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Today's "conservative journalism" -- what would Bill Buckley say?

February 02, 2010 12:13 pm ET

Between the embarrassing New Orleans caper where self-described "journalist" James O'Keefe was arrested after helping infiltrate the office of Sen. Mary Landrieu, Jackass-style, to the unhinged State of the Union response from elite members of the right-wing punditocracy (i.e. Obama's an "arrogant," "fake" "jerk"), a disturbing portrait emerged last week that helped confirm the sad state of "conservative journalism" in America today.

And yes, I prefer to put the oxymoronic phrase "conservative journalism" in quotation marks since it seems to exist more as an idea than a functioning entity. Instead of being in the news gathering or analysis business, "conservative journalism" today appears to be more akin to propaganda/name-calling -- or, thanks to O'Keefe's Keystone Kops routine, more like dirty tricks/propaganda/name-calling.

It's political warfare (or pseudo-journalism) being waged by people who want the protection and prestige that comes with being called a journalist, even though few of them actually practice the craft. It's fueled by thoughtless defamation. And yes, the lack of adult supervision has become glaringly obvious, which is why I can't help wondering what William F. Buckley would make of all this.

Buckley died in 2008, and, of course, is credited with revitalizing modern-day American conservatism. With his magazine, National Review, as well as his three-decade run as the host of the wonky Firing Line on PBS, Buckley also served as the father of conservative journalism in this country, as he worked to cultivate a space where partisan reporters, pundits, and essayists could join the media landscape and influence the public debate. (Ronald Reagan often credited National Review for inspiring him.)

But would Buckley even recognize "conservative journalism" today, where pundits rush to be the first to broadcast their childish Obama taunts? And where sloppy P.T. Barnums like Andrew Breitbart seem to encourage a new generation of "journalists" to skirt the law in the name of vilifying Democrats?

If Buckley had lived to see the right-wing media's unhinged, Obama's-a-Nazi/communist/racist rhetoric of today, as well as the O'Keefe-style, let's-pretend-we're-above-the-law brand of "conservative journalism," what would Buckley's reaction have been? Would he have remained silent or called it out for what it is? Sort of like how, decades ago, Buckley's National Review finally worked up enough nerve to call out the radical right's John Birch Society and its fringe activity.

As Buckley used to say, the pyrotechnicians and noisemakers have always been there on the right. But that didn't mean he condoned or legitimized them. And I doubt he would today.

Don't worry, I'm not trying to suddenly turn Buckley into some kind of saint, or pretend that, for decades, National Review was some sort of beacon of impeccable journalism. We all know Buckley wasn't above lobbing cheap shots. And truth be told, National Review under Buckley leaned a lot more toward (lazy) pontification than it did gumshoe reporting. But it seemed that most of the time, it strived toward being a serious endeavor and to carry the flag for conservative journalism. For instance, during the Clinton years, National Review left "Troopergate" and other conspiracy foolishness to The American Spectator, which ended up taking many spectacular falls. Editorially wrong-headed? Sure. But serious, or at least pretending to strive for seriousness and intellectual honesty? I would say yes, Buckley's brand of conservative journalism did that.

But today? Ugh. One of National Review's high-profile editors now teams up with Glenn Beck to push the wholly discredited nonsense about how liberals were to blame for Hitler's atrocities. And yes, it's the same National Review editor who defended Beck when he claimed that the president of the United States (i.e. "this guy") has a deep-seated hatred for white people, the white culture, and is in fact a "racist."

Since Buckley's passing in 2008, there's probably been more damage done to the cause of "conservative journalism" -- more steps have been taken backwards -- than in the many decades Buckley ran the National Review.

It was telling, for instance, that when the White House Correspondents' Association last year expanded its roster of eligible reporters for in-town pool reports and accepted representatives from online sites, not a single conservative outlet was represented. Instead, Salon.com, Huffington Post, and Talking Points Memo got the nod. Conservatives were locked out because there wasn't a single site in operation on the right side of the Internet that consistently produced original and dependable journalism. Not one. And why is that? Because conservatives appear to have given up. They don't respect journalism and they don't have the foggiest idea how to produce it. They're clueless.

In a piece last week at Daily Beast, and in the wake of the O'Keefe arrest, Benjamin Sarlin detailed the chronic failure of conservatives, especially online, to produce good, ethical journalism. He noted:

It's difficult to build up newsmaking capabilities while a huge chunk of the right's base believes that mainstream news reporting is itself a left-wing practice.

