The Madness of Prez. George?
Is Justin A. Frank’s frightening Freudian profile, “Bush On The Couch” really psychology? Or is it just couched that way?
Reports and Opinions By Larry Joseph Calloway
Is Justin A. Frank’s frightening Freudian profile, “Bush On The Couch” really psychology? Or is it just couched that way?
The networks were indulging in their “survivor” show fare, but he was impressive on C-Span, with his FDR way of gesturing with his head and neck, this true survivor who called John Kerry “my bother.”
Teresa Heinz Kerry was right. The media celebrities intent upon enforcing a sort of high school code of popularity, good looks and cliches should go shove it.
Why does the White House give special access to an anti-American, royalist, untrustworthy and unreliable foreign power? See the movie, read the book.
Did the media just go blank on the propaganda that supported the first Gulf War? At least The New York Times and Bob Woodward have published apologies.
The psychological explanation for Abu Ghraib currently circulating in the media doesn’t let the military command off the hook. John Kerry is missing another opportunity here.
Look. The authority of George W. Bush to speak for me is probably constitutional. But he arrogates an authority higher than that.
Diversity, in the view of the president of the National Association of Election Directors, is the best safeguard against vote rigging. But in New Mexico a few county clerks have taken diversity over the hill.
American public life is anti-intellectual as hell. Advice to John Kerry: don’t think in public.
A review of two speeches in which national news executives express to their colleagues why paid political diatribes are becoming a threat to their traditional journalism.