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Showing posts with label Journalists Tapscott Mark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journalists Tapscott Mark. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2009

From Tapscott's Copy Desk for July 23 2009

Clinton's India debacle shows failure of Obama's foreign policy by grovelling

From Tapscott's Copy Desk

Tapscott's Copy Desk

Fresh and insightful opinion from Tapscott's Copy Desk, by the Washington Examiner's Editorial Page Editor Mark Tapscott. Got a tip or an oped to place? Send an e-mail to mark.tapscott@gmail.com.

fri>Examiner Editorial Section Thursday

Obama's foreign policy is groveling for goodwill.

Examiner Edtorial.

Check it out!

Founders wisely blocked Obama's health care reform push

Mark Tapscott, Examiner Columnist

Read the full story.

Worried Europe pleads with U.S. to come back.

Meghan Cox Gurdon, Examiner Columnist.

Read the full story.

All of Bill's sons: Private lives in public letters.

Noemie Emery, Examiner Columnist

Read the full story.

Will Rep. Mike Doyle, D-PA, give it back?

Kevin Mooney's Dirty Money Watch.

Read the full story.

Obama's joblessness grows.

This week's Charticle.

Read the full story.


*****
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/

Friday, July 10, 2009

Today in Tapscott's Copy Desk July 10 2009

From Tapscott's Copy Desk

Tapscott's Copy Desk

Fresh and insightful opinion from Tapscott's Copy Desk, by the Washington Examiner's Editorial Page Editor Mark Tapscott. Got a tip or an oped to place? Send an e-mail to mark.tapscott@gmail.com.

Examiner Editorial Section Friday

Political opposition is not a hate crime.

Examiner Editorial

Read the full story

Pelosi allies abuse Panetta to advance Left's agenda.

Newt Gingrich, Examiner columnist.

Read the full story.

White House advisors split on second stimulus.

Irwin M. Stelzer, Examiner Columnist

Read the full story.

Transparency needed to prevent tax dollars going to nowhere

Marta Mossburg, Examiner Columnist

Read the full story.

Congress gives your money to T. Boone Pickens.

Timothy P. Carney, Examiner Columnist

Read the full story.

Will Sen. Lindsey Graham give it back?

Dirty Money Watch by Kevin Mooney

Read the full story.

Why pay millions of dollars to a defense contractor to redesign Recovery.gov.

Examiner OpEd by Jerry Brito

Read the full story.

Iran's shot heard around the world.

Examiner OpEd by James Zumwalt

Read the full story.


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*****

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Mark Tapscott: Obama gives far Left 99 dreamy days

April 28, 2009

From Tapscott's Copy Desk

Tapscott's Copy Desk
Fresh and insightful opinion from Tapscott's Copy Desk, by the Washington Examiner's Editorial Page Editor Mark Tapscott. Got a tip or an oped to place? Send an e-mail to mark.tapscott@gmail.com.

Examiner Editorial Section Tuesday

Examiner Editorial
It's been a dreamy first 99 days of the Obama administration for the far Left in American politics.
Read the full story

Dirty Money Watch by Kevin Mooney
Will Sen. Tim Johnson, D-SD, give it back?
Read the full story.

Gene Healy, Examiner Columnist
A look at Obama's presidential power-grab.
Read the full story.

Marta Mossburg, Examiner Columnist
Maryland lawmakers should give College Park more independence, not more tax dollars.
Read the full story.

Scott Ott's Examiner Scrappleface
With flu strain running amok, Obama warns against anti-swine bias.
Read the full story.

Examiner OpEd by Douglas MacKinnon
Conservative journalists need not apply for Pulitzer Prizes.
Read the full story.

Examiner OpEd by Ana Carcani Rold
Taliban reigns over Pakistan's Valley of Death.
Read the full story.

