Full Court Press

From Obama's "liberal" voting record to dispatches from the Taliban's front line, Charles Kaiser rounds up this week's media winners and sinners










Sinners: Charles Green and the rest of the editors of the National Journal, for their ridiculous method of determining who has the "most liberal" voting record in the Senate.

1_80014505.jpg
Senator John Kerry (Photo: Getty Images)
Just before Super Tuesday, the National Journal published a story asserting that Barack Obama was "the most liberal senator in 2007." Here are seven reasons that this study is meaningless, except to the people in charge of attack ads for the Republican National Committee:

• In 2006, Obama was the 10th most liberal senator; in 2005, he was the 16th most liberal, according to the same statistical methods.

• The 2007 rankings are based on 99 votes—and Obama only participated in 66 of them.

John McCain missed so many votes in 2007 that he avoided being rated altogether.

• In 2004, the National Journal obliged the Republicans by making John Kerry it's number-one liberal—entirely on the basis of his votes on economic issues, because he hadn't voted frequently enough in the foreign policy and social issues categories to be rated at all.

• In 2007, a vote to implement the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission was counted as a "liberal" vote—as were all votes in opposition to the war in Iraq.

Karl Rove has already said, "Nonpartisan ratings say that [Obama] has a more liberal and a more straight-party voting record than Senator Clinton does. Pretty hard to do."

Adam Nagourney, chief political correspondent for the New York Times, told FCP he would never use anything like the National Journal's rating to assess a candidate's voting record. When he saw the Journal's ratings, he said, his first thought was, "regardless of its merits, that's going to be a Republican attack ad."

obama_wright225.jpg
Barack Obama, with Pastor Jeremiah Wright (Photo: Image courtesy of Fox News)
Winner: Martin Peretz, for a surprisingly nuanced defense of Obama's relationship with Pastor Jeremiah Wright: "Every candidate has noxious supporters, and it is simply illogical and unfair to impute the views of these supporters to their favored candidate, especially when the candidate clearly disagrees." Peretz said that Obama's cadence in his speech about race reminded him the "disciplined thinking" of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. Turns out Peretz has some differences with his own rabbi, especially when he declares, "'We rush towards war and crawl to peace." According to Peretz, "This is a lie!" So why does he still pray in this synagogue? "Because, aside from the offending 'hip' politics of the rabbis, there is an all-embracing warmth that suffuses the fold."

Winner: The Globe and Mail, for training an Afghan researcher to conduct a series of videotaped interviews with Taliban fighters. One conclusion: The men who spoke were less motivated by religion than they were by hatred for foreign invaders.

Winner: Eric Alterman, for a comprehensive (and comprehensively depressing) assessment in the New Yorker of the bleak future for American newspapers.

Winners: The New York Times and the Washington Post, for two excellent pieces about the state of the oil industry in Iraq. Richard A. Oppel, Jr. reported in the Times that "at least one-third, and possibly much more, of the fuel from Iraq's largest refinery here is diverted to the black market, according to American military officials. Tankers are hijacked, drivers are bribed, papers are forged and meters are manipulated—and some of the earnings go to insurgents who are still killing more than 100 Iraqis a week."

Continue >>

 


Full Court Press
Charles Kaiser on Torture Team: Rumsfeld's Memo and the Betrayal of American Values

Generation Slap
They're naive, self-important, and perpetually plugged in. This is a call to arms against Millennials

MURDER! MUTILATION! CANNIBALISM!
One man's tour through the world of death metal

Homosexual Agenda
Gayest Person Ever? Author Joel Derfner wants the title

Full Court Press
Frank Rich leads this week's list of Winners and Sinners


EXECUTIVE EDITOR:


EDITED BY:



Email us at:
tips@radaronline.com
or IM: TipRadar







Cindy Adams Defends Sue Simmons From Her Own Newspaper

The Chris Matthews Race and Gender Reel

Britney Seeks Divine Wisdom from Mel

'Worst Person on the Internet' Finally Indicted

Headline of the Day

Pharmaceutical Slogans For Politicians

Sources: WaPo Executive Editor Leonard Downie Out in '09

Anthony Pellicano Goes Down

Jose Canseco Wants to Whoop You

British Teens Imperil the Future of the Nation by Climbing Things, Jumping Off Them





House Speaker Nancy Pelosi Brings the Pain
It's getting hot in here

Your '80s Heroes Are Now Losers
Just as messed up as we hoped

A post-Obama world is a good world
Yes, he did

Bush the Third
You've been warned

A younger Bill O'Reilly gets angry
But did he ever have it?