I don't think Sarlin got it quite right. I would have phrased it this way: "It's difficult to build up newsmaking capabilities when a huge chunk of the right's base hates journalists and journalism."

And it's that guttural hatred that taints everything about today's "conservative journalism." Part of it is the new, instant-reaction media landscape and the way it seems to reward crude behavior. I have no doubt, for instance, that years ago some partisan National Review writers and editors watching Jimmy Carter or Bill Clinton address joint sessions of Congress, likely muttered "jerk" under their breath. But the scribes weren't juvenile enough to publish any sophomoric slams.

Now it's a point of pride. Last Wednesday night, National Review staffers and contributors, as well as other high-profile "conservative journalists," seemed to race online to see who could insult and denigrate the president first.

For those who weren't scoring at home, the president was a "flippant," "snitty," "self-serving," "thin-skinned," "cocky," "patronizing," "arrogant," "fake" "jerk." Although, back in the real world, President Obama received very high marks from State of the Union viewers, according to most of the media's instant polling that night.

It's the same immoral, right-wing reward system that creates unintentional comedies like O'Keefe's Louisiana mishap. According to his recounting, O'Keefe's intent was to see if Sen. Landrieu's office phones weren't being answered and to make a hidden video in the process; a video designed, of course, to make her, or her staff, look bad. Meaning, O'Keefe and his Jackass pals set out to embarrass a Democrat. Period. There was no "journalism" being practiced inside Landrieu's office. It was a Donald Segretti-like dirty trick.

Still, O'Keefe fancies himself as the GOP Bob Woodward. Because what did O'Keefe learn from last year's ACORN controversy, in which he starred as an undercover videographer? He learned that even if he appears to break some laws in the process of an undercover sting (privacy laws he later claimed he knew nothing about), it doesn't matter because the right-wing media don't care. They rewarded his unethical behavior. And yes, the ends clearly justified the means.

Thirty-one Republican members of Congress co-sponsored a resolution in October 2009 honoring O'Keefe and partner Hannah Giles for "display(ing) exemplary actions as government watchdogs and young journalists uncovering wasteful government spending." Nobody inside the right-wing world cared if O'Keefe and Breitbart allegedly edited out exculpatory portions before releasing the tapes. They don't care that he and Breitbart refuse to this day to release all of the unedited videotapes so independent observers can determine just how manipulated they were before posting them online.

So the moral is obvious: To get on Fox News, you concoct a video that makes Democrats look bad. End of story. But of course, that's not journalism.

Don't just take my word for it. In the wake of the ACORN videos story last year, a few voices within conservative media actually pointed out the obvious. James Taranto, a member of the far-right Wall Street Journal editorial board, included this boulder-sized caveat in his otherwise fawning interview with O'Keefe's mentor and employer, Andrew Breitbart, last year:

The approach Mr. O'Keefe and Ms. [Hannah] Giles used -- lying to prospective sources or subjects -- is grossly unethical by the standards of institutional journalism. Almost all major news organizations, including the Journal, strictly prohibit it.

Fox Business' Rebecca Diamond made a similar point during an interview with O'Keefe last November:

But, James, if you want to be considered a real journalist and not just a conservative activist -- just doing stuff on behalf of your conservative agenda -- you can't pretend you're somebody you're not. ... If I did that, Roger Ailes would probably fire me because it's unethical as a journalist, as a real journalist.

Which brings me back to Buckley. If you rewind to the time of the National Review's founding in the 1950s, Buckley had to decide how to treat the emerging right-wing influence of the radical John Birch Society, which at the time was convinced Dwight Eisenhower was a communist agent, that most of the U.S. government was run by communists, as were the health care and education industries. As Buckley biographer Sam Tanenhaus explained to Bill Moyers on PBS last year, at first the National Review indulged the John Birch Society because it was fanatically anti-communist, which bolstered the conservative movement.

Then, finally, in the mid-1960s (and yes, it took way too long), Buckley said "Enough." As Tanenhaus recounted last year:

And he said, "We can't allow ourselves to be discredited by our own fringe." So, he turned over his own magazine to a denunciation of the John Birch Society. More important, the columns he wrote denouncing what he called its "drivel" were circulated in advance to three of the great conservative Republicans of the day, Ronald Reagan, Barry Goldwater, Senator John Tower, from your home state of Texas, and Tower read them on the floor of Congress into the Congressional record. In other words, the intellectual and political leaders of the right drew a line.

"We can't allow ourselves to be discredited by our own fringe," said Buckley, referring to the conservative movement as a whole. Today, however, rife with would-be lawbreakers and committed name-callers, "conservative journalism" faces the same fringe conundrum.

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    • Author by Tbone Slickens (February 02, 2010 1:06 pm ET)
      1 24
      And yes, the lack of adult supervision has become glaringly obvious, which is why I can't help wondering what William F. Buckley would make of all this.


      So since you brought it up...

      What about those club wielding Black Panthers so easily dismissed by Holder? I have a pretty good idea what BB would have to say about them! If only mmfA and their fellow travelers would do the same.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by rms (February 02, 2010 1:21 pm ET)
        15  
        After reading the commentary that is the only thing you find worth commenting on??? How about the essential truth of the piece?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by wookie (February 02, 2010 1:29 pm ET)
          13  
          Its kind of ironic that he responds to this piece with irrelevant rumor mongering.
          Report Abuse
        • Author by bilbo_dies (February 03, 2010 10:01 am ET)
          2  
          And the fact that said "Black Panthers" were arrested and are being prosecuted.

          BTW I am pretty sure I have read people on this site stating that the intimidation of voters by ANYONE is wrong, including the guy slickboy is talking about.
          Report Abuse
      • Author by bintx (February 02, 2010 1:21 pm ET)
        17 1
        They weren't. The Bush Administration determined that these guys who allegedly belonged to The New Black Panthers [the Black Panthers have been defunct for 30 years] should be charged with civil crimes. Holder had nothing to do with it, except that they prosecuted the case. [Listening to Hannity and the Fox crew usually leaves a person completely in the dark regarding facts] Keep up.

        "From December 3 testimony by Tom Perez, Department of Justice assistant attorney general for the civil rights division, before the House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties (via the Nexis search database):

        PEREZ: The case was not dismissed. The case was reviewed by two attorneys, including Loretta, who have a combined total of 60 years of experience, and they made the determination that, based on the law of the Third Circuit, that the case against the person who wielded the stick, that we should indeed seek the maximum penalty, and that maximum penalty was sought and obtained, and the case against the other defendant should be dismissed, and the case against the national party should also be dismissed. So that was the determination that was made and so I needed to correct the record because the case was not indeed dismissed and those two career attorneys, with 60 years of experience, made that decision."
        Report Abuse
      • Author by DellDolly (February 02, 2010 3:27 pm ET)
        6  
        MMFA has debunked that accusation against Eric Holder - today! What a FAIL that you bring it up on the very day they shot it down.

        It was the Bush Administration which dismissed criminal charges as relatively impotent and chose instead to go with civil charges which really sanctioned the guy from ever doing it again, which is the best result we in the public could have received!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by donwelty (February 02, 2010 7:55 pm ET)
        7  
        Entirely off topic. The topic is Buckley. Changing the subject does not add to the discussion. If you have an opinion about Buckley and his reaction to the fringe, say something. Are you a member of the fringe Buckley didn't like? Is that why you want to change the subject?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by cugagcmu805031 (February 02, 2010 10:24 pm ET)
        9  
        I understand why you are upset about this post and feel you have to go off on a tangent to some totally unrelated topic: Mr. Buckley was referring to conservatives like you who jump on the first rumor train and ride it to the end, believing every bit of it, and fact-checking nothing.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mmfa.fan (February 03, 2010 8:11 am ET)
        3  
        That's the most pathetic response I've seen here in, well, possibly ever. Not only is it completely off-topic, but it's been debunked already, which you would know if you bothered to inform yourself with the facts.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by louee (February 04, 2010 4:25 pm ET)
        1  
        Are you the same guy harping on the Panthers over at HuffPo? Get a freakin' grip on yourself! And ya know what? Stick that 'fellow travelers' b.s. where the moon don't shine. What do you think this is, the McCarthy era? So sorry to disappoint, but that alcoholic psychopath is long dead. It's just like a righty to throw stoopid catch phrases around rather than respond to an argument well made. Hannity awaits.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by bintx (February 02, 2010 1:22 pm ET)
      8  
      William F. Buckley would be appalled that these yahoos are even calling themselves "conservatives" in the first place. Nothing conservative about them.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by gg (February 02, 2010 2:32 pm ET)
        8  
        In fact, he would be fired from the NR just as his son was.
        You are right these people are not conservatives, they are reactionaries, who would like to start their won "Reign of Terror"
        Report Abuse
    • Author by juliajayne1 (February 02, 2010 1:47 pm ET)
      10 1
      Sam Tanenhaus said it best in his book "The Death of Conservatism", "what we've seen in the right is what I call a politics of organized cultural enmity....."

