Monday 6th of May 2024

amerikan pie .....

amerikan pie .....

Palin's daughter is pregnant, get over it. 

The 17-year-old daughter of Alaska governor Sarah Palin is pregnant. If not for the fact that Senator John McCain has chosen Palin to be his running mate, would we care? I doubt it. 

Until last week, few people in the “lower 48” could even identify Palin. Since then, though, there has been an awful lot of discussion on blogs and even some mainstream news sites about Palin and sex.  

Palin's Daughter Is Pregnant: Get Over It 

The election is not about issues, they say (hope). 

WaPo: Rick Davis, campaign manager for John McCain's presidential bid, insisted that the presidential race will be decided more over personalities than issues during an interview with Post editors this morning. 

"This election is not about issues," said Davis. "This election is about a composite view of what people take away from these candidates." 

McCain Camp: Election About Personality 

Elections about issues, not image. 

It has become clear to me that Americans at large are generally obsessed with image.

Self-image dictates how we act in certain situations, how we respond to others, and in November, how we vote.

This is not, by any means, a new phenomenon sweeping the nation.  

American self-deception, is part of a long history of nationalism.  This sentiment is one reason Americans are drawn to the image of George W. Bush.  

Republican pollster Frank Luntz said that swing-state victories will not be decided on environmental issues like Yucca Mountain or any other issue: “This is not an issue-based election,” he said. “It’s going to be decided on presidential image, on personal attributes.

Elections About Issues, Not Image 

Gus: Confused? Issues or personality? Here come the funny speeches...

Buns happen...

Op-Ed Columnist
Life of Her Party
By MAUREEN DOWD

ST. PAUL

For many years, reality was out of vogue with Republicans. They ignored the reality of Iraq and Katrina, of Pakistan and Osama bin Laden.

When confronted with their colossal carelessness around the globe and here at home, their mantra was, as Rummy put it, “Stuff happens.”

Now reality, in all its messy, crazy, funky glory, has flooded the party, in the comely, crackling form of Sarah Palin.

Unable to stop the onslaught of wild soap opera storylines erupting from the Palin family and the Alaska wilderness, McCain campaign adviser Steve Schmidt offered caterwauling reporters a new mantra: “Life happens.”

Indeed, it does. Only four days into her reign as John McCain’s “soul mate,” or “Trophy Vice,” as some bloggers are calling her, on the ticket known as “Maverick Squared,” Palin, the governor of Alaska, has already accrued two gates (Troopergate and Broken-watergate), a lawyer (for Troopergate), a future son-in-law named Levi (a high school ice hockey player, described by New York magazine as “sex on skates”), and a National Enquirer headline about the “Teen Prego Crisis” with 17-year-old daughter Bristol.

It seems like a long time since Vice President Dan Quayle denounced Murphy Brown for having a baby out of wedlock, bemoaning a “poverty of values.” It also seems like a long time — and another McCain ago — that Republicans supporting W. smeared the old John McCain by spreading rumors that he had fathered an illegitimate black child.

This week, the anti-abortion forces celebrated the news of Bristol’s pregnancy, using it as further proof that their beloved Governor Palin — who will no more support sex education than polar bears — was committed to the cause.

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read more at the NYT and see toon at top...

storm above the doldrums...

ST. PAUL — After days of mounting questions about her qualifications, Gov. Sarah Palin rallied the Republican National Convention tonight by touting her small-town government experience and ridiculing concerns about whether she is up to the job of vice president.

“Before I became governor of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown,” Ms. Palin said. “And since our opponents in this presidential election seem to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job involves. I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a community organizer, except that you have actual responsibilities.”

...

Appearing in Ohio at a town meeting on Thursday, Mr. Obama took the Republicans to task for largely ignoring the troubled American economy on their first night of speeches.

“You did not hear a single world about the economy,” Mr. Obama said before an outdoor gathering in New Philadelphia, Ohio. “Not once did they mention the hardships that people are going through.”

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Gus: The world is in trouble. Not because most economies in the world are stuffed, moribund or barely surviving on the printing presses of the US Fed Bank, but because all that is done this days is done in the name of god. War, money, survival. No real venture is made with the understanding of the little planet we live on — changing faster than ever before, even in its most darkest life-on-earth days. Today more of the North Pole ice has shrunk evermore for comfort. Gustav has barely blown its last breath and dumped its last drops that Ike is threatening the lower north Atlantic and Hannah is about to blow the Bahamas away. The weather in Sydney has been crap and colder than usual, but the weather in Darwin being hotter than usual is the most indicative of the planet's weather's bad trends.

Storms always appear just above the doldrums in summer in the northern hemisphere and below the equatorial band in the southern hemisphere. But more storms and stronger storms is not a good look.

red flags

September 27, 2008 Op-Ed Columnist

Palin’s Words Raise Red Flags

By BOB HERBERT

The country is understandably focused on the financial crisis. But there is another serious issue in front of us that is not getting nearly enough attention, and that’s whether Sarah Palin is qualified to be vice president — or, if the situation were to arise, president of the United States.

History has shown again and again that a vice president must be ready to assume command of the ship of state on a moment’s notice. But Ms. Palin has given no indication yet that she is capable of handling the monumental responsibilities of the presidency if she were called upon to do so.

In fact, the opposite is the case. We know that there are some parts of Alaska from which, if the day is clear and your eyesight is good, you can actually see Russia. But the infantile repetition of this bit of trivia as some kind of foreign policy bona fide for a vice presidential candidate should give us pause.

The McCain campaign has done its bizarre best to shield Ms. Palin from any sustained media examination of her readiness for the highest offices in the land, and no wonder. She has been an embarrassment in interviews.

But the idea that the voters of the United States might install someone in the vice president’s office who is too unprepared or too intellectually insecure to appear on, say, “Meet the Press” or “Face the Nation” is mind-boggling.

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see toon at top...

we hope she wins...

 BY Peter Van Buren

 

What is Sarah Palin up to, suing the New York Times for libel? Is she really trying to change the First Amendment? Does she know what she is doing?

Palin v. The New York Times Company is now before a district court in New York, and, regardless of the outcome, is almost certainly headed for the Supreme Court. The plaintiff seeks to overturn precedent that gave America some of the world’s strictest libel laws. If other media you consume is still treating this all as just another kooky Nailin’ Palin story, you’re looking at the wrong sources.

 

The story begins on June 14, 2017, when a left-wing nut-job shot at Republican politicians playing baseball in Virginia (wounding, among others, Louisiana’s Steve Scalise). The New York Times wrote at the time: 

 

Was this attack evidence of how vicious American politics has become? Probably. In 2011, when Jared Lee Loughner opened fire in a supermarket parking lot, grievously wounding Representative Gabby Giffords and killing six people, including a 9-year-old-girl, the link to political incitement was clear. Before the shooting, Sarah Palin’s political action committee circulated a map of targeted Democrats that put Ms. Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized cross hairs.

 

The Times quickly issued multiple corrections, pointing out it had, 

incorrectly stated that a link existed between political rhetoric and the 2011 shooting of Representative Gabby Giffords. In fact, no such link was established. The editorial also incorrectly described a map distributed by [Palin’s] political action committee before that shooting. It depicted electoral districts, not individual Democratic lawmakers, beneath stylized cross hairs.

 

Palin filed a libel suit stating the Times defamed her by claiming her PAC’s advertising incited people to violence, which the Times knew was not true. The suit was initially dismissed, but after five years of wrangling, Palin got the case reinstated.

Under current law, three criteria have to be met to prove a charge of libel. Palin first has to show what the Times wrote was false; this is not in contention, as the Times issued a correction. Second, she has to show that what the Times wrote was defamatory, meaning it harmed her reputation. Third, she has to show “actual malice”—that is, the Times knew what it published was false or showed reckless disregard for the truth.

The rules for libel cases between the media and public figures goes back to 1964’s Sullivan v. The New York Times Company, when the Supreme Court held the First Amendment protects the media even when they publish false statements, as long as they did not act with “actual malice.”

In Sullivan, the dispute arose after civil-rights leaders ran a full-page fundraising ad in theTimes describing “an unprecedented wave of terror” wrought by police against peaceful demonstrators in Montgomery, Alabama. Their specific allegations were not all true, and the advertisement made the police look worse than they were. So L.B. Sullivan, in charge of the police response in Montgomery, sued the New York Times for libel, claiming they printed something they knew was false and damaged his reputation. An Alabama court agreed and the New York Times was ordered to pay $500,000 in damages.