Examiner OpEd by David Martosko
What you eat is everybody's business in the Nanny State.
Read the full story.
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20090428 Obama gives far Left 99 dreamy days
Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/
Kevin Dayhoff Art: www.kevindayhoff.com
Kevin Dayhoff Westminster: www.westgov.net

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Tapscott Congress ignored regulators' repeated warnings about problems at Fannie, Freddie


Examiner Editorial Section Sunday

Congress ignored regulators' repeated warnings about problems at Fannie, Freddie

April 18, 2009

Examiner Editorial Section Sunday

Examiner Editorial

Congress ignored repeated warnings it received from federal regulators about problems at Fannie and Freddie..
Read the full story

Michael Reagan, Examiner Columnist
Barack Obama's homeland security chief says conservatives who support the 10th Amendment are "rightwing extremists."
Read the full story.

Mark Tapscott, Examiner Editorial Page Editor
Those Tea Party Protestors display some of the same spirit Edmund Burke saw in Americans in 1775.

Read the full story.
Fresh and insightful opinion from Tapscott's Copy Desk, by the Washington Examiner's Editorial Page Editor Mark Tapscott. Got a tip or an oped to place? Send an e-mail to mark.tapscott@gmail.com.

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20090418 SDOSM Examiner Editorial Section Sunday

Kevin Dayhoff www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Monday, March 23, 2009

A presidency approaching meltdown?

From Tapscott's Copy Desk: A presidency approaching meltdown?
March 23, 2009
Tapscott's Copy Desk

Fresh and insightful opinion from Tapscott's Copy Desk, by the Washington Examiner's Editorial Page Editor Mark Tapscott. Got a tip or an oped to place? Send an e-mail to mark.tapscott@gmail.com.

Examiner Editorial Section Lineup

Examiner Editorial
President Barack Obama is getting it radically wrong on the economic issue he described as the most serious since the Great Depression, which makes a growing number of people question whether he is up to the job.

Read the full story.

Hugh Hewitt
Hugh Hewitt, The Washington Examiner's newest weekly columnist, hopes the Senate can slow down the Obama rush to turn bad ideas into laws America can't afford.
Read the full story

Gregory Kane
Could D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty be a latent Reublican?
Read the full story.

James Jay Carafano
America shouldn't get involved in a half-measures war in Afghanistan.
Read the full story.

Barbara Hollingsworth
Want to know why commuting takes longer? Maybe you have a Transportation Planning Board like the one in the nation's capital.
Read the full story.

Daniel J. Popeo
Drug cost reduction must not compromise patient safety.
Read the full story.

Meghan Cox Gurdon
There are good reasons why young boys are attracted to toy guns, bows and arrows and the like.
Read the full story.

Michelle Bernard
Card Check represents a threat to African-Americans and women who hope to succeed in a free job market.
Read the full story.

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20090323 SDOSM Tapscott A presidency approaching meltdown?
From Tapscott's Copy Desk: A presidency approaching meltdown?

Kevin Dayhoff www.kevindayhoff.net http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

Monday, November 24, 2008

The Sunday DC Examiner November 23, 2008

The Sunday DC Examiner November 23, 2008

Survey shows public opposes predatory lawyers

Examiner Editorial: Obama and Democrats in Congress should think twice before
helping predatory class-action lawyers fatten their already bulging bank accounts.

Byron York: Have we changed yet? And why are all
those old Clintonistas surrounding the new president?

Michael Reagan:
Quo Vadis, GOP?

In addition DC Examiner editorial page editor Mark Tapscott notes:

For your additional Sunday reading pleasure - "Fighting for the Right"

I don't usually include links to Examiner news stories in this daily missive, but today's edition has a
fine profile by the Examiner' s Marc Sandalow of House Minority Leader John Boener. See especially Boehner's quotes on areas of the country where the GOP brand "doesn't work."

20081123 The Sunday DC Examiner November 23, 2008

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Today in the DC Examiner: The Coming Conservative Ascendancy

Today in the DC Examiner: The Coming Conservative Ascendancy

November 20, 2008

Now that I have your attention!

Examiner Editorial: Barack Obama's strongest critic during the 2008 presidential campaign could turn out to be his
most important ally in the coming energy debate.

Chris Stirewalt: Believe it or not, there are
actually some differences between the Great Emancipator and The One.

