Tuesday, December 28, 2004

The hypocrisy hangs thick in the air:

So says Paul Cella a blogger at: http://cellasreview.blogspot.com/2004_12_01_cellasreview_archive.html#110422961948727439
Mr. Cella also refers to a blog posting by Colby Cosh at:
http://colbycosh.com/#rwgb

basically, the argument is that the obits for Reggie White, all star football lineman who died of an aphnia induced heart attack, stress that Mr. White 'tarnished his image' by calling "... homosexuality as "one of the biggest sins in the Bible" and stereotyping races (i.e. blacks are thus, whites are thus).

It is difficult at this point to know what Mr. White meant back in the 90s when he made these comments but it is clear that it was the media not Mr. White who 'tarnished' his image. The media could certainly have played down the comments or not reported the comments or reported the comments but indicated that they didn't know what Mr. White meant. Thus, I don't think that the media (the AP and the Chicago Trib are cited by mssrs Cella and Cosh) are being hypocrites so much as they are being sloppy.

Similarly, Cella and Cosh say the media does not say that black rappers who use homobashing lyrics have 'tarnished' their image. In this case, I'll side with the media because the rappers 'image' is their lyrics - they have no other image. I think Cella and Cosh would be correct if they said that the media is wrong, or deliquent when it fails to report the homobashing lyrics but that doesn't create hypocrisy
.

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Was Hypocrisy on the Ballot Yesterday

I read someone on line who said that people who voted for Bush assumed that he was sincere when he said he wanted to fight terrorism and win the conflict in Iraq while people who voted for Kerry assumed he was a hypocrite when he said he wanted to fight terrorism and win the conflict in Iraq.

One could also assume that some people voted for Kerry because they assumed he was a hypocrite when he said he was against gay marriage and abortion.

I don't doubt that some people did this (especially on Iraq and gay marriage). However, I expect more people who voted for Kerry did so out of a general dissatisfaction or unease or fear. Thus I don't consider the election to have been a referendum on hypocrisy.

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

Movies and TV shows - is there a difference

A movie that is said to be anti Kerry will be shown on several TV stations this month.

This is the website for Stolen Valor:
http://www.stolenvalor.com/foia.HTM

A movie that was obviously anti Bush was shown in numerous movie studios 3 months ago (and will be shown on pay for view later this month). The Democratic National Committee (DNC) is trying to have the broadcast of the TV stations stopped.

Is this hypocrisy?

First off, it is not clear to me whether there is a legal difference between a movie and a TV show. Secondly, it is now much closer to an election than when the movie came out. The DNC action is based on the argument that the TV show is an in-kind contribution to the Bush campaign. The DNC does not address (at least not yet) the issue of whether the movie was an in-kind contribution to the Kerry campaign.

I'll wait until they address this before I think this through the rest of the way.


- Ultimately the anti Kerry program wasn't shown on TV - I went to the site and watched a few minutes - the movie did not have good production values and probably wouldn't have been very effective.

Thursday, September 02, 2004

Zell Miller - Occupation vs Liberation

In his speech yesterday, Senator Zell Miller (who by the way was the first person to be the keynote speaker at both a Democratic and a Republican convention), said that when Senator Kerry referred to American troops in Iraq (I think he meant Iraq) as occupiers and not liberators, it made Miller angry. It has been documented that President Bush also used the phrase 'occupiers'. Now:
1. I can't remember Kerry ever using the expression and Miller didn't say when he said it
2. When Bush used the phrase 'occupiers' it was before an Iraq govt was sworn in on June 29.

I doubt that Miller is actually angry about the use of the word 'occupier'. Miller knows that our troops were both liberators and occupiers (although the latter was done out of necessity because of the former). Thus he is undoubtedly a hypocrit.

Furthermore there were other things Miller said that were either clearly things he didn't believe or else greatly exaggerated. A site that gives a summary is at:

http://www.slate.com/id/2106119/

However, the only thing this shows is that he was angry. Frankly, his presence and his demeanor were more angry than his words. Thus the hypocrisy only rises to a level 2.

Friday, August 27, 2004

NY Post on the 527 Hypocrisy

The NY Post today had an article titled "Hypocrisy, thy name is Kerry" which has more details on the people in the Kerry Campaign who have connections to the 527 organizations. This relates to my post yesterday on this subject.