The Times appealed to the Supreme Court, arguing that if a newspaper were required to check the accuracy of every criticism of a public official, freedom of the press would be severely limited. The First Amendment, they argued, required the Court to give the benefit of the doubt to the media in cases involving public officials. The Court sided with the Times, and created a new standard for libel of a public figure, “actual malice,” defined as knowing a statement was false but publishing it anyway, or publishing a claim with “reckless disregard” for truth. The Court’s Sullivan framework is why the New York Timeshas not lost a libel case in America ever since.

As part of the decision, Justice William Brennan asserted America’s “profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.” Free and open debate about the conduct of public officials, the Court reasoned, was more important than occasional factual errors that might damage officials’ reputations.

In context, Sullivan freed Northern journalists to aggressively cover racial issues in the South, shielded from libel suits. It represented a significant broadening of the First Amendment.

In Palin’s case, to stay within the framework of the Sullivan precedent, the Times is arguing their article did no harm to Sarah Palin. She continues to bop around the national political arena doing whatever it is she does. Palin’s side is arguing the Timeshad no evidence her PAC incited anyone in the instant shooting case, and that the Timesemployee who wrote the original article thus exhibited “reckless disregard” for the truth. The case is in early days, but everyone already can map out the forthcoming arguments based on the criteria in Sullivan.

A lot of journalistic slush has flowed downhill since Sullivan in 1964, and attitudes toward the media have changed. The media of 1964 wanted to be objective, or at least give the appearance of being objective. In 2022 places like the Times wear their partisanship as a badge of honor and mock people like Sarah “Caribou Barbie” Palin. They spend years covering stories with reckless disregard for the truth, whether it be fake WMDs in Iraq or “Russiagate.” The glory days of NYT’s reporting on the Pentagon Papers or Watergate are long gone.

The Supreme Court justices who wrote the Sullivan decision are also long gone. Completely separate from Palin’s lawsuit, last year Justice Neil Gorsuch added his voice to an earlier statement by Justice Clarence Thomas questioning Sullivan.

Thomas, in a libel-case dissent, scolded the media over its publication of conspiracy theories and disinformation. He cited news reports on “the shooting at a pizza shop rumored to be the home of a Satanic child sex abuse ring involving Hillary Clinton” and a NYT article involving “online posts falsely labeling someone a thief, a fraudster and a pedophile.” Thomas wrote that “instead of continuing to insulate those who perpetrate lies from traditional remedies like libel suits, we should give them only the protection the First Amendment requires.”

Siding with Thomas, Justice Gorsuch wrote that the media in 1964 was dominated by a handful of large operations that routinely “employed legions of investigative reporters, editors, and fact checkers… Network news has since lost most of its viewers. With their fall has come the rise of 24-hour cable news and online media platforms that monetize anything that garners clicks.”

Gorsuch is clear: The changing media landscape requires the Court reassess Sullivan. Now, the Court has a conservative majority that might be ready to do so. In the background is Donald Trump, whose criticism of existing libel laws, focused on Bob Woodward’s books about his presidency, is well known.

This is the immediate context of Sarah Palin’s case against the New York Times. It is a difficult case, particularly those who support broader First Amendment rights. A ruling that weakens or nullifies Sullivan and declares Palin the winner would have an inevitable chilling effect on the media. Maybe not super-media like the Times, which has money for lawyers and always relishes a good First Amendment fight, but smaller outlets who cannot afford to defend themselves. Everyone remembers the demise of Gawker.

If the Court rules against the Times, the media will have only themselves to blame. Given that Sullivan ensures close calls always fall their way, too many in the corporate media purposefully exploited that gift, using the First Amendment as a dummy front to pass off untrue garbage and shameful partisan propaganda as fact.

In a post-Sullivan world, it is unlikely that Russiagate would have been a three-year media event. Libel suits would have stopped the whole thing cold. As Justice Gorsuch wrote, the Sullivan standard Palin is contesting has offered an “ironclad subsidy for the publication of falsehoods” for the media to disseminate sensational information with little regard for the truth. Maybe it is time to change that.

 

 

 

Peter Van Buren is the author of We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi PeopleHooper’s War: A Novel of WWII Japan, and Ghosts of Tom Joad: A Story of the 99 Percent.

 

Read more:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/sarah-palin-takes-on-the-new-york-times/

 

 

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