Tag Archives: rolling-stone

Matt Taibbi–Wall Street’s Big Win

Matt Taibbi's latest article in Rolling Stone giving a good analysis and criticism of Congress' “historical” financial reform legislation. Here's a snippet: “But Dodd-Frank was neither an FDR-style, paradigm-shifting reform, nor a historic assault on free enterprise. What it was, ultimately, was a cop-out, a Band-Aid on a severed artery. If it marks the end of anything at all, it represents the end of the best opportunity we had to do something real about the criminal hijacking of America's financial-services industry. During the yearlong legislative battle that forged this bill, Congress took a long, hard look at the shape of the modern American economy – and then decided that it didn't have the stones to wipe out our country's one

Katy Perry Tits do Rolling Stone of the Day

When your tits are all you have going for you….and they’ve managed to get you this far along….you might as well give them the spotlight they deserve as a thank you…so I get both Katy Perry and Rolling Stone’s strategy in dressing her like this for the latest issue, cuz really, this is all she is good for….and luckily they photoshopped all the sloppy that comes with these tits…unfortunately they didn’t photoshop on a new head…. On a seriously important sidenote, I am still trying to get the titty fucking pics of her off the dude in Prison, but I’ve had no luck yet.

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Katy Perry Tits do Rolling Stone of the Day

Pete Wentz: Fans ‘May Recognize’ Some Black Cards Bandmates

While the bassist won’t reveal full lineup yet, he tells MTV News who isn’t in the band. By James Montgomery Pete Wentz Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Digitas Pete Wentz will be the first one to tell you that no matter what he does from here on out, he’ll always be known as “the dude from Fall Out Boy.” So as he prepares to launch his first post-FOB project — a group he’s calling Black Cards — he’s not shying away from talking about his (former?) band, as well. He knows the comparisons between the two are inevitable. That said, those comparisons are also pretty unfounded. Much like the music being made by fellow FOBs Patrick Stump, Joe Trohman and Andy Hurley these days, Wentz’s Black Cards is about as far removed from Fall Out Boy as you can get. And yet, he must still answer the questions, about just what his new endeavors (and the endeavors of his bandmates) mean for the future of the band. “We’ve always been friends, so I think everyone is interested in supporting each other’s projects,” Wentz wrote in an email to MTV News. “I really miss touring and seeing the guys everyday onstage. At the same time, I feel like I want to keep traveling and creating new ideas. I think what everyone is doing now will be important to the legacy of Fall Out Boy.” And while words like “legacy” will no doubt make the Fall Out fanatics a little nervous, Wentz knows that — for the time being, at least — he’s got to move forward, meaning he’s primarily focused on assembling his Black Cards band. Last week, he revealed to Rolling Stone the identity of his mysterious frontwoman: Her name is Bebe Rexha. And on Tuesday (July 20), he decided to dispel some rumors about who isn’t in the group, namely former Chiodos frontman Craig Owens, who’s signed to Wentz’s Decaydance label, or Panic! at the Disco’s Brendon Urie. “I can confirm [that] neither Craig& #8212; who has amazing new songs and a new record soon — or Brendon — who is working on Panic! in between beating the sh– out of me at ping-pong — are in the group,” Wentz wrote. “The other guys, some people may recognize, but no one who people will be like, ‘Oh My God, they got that guy???’ As soon as we figure out everyone’s role, we’ll announce them. Expect some news in the next week or so.” So, it looks like we’ll just have to wait for more information. Like we said, he’s got to keep moving forward. Are you excited to hear new music from Pete’s Black Cards band? Tell us in the comments!

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Pete Wentz: Fans ‘May Recognize’ Some Black Cards Bandmates