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/editorial/27551.htm


A more comprehensive article on the same thing, also today, is at:

http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/Vote2004/527_groups_040825-1.html

and a followup op ed in the Washington Post at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A50985-2004Aug31.html

Thursday, August 26, 2004

527s

Yesterday, former Senator (and current board member of the Ex-Im bank- appointed by GWB no less) went to Texas to complain about the ads that the SwiftVeteransforTruth was running and to complain that the group is a tool of the Bush campaign. As has been noted by several bloggers, most notably NZBear of http://www.truthlaidbear.com/ in his Aug 24-26, 2004 postings, the 527 organizations that support Kerry have spent about 100 times more money than the SwiftVets and furthermore, the connections between the Kerry campaign the the anti Bush 527s is far more robust than the connection between the SwiftVets and the Bush campaign.

So we have a slamdunk case of the Kerry campaign complaining about tactics that they use themselves (and use more than the stuff they are complaining about).

So what type of hypocrisy is it?

Well, I'm thinking it is about a 2. Many people, maybe most, can see the hypocrisy. In some ways it is completely self correcting because it shows the flaws of the campaign reform act that allowed the 527 loophole (the number being the clause in the law allowing these organizations to place TV ads).

Wednesday, August 18, 2004

The US Government is Advising Me on Being a Hypocrite

at: http://www.theantidrug.com/marijuana/sayno.asp

is an article that begins, "Marijuana: How to Tell Your Kids to Say No, Even if You Didn't"

The article basically says that even though parents took marijuana, they should tell their own children not to take marijuana. The article goes into some detail about what to do when the next generation calls the previous generation 'hypocrites'.

" ...What if you are afraid of sounding like a hypocrite? "Do as I say, not as I do" has never been a good method of parenting. Parents can emphasize that this discussion is about your child's future, and not about your past. Even if you..."

First thing to realize is that if I now believe they shouldn't smoke marijuana and say "I believe you shouldn't smoke marijuana", that is not hypocrisy. If I believed that smoking marijuana was not harmful and said "it is harmful", now that would be hypocrisy.

The other thing to say about the ad is that it states that marijuana now is stronger than marijuana back in the 60s and 70s. I've heard this said but I have no way of verifying it. Thus, frankly, on this subject, I am too ignorant to be a hypocrite, no matter what my government thinks.

Tuesday, August 10, 2004

Kerry and Energy Independence

Apparently, Sen John Kerry is making speeches about the US achieving energy independence.

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/07/politics/campaign/07energy.html?ei=5090&en=022a8d4b7907d6c0&ex=1249531200&partner=rssuserland&pagewanted=print&position=

Obviously this is a case of hypocrisy since his advisors realize he doesn't mean it (they say so in the article). The fact that this hypocrisy is acceptable is a sign that, yes, people are willing to admit that some hypocrisy is innocuous.

Now if this were the only Kerry hypocrisy I would agree. Unfortunately it isn't.


Friday, July 23, 2004

Dem vs. Rep Hypocrisy

Michelle Cottle had an article in the on line version (June 18, 2004)of the New Republic back in June. I have just gotten to it and today I can't find it on line.

The article states that people in the D and R parties have different ways of looking at hypocrisy. Democrats think of it as the worst of crimes, i.e., Rush Limbaugh can not be criticized for doing oxycontin; instead he must be criticized for preaching against drug abuse on the radio while abusing drugs in his own life. Republicans don't care as much about hypocrisy; they care more about people's views on sin.

The article is well reasoned and well written but I think wrongly premised.

The premise that democrats think hypocrisy the worst of crimes would lead to a criticism of Ralph Nader for violation of campaign finance rules. Cottle notes this and says 'it will be interesting to see... will cause him any lingering grief.  Now, after more than a month, it is clear that it hasn't caused Nader any grief whatsoever.  It seems the premise, namely, that Democrats think hypocrisy the worst of crimes, is not true.

What seems more likely is that Democrats think hypocrisy in Republicans is the worst that they can be charged with but think hypocrisy in Democrats, unless it is obvious, is unimportant.

For example (this is in Demthink), George Bush's budget busting actions are horrible while John Kerry's views on abortion, while I think obviously hypocritical are unimportant.

Similarly, Republicans think hypocrisy in Democrats is a serious crime (maybe not as serious as sin itself), but that hypocrisy in Republicans is unimportant.