Meghan Cox Gurdon: Will be back next week

Examiner OpEds:

*
Mark Hyman says it's time to stop the bailouts and starve that beast on the Potomac.

* Michael Caputo introduces
Joe the Plumber to Eliot Spitzer.

* John Wonderlich of the Sunlight Foundation sees
technology as Obama's key tool for bringing about change in Washignton.

* Jeremy Lott and Eric Heidenrich of the
Capital Research Center contend voters definitely did NOT go green in the 2008 election.

* Pamela Villarreal of the
National Center for Policy Analysis hopes we all can save our 401(K)s before the GRA becomes a reality.

The Coming Conservative Ascendancy? I almost forgot:

Tapscott's Copy Desk:Notes on the
Coming Conservative Ascendancy

20081120 Today in the DC Examiner The Coming Conservative Ascendancy

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Today in the DC Examiner: An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires

Today in the DC Examiner: An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires

November 19, 2008

Will Obama back missile defense or back missile defense into history?

Examiner Editorial: Liberals have been saying for decades that missile defense can't work, even as the U.S. Army and Navy are repeatedly and successfully testing land and sea-based systems that destroy incoming missiles. Will Barack Obama listen to the liberals or the military?

S.J. Masty's Time Machine: Maybe Charlie Chan can solve the mystery of who shot the GOP.

Jay Ambrose: Our Denver-based Herald of the Rockies is having second thoughts about Obama's first promises.

Tapscott's Copy Desk: Harry Reid and Robert Byrd falsified government data on job creation. Will the Mainstream Media call them on it?

And don't miss a former GM manager's explanation for why she opposes a federal bailout for Detroit's Big Three: You will find Lori Roman's Op-Ed here: “An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires

20081119 Today in the DC Examiner: An Auto Bailout is Like Sending Arsonists to Fight Fires

Monday, November 17, 2008

Today in the DC Examiner: Secret ballots for the lame ducks, but not for American workers?

Today in the DC Examiner: Secret ballots for the lame ducks, but not for American workers?

November 17, 2008

Examiner Editorial: When the congressional party caucuses convene to elect new leadership this week, they will do so with the secret ballot. Guess who wants to abolish secret ballots in the work place?

Melanie Scarborough: All that changes on inauguration day is who gets the goodies.

Examiner OpEd: Andrew Moylan of the National Taxpayers Union wonders what might have happened had John McCain opposed the Wall Street bailout.

Tapscott's Copy Desk: What's this, a Washington Postie defending Sarah Palin?

20081117 Today in the DC Examiner Secret ballots for the lame ducks

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Tapscott's Copy Desk: Comparison of original Paulson bailout to compromise proposal

Tapscott's Copy Desk: Comparison of original Paulson bailout to compromise proposal


More from Tapscott's Copy Desk RSS Feed

POSTED September 28, 2008

House Republican Whip Roy Blunt's office provides this side-by-side comparison of Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's original Wall Street bailout proposal with the final compromise agreed to over the weekend by congressional and Treasury negotiators:

Click here: Side-by-Side Comparison of Rescue Legislation on Tapscott's Copy Desk

http://www.dcexaminer.com/opinion/blogs/TapscottsCopyDesk/Comparison_of_original_Paulson_bailout_to_compromise_proposal.html

20080928 Tapscott: Comparison original Paulson bailout to compromise prop

Monday, June 30, 2008

20080627 Mark Tapscott's Copy Desk: John McCain's three biggest problems - Himself, George Bush and history

I finally got around to reading Mark Tapscott’s post from last Friday: Tapscott's Copy Desk: John McCain's three biggest problems - Himself, George Bush and history.

As usual, Mr. Tapscott has illuminated some rather salient points… / June 30, 2008 Kevin Dayhoff

Tapscott's Copy Desk: John McCain's three biggest problems - Himself, George Bush and history.

From last Friday, June 27, 2008

Some folks are asking what I meant yesterday on MSNBC during an i
nterview with Chris Jansing when I said that presumptive GOP presidential nominee John McCain's "three biggest problems are John McCain, George Bush and history, and he's yet to effectively address any of the three."

