Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

'60s leftist William Ayers: Time for GOP to get over it
NY Daily News ^ | 10/26/08 | Dick Vanderford

Posted on 10/26/2008 10:16:34 PM PDT by pissant

The man the GOP loves to hate tiptoed out of hiding Sunday - if only to blast Fox News and the rest of the media for his predicament.

William Ayers, the '60s radical who is one of John McCain's talking points in his criticism of Barack Obama, told a Manhattan panel discussion audience he was tired of being used as cannon fodder in America's political wars.

"[Fox host] Bill O'Reilly comes on his show and first thing he says is, 'Why won't this Ayers story die?'" Ayers told well-wishers. "And then he spends 10 minutes talking about it."

Ayers, a University of Illinois education professor in Chicago, has mostly kept a low profile since McCain started using him as a poster boy for Obama's supposed left-wing leanings.

(Excerpt) Read more at nydailynews.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: ayers; billayers; criminalleft; homicidalcommunists; justicedelayed; larrysinclairslover; obama; radicalleft; revolutionaryleft; richardvanderford; vanderford; violentleft; weatherunderground
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-60 next last
To: CanadianMusherinMI

The hatred for “whites” when you read these blogs is scary. And some of these bloggers teach at universities.


21 posted on 10/26/2008 10:40:34 PM PDT by machogirl (when the call comes at 3:00 am, what if the teleprompter is broken?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: machogirl

blogs? how do you find them? there needs to be, to use the word of obama more “transparency” of colleges. i think most parents would want to know if there child is being taught by terrorists or racists. parents must have been a sleep a long time or far to trusting of our academic institutions for it to get so out of hand!


22 posted on 10/26/2008 10:44:51 PM PDT by CanadianMusherinMI
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

To: pissant

We should follow this man the rest of his life. No justice was done in the courts. It’d be ironic that a man that aligns himself with the “no justice, no peace” crowd should find that he’ll never have peace again for what he did.


23 posted on 10/26/2008 10:44:53 PM PDT by DesScorp
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Republic_of_Secession.

And the tragedy is that they get away with it more often than not. Suppression of dissenting opinion is the M.O. of dictatorships the world over. I vividly recall Castroites’ cries of “To the wall,” when intellectuals and media people were executed shortly after his takeover. Dictators don’t persuade opposing voices: they silence them forever.


24 posted on 10/26/2008 10:50:54 PM PDT by Bernard Marx
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Ayers believes that terrorist acts against corrupt government officials are okay.

I wonder what he’d say about someone commiting terror acts on the government run University of Illinois at Chicago.....


25 posted on 10/26/2008 10:51:10 PM PDT by Tzimisce (How Would Mohammed Vote? Obama for President!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Richard Vanderford is a graduate student in NYU's Magazine Writing program. Born and raised in Canada, he is still struggling to adapt to New York's warm weather. Interested in working as a foreign correspondent, he spent the summer studying and reporting in West Africa and China. He has written for, among others, Toronto's Sharp Magazine, Montreal's Maisonneuve, the Calgary Herald and the Daily News (New York).

26 posted on 10/26/2008 10:51:32 PM PDT by kcvl
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Richard Vanderford is a journalism student at New York University. He can reached at richard.vanderford@gmail.com.


27 posted on 10/26/2008 10:52:43 PM PDT by kcvl
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: kcvl

I’m sure richy likes older men, like Ayers, to ‘tutor’ him.


28 posted on 10/26/2008 10:55:14 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]

To: pissant
Obama's supposed left-wing leanings.

Nope. No spin here.

29 posted on 10/26/2008 10:55:17 PM PDT by Zack Attack
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pissant

RICHARD VANDERFORD is an *SS!!!

******

GOODBYE, PRINCE OF DARKNESS

THE END OF AN ERA: JOURNALIST EXTRAORDINARE ROBERT NOVAK MAKES HIS EXIT

BY RICHARD VANDERFORD
August 19, 2008

Robert Novak made his living by shoe leather reporting. The metaphor is apt, though you can’t quite say he pounded the pavement. Novak’s beat was the Baroque thoroughfares and gilded power corridors of Washington D.C. What’s amazing, however, is that the half-century career of this Chicago Sun-Times columnist never slowed into a comfortable stroll. It remained what it always was: the hustle of young man who, after wandering into American politics, immersed himself in the intrigues and personalities around him with pathological one-mindedness. Reading his 2007memoirs, The Prince of Darkness, you get the sense that Novak was a student of politics who never wanted to graduate. Why would he? He had few hobbies. Poor health drove him from even social drinking. He had many more “sources” than friends. And were it not for the saintly patience of his selfless wife, it’s unlikely he would have any family. Novak made political reporting his life’s work and passion. If he’s fallen short of anointing himself a statesman of American journalism, he didn’t fail to install himself as a fixture.