For example (this is in Repthink), John Kerry's views on abortion are hypocritical and awful, but even worse is his support for abortion. George Bush's budget busting actions were necessary and the dems would have done it anyway.    

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

Kerry and Abortion

Senator, and presidential candidate, John Kerry announced that he believes that life begins at conception.

see the Washington Post story on this at:

http://is1.websearch.com/websrch.iepan.full/search/inc/results/web/framed.htm?display-url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fac2%2Fwp-dyn%2FA27920-2004Jul4%3Flanguage%3Dprinter&qkw=kerry+conception&nextid=di13:1089749489368&frame=http%3A%2F%2Fclickit.go2net.com%2Fsearch%3Fpos%3D11%26ppos%3D10%26plnks%3D10%26uplnks%3D20%26cat%3Dweb%26cid%3D239170%26site%3Dsrch%26area%3Dsrch.noncomm.inktomi%26shape%3Dtextlink%26cp%3Dwebsrch.iepan.full%26cluster-click%3D0%26pd%3D0%26coll%3D0%26query%3Dkerry%2Bconception%26rawto%3Dhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fac2%2Fwp-dyn%2FA27920-2004Jul4%3Flanguage%3Dprinter

Senator Kerry has a record of support for abortion rights and choice groups. He has made numerous speeches to such groups harshly criticizing people who support restrictions on reproduction rights, harshly criticized restrictions on federal funding of abortions, etc. He hasn't once announced that he believes life begins at conception prior to this year.

I think everyone in the abortion rights movement thinks that Kerry is lying when he says that he believes that life begins at birth. I also think he is lying.

So, this is a case of hypocrisy - saying something one doesn't believe in.

The question becomes what type of hypocrisy is it.

Well, the law on the subject is quite stable. The Supreme Court decision prevents States from infringing on a woman's right to an abortion in the first 6 months of pregnancy and the Partial Birth law (Kerry voted against this; at the time he says he thought it punitive; he now says he would have voted for a softer version of the bill with a clause about woman's health) effectively prevents States from funding abortions in the last 2 months and makes such persons performing such abortions prosecutable.

I think Kerry's hypocrisy on this issue is pretty inconsequential from a legal standpoint. I worry however. Many of the people supporting Kerry on this are doing so because they believe he is lying. What else might he be lying about?

Monday, July 05, 2004

Bad AQ today

Today, I called a friend of ours. We shop for her some since she is in a wheelchair.

She said that she was thinking of going to a store near her today but the air quality was too bad.

She smokes cigarettes.

I almost responded with a sarcastic quip but didn't.

Is this hypocrisy (surely she realizes that the air outside is much better for her than apartment air with cigarette smoke - and btw, the air quality was actually pretty good today)dangerous at all.

No. She probably just wanted to justify to herself a decision. Definitely a type 1.

Monday, June 07, 2004

Hypocrisy and Reagan's Death

Among people who didn't like former President Reagan, there were a number of reactions.

Some people simply said what they didn't like about him. The three anti-Reagan writers on Slate did this.
see
http://slate.msn.com/id/2101842/
http://slate.msn.com/id/2101829/
and
http://slate.msn.com/id/2101835/

This was honest but mean spirited.

Some people who didn't like him had a kind word followed by some colder thoughts. Former President Carter had comments like this. This also came out sounding mean spirited.

However, Senator John Kerry (a google and nexus search of Kerry's comments about Reagan reveals that Kerry disliked Reagan and Reagan's policies) had a fairly long and warm thought about Reagan. This was probably hypocritical but comes out sounding nice and statesmanlike.

Kerry's announcement is at: http://is1.websearch.com/websrch.iepan.full/search/inc/results/web/framed.htm?display-url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.boston.com%2Fnews%2Fnation%2Farticles%2F2004%2F06%2F05%2Fkerry_calls_reagans_optimism_an_example&qkw=kerry%2bon%2breagan&nextid=ms15:1086658482562&frame=http%3A%2F%2Fclickit.go2net.com%2Fsearch%3Fpos%3D3%26ppos%3D0%26plnks%3D0%26uplnks%3D20%26cat%3Dweb%26cid%3D239170%26site%3Dsrch%26area%3Dsrch.noncomm.inktomi%26shape%3Dtextlink%26cp%3Dwebsrch.iepan.full%26cluster-click%3D0%26pd%3D0%26coll%3D0%26query%3Dkerry%2Bon%2Breagan%26rawto%3Dhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.boston.com%2Fnews%2Fnation%2Farticles%2F2004%2F06%2F05%2Fkerry_calls_reagans_optimism_an_example

A victory for hypocrisy - at least type 1.