Read his entire post here:
Tapscott's Copy Desk: John McCain's three biggest problems - Himself, George Bush and history.

Saturday, June 07, 2008

20080607 HamNation: Obama on your shoulder

Mary Katherine Ham - HamNation: Obama on your shoulder

June 7, 2008

Yesterday, Mark Tapscott wrote in an email: If you watch no other video this month, this is the one to watch. Mary Katharine's first day at The Washington Examiner as online editor is June 10.

It’s a great video but I guess my two all-time favorites are:

HamNation... Not Vegetarian!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTAHyd_2SL8

And:

HamNation: Sopranos DC Edition

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULlxwoWMcDM

Meanwhile here is the video called to our attention by Mr. Tapscott:

HamNation: Obama on Your Shoulder

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BtJG0BonMQ

And finally, since I am a geek for economic history and I like to eat – let’s throw in this video for extra measure… Ummm – collard greens…

HamNation: Hold Onto Your Collards!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iX_hXDxQgR8

####

20080607 HamNation: Obama on your shoulder

Sunday, June 01, 2008

20080530 Commentary on Global Warming by Mark Tapscott

Global Warming: Destined to be the new 'Bloody Shirt' in American politics

Tapscott's Copy Desk May 30, 2008

There were 16 presidential elections between 1868 and 1928 and Democrats won in only four of those contests, with only two candidates, Woodrow Wilson and Grover Cleveland. More often, whenever it looked like a Democrat might have a shot at the White House, Republicans would "wave the bloody shirt." End of election story.

Waving the bloody shirt was as easy as GOP party leaders and candidates simply reminding Northern Republican voters that it was the overwhelmingly Democratic South that seceded in 1861 and ignited the Civil War, the most cataclysmic event in the nation's history. For more than half a century, that fact was an unavoidable and impassable obstacle for virtually all Democrats who nurtured dreams of becoming the nation's commander-in-chief.

What does this relic of American political history have to do with contemporary politics and campaigns? Well, the phenomenon is about to be repeated in a sense. The Senate takes up debate when it returns from the Memorial Day recess on S. 2191, the Warner-Lieberman bill known as "America's Security Act."

All three remaining presidential candidates support Warner-Lieberman or variations of it and the proposal has generated widespread enthusiasm in the mainstream media and among environmental activists. The proposal would cap the nation's greenhouse gas emissions - mainly carbon dioxide, which allegedly cause global warming - from combustion of petroleum, coal and natural gas from all sources, then set up a complicated system of "credits" that companies would buy and sell.

[…]

Columnist Charles Krauthammer has a superb piece in today's edition of The Washington Post.

That is exactly the point. It's also why The Examiner published this editorial earlier this week on why environmentalism isn't about the environment, it's about power for the elite.

Read the entire post here: Global Warming: Destined to be the new 'Bloody Shirt' in American politics

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

20080528 The Tentacle: Ham Nation by Kevin Dayhoff

Ham Nation

May 28, 2008 Kevin E. Dayhoff

Newspaper junkies learned last week that Mary Katherine Ham is joining The Washington Examiner as the online editor of “the publication’s forthcoming new web site.”

The announcement came by way of an email alert from The Washington Examiner’s editorial page editor, Mark Tapscott.

The news comes as excitement grows among those in the central Maryland area, who are Washington-oriented and get much of our national news from online publications, especially The Washington Examiner. Many are looking forward to the paper’s launch of its new web site – “dcexaminer.com.”

It is also welcome news for those who have followed the career of Ms. Ham on Fox News and Townhall.com and understand that she is just what is needed to bring online publications into the new millennium.

[…]

Moreover, the fresh new approach to an online publication is more likely to be achieved with an editor with a background in Internet media. Moving an aging dinosaur print media editor over to the online world and re-labeling their job description, and the sign on the door, isn’t going to work.

This is where someone like Mary Katherine Ham, a 2002 graduate of the University of Georgia with a degree in journalism, has a running start and advantage over any print media refugee assigned to an online publication. For starters, she is 28 years old and is a second-generation journalist.

As The Examiner press release notes, she “grew up in a newspaper family, as her father was managing editor of The Durham Herald-Sun (NC) for 13 years and four as director of digital publishing.”

Furthermore, Ms. Ham is currently a blogger, columnist, and managing editor for the web site Townhall.com. Many have enjoyed her regular appearances on “The O'Reilly Factor” on Fox News, where Bill O’Reilly introduces her as an “Internet Cop.” Others have enjoyed her work in an award-winning video blog series titled “HamNation.”

[…]

It was actually no surprise that The Washington Examiner hired Ms. Ham. Mr. Tapscott has stayed on the cutting-edge of the integration of news reporting into the technological age.

Apparently he did not need a lesson in computational complexity theory, or a “qualitative, anthropological study of young media consumers,” to understand that the future of newspapers is found in the increased integration of video, interactive ability, depth – with “path to the back story,” and honest news reporting.

Mary Katherine Ham is scheduled to begin working at The Examiner’s downtown Washington newsroom on June 10.

Read the entire column here: Ham Nation

Related: Art Writing Essays and articles, Dayhoff media The Tentacle, Media journalists Ham - Mary Katherine Ham, Media journalists Mark Tapscott, Media Newspapers, Media Newspapers Washington Examiner, Media Commentary

20080528 The Tentacle: Ham Nation by Kevin Dayhoff

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com, Winchester Report and The Sunday Carroll Eagle – in the Sunday Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun. Get Westminster Eagle RSS Feed

www.kevindayhoff.net

http://www.youtube.com/kevindayhoff

http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/

http://gizmosart.com/dayhoff.html

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

20080528 This week in The Tentacle


This week in The Tentacle

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Ham Nation

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Newspaper junkies learned last week that Mary Katherine Ham is joining The Washington Examiner as the online editor of “the publication’s forthcoming new web site.”


Beach Ladies

Tom McLaughlin

I love women and now that the Memorial Day weekend has just passed, they are parading on the beach in as little clothing as possible. And I am sitting in my sand chair watching.


Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Joe's Bench

Roy Meachum

It took place in front of Joe Cohen's cigar store; the one with the walk-in humidor - although these days not a lot of folks walk in. Uncle Joe, as he is called, also maintains a bench against his North Market Street window.


The “Invisible” Road Not Taken…

Nick Diaz

The annual “Ride to the Wall” just took place yesterday, and judging from the amount of publicity about this annual event, you have probably heard about it.


Monday, May 26, 2008

Elementary, My Dear Watson – Part Two

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Last week, we covered the symbols and name recognition in Maryland. This week, we look at how to make a speech about how a legislator works interesting to a fourth grader. No small feat, that!


Short Takes

Steven R. Berryman

Here are some short takes on happenings and observations from the last few weeks. From a Diversity Festival, to an Air Show, to English as a national language, to the proposal for 2300 new Beazer “green” homes, things are happening at a fast and furious pace!


Friday, May 23, 2008

The Banished War

Roy Meachum

The war does not take up very much time on the presidential campaign trail. Emphasis rests on the economy. In rooting around for the causes of the recession, few politicians will finger the real culprit. It is, of course, the war, stupid.


Thursday, May 22, 2008

Maryland’s Pulse

Chris Cavey

About two weeks ago I started my fascination with “gas station politics.” We have all encountered this brand of political wisdom, spewed from the innocent perspective of the common citizen normally at too high of a volume and in a public place.


End The Charade; Open The Books

Joan McIntyre

The Board of Education Budget Begging Parade is nearly completed for yet another year. When is this humiliating practice of parading parents, students and teachers before the public - begging for funds - going to stop? Are we just so used to it that we don't even notice anymore?


Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Another Lock-Step Decision

Kevin E. Dayhoff

Last Friday, Westminster Common Councilmember, and Democratic National Convention superdelegate, Greg Pecoraro endorsed Senator Barack Obama. His endorsement comes as the Democratic primaries draw to a close and presidential historians are looking to a very busy summer.


Decoration Day

Tom McLaughlin

Even when he was deep into his Alzheimer’s state, Dad always seemed to know when it was Memorial Day – Decoration Day, as he called it. I guess it might have been the war movies that showed constantly on the television that clued him in, or maybe he just knew.


Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Negative Ladies

Roy Meachum

Much has been made in recent politics about gender, nationally and locally. The chase for the Democratic presidential nomination has been reduced to the candidates' personal plumbing. For the thrill of seeing a woman elected, Hillary Clinton's supporters are prepared to use any weapons at hand.


One Problem, No Single Answer

Farrell Keough

When we were last together, we discussed a presentation given to the Farm Bureau on nutrient problems in the Chesapeake Bay. Since that time, a number of rebuttals have been made with respect to the comments. Here is a brief commentary on some of those points.


Monday, May 19, 2008

Elementary, My Dear Watson – Part One

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

No, not the off-handed comment famously rendered by the brilliant English detective Sherlock Holmes to his trusted companion, Dr. Watson. I’m talking about that generation of learners who fill our elementary schools, our next generation of leaders, scientists, entertainers, and thinkers.


Energy Absurdities

Steven R. Berryman

How does one gage the pain level of rising energy prices on a household budget? When the price at the pump for gas at Sheetz hits $3.79 for unleaded regular, does that do it?

20080528 Washington Examiner Editorial: Revenge, not statesmanship, blocking Bush’s nominees to undermine courts

Revenge, not statesmanship, blocking Bush’s nominees to undermine courts

It is difficult not to think of two words — lies and hypocrisy — when reviewing the promises and foot dragging on President Bush’s judicial nominees by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy of Vermont. These two senators have arbitrarily blocked scores of qualified nominees without even giving them the courtesy of a committee vote.

[…]

As for Leahy, he is becoming infamous for ignoring his own stated standards for judicial nominations. Leahy has said American Bar Association ratings are “the Gold Standard by which judicial candidates are judged,” but now he is denying committee votes to nominees unanimously given the ABA’s highest rating…

[…]

Read the entire editorial here: Revenge, not statesmanship, blocking Bush’s nominees to undermine courts

####

4 hrs ago - Revenge, not statesmanship, blocking Bush’s nominees to undermine courts

1 day ago - Environmentalism is not about the environment

2 days ago - Right on entitlement reform

4 days ago - Hall of Shame for Capitol Hill GOP

5 days ago - Legalized property theft by Alexandria

6 days ago - Chill out on global warming

7 days ago - A shocking lack of accountability

8 days ago - Aspiring presidential wives aren’t exempt from discussion

9 days ago - Pigs in the trough on Capitol Hill

11 days ago - Telling the truth on polar bears, global warming

Sunday, May 25, 2008

20080523 Mary Katharine Ham joins The Washington Examiner as online editor


Mary Katharine Ham joins The Washington Examiner as online editor

Related:

20061122 Meet Mary Katharine Ham Bull City native

20031007 In Defense of Rush by Mary Katharine Ham/Richmond County Daily Journal

20071003 Living and loving in the age of asparagus

20070608 Mary Katherine Ham – HamNation: Sopranos DC Edition

The Washington Examiner issued this news release this afternoon:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Mark Tapscott

May 23, 2008

Mary Katharine Ham joins The Washington Examiner as online editor

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) --- Townhall.com managing editor and regular Fox News guest Mary Katharine Ham is joining The Washington Examiner as online editor for the publication's forthcoming new web site, dcexaminer.com, the newspaper announced today.

As online editor of dcexaminer.com, Ham will be responsible for overall management of the site's news and editorial content and staff, as well as working with Examiner and outside resources on creative development of new features and functionality. She will work from the Examiner's downtown Washington, D.C. newsroom and will start June 10.

"We are especially excited and proud to have Mary Katharine Ham join The Washington Examiner because she among the most respected young stars of online journalism and is also well-known to cable television and talk radio audiences through her regular appearances on 'The O'Reilly Factor' on Fox News," said Vivienne Sosnowski, editorial director of Clarity Media, which publishes The Washington Examiner, The Baltimore Examiner and The San Francisco Examiner, as well as the Examiner.com web site.

"Her hiring demonstrates again our commitment to building a great news and information company that excels in three channels, including newspapers, online and video," Sosnowski said.

Prior to joining Townhall.com as an editor in 2005, Ham was an online editor for The Heritage Foundation think tank. Before that, she was a sports reporter and features writer for a North Carolina daily, winning two awards for excellence for features and sports columns from the North Carolina Press Association.

She is a 2002 graduate of the University of Georgia with a degree in journalism. Ham grew up in a newspaper family, as her father was managing editor of the Durham Herald-Sun for 13 years and four as director of digital publishing. He is now vice-president for communications of the John Locke Foundation in Raleigh, NC.

####

Monday, April 09, 2007

20070408 Soundtrack Snapshots



Soundtrack Snapshots

April 8th, 2007

All about old big fish, dandelions and speeding cows

I hope everyone had a nice Easter holiday weekend…

Looking at the week preceding Easter, the Washington Post carried a Reuters brief Politics Summary.

They are only but a paragraph in length and can be found here: “Reuters Politics Summary.”

Topics included:

Bush prays for safety of U.S. troops on Easter

Stem cell vote set for Congress this week

U.S. Gov. Richardson arrives in North Korea: KCNA

Top U.S. diplomat visits Somalia to urge truce

McCain says he misspoke in upbeat Baghdad comments

Iraq war protester marches to Bush's ranch

Cheney accuses Pelosi of "bad behavior" in Syria

No sign of compromise on Iraq by Bush, Democrats

Hanoi police manhandled dissidents' wives: U.S.

_____

In other news, Don Surber helps us understand: How they knew the fish was 90.” April 8th, 2007 by donsurber:

Dan Joling of the AP reported that fishermen caught a 90-year-old fish in the waters off Alaska:

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A commercial fishing boat has pulled up what could have been one of the oldest creatures in Alaska — a giant rockfish estimated to be about a century old.

The 44-inch, 60-pound female shortraker rockfish was caught last month by the catcher-processor Kodiak Enterprise, owned by Trident Seafoods, south of the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea.

Read the rest here: How they knew the fish was 90.”

_____

In one of my favorites, Doug Oster of TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES explained March 28, 2007 how the lowly dandelion is really a very much-maligned plant.

Lawn foe a surprisingly good green.”

Yes, count me in as someone who also likes dandelions…

Dandelions are incredible. There, I've said it. I'm proud that they are part of my garden and my diet.

Thousands, maybe millions of dollars are spent each year in an effort to eradicate this so-called weed, but dandelions actually are among the world's great plants in terms of nutrition. They are an excellent source of antioxidants and beta carotene.

They also are high in potassium, iron, calcium, phosphorus and magnesium and are loaded with vitamins A, C and E. Want to know another secret? They taste good.

When I tell people I love dandelions, the reactions are mixed. Some look at me in disbelief, given my reputation as a devoted gardener…

Read the rest here: Lawn foe a surprisingly good green.”

_____

The smack down of the week was the Washington Post’s editorial last Thursday on Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s excellent adventure: “Pratfall in Damascus: Nancy Pelosi's foolish shuttle diplomacy.”

Thursday, April 5, 2007; A16

HOUSE SPEAKER Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) offered an excellent demonstration yesterday of why members of Congress should not attempt to supplant the secretary of state when traveling abroad.

[…]

"We came in friendship, hope, and determined that the road to Damascus is a road to peace," Ms. Pelosi grandly declared.