Two weeks ago, Novak announced his “immediate retirement” after being diagnosed with a brain tumor. The news caught many off guard. Fans and detractors were forced to face the reality that, at 77, Novak is an old man. Yet Novak’s scrappy writing style and indefatigable reporting habits do not suggest the outlook of a septuagenarian and grandfather. Of all the aspersions leveled against Robert Novak—and there are many—you can’t call him lazy. As a longtime co-author (and later sole bylined author) of the famous syndicated “Inside Report” column, Novak has spilled volumes and volumes of ink. Except he really hasn’t. The ink has been spilled, but it’s not in volumes. His body of work, not anthologized or otherwise collected in print, is “ephemeral.” Timeliness was central to his reporting. As one British commentator famously opined, his work reads as though it was written in the back of a lurching cab.

His addiction to scoops shapes his memoirs too. Though he can’t break a new story on a decades-old event, he can forsake longviews and meditated analysis. Chapters, for the most part, are organized chronologically, with titles like “The Goldwater Revolution” and “‘Amnesty, Abortion, and Acid’” that lead into the central moments in American political history . His role in covering them is often presented as a straightforward historical narrative, and biographical details are dropped in as they emerge. The memoir contains enough information and chronological breadth to qualify as a historical work, but often reads like a play that’s had all its dialogue excised. There are no grand soliloquies or cleverly positioned asides to guide the audience to a greater understanding of the larger themes. Just lists of players, often obscure, and a long sequence of Enters and Exits. Regular reports of his (ever-increasing) salary serve as a shorthand indicator of increasing material success.

More at home with the tiny pieces than the big machine, it’s not surprising that a nuts-and-bolts mentality informed Novak’s understanding of politics as well. In his retelling of his early reporting, such as his treatment of the Landrum-Griffin Act (a 1959 law to protect against union corruption which grew from a highly publicized investigation into Teamster racketeering), there is a pronounced focus on politics over policy. Novak’s work is permeated with an implicit cynicism on the motives of power brokers. Twenty-first century Americans may be accustomed to thinking, in a general way, that politicians are self-interested rats. It is still instructive and fascinating to see the clash and mesh of individual personalities, along with the mutual back-scratching of a chummy establishment who regularly produce legislation where the public interest is an afterthought. Novak is as old as they come, and despite living in an age of hyper-linked information, he’s still a safer bet than the Internet for figuring out who owes who what in D.C.

As a living encyclopedia, Novak was more Wikipedia (uncorroborated, biased) than Britannica (stately, unimpeachable). In itself, his immersion in the Washington scene is ethically iffy. He scratches backs, and is not so fastidious about the appearance of ethical purity that he’s above accepting gifts or “hospitality” from prominent public figures. Guests at an Army and Navy gala honoring him wore buttons that read “I’m a source, not a target.” It was a joke, but there’s a more than a grain of truth behind it. It’s often either/or with Novak, and he concedes that he will soften criticism to avoid antagonizing good sources. He will also, if necessary, file a story with a deliberately misleading dateline, or falsely describe anonymous sources in order to save them from possible harm or embarrassment. In general, he operates with a “scoop first and ask questions later” imperative.

That’s not to say that he was without a moral compass. In his memoir he makes it clear that he considered ethical issues. The need to verify with independent sources, for example, is treated like a commandment. In other areas, however, he seems to imply the existence of a code of conduct whose principles are a little fuzzy. In discussing his filing of a critical story on Lyndon Johnson while being hosted at the president’s ranch, he asserts that he wasn’t doing anything wrong (LBJ disagreed). Sometimes he’ll suggest where a conflict of interest could have arisen, and then write what amounts to a blithe shrug, dismissing his own concern and remarking something like “I hope this favor didn’t influence me to give them special consideration.” He benefited from working in dailies and on television. They move quickly and privilege the dirt-disher. The perceived liberty-taking that gave him his nickname “No Facts,” and some of his other lesser ethical transgressions can be overlooked or forgotten in such fact-paced environment.