Friday, June 04, 2004

Lack of Hypocrisy Accusations

The campaign so far is notible for the lack of hypocrisy accusations. The Bush people are focusing their anti Kerry mantra as 'he flip-flops', which is probably a good idea for them because 'flip flops' are a type of beach wear and can be help up at Kerry events.

The Kerry people have no single focus of their anti-Bush chants but, to my knowledge, they haven't yet accused him of hypocrisy.

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

Terrorists execute a hostage - cite abuse of Iraqi prisoners

Today, the terrorists holding an American contractor hostage executed him (and posted the images on a website) citing the abuse of Iraqi prisoners. Not a single newspaper has yet pointed out this as a case of hypocrisy, although its obvious the terrorists aren't really concerned with the abuse (which has been general knowledge since January, apparently although the pictures are new).

If I were a newspaper editor I also would not point out the hypocrisy. That's because terrorism is worse than hypocrisy; much, much, much worse. The hypocrisy is insignificant compared to that.



A Reuters article on the execution is at: http://">http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=5108202

Monday, April 05, 2004

More on the DailyKos hatespeech post

A good narrative on the follow up to the original dailykos post was at: http://berrysworld.blogspot.com/archives/2004_04_04_berrysworld_archive.html#108116036761252544

It turns out that there are layers and layers of direct and indirect hypocrisy here.

In addition to the non-apology apology, there is the non-report report where a friend or ideological soulmate of Dailykos intentionally downplays the 'hate' part of the hate post and then says, in effect, "why are people persecuting poor dailykos?"

How harmful is this? Well, it seems to me that the people harmed are the people who do the 'non report report' and the 'non apology apology', but maybe their readers are also affected. I'll have to think about this.

Sunday, April 04, 2004

John Dean vs. GWBush

At: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/04/04/wnix04.xml&sSheet=/portal/2004/04/04/ixportaltop.html

John Dean, the former chief counsel (and convicted perjuror) to Richard Nixon blasted the Bush administration for being corrupt because (as I understand it) they won't let national security advisor Rice testify in public to the 9-11 commission. It seems the word 'corrupt' actually means 'secretive' but wait a minute, Rice is going to testify in public. So John Dean isn't being hypocritical just very, very sloppy and very, very behind the times and very, very hysterical.

Oddly, the actual hypocrit here is the President who, at first said that public testimony by Rice would badly damage the executive's ability to get honest advise, then said, 'oh well go ahead anyway.' Obviously either he didn't mean what he said when he won't let Rice testify or he didn't mean what he said when he did let Rice testify. In either case, however, this is a pretty inconsequential piece of hypocrisy and in fact, the President, is, I think, supposed to get huffy when he executive perogatives are challenged.
Kerry and hip hop

Last week Kerry made some positive and cautionary comments about hip hop music. The theory is widespread that he actually knows nothing about the subject. This is more or less innocent pandering but its amusing none the less. A good read on this is at: http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2004_04/003612.php
The Daily Kos's manuvers

A few days ago dailykos (a popular left wing blogger - up to 3M hits/day) posted some thoughts about some civilian American causalties. He basically celebrated their death by mutilation deaths. Shortly thereafter, dailykos eliminated the post and had it eliminated from one of the google archives. Others, however, noticed. One of these was John Kerry who, up until that point was advertising on dailykos. Some of Kerry's fans posted anti-link elimination messages on Kerry's site.

Dailykos then posted a non apology apology and blamed others for illuminating his earlier post.

By doing this latter post he basically admitted that his removal of the earlier post did not mean that he disbelieved his own words. This is about as clear a slamdunk case of hypocrisy as you will ever see. Now, it turns out that this hypocrisy is not very important because those who are dailykos fans are not influenced by the fact that it was hypocrisy and neither are the anti dailykos people. Dailykos marginally loses some revenue from the Kerry campaign.

