New York Times op-ed space has been given over to novelists and short-story writers — some of them writers I enjoy and admire. I suppose it’s a search for fresh perspectives; unfortunately, the results are often ill-informed and half-baked. An example […]
Guest Post by dnA Within the first three paragraphs of Jonah Goldberg’s Sunday Outlook piece for the WaPo, which is inundated with clichés (example: “spiked like Dick Cheney’s EKG,” hyuk!) Goldberg makes this disclaimer: As National Review put it in its editorial endorsement of Romney (I am undecided, for the record): “Each of the men […]
Guest Post by Ron Chusid Despite the high profile victory for keeping creationism out of science classes in the Dover case, there are ongoing battles around the country to defend science. South Carolinians for Science Education reports on one victory as the State Board of Education reversed a December vote which would have led to […]
Guest Post by Ron Chusid Some of the posts on Saturday dealt with the inevitable attacks which the Democratic candidate will face and whether they will be prepared to respond. There was an example of a response to an attack from the Obama camp on Saturday night as Dick Durbin defended Obama against recent attacks […]