Steve Stone’s Gone
This just sucks. This is a huge mistake. Stone is an excellent analyst, and while he’s a homer, he’s an honest homer.
Call It A Comeback
This just sucks. This is a huge mistake. Stone is an excellent analyst, and while he’s a homer, he’s an honest homer.
Chapman addresses why most of the press is wrong
There are instances where it would be a terrible thing for journalists to be sent to jail for refusing to name their sources. But this isn’t one of them, and the press should stop pretending it is.
In this case, the press isn’t protecting a whistleblower, it’s protecting those who sought revenge against a whistleblower.
I’m still laughing. In fact, I can’t stop. I’m going to bed and will catch up on the ‘debate’ and thank yous to those who donated.
But thank you! Through this site, over $2500 was raised to help the DCCC. With the Dems having a nine point advantage in the generic ballot, we will hopefully see a wave coming for Tuesday.
Ginny Schrader, the Democratic candidate for the U.S. House seat from Pennsylvania’s 8th Congressional District, left a debate with Republican Mike Fitzpatrick, saying she was angry over a GOP mailer that criticized her screening of a controversial film at a fund-raiser.
Sponsored by the National Republican Congressional Committee and sent out Saturday, the mailer criticized Schrader’s decision in July to screen Michael Moore’s “Fahrenheit 9/11,” which is sharply critical of President Bush and the war in Iraq.The mailing, headlined “Ginny Schrader: The Hate America crowd has found their candidate,” claims Hezbollah, a group of Lebanon-based guerillas identified by the United States and Israel as terrorists, has offered to distribute Moore’s film.
“Let me assure you, I don’t hate America,” Schrader said in her opening remarks Monday. “This mentions Hezbollah. Half my family is Jewish. This is totally unacceptable.”
She also asked Fitzpatrick to apologize. Fitzpatrick, who sat stoically next to the standing Schrader, did not respond.
She’s on the left hand side!
Click on Air America Radio on the left hand side blog roll.
I’m sure with an Illinois Senator on, Al will be doing his Alan Keyes impersonation.
Not even comparable. He thinks that John Stewart’s broadside against Crossfire is the same as the whining about bias on both sides (I reserve the right to work the ref).
To me, and I’m probably not typical, it is not even close. Charles Madigan and most of the writers at papers do a decent job under the constraints of the business of journalism and in many ways I think it is getting better. Frequent updating on-line improves the context of stories and the information people can get. But more importantly the attack on Crossfire is an attack on mass media become a postmodern wasteland of claim versus claim. That’s a far more sophisticated complaint that too much of news is simply repeating assertions.
I love to make fun of Chris Mathews, and for good reason, but I have to admire that when he catches a clear problem, he calls the speaker on it–he’s done it to Kucinich, he’s done it to some of the Bush people and to Michelle Malkin. That’s what the ref should be doing–not making sure all points are even by the ‘team.’
Madigan and the written press are better about this. The problem is that fewer and fewer citizens are bothering to read them.
The post above this by Madigan is very good as well.
Much of the blogosphere likes to blast the press for a bunch of different things. Some of that is deserved–certainly there is a lot of group think like with any profession and much of the TV media is just horrible anymore, but ultimately, journalists are the only ones with the ability to track down stories. I’m not sure how many bloggers have actually tried reporting, but it is really hard. Try and sort through a complicated budget matter with competing claims is extremely difficult. It takes time that on a beat, many journalists can’t master. That is a flaw in the system, but it doesn’t make them incompetent.
To any GOPers who might be thinking about challenging lots of black voters. (note I don’t think most Republicans engage in some behavior)
Spend a couple days in black neighborhoods first. Or you are in for a very rude surprise in their response to you. Actually, you are in for a very rude surprise either way, but doing the first may force you to rethink your strategy.
The ballot, produced by the county election commission, was distributed to more than 40 local newspapers. Mogge says the ballot reaches thousands of potential voters in the 6th District.
Now the Cegelis camp wants the state election board to determine whether the DuPage commission might have omitted her name intentionally or because of gross negligence. If her name was left off purposely by an election board employee, that person could face a felony charge, Mogge said.
Rich Miller picks up on what Rick Klau and I complain about on a regular basis, the absolute shoddiness of the State Democratic Party’s on-line outreach efforts.
The response to Miller is telling:
UPDATE: Someone over at the House Democrats (the people who run the state party) reminded me that when they were in the minority, they had lots of time to publish their own faxed newsletter. Yes, I remember that well. They’re a little busy these days. No time to invent computer games.
So from 1995-1997 they had a fax. That’s the response?
Second, does anyone notice the problem here? The House Democratic Caucus isn’t the State Party. I respect Madigan though I have a love hate relationship with his brand of machine driven politics. I don’t trust him on a lot of issues, but I respect him. That said, the fortunes of the Illinois House are not the fortunes of the Illinois Democratic Party.
The Republicans are moving forward with a series of initiatives to attract younger and more connected voters. Despite my straying from the reservation when it comes to issues like school funding and attacking Pangle, I want the Democratic Party to win in Illinois because for the most part the Democratic Party is more concerned with investment in education and infrastructure. Certainly there are good folks in the House GOP, but look at Alan Keyes and those who put him in power and forgive me if I don’t trust that party.
The Democrats are missing an opportunity to utilize the netroots for campaigns where it could matter. In the short term, it doesn’t matter, but in the long term, it certainly will. Obama’s campaign was suited to developing this strategy, but the wave took them in a different direction. I don’t begrudge that at all given the way the race has gone, but the Party needs to think about the long term and I can tell you that many electeds could benefit including Senator Durbin who is popular in the blogosphere and I think it’s safe to say that Bean, Renner and Cegelis have outpeformed at least partially due to online efforts. I’m not a triumphalist in saying that all three are doing better than expected only because of the internet because that isn’t true, but it does add a small crucial help to the system.
If nothing else, you could take shots at me for making fun of the Governor.
Oh, wait, the Speaker does that too.