THG Week in Review: June 26-July 2, 2010

Welcome to THG’s Week in Review, and we hope you’re having an awesome holiday weekend. Below, we takes a look back on the last seven days in celebrity news. Visit us daily and follow us on Facebook and Twitter for all the latest gossip, rumors, commentary and humor. Now, The Hollywood Gossip ‘s Week in Review … Tapes containing a Mel Gibson racist tirade against Oksana Grigorieva were reportedly leaked, painting the actor as possibly the worst person alive. After months of hype and endless pics and sneak peeks, the best Twilight film so far hit theaters, raking in the cash. Here’s our Eclipse review ! Chris Brown’s moving Michael Jackson tribute at the BET Awards won praise from some and criticism from others … were the singer’s tears fake ? Molly Hagerty revealed herself as the massage therapist Al Gore allegedly assaulted. Police reopened the sexual assault case against the ex-V.P. While trying to reconcile with wife Bianca Kajlich, U.S. soccer star Landon Donovan admitted he may have a love child with a British woman. Taylor Lautner and Eclipse drew raves; Chris Brown’s comeback mixed reviews. The Jake Pavelka-Vienna Girardi circus continued with harsh allegations, nude magazine offers, Jake gay rumors and the TV showdown of the century. Grand Slam tennis champ Jennifer Capriati was hospitalized after a rumored overdose, which boyfriend Dale DaBone blamed on his return to porn. Tiger Woods divorce papers are reportedly signed. Elin Woods is apparently very rich. She will be required to keep quiet about their life in exchange. Britney Spears steps out in L.A., and what in the name of … is she wearing?! The star was also accused of child abuse this week by an ex-bodyguard. Miley Cyrus previewed the final season of Hannah Montana . In other Miley news, she says she can’t be tamed, but Eminem and Drake totally did so. Is this really Lady Gaga? Is that Justin Bieber’s girlfriend? Rumor mill: Is model Jo Calderone really Lady Gaga in drag? Sorry girls. Justin Bieber may be with Caitlin Beadles again. Kristen Stewart hopes to escape assassination from fans. Fist-pump! The Jersey Shore Season 2 trailer is released. Octomom is living hand to mouth … 14 kids will do that. Larry King is hanging up the suspenders for good . Jon Gosselin got a tattoo of Ellen Ross’ name. This week on THG’s plastic surgery watch … Megan Fox is spoken for. Soon, Carrie Prejean will be as well. TV Watch: Katie Cassidy was cast on Gossip Girl , The Bachelorette cranked up the drama to 11 … and Danielle Staub took it to 12 on the RHONJ . Police Blotter: Amy Locane was charged with vehicular homicide; Jeffrey Jones forgot to register as a sex offender; Vince Neil got another DUI. Couples watch: Ne-Yo and Monyetta Shaw are expecting; Cameron Diaz and A-Rod may be an item; Kristin Cavallari is dating Miguel Medine. Wedding Bells: Megan Fox married Brian Austin Green; Mena Suvari and Simone Sestito tied the knot; Carrie Prejean and Kyle Boller will wed soon; Zoe Saldana is engaged; Rumors swirl around Prince William and Kate Middleton.

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THG Week in Review: June 26-July 2, 2010