A good place to read the various ins and outs of this is at: http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2004_04/003612.php

Sunday, March 28, 2004

Tax Policy

I think the most egregious hypocrisy of the presidential campaign is in the tax policy area.

Candidate Bush ran on a platform of cutting taxes because of a projected surplus. When the projected surplus disappeared, by then President Bush had taxes reduced three times to avoid recession. It seems clear that whatever the situation cutting taxes is the solution. When we had unanticipated expenses because of the 9-11 attack or the Iraq war or the prescription drug benefit these didn't require raising taxes. Its obvious that President Bush simply believes that lower taxes are a public good no matter what the situation. He has, however, not said this. Instead we get doubletalk.

If anything, Senator Kerry is worse. During his nearly two decades as a Senator he never once mentioned the corporate tax rate or the deferral of taxes on income abroad as an issue. Nor did he mention them as an issue when running for the Democratic nomination. Just last week he announced a policy on both of these. He even implied that they would produce 10 million new jobs. Now Senator Kerry realizes full well that these twin initiatives, if implemented, would have only a minimal impact on jobs (and no one can even confidently predict what that would be other than it would be minimal). He also would not have proposed these initiatives during the nomination contest because their complexity, their amibuity, the fuzziness of assigning exeptions to the overall policy would have been impossible to defend during the nomination contest. It seems obvious Kerry does not believe in his own initiatives and is just proposing them to make himself seem like a combination of fiscal conservative and anti off shoring knight.

Thursday, March 18, 2004

Supreme Court Justices

An article in the NY Post at: http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/21011.htm

documented the cases of VP Cheny and Justice Scalia who duck hunted together and Justice Ginsberg who lends her name to fundraising activities of the National Organization for Women.

He states that people accuse Scalia of conflict of interest but not Ginsberg. He says that is hypocrisy.

The problem with that claim is that it implies that people are knowingly accusing Scalia but knowingly not accusing Ginsberg. Of course, the fact is that virtually no body knows about the Ginsberg case. It may be that you could claim that the media is deliberately not reporting the Ginsberg case, but I didn't think the NY Post actually makes that claim.

Wednesday, March 17, 2004

More on Campaign Ads

A number of new Bush and Kerry ads are out.

An analysis of them is at: http://slate.msn.com/id/2097241/ (the two analysts are both relatively left of center). As expected they don't like the ads much (they dislike Bushes more). Personally, I also dislike political ads but only because they are less entertaining than product ads. However, I noticed that neither analyst claims that either Bush or Kerry is being hypocritical. Instead they are 'misleading' 'vacuous' or 'lying'.

At this point, it seems the analysts have pretty much conceded that it doesn't matter whether the candidates believe what they said, only that the ads be less disgusting (although they both concede that might make them less effective). Bush and Kerry, both being politicians for a number of years, no doubt realize that effective messages must be kept simple and since politics is not simple, the message will always be somewhat misleading. I also feel that both of them are able to believe contradictory proppositions (e.g., Bush can believe that Kerry's health care proposal will require a dollar for dollar tax increase even though Bush's drug insurance proposal required not a single dollar of tax increase). Thus neither candidate's ads could reasonably be said to be hypocritical.

Sunday, March 14, 2004

Campaign Ads.

President Bush has placed a campaign add that strongly implies the Recession began when he first took office. This is almost certainly not hypocrisy because even though current impartial analysis indicates that it began in March 2001 (still could be adjusted), Bush almost certainly believes that the recession was underway in Jan 2001. In any event, its hair splitting. Bush also, in a speech (not an ad), said Kerry introduced a bill to cut the CIA's budget by $1.5 billion; that this would have weakened the agency; and, that the cuts were so egregious that no one even in the Democratic party would co sponser this. This is certainly misleading since at the time the CIA was underspending its budget in one area by $1.5 billion over a 5 year period and Kerry's bill would, essentially have simply taken away unspent funds. The reason no one supported it is that another Democrat had a Republican co sponsor to adjust the budget in a different (more flexible and thus more acceptable to the CIA) way. This probably doesn't reach the hypocrisy threshold only because Bush probably wasn't told all the facts by his staff. If, however, I'm wrong and Bush was told the facts, it would count as hypocrisy since Kerry was not 'weakening the CIA' and Bush would have known it.

Wednesday, March 03, 2004

Hypocrisys to keep watching.

