Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Policy vs blog at the NY Times

After the Charlie Hedbo terror attack in Paris, a number of publications showed the cover of the next issue with Mohammud saying "Tout est Pardonne" (all is forgiven). The NY Times published a story without the image. In any interview in Jan 2015,

Out of respect to our readers we have avoided those we felt were offensive,” New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet told The Huffington Post on Monday night, shortly after the Charlie Hebdo cover was released online. “Many Muslims consider publishing images of their prophet innately offensive and we have refrained from doing so,” Baquet said.

Yesterday, the NYTimes, in a blog post, had an article on a protest some over some 'art'  which had an image of a portrait of Pope Benedict XVI made of condoms. The article had the portrait.

The blogpost indicates that the image of Benedict was meant to be negative, perhaps offensive,

Niki Johnson of Milwaukee, the artist who created the work, said in an interview that she disagreed with Benedict’s conservative social positions, including a statement that condoms could contribute to the spread of AIDS in Africa. The portrait, she said, is “not hate-based,” but rather a way to critique Benedict’s views while raising awareness about public health.What I want to do is really destigmatize the condom, normalize it,Ms. Johnson says.
 
A key issue here is whether the policy of the NY Times included blogs. If yes, they are hypocrites, if no, then not.

Interview with Huffington Post is here.
Blogpost with image of Benedict XVI is here.

Today, there was an interview given to the Washington Examiner. In the interview, the NY Times spokesman defended their blog and did not invoke the 'it was a blog' defense. The defense is someone incoherent but here is an interesting portion, 

"...Hundreds of thousands of people protested worldwide, for instance, after the Danish cartoons were published some years ago. While some people might genuinely dislike this Milwaukee work, there doesn't seem to be any comparable level of outrage...."

It is hard to avoid the conclusion that what the NYTimes means to say is something like, "Catholics don't kill you when they are insulted, muslims do" but the NYTimes obviously can't bring themselves to actually say that.
 t
said,
 



Sunday, June 21, 2015

The NY Times and the Catholic Church

The NY Times was enthusiastic about the Pope's recent encyclical which called for action on climate change. From their editorial on June 19, 2015

 "...The timing of “Laudato Si” could not have been better. In December, delegates from nearly 200 nations will gather in Paris to make one more attempt at a global arrangement that would commit all nations to reduce their emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, before atmospheric concentrations reach what some believe is the point beyond which truly intolerable consequences are inescapable...."

Back a few years ago Obamacare was beginning to be litigated on religious grounds related to drugs that cause abortion and so forth.  Then the NY Times was not so enthusiastic. From their editorial of May 27 2012,

"...Under the Constitution, churches and other religious organizations have total freedom to preach that contraception is sinful and rail against Mr. Obama for making it more readily available. But the First Amendment is not a license for religious entities to impose their dogma on society through the law. The vast majority of Americans do not agree with the Roman Catholic Church’s anti-contraception stance, including most American Catholic women...."

Interestingly, the 2015 encyclical also is against abortion and against gay marriage but the NY Times seems not to have noticed.

The two issues (abortion and climate change) are not the same and furthermore, it seems to me that abortion is more a legitimate religious issue than climate change. Anyway, it shows clearly that the NY Times is not above cherry picking pieces of doctrine they like and ignoring or dismissing as irrelevant doctrine that they dislike and, or course don't tell their readers about this in an honest and straightforward way.



Can Tweets be Hypocritical

Salon is an opinion website on the left of the political spectrum.

In the image are two tweets from Salon.com (slnm.us). One is from 2013 after the terror attack at the Boston marathon and says, 

"Muslims don't need to apologize for the Tsarnaevs

the other is from a few days ago and says 

"White America must answer for the Charleston church massacre"

Whether we have hypocrisy or not seems to be a matter of whether Salon.com is a unitary body or whether the individuals (they are different individuals) who tweeted for Salon.com are considered outside of their Salon.com affiliation.  Also the tweet from 2013 links to a summary of research which purports to back up the tweet. However, I am quite skeptical of research summarized by advocates, especially 'social science' research.

Saturday, May 02, 2015

Günter Grass Dies; Was he a hypocrite? Yes- but small potatoes.

 

Gunter Grass died on April 13, 2015. I didn't get around to writing about this until today. Grass won the Nobel prize in literature in 1999. His early novels told stories with the setting being the 1930s and 1940s and, per almost all readers and critics, urged Germans to confess and repent for their Nazi past. In 1985, Grass criticized the visit to the Bitburg cemetery by US President Reagan and German Chancellor Kohl.