Never mind that that statement is ludicrous: As any diplomat with knowledge of the region could have told Ms. Pelosi, Mr. Assad is a corrupt thug whose overriding priority at the moment is not peace with Israel but heading off U.N. charges that he orchestrated the murder of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri. The really striking development here is the attempt by a Democratic congressional leader to substitute her own foreign policy for that of a sitting Republican president. Two weeks ago Ms. Pelosi rammed legislation through the House of Representatives that would strip Mr. Bush of his authority as commander in chief to manage troop movements in Iraq. Now she is attempting to introduce a new Middle East policy that directly conflicts with that of the president. We have found much to criticize in Mr. Bush's military strategy and regional diplomacy. But Ms. Pelosi's attempt to establish a shadow presidency is not only counterproductive, it is foolish. (My emphasis)

I could not agree more.

Commentary about such matters has become so predictable that it has been rendered uninformative. The lefty bloggers and the main stream media will defend democrats no matter what they do and the righty wing-nuts will criticize Democrats no matter what they do. It has become one big yawn. But when a mainstream media standard-bearer such as the Washington Post weighs-in, then that becomes news in and of itself. And the Washington Post was not the only standard-bearer to criticize her ill-advised adventure.

What was she thinking?

Read the entire editorial here: “Pratfall in Damascus: Nancy Pelosi's foolish shuttle diplomacy.”

Wanna read more? Check out “An Arab-American rebukes Pelosi” posted by Thomas Lifson

Emilio Dabaul, an Arab-American with relatives in Syria, writes a superb rebuke to Nancy Pelosi on the website of the American Congress for Truth. This one is a must-read, and I take off my hat to Mr. Dabaul and ACT for a piece that is logical, clear, well-written, and full of passion. Follow the link, but here is a brief taste: …

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Don Surber calls to our attention the O’Reilly – Rivera shouting match: “So much Hot Air.”

2. Hot Air also has Bill O’Reilly vs. Geraldo Rivera. I saw the thing live and thought it was the usual over-the-top shouting match that should be reserved for Sweeps Months. But hey, readers can decide for themselves.

I missed it because I changed the channel to the “Food Network.” I find these childish food fights of kindergarten proportions to be a waste of my time. If I want to witness inane and uninformed conversations performed by folks with their eyes bulging and their veins popping – I’ll go to a local public hearing. Well, then again - maybe not. I always have my sock drawer to re-arrange… I gain little value out of such shouting matches and I thought that both Mr. O’Reilly and Mr. Rivera made fools of themselves.

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Don Surber, the inventor of the “Name that party” game in which the main stream media identifies Republicans who mess-up right away in the news article but somehow always seem to either, not identify of bury the identification of wrongdoing Democrats; seems to have invented yet another media game:

Name That Party 2.0

There have been complaints that “Name That Party” is too easy. In this game, I post a newspaper story about a political scandal. Readers then guess which party the crook belongs to simply based on which paragraph the reporter discloses the crook’s party.

It did get too easy. Republicans were identified as Republicans within the first 3 paragraphs. Democrats, well, sometimes they were not called Democrats even after 63 paragraphs. Ain’t that right, Matthew Dolan of the Baltimore Sun?

So I am rolling out a new game: Pet or Pork?

Read the entire post here: Name That Party 2.0

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Don Surber comments on the favorite game of liberals, class warfare:

NYT: Women, minorities hardest hit by global warming

April 1st, 2007 by donsurber

The joke for years was if the world ended, the New York Times’ headline would read: “Women, minorities hardest hit.”

The joke came true today in this actual NYT headline:

Poor Nations to Bear Brunt as World Warms

The photograph with it showed: “A woman harvesting corn in Malawi, an African country that is already prone to drought and faces grim prospects under global warming.”

Women? Check. Minorities? Check. Let’s roll. The story began:

Read the rest of the post here: “NYT: Women, minorities hardest hit by global warming

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Last but not least, Mark Tapscott of “Tapscott’s Copy Desk” continues to keep us informed on pork and earmarks: “Kudos to OMB for Updated Online Earmarks Database.”

If you have not been following Mr. Tapscott’s coverage of the wasteful, bankrupting and incomprehensible spending of Congress, click on Mr. Tapscott’s labels for: Porkbusters and Earmarks

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Quote of the week:

Scientists tell us that the fastest animal on earth, with a top speed of 120 ft/sec, is a cow that has been dropped out of a helicopter.” Dave Barry

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