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Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review)
August 28, 2008, 2:23 am EDT
The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following.
The wrath of women scorned (Warren Advocate)
August 27, 2008, 7:15 pm EDT
TO THE end, they made her their winner. "Hill-ary … the nominee", they chanted in the filled underground Manhattan gymnasium where Hillary Clinton held her final victory celebration. Five months of campaigning ended with a win in South ...
William Klein: Play TV Talking Heads Rope-A-Dope Poker (HuffingtonPost)
August 27, 2008, 3:39 pm EDT
The networks' convention coverage can be so mind-numbingly tedious that viewers are concocting their own strategies for staying awake.
Just Over Half of Democrats Say Bill Clinton Likes Obama and Wants Him to Win (Rasmussen Reports via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 11:12 am EDT
Bill Clinton is expected to talk about himself at the Democratic National Convention tonight and then leave town before Barack Obama's acceptance speech. But just over half of Democrats believe there is no animosity between the two men and that ...
Belles in Hell's Kitchen (Santa Fe Reporter)
August 27, 2008, 6:31 am EDT
My mother, a PhD in Women’s Studies, finds my obsession with food bewildering. “How can anybody care so much about all that?” she groans. As writers Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page say: “Food has become our national ...
Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review)
August 27, 2008, 1:23 am EDT
The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following.
No Nastiness In Springfield? (Brent Bozell III via Yahoo! News)
August 27, 2008, 3:00 am EDT
For two years now, we've heard Barack Obama's media allies tell us how he was somehow Not a Politician, that he was the pragmatic soul of civility who was "uniquely qualified to nudge the country toward the color purple." (So said Newsweek.) If ...
Letters (Colorado Springs Independent)
August 7, 2008, 6:40 am EDT
Out with NASCAR Call me anti-American, but isn't NASCAR (and all other manner of gas-guzzling, eardrum-splitting, quasi-sports) among the biggest examples of waste and stupidity?


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Presidents are not perfect

Posted by: archiveguard on Sep 09, 2005 - 09:37 PM
Politics
With all the blame flying around nowadays as each party looks for ways to
twist events to their advantage, it is so tempting to jump in and make retorts
about how much worse "their" political leaders performed.

Monitor Your Integrity

More important than proving perfection on your parties side, is a willingness to seek out the mistakes and correct them; to improve; to monitor your integrity. In the face of the opposition bashing away and looking for any sign of weakness it is tempting to deny any fault at all, but it is still weak to ignore potential improvement. For a leader to inspire confidence, he must maintain a balance between claimed efficacy and a willingness to examine and adapt when changes will make a real impact; Not because the opposition is demanding apologies for not adhering to their views, when their only cause is your destruction, and only when reason makes a strong case.

There are those so hungry for a disaster to blame on a president, nothing will prevent their finding fault with the opposition while their party's errors are given a pass.

Historical Perspective

I've been reading 1776 by David McCullough. George Washington was a confident optimistic leader in public while in his personal conversations and correspondence he admitted great concern for the Patriot Army's success. He made several bad decisions in the defense of New York City; splitting his army against a superior force; picking the wrong leader for a post and then switching midstream. The changes which confused soldiers prior to battle. Washington also overlooked a lesser used Long Island road which allowed the British to flank and surround his troops.

Fortunately for Washington he didn't have a post battle press conference with reporters loyal to the enemy demanding he admit he was a failure. No, he had done his honest best and he and his troops learned and grew better eventually defeating Britain, which was considered the period's military superpower. Though he made mistakes, he was still the best man available for the job. Though he did modestly tell congress he felt inadequate to the job, he put all into it's success. The enemy made many errors as well, but if Washington had been dismissed for his lack of perfection, our history would be much different. Congress knew of his error's but saw past them to his leadership and intelligence, rather than using every opportunity to improve their political positions.

Politicians today tend to look for anything that can tarnish the opponent, with no regard first for the facts, and no regard for damage to the country. The media plays along amplifying the agenda, to the detriment of the business at hand. More and more of us see through the shrill deceits of the knee jerk politicians. We see who is working for our safety and who is busy spouting whatever sounds good to their political circles. If they only knew how nutty, how empty their words are, how devoid of purpose and integrity they appear to the discerning public.

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Everything government touches turns to crap.

-- Ringo Starr

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