However, Grass himself had a Nazi past in that he served in the Waffen SS.  He revealed this in 2006 just prior to marketing a new literary product.  He may have considered his novels or his left wing politics to be a repentance but never said so.

Was he a hypocrite? Well, yes but not to an enormous extent as his service with the Waffen SS was relatively short (a few months in 1944). This assumes he did not participate in any atrocities (no evidence to date has been provided of such participation).

Was he smug? Yes. Opportunistic? Yes. Sanctimonious? Yes. Was he wrong on major issues (he predicted the reunification of Germany would lead to the militarization of Germany and a new military conflict caused by Germany)? Yes.  

He also wrote, in 2012, a famous poem that essentially said that Iran should get a nuclear bomb because Israel had one.

All the info in this (but not the image), is available from the wikipedia page on Grass.  




 

 

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Facebook and the image of Mohammed

Two weeks ago, the CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, had a post on his facebook page (yes he is also a customer) that said, 

"A few years ago, an extremist in Pakistan fought to have me sentenced to death because Facebook refused to ban content about Mohammed that offended him..."

Now Facebook is cooperating on the censoring of websites with images of Mohammed where those websites come from Turkey.
.

Is Zuckerberg a hypocrite. Not in my estimation.

He merely didn't distinguish between US originating websites and those in other countries. He is also guilty of being pompous because he didn't do that.

Facebook, like other multinational countries, must obey the laws of the countries in which they do business even if those laws are stupid or tyrannical (in any event, Turkish citizens can easily access French or US websites and see all the images they want, including those purporting to be of Mohammed (it seems to me interesting that since nobody knows what Mohammed actually looked like, besides a few obvious things, e.g., he was male, he wore robes, he had a goatee or beard), nobody who is accused of drawing Mohammed is actually doing so).

The image is from a Washington Post story, here.



Sunday, January 25, 2015

Meteorologist Gives Up Flying for Global Warming


There are a lot of conferences to attend if you are a climate activist or climate scientist. One such fellow, Eric Holthaus (first image), 
had been, by his own estimate, 75k air miles a year and gave it up for global warming (reportedly, he also had a vasectomy to stop overpopulation). 

He also counsels his fellow activists and/or scientists to do so. It's not that successful yet. 

The reports out of Davos are that hundreds of
private jets (and similar number of corporate jets and chartered small passenger load jets- 2nd image is of an Pharrell Williams, a hip hop performer/composer and climate activist tweeter on a private jet) have landed at this luxury destination to discuss climate change (aka Global Warming).

As a bonus, Holthaus gives additional information on Jeff Greene (he owns a 145' boat which seems to have cruised to a tropical destination some years ago and did damage to a coral reef).

Holthaus's post is at Slate, here.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Jeff Greene - Self Confessed Financial Hypocrisy

Jeff Greene is a billionaire, a major contributor to Democratic candidates and actually ran for the 2010 Democratic party nomination for a Senate Seat in Florida (he lost the primary and the guy who beat him lost in the general election). The image is from that campaign.

He was interviewed in Davos, Switzerland. He said that

 "...“I’m remarkably long for my level of pessimism. Our economy is in deep trouble..."

This is the first type of hypocrisy I've found where the hypocrite actually has a financial interest in being proven wrong (being long means his money 'bets' on the market going up).

There is another, more standard hypocrisy here. He flew to Davos on his private jet (with his wife and kids and two nannies) for the World Economic Forum and said, 

 “...America’s lifestyle expectations are far too high and need to be adjusted so we have less things and a smaller, better existence..."

That type of behavior is actually pretty common and Greene probably reasons that since his time is pretty valuable and his charitable contributions (he is sponsoring a conference on 'closing the gap' in Palm Beach, FL) are substantial, he should get a pass. 

The article with the quotes is here.


Is Senator Ernst a Welfare Queen Hypocrite

A website post (noted below) essentially charges her with hypocrisy although without using the word, "hypocrisy".

The basis of the hypocrisy is that Senator Joni Ernst (image on left) is for cutting waste in government but her family benefited from agriculture subsidies. There are a few problems with the charge, however. Of the $460k or so in subsidies noted by the post, the vast majority went to Ernst's uncle.  Ernst' father received about $38k in subsidies and this was over a 14 year period. Senator Ernst herself seems to have received zero in agricultural subsidies. Thus the specific facts contradict the theme of hypocrisy.