Senator John Edwards dropped out of the running for the Democratic nomination. Senator Edwards had been running on an anti free trade platform. I doubt that Senator Edwards actually believed the non sense he was spouting about NAFTA since the mill jobs he prattled on about were being lost long before NAFTA. I never analyzed his hypocrisy.

Senator Kerry has a more nuanced hypocrisy on trade. He voted for NAFTA and GATT but says the Bush administration didn't take the environmental and labor standards provisions seriously. Actually, President Bush has been less free trade than Clinton (steel tarriffs, sugar quotas, mohair subsidies; personnally I think Bush was wrong on these). No one can produce a single anti NAFTA comment by Senator Kerry during the Clinton administration. The New York Times produced a delightful comment about Senator Kerry which said that the reason Kerry seems to contradict himself and give convoluted answers is because of nuance (I'm not linking to this because the NY Times comment is drivel). However, on the Trade issue, given that Kerry has legitimate economic advisers it must be obvious to him that his position on trade is hypocritical. At last, a fairly obvious example.

Now lets take same sex marriage. President Bush had been against a constitutional amendment but now is for such an amendment but hasn't any suggested language. This is almost certainly hypocrisy since Bush knows that the exact language is vitally important. Senator Kerry voted against the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act because he said then that it was unconstitutional. He claims now to think the Act is constitutional and is against a US Constitutional amendment that uses language similar to the 1996 Act. He was asked about this by a reporter. The answer was so incoherent that it is unclear just what Senator Kerry believes. However, the gay community believes strongly that when Kerry says 'I am against gay marriage' that he really believes, "I am for gay marriage, I just can't say that so instead I'll oppose a constitutional amendment'. That is, the gay community is for Kerry because of his hypocrisy. Cool.

Sunday, February 22, 2004

TNR defends Kerry against the charge of hypocrisy

In this article:

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040301&s=trb030104

The New Republic writer Peter Beinart defends Senator John Kerry against the charge of being a hypocrite.

As with typical articles in this magazine, it is a very literate, very detailed defense. However, nowhere in the article is there a statement of who is charging Kerry with being a hypocrite. The republicans, evidently released a commercial (I've not seen it) which charges Kerry with being unprincipled because Kerry has taken a lot of special interest money. Unprincipled does not equal hypocritical. TNR also uses some clever typology definitions of special interests. They define some of the special interests that donated funds to Kerry as 'less special' than the special interests that donated to President Bush. They also make the interesting comparison that special interests gave more money to Bush than to Kerry. This is logically irrelevent. It doesn't make me less of a hypocrite just because someone else is a hypocrite.

Sometime earlier, the Washington Post listed Kerry positions on foreign intervention. They did so at this site:

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040301&s=trb030104

The Washington Post noted that Kerry had been against the first Gulf War, then for the Bosnia action, then for the 2nd gulf war, then criticized it, then supported it, then opposed funding it. The Washington Post never accused Kerry of hypocrisy nor did they point out that Kerry may conveniently believe whatever he thinks will be popular in his State of Massachusetts. The latter effect isn't hypocrisy, its just weak mindedness.

Friday, February 13, 2004

The Media Chasing of Bush and Laying off of Kerry
At the website:

http://www.hughhewitt.com/index.htm#postid273

A radio host (Hug Hewitt) and columnist (generally a conservative) charges the media with hypocrisy. His argument was that big media went after Bush on the National Guard AWOL charges with everything they had but laid off the Kerry-Intern charge and that because there was no factual support for either, this constitutes hypocrisy.

I'm not so sure. Mr. Hewitt is persuasive in saying that big media gave disparate treatment to the two situations. However, the Kerry-Intern charges were only a few days old at the time. More importantly, Mr. Hewitt claims that big media is biased against Bush. The charge of bias actually is a defense of sorts against the charge of hypocrisy. The reason is that if big media believe that Bush should be smeared, they are doing exactly what they believe in. Actually, the hypocrisy is something else, that is the big media pretending to be neutral when they are not.