On his role in the 2003 “Plame Affair,” his critics were not as charitable. In his memoir, he defends his own actions, which included outing the former undercover CIA agent and failing to shield his anonymous source. It’s a relatively fresh event and a difficult place from which to look at Novak’s ethics—the debate about the particulars are hardened along partisan and ideological lines—but it can serve as a good jumping-off point to look at the evolution of his journalistic character.

The relationship between journalist and newsmaker is normally fairly straightforward. Newsmakers make news. Journalists observe and report. In the early stages of his career, Novak played the straightforward journalist; however, by the time the Plame Affair breaks, it’s clear that he became more advocate and ideologue than objective observer. When he was invited to Meet the Press, it wasn’t to be the press. Novak’s own assessment is muddled. He asserts that every column he writes is rooted in traditional reporting, but unapologetically defends his conservative values and his role in propagating them. He prides himself on being a history maker. He directly takes credit for, or implies a prominent role in (among other things): opening the debate on affirmative action; bringing Kennedy to Dallas, where he was assassinated; prompting the resignation of LBJ; and determining American troop deployment policy in Korea and West Germany. He has worked on television programs that, if not strictly partisan, are as adversarial and polemic as the most vicious legislature.

Novak has a small obsession with prediction. Just as salary is a shorthand for material success, predictive accuracy is, to him, a yardstick of political savvy. It seems fitting to end a discussion on him with some attempt to divine his future, and legacy. His being a divisive figure with an unmatched longevity in one line of work would seem to make it easy: he will go out having beena divisive conservative writing an insider’s column. But Novak himself is not content to rely solely on his gut. He needs to break down election predictions, for example, state-by-state. His own Prince of Darknesshides a definite motif of penitence throughout that shows on closer inspection. Novak is inflammatory and rude, but he’s also has an air of a twelve-stepper combined with a Christian convert. He renders painstaking thanks even to those who have clearly wronged him. And as much as he dismisses criticism (and even outright hatred), there’s a sense of his underlying fatigue at being an object of scorn as he gropes for explanations for all his betrayals and rudeness.

Illiness has forced Novak’s official resignation, but I somehow don’t believe it. He won’t stop writing until he dies. We might never know if he’ll ever transform into a kinder commentator. But having helped him beat three cancers already, medical science may keep him alive just long enough to find out.

Richard Vanderford is a New York-based freelancer. He’s currently in Beijing covering the Olympics for Toronto’s Sharp magazine.


30 posted on 10/26/2008 11:02:05 PM PDT by kcvl
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Obama’s mentor, Ayers, dedicated his book to Sirhan Sirhan, the murderer of Bobby Kennedy ! Sirhan Sirhan - of all people, I can’t believe it, does Teddy even know? What a monster!

Ayers Republished His Revolutionary Manifesto in 2006
Politics | Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 10:35:47 am PST

Yesterday we linked to Zombie’s new report on “Billy” Ayers’ and Bernardine Dohrn’s 1974 communist declaration of war against the United States.

Little did we realize that Ayers actually republished this book dedicated to Robert F. Kennedy’s assassin Sirhan Sirhan ... in 2006: Sing a Battle Song: The Revolutionary Poetry, Statements, and Communiqus of the Weather Underground 1970 - 1974: Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers, Jeff Jones: Books.


31 posted on 10/26/2008 11:18:29 PM PDT by Titus-Maximus (Putney Swope Lives!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: CanadianMusherinMI

Just searched on google.


32 posted on 10/26/2008 11:22:11 PM PDT by machogirl (when the call comes at 3:00 am, what if the teleprompter is broken?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 22 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Obama’s mentor, Ayers, dedicated his book to Sirhan Sirhan, the murderer of Bobby Kennedy ! Sirhan Sirhan - of all people, I can’t believe it, does Teddy even know? What a monster!

Ayers Republished His Revolutionary Manifesto in 2006
Politics | Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 10:35:47 am PST

Yesterday we linked to Zombie’s new report on “Billy” Ayers’ and Bernardine Dohrn’s 1974 communist declaration of war against the United States.