Gainor Column: New Technology Puts Journalists on Defense, Just Like Rest of Us

This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a blogger. Millions of bloggers, actually. And they are taking back freedom of the press from journalists unwilling and unable to use it in a fair and responsible manner. A few weeks ago, we saw Helen Thomas confess her nutty anti-Semitism because a blogger caught her in an unusually candid moment. We found out what many have long suspected: that she’s a disgusting bigot. Then there was the Gen. McChrystal controversy as our top general in Afghanistan reportedly criticized the Obama administration to a Rolling Stone reporter. Blogger critics argued ” The Runaway General ” showed the journalistic beat system prevents warts-and-all portrayals such as this one. Reporters are often too cozy with sources to make them look bad. Adding to that ethical issue, The Washington Post followed with a story saying the reporter in this case might have violated rules about what would be off the record. Rolling Stone denied it of course. But nothing got more press than the seemingly simple resignation of self-immolating Washington Post blogger Dave Weigel. Weigel was hired by the Post three months ago and continued his previous anti-conservative efforts with an attack on those ” anti-gay marriage bigots ” and making a joke about Matt Drudge “diddling” an 8-year-old boy. He was forced to apologize but remarkably kept his job. Remember, this is the Post that ruined Sen. George Allen’s career because he said “macaca,” the most obscure offensive comment in modern politics. “Macaca,” which about 12 people knew to be a racial slur, has been used in the Post 187 times since Allen first uttered the term in August 2006. More than 110 of those were prior to the election that Allen then lost. But Weigel survived his “macaca moment” with nary a scratch. Every day afterward he would highlight the worst of the conservative movement in a great example of skewed reporting while the Post’s other bloggers literally celebrated the liberal world view. It was doomed to fail – more so since Weigel comments on Twitter often mocked the very movement he was covering. Then all hell broke loose. Just like Climate Gate, leaked e-mails created a stir. E-mail comments Weigel had sent to a list of lefty pundits and journalists reportedly blasted several top conservatives and caused Weigel to offer his resignation. Before Post editors could decide, The Daily Caller had a more complete version of Weigel’s e-mails that were even worse. In this batch, the Daily Caller quoted him saying when Rush Limbaugh went in the hospital, ” I hope he fails .” Weigel went on to attack pretty much anybody who’s anybody in the conservative movement – Gingrich, Beck, Drudge again – and everyone else, too. In one case, the Caller said Weigel claimed conservatives were “using the media to ‘violently, angrily divide America.'” The Post accepted the resignation two months too late. Weigel’s departure has been enormous news for the inside the Beltway crowd. It’s probably gotten more press than any resignation since Nixon. Pundits, journalism professors, the Post ombudsman and more have all chimed in on the issue. Virtually every lefty Web outlet that matters has opined, from HuffingtonPost to Slate to Salon. Tons of Twitter and Facebook posts have been devoted to either the justice or injustice of it all. The Weigel situation has become an object lesson in the way Washington really works – and the way the world has changed. D.C.’s in-crowd, both left and right, has closed ranks around him as one of their own. Some people I respect have had kind words about him, so he is no ogre. But many of his supporters also are letting their friendships cloud their judgment. Even Weigel admits he screwed up. He chalked his actions up to ” hubris ” in a piece he wrote that makes him appear more conservative than he ever did while actually working in Washington. “Was I really that conservative? Yes,” he wrote. Then he admitted he changed. “At ‘Reason,’ I’d become a little less favorable to Republicans, and I’d never been shy about the fact that I was pro-gay marriage and pro-open borders.” In an unsurprising move, Weigel signed on to a contributor to MSNBC, the most crazy lefty network he could find. “Welcome aboard and my condolences, uh, congratulations!” wrote “Countdown” host Keith Olbermann on Twitter. Perhaps now, his conservative supporters will acknowledge Weigel’s gone to the loony left. But there’s more to it than that. Helen Thomas and Weigel should serve as a wake-up call to every person in public life. The message: the rules have changed dramatically. Technology, Facebook, Twitter and more have made privacy more of a theory than a fact. What we all do in every part of our lives – e-mails, embarrassments and more – can have very real consequences. No one can easily survive that level of transparency. Ordinary Americans have lived with those rules for decades. New technology has made that reality more intrusive. Journalists are just discovering that now everyone is going to hold them to the same standards they’ve held everyone else. The rise of citizen journalism, of a few conservative news outlets and people like Andrew Breitbart, is letting everyone see what journalists are really like and reporters and editors are learning life on the other side of camera. Journalists are rightly terrified. Dan Gainor is The Boone Pickens Fellow and the Media Research Center’s Vice President for Business and Culture . His column appears each week on The Fox Forum and he can be seen on Foxnews.com’s “Strategy Room.” He can also be contacted on FaceBook and Twitter as dangainor.

Were McChrystal and Staff Talking Off The Record to Rolling Stone?