Monday, February 02, 2004

CBS/MTV shows the breast superbowl halftime ever

Yesterday, during halftime of the superbowl, Janet Jackson's breast was exposed. Today, CBS, MTV (the producing company) and the performers involved are saying it was unplanned.
see: http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/040201/nysu032_1.html

and
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1484738/20040201/jackson_janet.jhtml?headlines=true

it is obvious that the Ms Jackson's wardrobe was specifically designed to show the breast and she wore a pasty on the nipple which is not typical regularwear. In addition the pregame announcement promised a shocking surprize.
see: http://216.239.37.104/search?q=cache:fdY9BmfrFS0J:www.mtv.com/news/articles/1484644/20040128/jackson_janet.jhtml%3Fheadlines%3Dtrue+janet+jackson+shocking+moments&hl=en&start=1&ie=UTF-8
Conclusion - hypocrisy but the level is minimal. Ms Jackson has shown her breasts (both) before, granted that this was during prime time and children were watching but, really, these are entertainers - they are supposed to entertain and these entertainers aren't that bright either. No one should expect them to be guardians of morality.
Kerry calls the Pot Black

The Washington Post had a devestating and detailed article on the record of Senator Kerry regarding the taking of funds from lobbyists.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64727-2004Jan30.html

Apparently, the Senator, who intends his presidential campaign (assuming nomination) to be against the special interests, has taken more funds from lobbyists than any other Senator in the past 15 years (since records have been collected).

He can defend against the charge of hypocrisy only by saying that he will attack the special interests irrespective of the fact that they have given him money. This, however, brings up the charge of hypocrisy in his dealings with individual special interests who must have been lead to believe that Kerry's Senatorial work would, in some way help him. Of course whatever discussions took place would be unknown and not publically discoverable.

Thursday, January 22, 2004

Michael Moore endorses Clark

I've done a number of posts on the hypocrisy of General Wesley Clark. Now one of his supporters has a hypocrisy problem of his own. Michael Moore, movie maker and noted extreme leftist has endorsed Clark. As Slate notes, at: http://slate.msn.com/id/2094210/ , the Michel Moore movie "bowling for Columbine" has harsh criticism of the US actions in the balkens in the late 90s. These actions were led by General Wesley Clark. Michael Moore has just endorsed Clark. Apparently, Moore says that 'well thats all in the past' or words to that effect. I doubt whether Moore actually believes that so either he was pretending to critize the Balken efforts back then or he is lying now. This is an interesting case also because Moore's endorsement of Clark probably hurts Clark more than it helps him.

Monday, January 12, 2004

More on Wesley Clark

A Slate reporter has been following General Clark in New Hampshire.

http://slate.msn.com/id/2093825/

Apparently, Clark continues to say things that seem crazy, for example that President Bush didn't try to get Osama Bin Laden. It seems impossible to imagine that Clark really believes in such things. This makes it an open and shut case of hypocrisy. I was trying to think well of Clark but he is preventing me from doing this. Arrrgh.

Sunday, January 04, 2004

More on Governor Dean's changing Relationship with God

A New York Times article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/04/politics/campaigns/04DEAN.html

Gives a cynical view of Governor Dean's new relationship with God. The article doesn't come out and accuse Dean of faking an interest in religion but implies it. One amusing note was that Dean was asked his favorite book of the New Testament, answered "Job" and it took an hour before he realized (no doubt one of his aides helped him) that Job isn't in the NT. By the end of the article it is obvious that when Dean says, "Religion is a big part of my life" he doesn't mean it. So the hypocrisy charge that I dismissed a few days ago is reinstated.

Friday, January 02, 2004

Howard Dean's Relationship with God

It now is well known that Former Governor Howard Dean quit one Christian denomination and joined another because of a problem with his old Church's position on a bike path. It is also well known that he doesn't attend church services. It is also well known that he has said he doesn't want to let the Republicans talk about Guns, God and Gays in the south. The New Republic had an article basically saying that his position would lead to electoral defeat in the south. A few days later, Dean said he believes in God and would talk about God when he campaigned in the south. Is this hypocrisy.

What specifically is the hypocrisy? Does Dean not believe in God while saying he believes in God? or more likely, does Dean think southerners who believe in God aren't very bright but avoids saying this to avoid offending them? I think the latter is more likely and if so, it is a case of hypocrisy by silence which is not formally hypocrisy the way I defined it.

The Washington Post style section today has a story from a reporter following the Dean campaign in S Carolina at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48313-2004Jan1.html

The story mentions the religion issue. The story also indicates that Dean is not 'resonating' in S Carolina and he is not bible thumping either. So even if it were hypocrisy it would be minimal and minimally important.