Little did we realize that Ayers actually republished this book dedicated to Robert F. Kennedy’s assassin Sirhan Sirhan ... in 2006: Sing a Battle Song: The Revolutionary Poetry, Statements, and Communiqus of the Weather Underground 1970 - 1974: Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers, Jeff Jones: Books.


33 posted on 10/26/2008 11:28:29 PM PDT by Titus-Maximus (Putney Swope Lives!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pissant

Is it against FR rules to publicly call for the death of a known terrorist? Just wondering...


34 posted on 10/26/2008 11:56:34 PM PDT by thecabal (I AM JOE)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: thecabal

I’m really curious about this. Given that Ayers was a member of Weather Underground, that WU declared war on the United States, and that they killed policemen, and attempted to kill a judge and his family and soldiers and their families; and that (to my knowledge) Weather Underground has not either ended their war against the US or announced a change to non-violent methods, and Ayers has never renounced his membership in Weather Underground, is he still at war with the US? Could he be arrested for the threats he made, or the threats that Weather Underground made since they are still current as it were?


35 posted on 10/27/2008 12:01:59 AM PDT by SeminoleSoldier
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 34 | View Replies]

To: Titus-Maximus

Sirhan Sirhan is a pinko Palestinian, which is probably why Ayers found him attractive.


36 posted on 10/27/2008 12:18:08 AM PDT by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 33 | View Replies]

To: pissant

“The man the GOP loves to hate tiptoed out of hiding Sunday - if only to blast Fox News and the rest of the media for his predicament.”

The man the GOP loves to hate??? WTF? Shouldn’t the ENTIRE COUNTRY hate this man, and his wife, for that matter? Shouldn’t Democrats be ashamed of this human POS? Obviously all rhetorical questions, but the absurdity of this boggles the mind!

Yes, it’s all those hate-filled right-wingers, going after a poor, middle aged, former radical (but he’s a respected education professor now at the University of Chicago!), picking on him and subjecting him to being asked a few questions by a Bill O’Reilly producer.


37 posted on 10/27/2008 12:24:58 AM PDT by FarRightFanatic (Sarah Palin to Sen. Biden: "Your plan is a white flag of surrender.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SeminoleSoldier

The best chance (if any exists) to still nail the scumbags in the legal system is probably to re-open any “cold cases” such as the bombing of a police station in CA (Berkeley, I think) that murdered a police officer. I wonder about the case in NY of the murder of 3 guards in the armored car robbery around 1981 — that involved close friends of Ayers & Dohrn (who went on to raise the children of their Weatherfreak pals who received long jail terms) and I have long wondered whether Ayer and/or Dohrn could be tied to those heinous crimes. I think that Dohrn was involved in stolen identities IIRC that helped some of that gang, so maybe she was an accessory to multiple murders. I think she did some jail time for refusing to testify before the Grand Jury investigating that case — don’t know if there’s anything that could still be re-opened, legally, but she and Ayers deserved to fry for the whole collection of murderous and treasonous crimes.

It’s often said that “there is no statute of limitations on murder” and if any evidence still exists that could link Ayers and/or Dohrn to any case involving murder then it might still be possible to nail the scumbags. I doubt that anything short of murder could still be prosecuted at this late date, although there ought not to be any statute of limitations on prosecuting treason, which the Weatherfreaks certainly are guilty of, whether or not it could be successfully prosecuted.


38 posted on 10/27/2008 2:13:53 AM PDT by Enchante (The real "bitter clingers" are on the LEFT -- ranting Obamabots clinging to delusions!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: Arizona Carolyn

Bingo. Ayers risked getting a second round. [Probably likes the attention subconsciously.] Featured this on the morning ping [in-depth follow-up] ...
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2116186/posts?page=167#167

... and added it to the Ayers Link Thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2111988/posts?page=49#49


39 posted on 10/27/2008 5:23:23 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (We can win the economic meltdown debate: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2115485/posts)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: pissant
Hey, Bill Ayers, I'll tell you what... Let's have someone murder some of your family members, get off scott-free, then years later brag about it, and see if you want their murders "dropped?"

Mark

40 posted on 10/27/2008 5:41:53 AM PDT by MarkL (Al Gore: The Greenhouse Gasbag! (heard on Bob Brinker's Money Talk))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-60 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson