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Keyword: pomposity

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  • Some advertisers leave Carlson show after immigrant comments [Tucker Carlson]

    12/18/2018 12:47:23 PM PST · by Oldeconomybuyer · 59 replies
    ABC "News" ^ | December 18, 2018 | By MAE ANDERSON, AP BUSINESS WRITER
    Some advertisers say they are leaving conservative host Tucker Carlson's show following his remarks that immigrants could make the U.S. "poorer and dirtier." It's the latest example of sponsors leaving a Fox News Channel show after controversy, but experts say the flap is likely to blow over. So far, the show's biggest advertisers appear to be sticking with him and his prime-time show, "Tucker Carlson Tonight." Carlson said last Thursday that there's pressure from "our leaders" to accept immigrants "even if it makes our own country poorer and dirtier and more divided." He added Monday that in the Southwest, "thanks...
  • New York Times: Obama Aide Reads 'To Kill a Mockingbird' to Month-Old Daughter

    01/20/2015 2:28:34 PM PST · by PJ-Comix · 30 replies
    NewsBusters ^ | January 20, 2015 | P.J. Gladnick
    Shades of Jimmy Carter revealing at his 1980 presidential debate that he discussed nuclear policy with his 12 year-old daughter. Actually, this is even funnier. According to New York Times reporter Michael S. Schmidt, President Obama's deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes (brother of CBS News Chairman David Rhodes) can be found after midnight reading "To Kill A Mockingbird" to his month-old baby daughter. This hilarious revelation comes to us in Schmidt's article about the lonely agony of writing Obama's State of the Union address after midnight. Take it from here, Michael S. Schmidt:
  • Who’s a Journalist? A Question With Many Facets and One Sure Answer(Barf Alert Courtesy of the NYT)

    07/21/2013 5:32:42 AM PDT · by lbryce · 16 replies
    New York Times ^ | June 29, 2013 | Margaret Sullivan
    Who’s a Journalist? A Question With Many Facets and One Sure Answer Behind almost every correction in The Times, there is a story. In the case of the correction about Alexa O’Brien, the story is a particularly interesting one. The correction, which was in Wednesday’s paper, read: An article on Tuesday about the role of Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, in the case of Edward J. Snowden, the former computer contractor who leaked details of National Security Agency surveillance, referred incompletely to Alexa O’Brien, who has closely followed the case of Pfc. Bradley Manning, accused of providing military and...
  • John Kerry Thinks Yur Stuped (but yu new dat all ready)

    09/25/2010 9:36:55 AM PDT · by La Lydia · 30 replies
    Legal Insurrection ^ | September 25, 2010 | William Jacobson
    John Kerry, spokesman for the new Democratic Party, and sometimes Senator from Ted Kennedy's state, has a few choice words for you dummies, via The Boston Herald: A testy U.S. Sen. John F. Kerry yesterday blamed clueless voters with short attention spans for the uphill battle beleaguered Democrats are facing against Republicans across the nation. “We have an electorate that doesn’t always pay that much attention to what’s going on so people are influenced by a simple slogan rather than the facts or the truth or what’s happening,” Kerry told reporters after touring the Boston Medical Center yesterday.Don't worry, I...
  • How the Protestant "Reformers" violated the integrity of Scripture

    05/09/2007 10:10:07 AM PDT · by stfassisi · 100 replies · 1,216+ views
    How the Protestant "Reformers" violated the integrity of Scripture By Saint Francis de Sales (1567-1622), Bishop and Doctor of the Church The following is an excerpt from St. Francis De Sales "The Catholic Controversy" CHAPTER I. THE SCRIPTURE IS A TRUE RULE OF CHRISTIAN FAITH I well know, thank God, that Tradition was before all Scripture, since a good part of Scripture itself is only Tradition reduced to writing, with an infallible assistance of the Holy Spirit. But, since the authority of Scripture is more easily received by the reformers than that of Tradition, I begin with the former in...
  • Colonists who opposed American Revolution all but forgotten(Justifying NY TIMES)

    07/04/2006 4:57:26 AM PDT · by radar101 · 88 replies · 1,846+ views
    San Diego UNION ^ | 4 July 2006 | Cynthia Crossen
    In June 1776, just a month before the Declaration of Independence was ratified, the white men of Barnstable, Mass., voted on whether America should break its bonds with Great Britain. The tally: 30 for independence, 35 against and 65 abstentions. These days, the Colonists who opposed the revolution have been all but forgotten. Yet, in the years leading up to the Revolutionary War, as many as a fifth of those living in America wanted to remain British subjects. Probably at least that many again were apathetic or opportunistically waiting to see which side won. The American Revolution, many historians argue,...
  • Healing Yet To Commence

    11/08/2004 9:18:56 AM PST · by FreeKeys · 1 replies · 247+ views
    IOWAHAWK ^ | Nov. 5, 2004 | David Burge
    Yipes! Looks like this whole America-healing thing has been a bit slower than earlier anticipated. We here at Iowahawk are all about keeping hope alive, so here's fresh batch of positives to keep our progressive friends warm during the upcoming Rovian ice age: On an up note, Democratic efforts to increase voter turnout was a major success story in 2004. Progressives have shown that they know how to get first-timers and young people to the polling booth. Next time, you can work on the problem of making them vote for you. Kerry's lack of success in the South was largely...
  • Anti-war views dominate at latest faculty forum (Yale-Chunder Alert)

    04/07/2003 9:14:45 AM PDT · by BillyBonebrake · 11 replies · 149+ views
    The Yale Daily News ^ | April 7, 2003 | NICK BAUMANN
    At another installment in the University's series of faculty forums Friday, six Yale professors offered a number of anti-war views on the causes and possible consequences of the current conflict in Iraq. The April 4 event in Davies Auditorium, which drew several hundred students and professors, featured law school professor Bruce Ackerman; anthropology professor Arjun Appadurai; Ethics, Politics and Economics chairwoman Seyla Benhabib; African American Studies chairman Paul Gilroy; history professor Ben Kiernan; and ethics, politics and economics professor Gaspar Tamas. The panel, sponsored by the Program of Ethics, Politics and Economics, stood in stark contrast to the largely pro-war...