      And that the MSM have abdicated their responsibility for reporting what's really happening in favor of supporting conflict-driven coverage of discordance and incivility. (paraphrased).

      For anyone who hasn't seen the interview with Bill Moyers on Sam Tanenhaus' book or hasn't read the actual book, here is the transcript of the interview done on 9/18/09.

      http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/09182009/transcript1.html

      The problem with the conservatives (as has been stated here by many posters) is that they only seem to stand for being against the democrats. And that was highlighted brilliantly by our President this last Friday with the Q&A session with the Republicans. I mean if these guys have any ideas, they aren't actually bringing them to the fore or showing any intellectual rigor or reality based thinking.

      And the MSM and "Conservative Journalists" both enables them, as Eric so effectively delineates.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by pls5671 (February 03, 2010 1:19 am ET)
        1  
        I don't think the so called Conservatives know who they are supposed to be serving. It is not the people. I think they don't even know what Conservatives stand for they are now standing on LIES. They are really LOOKING GOOD.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by louee (February 04, 2010 4:33 pm ET)
        2  
        They don't have any ideas. They can no longer claim to be for fiscal conservatism or small government after the Bush fiasco. So there's nothing left to them but the politics of hate. And they have gravitated naturally to it. As others have said, these people aren't conservatives in the Buckley vein; they simply want power and money and will say anything and do anything to get it. What is so terrifying is that there are so many dumbass people out there who have neither power no money whose penchant for hatred draws them to these incredible jerks. This will sound hyperbolic I know, but it's eerily similar to Germany right before Hitler where the average citizen lost his or her equilibrium, had to find someone to blame, and was offered easy targets by a charismatic speaker. And the rest is history.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by rtejon (February 02, 2010 2:20 pm ET)
      6  
      Remember when Chip Buckley was forced out from National Review for saying he couldn't support McCain? Mere months after WFB died.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by lynneg (February 02, 2010 5:24 pm ET)
      4  
      It seems the real question is where are the Conservative leaders on this fringe activity? Are they afraid to disagree? Or want to be in power so much, they let it continue?
      Senator Grassley played the Democrats for fools. He was supposed to be engaging in real discussions and compromise with the healthcare Bill and then he went out and claimed it was going to kill Grandma.. The GOP is no longer the Party of Eisenhower they are the Party of Beck, Rush and Palin.
      God Bless America. We desperately need it.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by lynneg (February 02, 2010 5:25 pm ET)
      4  
      Is there any way we can get a Media Matters type show on talk radio with syndication? That would really help to get the truth and whole story out there.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by PopeRatzo (February 02, 2010 5:47 pm ET)
        6 1
        No. There is no way to get "a Media Matters type show" on talk radio with syndication.

        Radio is owned by right wing conglomerates. They'd never allow such a thing to happen.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by donwelty (February 02, 2010 8:11 pm ET)
          4 1
          Actually, I think that a show debunking the misinformation from the right would not do well because it would have to give background as to why the arguments of the right are so outrageous and then give an explanation of the situation which goes into greater depth than anything that Fox News can do.

          It is a lot easier to come up with a conspiracy theory that it is to explain the details of what is happening to show that the conspiracy theory is totally inappropriate. When the lunatic fringe come up with a conspiracy theory every five minutes, and it would take 15 minutes to explain the insanity of that particular theory, it may not achieve the ratings of the conspiracy theorists, like Glenn Beck. For example, it is easier to come up with a statement such as "the economy is a train wreck caused by the Obama administration," then it is to explain how the economy came to become what it is and then investigate alternatives that will lead us out of this particular recession. In addition, rationally weighing the merits of the administration's policy would take a greater amount of time. furthermore, a serious explanation would be more rational, thus less emotional and not nearly as exciting as the original conspiracy theory.
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          • Author by Les Philling (February 02, 2010 11:49 pm ET)
            1  
            Good points DW and PR. How about a comedic presentation to avoid the problems DW mentioned? And still get ratings enough to avoid the problem PR pointed out because enough non-con stations would take it to make it profitable?
            Report Abuse
          • Author by lynneg (February 03, 2010 4:47 pm ET)
            2  
            so we just let it continue and write our grievances here? If we do not expose the corporate GOP media monopoly for what they are we are never going to reform or change ANYTHING
            example Conventional Wisdom in America because of talk radio, fox etc is that Consevatives are more fiscally responsible and support our troops and are the more principled party. We all know how completely wrong this so called Conventional wisdom is and have facts to prove it, however, we have no national strategy to get the truth out or even break up their monopolisitc media infrastructure.
            This should be all Dems, progressives, Patriotic Americans top priority, but we do not organize or consolidate resources like they have done. United we stand and divided we fall is a true statement. They have done a great job at message control and framing all of the debates. We HAVE to get our act together. Any ideas? I would host or help with any work needed, but I do not have the connections necessary to start.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by wookie (February 02, 2010 10:03 pm ET)
        2  
        There is Counterspin, run by fair.org. But they are on public radio and no one has heard of them.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by just_thinkin (February 02, 2010 6:00 pm ET)
      1  
      I remember Buckley on a show on ABC a long time ago titled "The Legalization of Drugs" He advocated legalizing all drugs since these victimless "crimes" would overwhelm the legal system, and that the laws are enforced selectivily. He said the Prohibition is Unconstitutional. Imagine if the gov't had listened to Buckley then, would we have such crime on our border with Mexico. How about National Review dig up his comments from back then. This guy was before his time. I watch Glenn Beck everyday and am an Independent. I'll tell you what he does: He asks hard questions and the progressives don't like that. One thing about Obama, he Should seriously consider complete legalization of marijuana and hemp. A complete new industry could be created, the planet needs plants to absorbe the C02 every living thing exhales. Marijuana laws are a joke, asserts Tommy Chong and Cheech Marin, who are back and going on a tour and both appeared on 3 Fox News shows trying to get their aim accross which means rescheduling Marijuana, to save drug costs for Medicare, since Marijuana can be lower priced in general and it has a wide range of uses as medicine. Recreational users are where the money is. California could say you pay tax on it maybe $50 an ounce even if you grow your own. This administration doesn't have the guts to fix this utter failure of the drug war. Obama could reep billions and billions from this new industry and repeal the bogus decision from 1937, this Tax Act to effectively prohibit hemp or marijuana to be even grown for industrial purposes. Complete legaization of just marijuana alone allows our American farmers could finally after all these years grow the number 1 cash crop. Hemp produces more celluose than any other seasonal plant. DuPont wants to keep the prohibition because they know that the cannibis plant is easy to grow with modern machinery. Paper from hemp, quit cutting down trees for paper. Mark my word: Obama will be considered a failure if he does not outright legalize Marijuana for any use, personal or manufacturing. I'm up for any more good ideas, but we must remove from our jails criminals serving time for crimes related to Marijuana. Lay off some jail guards, close some prisons. Anything short of this is considered an utter failure. Any Administration either present or future that finally fix this will be kept in office. We have so much debt, I think it is immoral to leave the situation as it is now, 2010.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by donwelty (February 02, 2010 8:29 pm ET)
      4  
      Although I did not necessarily agree with Bill Buckley, he reminded me a lot like a right wing Ted Kennedy. Buckley had class. Buckley made a right-wing point of view seem logical and reasonable and responsible. Buckley did not call the people he was talking to or about names like we see with Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, and Rush Limbaugh. Buckley did not interrupt or throw tantrums as the current right wing misinformers do. Buckley at least had some reasoning for his opinions, and from what I recall there was a fairly logical progression to the conclusion that he drew. Although I did not necessarily agree with it, his thought processes were understandable.

      Nor did Buckley ever get into an emotional tizzy that is anything close to the rants of the current right wingers that populate Fox news evening broadcasts. I am sure that Buckley shares many opinions with many of today's right-wing broadcasters, except for the more far out, fringe opinions. I am also sure that Buckley would denounce, for example, Glenn Beck's remark that President Obama is a racist.