However, even had Senator Ernst received subsidies herself, she may not consider such subsidies as 'waste' or she might consider them 'waste' but be willing to take advantage of them since they are legal although she would like to end them. This is similar to my own feeling that dues paid to my synagogue (similarly anyone's dues to churches, temples, mosques, etc.) ought not to be considered charity for the purpose of schedule A of the IRS form 1040 because they are not as much 'charity' as would an equal gift to, say, the Red Cross or a Hadassah Hospital (I would be willing to see synagogue dues as 50% itemizable since the synagogue does some social work, counseling, etc). However, my opinion doesn't, in any way, require me to refuse to itemize my synagogue dues.

The website post with the information on Senator Ernst is here

Monday, January 19, 2015

The New York Times - Mohammud cartoon vs Piss Christ

This is yet another NYTimes issue (note logo as image).

 
Earlier this month there was a terror attack on the office of a magazine that published several cartoons with what is supposed to be Mohammad.

The New York Times, had in the past, published such pictures as the "Piss Christ". That is an image of a crucifix into which the artist, Andres Serrano, had placed his own urine. It was a pretty big photo; 60" by 40".

Is the NYTimes hypocritical for not publishing Mohammad's image while having published the Piss Christ as well as similar Christian-offensive art and some Holocaust denial art. Here we have a chance for an interesting distinction. The NYTimes's editor currently (and during the Mohammad image decision) has only been editor since mid 2014. Thus it is possible that, in some way, the NYTimes is a different paper than it was when the Piss Christ and other offensive things were published. Since this is such an interesting oddity, I don't think I'll call the NYTimes a hypocrite, at least until they publish something as offensive to Jews or Christians as the Mohammad images were to moslems. Even then, if they published, say another crucifix in urine but said specifically, "We are doing this because we know Christians won't kill us", that would still be enough to get me to judge them non-hypocrites (although it would be somewhat cowardly)..

A Huffington Post article recently on the NYTimes vs other newspapers in regard to the Mohammad image is here.

An article from 2012 in the Guardian on the 1989 photo "Piss Christ" is here.


Tuesday, January 13, 2015

One Image Many Hypocrisy Charges

There was a demonstration in Paris in support and/or in sympathy with victims of the January 9, 2015 atrocities which killed cartoonists, police and shoppers at a Kosher food market in Paris. the demonstration was on January 11, 2015. 

In the front row: Israel Prime Minister Netanyahu, Malian President Keita, French President Hollande, German Chancellor Merkel, Euro Council President Tusk, and Palestinian Authority President Abbas. Also attending were numerous other dignitaries from over 40 countries.

Hamas foreign affairs chief al-Zahar (second image) accused Abbas of hypocrisy (I'm not sure of what the hypocrisy actually is).

Turkish President Erdogan (third image) accused Netanyahu of hypocrisy for attending the demonstration. Erdogan says Netanyahu is a terrorist because of the Gaza deaths in last years war.

An official from Reporters without Borders (RwB) charged several officials of countries which persecute journalists (Egypt, Turkey, Russia, the UAE and Gabon) saying 

"Glad so many world leaders could take time off jailing and torturing journalists and dissidents to march for free expression in France."

Although,  the RwB official doesn't charge 'hypocrisy', this case is closer to being hypocrisy than the other two. In the case of the charge against 'Abbas', I can't figure out what the hypocrisy is supposed to be. In the case of the charge of Netanyahu, Israel made no effort to kill Paleos for their many cartoons depicting Netanyahu as evil, as a cannibal, etc.

al-Zahar charge of hypocrisy is here

Erdogan charge of hypocrisy is here.https://qu1ck51lv3r.wordpress.com/2015/01/12/erdogan-slams-netanyahu-for-attending-paris-rally/

RwB charge is here.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Is Nancy Pelosi a Hypocrite regarding Grimm vs others

As the post below says, one time speaker of the House Pelosi first image)has called for Representative Michael Grimm to resign. This follows Grimm's guilty plea (felony level) of contributing to a false tax filing.

An opinion piece by Ed Morrissey accuses Pelosi of sanctimonious hypocrisy because she did not call for the resignation of Charles Rangel, Bill Jefferson or


Jack Murtha (the next three images).

This is complicated because the various charges are all different (also, I'm not commenting on the 'sanctimonious' issue).

Going down the list:

Michael Grimm pleaded guilty, in December 2014, to one charge (a felony). Pelosi called for his resignation (sort of - actually Pelosi called for the current speaker of the House, John Boehner to force Grimm to resign).
 
