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Breaking: WaPo’s David Weigel Resigns After More Conservative-bashing Emails Disclosed

Washington Post blogger Dave Weigel resigned today after a host of offensive e-mails surfaced revealing his disdain for much of the right – the beat he was charged with covering. Fishbowl DC, which published a number of those emails yesterday, confirmed the resignation with the Post just after noon. Yesterday I reported on leaked emails from Weigel to a listserve of liberal journalists bashing conservatives and conservatism – you know, the people Weigel is supposed to be covering. As bad as those email were, a plethora of messages from Weigel published in the Daily Caller take the conservative-bashing to a whole new level. The new emails also demonstrated that yesterday’s quasi-apology from Weigel was really not as sincere as he claimed. He said that he made some of his most offensive remarks at the end of a bad day. But these new emails show that there was really nothing unique about them, and that offensive remarks about conservatives really were nothing new or uncommon. Many of the misguided statements were clearly made in jest – “I hope he fails,” Weigel said of Rush Limbaugh after the radio host was hospitalized with chest pains, a reference to Limbaugh’s hope that Obama’s agenda would fail. But other bouts of name calling – ragging on the “outbursts of racism” from “amoral blowhard” Newt Gingrich, for instance – were obviously not jokes. The Daily Caller revealed some quite stunning statements from the JournoList in its piece today: “Honestly, it’s been tough to find fresh angles sometimes–how many times can I report that these [tea party] activists are joyfully signing up with the agenda of discredited right-winger X and discredited right-wing group Y?” Weigel lamented in one February email. In other posts, Weigel describes conservatives as using the media to “violently, angrily divide America.” According to Weigel, their motives include “racism” and protecting “white privilege,” and for some of the top conservatives in D.C., a nihilistic thirst for power. “There’s also the fact that neither the pundits, nor possibly the Republicans, will be punished for their crazy outbursts of racism. Newt Gingrich is an amoral blowhard who resigned in disgrace, and Pat Buchanan is an anti-Semite who was drummed out of the movement by William F. Buckley. Both are now polluting my inbox and TV with their bellowing and minority-bashing. They’re never going to go away or be deprived of their soapboxes,” Weigel wrote. Of Matt Drudge, Weigel remarked,  “It’s really a disgrace that an amoral shut-in like Drudge maintains the influence he does on the news cycle while gay-baiting, lying, and flubbing facts to this degree.”… Republicans? “Ratf–king [Obama] on every bill.” Palin? Tried to “ratf–k” a moderate Republican in a contentious primary in New York. Limbaugh? Used “ratf–king tactics” in urging Republican activists to vote for Hillary Clinton in open primaries after Obama had all but beat her for the Democratic nomination. Weigel continued to defend these outbursts, as he did when contacted by the Daily Caller. “My reporting, I think, stands for itself,” he said. “I’ve always been of the belief that you could have opinions and could report anyway… people aren’t usually asked to stand or fall on everything they’ve said in private.” First, there’s the issue of whether anything said on a 400-member email list can really be considered “private.” “There’s no such thing as off-the-record with 400 people,” Nation columnist Eric Alterman told Politico . But the real issues are, first, whether such mean-spirited jabs demonstrate a disdain for many conservatives that precludes Weigel from covering them fairly (he did label gay marriage opponents “bigots,” after all), and second, whether the Post feels it is appropriate to have someone hostile to the right covering conservatism, while a through-and-through liberal in Ezra Klein covers the left. The Post signaled that it did not consider Weigel’s comments to be a serious problem. It seems that attitude has changed. Managing Editor Raju Narisetti told Politico that “Dave’s apology to readers reflects he understands, in calmer hindsight, the need to exercise good judgment at all times and of not throwing stones, especially when operating from inside an echo-filled glass house that is modern-day digital journalism.” He added that it was “time to move on.”

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Breaking: WaPo’s David Weigel Resigns After More Conservative-bashing Emails Disclosed

Newsweek’s Adler: Obama ‘Chickens Out,’ Fails to Push for Taxes to Make ‘SUVs… Prohibitively Expensive’