      In my opinion, Buckley had class and values, and those separate him from the right wing fringe who appear to have neither.
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    • Author by tbone (February 02, 2010 8:45 pm ET)
      9  
      We don't have to wonder what Buckley would say, we can just quote him:

      Conservatives pride themselves on resisting change, which is as it should be. But intelligent deference to tradition and stability can evolve into intellectual sloth and moral fanaticism, as when conservatives simply decline to look up from dogma because the effort to raise their heads and reconsider is too great.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by phredicles (February 02, 2010 9:45 pm ET)
      3  
      I'll take a contrarian position and say WFB would have been fine with such hi-jinks: This is after all someone who was happy to see African-Americans denied their right to vote simply because he expected (accurately, I'll admit) that he wouldn't approve of the candidates they'd vote for.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Les Philling (February 02, 2010 11:39 pm ET)
         
      It's political warfare (or pseudo-journalism) being waged by people who want the protection and prestige that comes with being called a journalist... - EB

      Yes, they seem so odd because they don't wish to be a part of the system. They wish to create a new one.


      "It's difficult to build up newsmaking capabilities while a huge chunk of the right's base believes that mainstream news reporting is itself a left-wing practice." - Sarlin
      I don't think Sarlin got it quite right. I would have phrased it this way: "It's difficult to build up newsmaking capabilities when a huge chunk of the right's base hates journalists and journalism."
      - EB

      Each asserrtion is substantively different. Both are true. I'd put it this way, "It's difficult to do something you don't want to do. The right's base doens't want to do journalism as evidenced by their disgust for old line journalists even when they get something indisputably correct - especially when it shows them up."


      And it's that guttural hatred that taints everything about today's "conservative journalism." Part of it is the new, instant-reaction media landscape and the way it seems to reward crude behavior. ... But the scribes weren't juvenile enough to publish any sophomoric slams. -EB

      I know this column is about the internut and not the "ink stained wretches", but don't forget that a nice hate base had been laid by right-wing radio.


      It's the same immoral, right-wing reward system that creates unintentional comedies like O'Keefe's Louisiana mishap.
      -EB

      I'd say "a-moral" because they think of themselves as apart. They are not of the same tribe or whatever, in their minds.


      "We can't allow ourselves to be discredited by our own fringe," said Buckley, referring to the conservative movement as a whole. - EB

      Unlike these righty Yippy-style radicals, he was mentally in the same game as the rest of the country. ... Hey the Yippees really hurt the Dem Party for many decades and still today. Could OK and co. be double agents?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by thelonegunman (February 03, 2010 9:08 am ET)
         
      the most interesting comment this 'kid' stated during his FOX PR session, er, interview, on Hannity, was that his behaviour (i.e., why he was arrested) is simply that which 'investigative journalists have been doing for years.'

      which 'investigative' journos is he talking about (me wonders...)
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Harry Eagar (February 03, 2010 1:02 pm ET)
         
      What would Buckley say? He'd say, "I taught them how with my fake story about the US government's plans to drop an atomic bomb on Hanoi."

      You'll have to go further back than Buckley to find honest conservative journalism. William Allen White?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Boxer1979 (February 03, 2010 1:26 pm ET)
      1  
      Today's "conservative journalism" -- what would Bill Buckley say?

      He wouldn't have to say nothing. He is already rolling in his grave over radical turn the conservatives went.

      SMH!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by rkeppler6115 (February 03, 2010 2:26 pm ET)
      2  
      Please don't continue to denigrate Jackass. They aren't frauds, they don't claim to be journalists, and most of their pranks involve themselves being the victims. To compare O'Keefe to Jackass is rude to the Jackasses.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by NiceguyEddie (February 03, 2010 2:39 pm ET)
         
      Well done, Mister Boehlert. Spot on as always.

      --------------------------------------------
      Bravo
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    • Author by armendale (February 04, 2010 11:53 am ET)
         
      The folks at FOX NEWS and the WSJ are highly disciplined experts in informational warfare. Politics IS war. To win, they are willing to exploit any and all means: propaganda, disinformation, espionage, surveillance, asymmetrical war, insurrection, etc.

      Once you accept that there are no rules in this game that cannot be bent or broken, and that truth is a quaint expendable commodity, then you begin to understand the mindset at work in the "news rooms" at FOX NEWS.


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    • Author by MarinCoUSA (February 04, 2010 6:34 pm ET)
      1  
      Sidebar Comment: Buckley also tried rode the atheist Ayn Rand-ists out of "the movement".
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    • Author by Mark-Ira (February 04, 2010 6:58 pm ET)
      2  
      What would William F. Buckley say? Nothing as harsh as what Barry Goldwater would!
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