In the midst of this week’s Gen. Stanley McChrystal controversy, a possibility concerning statements allegedly made by him and his staff has largely gone overlooked: might they have been speaking off the record when they were around Rolling Stone’s Michael Hastings? This certainly would explain some of the bizarre comments allegedly made by military members knowing full well how the chain of command works and that the President is clearly at the top. With this in mind, the Washington Post explored this possibility in a front page piece  Saturday entitled, “Gen. McChrystal Allies, Rolling Stone Disagree Over Article’s Ground Rules”: On Friday, however, officials close to McChrystal began trying to salvage his reputation by asserting that the author, Michael Hastings, quoted the general and his staff in conversations that he was allowed to witness but not report. The officials also challenged a statement by Rolling Stone’s executive editor that the magazine had thoroughly reviewed the story with McChrystal’s staff ahead of publication. A senior military official insisted that “many of the sessions were off-the-record and intended to give [Hastings] a sense” of how the team operated. The command’s own review of events, said the official, who was unwilling to speak on the record, found “no evidence to suggest” that any of the “salacious political quotes” in the article were made in situations in which ground rules permitted Hastings to use the material in his story. The Post elaborated: A member of McChrystal’s team who was present for a celebration of McChrystal’s 33rd wedding anniversary at a Paris bar said it was “clearly off the record.” Aides “made it very clear to Michael: ‘This is private time. These are guys who don’t get to see their wives a lot. This is us together. If you stay, you have to understand this is off the record,’ ” according to this source. In the story, the team members are portrayed as drinking heavily. A U.S. military spokesman in Kabul, Air Force Lt. Col. Edward T. Sholtis, acknowledged that Hastings, like other reporters who have interviewed McChrystal over the past year, was not required to sign written ground rules. “We typically manage ground rules on a verbal basis,” Sholtis said. “We trust in the professionalism of the people we’re working with.” So, you’ve got husbands and wives in a Paris bar celebrating McChrystal’s 33rd wedding anniversary, and comments made during the event — which were supposed to all be off the record — became part of Hastings’ piece. Is that Kosher? Obviously, Rolling Stone thinks it is: The executive editor, Eric Bates, denied that Hastings violated any ground rules when he wrote about the four weeks he spent, on and off, with McChrystal and his team. “A lot of things were said off the record that we didn’t use,” Bates said in an interview. “We abided by all the ground rules in every instance.” But this isn’t the only beef McChrystal supporters have with this piece: Officials also questioned Rolling Stone’s fact-checking process, as described by Bates in an interview this week with Politico. “We ran everything by them in a fact-checking process as we always do,” Bates said. “They had a sense of what was coming, and it was all on the record, and they spent a lot of time with our reporter, so I think they knew that they had said it.” In an interview Friday, the managing editor, Will Dana, said the reporter’s notes and factual matters were exhaustively reviewed. But 30 questions that a Rolling Stone fact-checker posed in a memo e-mailed last week to then-McChrystal media adviser Duncan Boothby contained no hint of what became the controversial portions of the story. Boothby resigned Tuesday. In the e-mail, a copy of which was provided to The Washington Post by a military official sympathetic to McChrystal, Boothby is asked to confirm the makeup of McChrystal’s traveling staff on the Paris trip and the communications equipment they brought with them on an earlier visit to London. “They don’t come close to revealing what ended up in the final article,” the official said. This all raises an interesting question that seemed to elude mainstream media as they quickly attacked the General probably forcing Obama to relieve him of his command: did the Rolling Stone break some journalism rules with this report? As NewsBusters’ Tim Graham pointed out Thursday, this is a FAR-LEFT magazine with strong anti-war convictions.   Is it indeed possible that much of the truly damning comments were made to Hastings off the record, and that he and his editors in their zeal to tear down McChrystal just didn’t care? Is it also possible that the magazine didn’t go through proper fact-checking procedures before it published the piece? If the answer to both questions is “Yes,” then maybe media quickly overreacted to this article before weighing and investigating such possibilities thereby making them complicit in ruining the General’s career while also conceivably endangering the mission in Afghanistan. As the Post has now let this cat out of the bag, it will indeed be interesting to see how this matter is handled on the Sunday talk shows tomorrow as well as in the coming days. Stay tuned. 

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Were McChrystal and Staff Talking Off The Record to Rolling Stone?