“Obama Chickens Out on Energy,” a disgusted Ben Adler argued to Newsweek’s The Gaggle blog readers this morning. Adler’s chief complaint with last night’s Oval Office address: Obama didn’t call for massive tax hikes to push Americans to make more politically correct spending choices. The Newsweek writer avoided the T-word until his last paragraph, but he made abundantly clear that he felt that a) American stupidity and short-sightedness was threatening to literally drown Manhattan in rising sea levels and b) Obama was not doing enough to make government force people to make better choices with their own money (emphases mine): In his address from the Oval Office on Tuesday night, President Obama eloquently laid out the case that we have failed to confront our dependence on fossil fuels, and that now is the time for us to do so. Obama acknowledged that our failure to do this so far has been caused not just by obeisance to entrenched interests, but also by “a lack of political courage and candor.” But he failed to use this opportunity to marshal public support for a logical, tangible goal that would reduce our destructive consumption of oil and coal. The idea that we can solve this problem of our massive, inefficient energy use through investing more in R&D is ridiculous. We need to start bringing down our emissions immediately, before Manhattan finds itself under water. Spending more money on research into technologies that may or may not be more efficient, and may or may not be economically viable 10 years from now, is insufficient. There are plenty of technologies, such as driving smaller cars, or hybrids, or taking buses, or living in smaller houses, that do not need to be researched and developed; they just need to be chosen. And they will be chosen if we make indulging in SUVs and McMansions prohibitively expensive, to reflect the social cost of global warming , and the cost of disasters such as the Deepwater Horizon oil-rig explosion that forced Obama to make this address in the first place. Obama should know all this, and his decision to pretend otherwise reeks of the same lack of courage and candor he had just lambasted unnamed predecessors for. Tossing out the pain-free idea that we can invest our way out of this problem is politically convenient, but it is not realistic. Obama swiftly pivoted to sounding like he was filled with steely resolve, saying, “But the one approach I will not accept is inaction.” But merely investing in energy research is little better than inaction. What Obama needed to say , if he was willing to stake his presidency on combating catastrophic climate change, as he had previously staked his presidency—and won—on the proposition that Americans are all entitled to affordable health insurance, was that he would not tolerate anything short of a bill that caps or taxes carbon emissions. He did not, and we will all suffer the consequences.

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Newsweek’s Adler: Obama ‘Chickens Out,’ Fails to Push for Taxes to Make ‘SUVs… Prohibitively Expensive’

WaPo Asks ‘Who Cares’ if President Golfs During Crisis, Forgets They Did in 2002

Poor Barack Obama. Being president can take a lot out of him. That’s why he needs  to relax on the links, and relieve some stress into his golf game. No problem, says the Washington Post, the Gulf Spill can wait. This is the same Washington Post that berated President Bush for golfing while an armed conflict was taking place…in Israel. Not that suicide bombings in Israel are an unserious matter, but doesn’t the disaster in the Gulf require at least as much attention (far more, in my mind) from the President? The Post doesn’t seem to think so. So while the paper decried Bush’s ” golf cart diplomacy ” and devoted over 600 words to suggesting that Bush’s golf game was distracting from his work on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Post found no such grounds to criticize Obama. As a reporter for one of the paper’s blogs put it, ” who cares? ” Obviously not the Post (h/t Jim Hoft ). Wrote Stephen Stromberg at the PostPartisan blog, Surely even the president deserves — and probably needs — some downtime, even now. Weeks spent clearing brush back at the ranch in Hyde Park might be pushing it. But an afternoon on the back nine doesn’t bother me. And whenever Obama does take a few hours off, there will always be enough going on in the world against which to juxtapose his leisure to enable the Jim Hofts of the Internet to take their cheap shots. It was unfair when Michael Moore did this to George W. Bush. And it’s unfair for Hoft to do it to Barack Obama. Was it unfair when the Post criticized Bush’s balancing of work and leisure (on his vacation, by the way)? Stromberg doesn’t say. As he notes, chief executives are always faced with a litany of difficult problems. So why are President Obama’s golf habits off limit, while his predecessors’ are fair game? In fact, while Hoft simply posed the snark-laden word “leadership” at the bottom of his piece, the Post devoted a full-length article on page A2 to Bush’s golf course distraction. The headline: “Before Golf, Bush Decries Latest Deaths In Mideast.” Oh, snap. The Post’s Mike Allen wrote in 2002: Bush, wearing khakis and a knit shirt, was holding a driver in his gloved left hand. The rest of his foursome, including his father, former president George H.W. Bush, was waiting. However incongruous the setting, the president plunged ahead. “There are a few killers who want to stop the peace process that we have started, and we must not let them,” he said. “I call upon all nations to do everything they can to stop these terrorist killers.” His business out of the way, Bush barely paused for breath before saying, “Thank you. Now watch this drive.” The abrupt segue illustrates the dilemma Bush will face over the next month as he relaxes and works at his ranch in Crawford, Tex., at a time of global political volatility. On Tuesday, Bush will leave Washington behind until Labor Day. That is likely to mean a return to the golf-cart diplomacy of last summer, when Bush talked Middle East peace between playing holes, at one point dripping sweat as he said Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat “can do a lot more to be convincing the people on the street to stop these acts of terrorism.” Golf was apparently worthy of being the central theme of this story; the President was golfing while suicide bombers were blowing themselves up in Israel. But President Obama’s attempt to get away from it all and enjoy 18 holes, on the other hand, is not worthy of any coverage. For those who suggest otherwise, the Post has two words: “Who cares?”