Eminem Plays Surprise Set At Red Bull EmSee Contest In New York

Em took the Bowery Ballroom stage for three songs during Road to 8 Mile rap battle. By Jayson Rodriguez Eminem (file) Photo: Chelsea Lauren/ Getty Images NEW YORK — Looks like the Jimmy B-Rabbit inside of Eminem is still alive. The Detroit rapper seemed to channel the scrappy character he played in his breakout movie role early Tuesday morning (June 22) as he took to the stage for a surprise performance during the Red Bull EmSee : The Road to 8 Mile freestyle rap battle. Just hours earlier, he had been on the rooftop of the Ed Sullivan Theater for a taping of Jay-Z’s appearance on the “Late Show With David Letterman.” Decked out in jeans, a white T-shirt, black, zip-up hoodie and black military cap, Em hit the stage shortly after midnight with a burst of furious rhymes. The Shady One delivered a rapid succession of rhymes to Drake’s “Over” before the DJ, the Alchemist, flipped the record to Lloyd Banks’ “Beamer, Benz or Bentley.” The intimate audience at Manhattan’s Bowery Ballroom — a space with a capacity of under 600 — were cheering wildly for Em and D-12’s Mr. Porter. Eminem quickly segued into “On Fire” and “Won’t Back Down,” from his new album, Recovery, which dropped on Monday. On the latter (without collaborator Pink), he was particularly energetic, delivering the rousing lyrics with added urgency. “Listen, garden tool/ Don’t make me introduce you to my power tool/ You know the f—ing drill,” Em rapped. “How you douche bags feel?/ Knowing you’re disposable, Summer’s Eve, Massengill.” After the third song, Eminem ended his brief set and directly addressed the crowd, hinting that their support was what carried him through recovery from his well-documented drug dependency. “New York, on some real sh–, we didn’t get time to rehearse this, but we wanted to come out for y’all,” he said. “If it wasn’t for y’all, I wouldn’t even be here. Thank you to each and every one of y’all. We love you. Peace.” Chants of “encore” soon filled the venue, but the rapper was gone. “Thanks to everyone for coming out to the Redbull EmSee battle,” he tweeted later. “I appreciate all the love New York. Yes, I’m really typing this.” Prior to Eminem’s set, underground supergroup Slaughterhouse performed. Royce Da 5’9″, Joe Budden, Joell Ortiz and Crooked I all drew cheers with their various slick rhymes. Royce, a fellow Detroit MC and longtime Em affiliate, spoke to the crowd about the collective’s ongoing negotiations with Shady Records, where the four hope to sign after releasing last summer’s group debut via E1 Entertainment. “It’s Shady for life,” he told the crowd. The event was hosted by Shade 45 morning-show host Angela Yee and D.R.E.S. Tha Beatnik. The night featured a three-round battle, judged by producers Just Blaze and the Alchemist, along with legendary freestyle rapper Craig G. Rapper DNA scored the biggest reaction from the crowd with his boastful rhymes and eventually earned the win. The winners of Red Bull EmSee contests across the country will battle at the finals in Detroit, where Em himself made his name as a lyrical mudslinger. Have you been at one of Em’s recent appearances? Where would you like to see Eminem pop up next? Let us know in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Eminem Related Artists Eminem

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Eminem Plays Surprise Set At Red Bull EmSee Contest In New York

Lady Gaga Opens Up About Her Health Issues In Rolling Stone

‘I make much more of an effort now to minimize the drama or the stress,’ she says of lupus running in her family. By James Montgomery Lady Gaga on the July 2010 issue of Rolling Stone Photo: Rolling Stone Earlier this month, Lady Gaga frightened fans when she revealed to Larry King that she had been tested for lupus and that results had shown she was “borderline positive” for the disease. “Lupus is in my family and it’s genetic, and it’s funny, ’cause my mother told me the other day that my fans were quite worried about me, because I did talk about the fact that I was tested for lupus,” Gaga told King. “And the truth is, I don’t show any signs, any symptoms of lupus, but I have tested borderline positive for the disease. So as of right now, I don’t have it. But I do have to take good care of myself.” And in the upcoming issue of Rolling Stone magazine — which hits newsstands Friday — Gaga expounds even further on her condition, telling writer Neil Strauss that she doesn’t want her fans to worry about the disease and that she’s already taking steps to ensure she’ll remain healthy in the midst of her seemingly endless world tour. “It’s more making sure that I reduce stress in my life to make sure I don’t develop [the disease],” she said. “I make much more of an effort now to minimize the drama or the stress. … I take care of myself. I drink and still live my life, but I could never let my fans down. That would kill me to have to face that extra obstacle every day to get onstage. It’s completely terrifying, so I’m just really focused on mind, body and soul.” Gaga also said that, though she’s been tested for lupus, she’s not interested in following doctor’s orders when it comes to preventing the disease. Rather, since lupus is thought to be hereditary, she’s sought the advice of her family on how to live. “It’s in my family, so I don’t really listen to doctors very much when it comes to it, because it’s so personal,” she said. “I talk to people that I know that have it or my father, whose sister died from it. There’s nothing to worry about, but I do get very tired sometimes, and I naturally wonder [about the disease].” And to that end, Gaga admitted to Strauss that she does worry sometimes about the effect her schedule (and her fame) has on her health but that she continues to press on, no matter what those closest to her may be saying. “I don’t want to be [a hypochondriac], so most of the time, I’m like, ‘F— it, I’m fine,’ ” Gaga told Strauss. “At a certain point, you’re so beyond the point of exhaustion that you don’t know: Do I have a health problem that may or may not be real, or am I just really tired?” Are you worried about Gaga’s well-being? Let us know in the comments. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Lady Gaga Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Lady Gaga Opens Up About Her Health Issues In Rolling Stone

Flashback: Media Promoted Military Criticism of President Bush

No general should criticize his or her commander, and Gen. Stanley McChrystal is no exception. But the mainstream media is primarily concerned with the political fallout of McChrystal’s apparent insubordination as revealed by a piece in Rolling Stone . They are not concerned with whether his critiques are accurate, in stark contrast to other military officers’ critiques of war policy under the Bush administration. During Bush’s tenure, active duty generals that spoke out against administration policy were portrayed as courageous whistleblowers. Retired generals were treated as ever-wise sages of military policy. None were scrutinized as McChrystal, pictured right, has been in the hours since Rolling Stone released its article. The most prominent active duty general to earn the media’s affection was Gen. Eric Shinseki, current Secretary of Veterans Affairs (to the media’s delight ). He insisted in 2003 that, contrary to Defense Department policy, the United States would need to send “hundreds of thousands” of troops to Iraq during the initial invasion. The media ate it up. “Top generals, including Eric Shinseki,” wrote the Boston Globe in 2004, “fault Pentagon leadership for not heeding their advice to deploy more ground forces before the invasion or to prepare adequately for the aftermath.” After Shinseki’s repudiation of official military policy prompted rebukes from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, the New York Times dubbed those rebukes “unusual” and went on to bemoan the fact that Shinseki “has not had more influence on the war planning and the allocation of forces,” in the words of another Army general. The Times also devoted a piece to active duty personnel’s criticisms of Rumsfeld and the Iraqi war effort generally. The article read, Long-simmering tensions between Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Army commanders have erupted in a series of complaints from officers on the Iraqi battlefield that the Pentagon has not sent enough troops to wage the war as they want to fight it… One colonel, who spoke on the condition that his name be withheld, was among the officers criticizing decisions to limit initial deployments of troops to the region. “He wanted to fight this war on the cheap,” the colonel said. “He got what he wanted.”… Underlying the strains between Mr. Rumsfeld and the Army, which began at the beginning of Mr. Rumsfeld’s tenure, are questions that challenge not only the Rumsfeld design for this war but also his broader approach to transforming the military. Instead of going on to examine the apparent problems with a military chain of command in which policymakers are criticized, the Times, the Globe, and many other media outlets used critiques from officers both named and anonymous to question the effectiveness and wisdom of American military policy. McChrystal’s statements could spur some discussion on whether President Obama is really up to the task in Afghanistan–the general is certainly is not the first to suggest it. Yet the media focus has been almost entirely trained on the general himself and on the supposed danger of a dysfunctional chain of command and a general who questions the president’s orders. Newsweek’s Jonathan Alter today explained, in the words of his headline, ” Why Military Code Demands McChrystal’s Resignation .” “The most important issue at hand in the furor over Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s acerbic comments in Rolling Stone,” wrote Alter, “is the central one in a democracy: civilian control over the military.” Got it? The question is not whether McChrystal’s critiques of the administration could shine some light on an ineffective war effort or misguided military policies. No, unlike military criticism of Bush war policy, McChrystal’s comments spur discussion of the intricacies of a civilian-controlled military, not the specific policies employed by the civilian government and their consequences on the battlefield. Time’s Joe Klein applauded Mike Huckabee in 2007 for saying he “would have met with Shinseki privately and carefully weighed his advice.” But now Klein is far more concerned with the ” military tradition and practice ” violated by generals who speak out against their commanders than he is with the ongoing war effort. McChrystal was of course out of line. But media liberals who are only distraught at potential insubordination when the subordinate does not aid their political goals in speaking out are commentators whose opinions must be taken with a few grains of salt.

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Flashback: Media Promoted Military Criticism of President Bush

Modern Lady: Beer Hates Women

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Modern Lady: Beer Hates Women