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WaPo Asks ‘Who Cares’ if President Golfs During Crisis, Forgets They Did in 2002

Have a Desire for Communist Propaganda? There’s an App for That

Can’t get enough of a brutal dictator responsible for substantial human rights atrocities including millions of deaths, all in the name of a failed ideology? iTunes has just the thing for you. Developer Eigthart, Ltd. presents the iStalin: FREE Communist Posters for the People iPhone/iPad application . The developer’s Web site describes the app as a means to “spread the communist glory.” (h/t @SetonMotley ) “Good news, comrades! Finally, after years of struggle the Industrialization of the Soviet Union paid off. From the creators of the Communist Manifesto, the October Revolution and the Perestroika comes the best Soviet Union product since Kalashnikov – iStalin! Finally the people will have the privilege to create Soviet posters themselves and spread the communist glory!” There is both a free version and a $1.99 version of this application. In addition to various candidate shots of Joseph Stalin, the Statue of Liberty with a “CCCP” label and shot of other left-wing icons, as such as Vladimir Lenin and Che Guevara. “The people can choose between different styles and papers that were approved by the communist party or place a photograph of Stalin or the symbols of the industrial proletariat – the hammer and sickle,” the Web site says. “There are some celebrity appearances including the comrades Lenin and Che. Last but not least, the people will be able to add different soviet slogans that tovarish Stalin personally picked.” Previously, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ) has received criticism for what applications that have made it through its approval process, despite claims it has attempted to weed out “inappropriate content.” Other such controversial items have included a “Baby Shaker” app and another app created by PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP ) that offered dating advice to men .

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Have a Desire for Communist Propaganda? There’s an App for That

Poll: Americans Overwhelmingly Reject Government’s Plan to ‘Save Journalism’

An overwhelming majority of Americans prefer freedom of the press to outdated models of journalism, according to a new Rasmussen poll. The survey comes in the midst of discussions in the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission to intervene on behalf of Old Media. Eighty-five percent of respondents in the Rasmussen poll said they believe maintaining press freedom is more important than financially supporting the newspaper industry. Only six percent said the latter is more important. Just 14 percent said they would favor a bailout of the newspaper industry. Respondents worried that government involvement in the industry would compromise press neutrality. Indeed, this sentiment reflects the findings of a number of studies over the past few years. As with any bailout, a bailout of a newspaper would inevitably mean at least some say in that newspaper’s content. In the words of a report released last year by the Business and Media Institute: As soon as Obama bailed out Detroit, he forced out GM Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner. The White House also gave majority ownership in Chrysler (55 percent) to the UAW. Wall Street bailouts resulted in overnight government regulation – even salary controls. Government intervention in media gives Obama the same opportunity to control the news. Seven major newspaper chains have gone into bankruptcy. If he uses the same strategies he used for Detroit, that would let Obama control major media outlets across the nation and he could dictate the news. A Harvard/Northwestern study observed just such trends in the newspaper industry of Argentina after that nation’s government instituted subsidies for its own failing newspapers. According to one blogger who reported on the study, Their analysis found a “huge correlation” between, in any given month, how much money went to a newspaper and how much corruption coverage appeared on its front page. For example, if the government ad revenue in a month increased by one standard deviation — around $70,000 U.S. — corruption coverage would decrease by roughly half of a front page. …in periods where newspapers were getting more money from the government, they produced fewer corruption scoops of their own and covered fewer of the scoops produced by other newspapers. (It should be noted here that the study only looked at the front pages of newspapers — so it’s possible rival papers were writing about the scandals uncovered by their peers. But if so, they were doing it on inside pages.) The Washington Examiner’s Mark Tapscott brilliantly captured the inevitability of a stilted journalism once public funding is introduced. He noted that the not-too-subtle goal of the campaign to “save journalism” is to transform the news industry from an information product collected by private individuals and entrepreneurs as a service to private buyers, to a government-regulated public utility providing a “public good,” as defined and regulated by government. The inevitable result of the campaign, Tapscott writes, is more government control over the news, since “government always expands its control over any activity it either funds or regulates.” The poll’s respondents presciently observed this attempt at a power grab–and resoundingly rejected it. According to Rasmussen, Sixty-nine percent (69%) think it at least somewhat likely that a newspaper that receives government funding to hire journalists will avoid criticizing government officials and policies, with 45% who say it is Very Likely. Twenty-three percent (23%) say it’s not very or not at all likely that newspapers will avoid such criticism if they get government funding. Seventy-one percent (71%) oppose a government bailout of the newspaper industry like the ones for the financial sector and the automobile industry, up from 65% in March of last year. Only 14% say a government bailout of the newspaper business is a good idea. Of course the federal government is considering a number of options beyond the gifting of taxpayer funds to ailing newspapers. Still many of its options could leave the door open to cronyism and compromising conflicts of interest between journalists and their federal benefactors. One such option is the creation of an “Americorps-type program that would hire and pay journalists to work for newspapers around the country,” in Rasmussen’s phrasing. First of all, as Reason’s Peter Suderman notes , the last thing American journalism needs is a crop of reporters on the public dole. But more to the point of this study, AmeriCorps itself has served as a prime example of cronyism in the distribution of public money. It is certainly not a model to be emulated. And besides, the combined price tag of these programs to save journalism could cost as much as $35 billion, according to Suderman. That’s almost 100 times the FCC’s annual budget. Any federal program doling out that kind of money will attract sycophantic would-be recipients, ready to do what it takes to get their hands on a slice of that pie. Americans, apparently, have a firm grasp of these facts. 

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Poll: Americans Overwhelmingly Reject Government’s Plan to ‘Save Journalism’