Then Representative Bill Jefferson (D-Louisiana)'s residence and office were raided in 2005 and 2006 by law enforcement. Famously, cash was discovered in Jefferson's freezer in the residence. Pelosi asked Jefferson to resign from his committee chairmanship. Jefferson was indicted in 2007. Jefferson was convicted in mid 2009 of 11 charges (of the 16 in the indictment). However, Jefferson had been defeated in the 2008 elections, so post-conviction, resignation was not possible as he was not a sitting Representative at the time.

Jack Murtha (D- Pennsylvania) was involved in numerous ethically problematic situations, from taking cash in return for advocacy in the early 80s to placing earmarks in legislation to directly support political allies by providing them funds for services they were ill equipped to perform in 2006. However, Murtha was never indicted.

Charles Rangel (D-NY) was involved in a number of tax evasion or income non reporting events and accepted various favors such as debt forgiveness and other income that actually financed his various election campaigns without reporting them in campaign finance reports. He was not charged with any tax crimes (some considered this improper favoritism by the Obama Dept of Justice but that's another issue). Rangel was, however, charged with a number of ethics violations by a congressional committee and found guilty of most of them. Pelosi voted in favor of censuring Rangel but against placing the censuring language in the Congressional record. To repeat, however, there was no felony or other criminal charge.

So, in sum, Pelosi could justify her 'make Grimm resign' comment even though she didn't ask Jefferson, Murtha or Rangel to resign because only Grimm was convicted of a felony. Thus no hypocrisy (although I suspect Pelosi would be uncomfortable to have her actually explain this reasoning in detail).


Morrissey's opinion piece is here.

or

 http://hotair.com/archives/2014/12/24/pelosi-to-boehner-force-grimm-to-resign-over-tax-evasion-conviction/

A odd conclusion of non- hypocrisy

Michael Grimm is a Congressman who represents Staten Island and some of Kings County, NY. (the 11th).

He was convicted of one count of assisting in the preparation of a false tax return (the amount of the falseness was pretty high so, it was a felony). Much of the 'falseness' involved non reporting of illegal immigrant workers. However he will apparently not resign.

Mr. Grimm has made numerous statements condemning corruption and calling for the prosecution of that and of immigration violations. Irwin sent me an email suggesting this for hypocrisy analysis.

After thinking about it for a while, it seems to me that this is not a case of hypocrisy. This is because Grimm didn't say 'no one should be corrupt and no one should use illegal immigration' but rather called for prosecution (or, as Grimm implied, 'an end to non enforcement') of corruption and illegal immigration. That's what actually happened. So Grimm called for prosecution and prosecution was carried out, ironically, on Grimm himself. So Grimm is now a convicted felon (even if not a hypocrite - probably he'd rather it be the other way around). Grimm is also what could be called a victim of irony.

An article reporting Grimm's plea of 'guilty' is here.

Interestingly, former Speaker of the House Pelosi called for Grimm's resignation. I'll review what she said when Congressman Rangel (also of NY - the 13th district representing some of Manhattan and some of the Bronx) pleaded guilty of tax evasion. 


Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Ebola Czar Hypocrisy

Back in the Bush administration there was a time when avian flu was causing concern. Actually more than concern.

President Bush appointed Stewart Simonson to coordinate monitoring and preparation. He was a lawyer. Democrats criticized the appointment because he was inexperienced in medical response issues. Republicans either supported or kept quiet on the experience issue.

Recently, President Obama appointed Ron Klain, a lawyer, to coordinate monitoring and response to Ebola (Klain is sitting on the couch in the image).   I presume some Republicans are criticizing the Klain appointment and Democrats defending it but I can't find any particular critics or defenders who also had comments in the avian flu situation thus I can't identify any body as specifically hypocritical. However, the if time goes on some of the most vigorous and well resourced (from a research standpoint) critics of the avian flu appointment (e.g., Move On and The New Republic) don't say anything, that would make them hypocrites. The difficulty of documenting that someone hasn't made a comment will prevent me from making the hypocrisy accusation in the case of silence.

Anyway, a Washington Post story goes back in time to give examples of the criticism of the Simonson appointment, here.

One criticism of Klain's appointment is implicit in a recent cold start.

Carol Costello and the hypocrisy of violence commentary

Carol Costello is an on air reporter for CNN. She is the recipient of various media reporting awards.

One of the events Costello reported on was the Ray Rice affair. In July 2014,she criticized the NFL, Ray Rice, ESPN defenders of the NFL, etc. and used her experience as a victim to do so.

Then in October 2014, Costello aired audio from an altercation involving Bristol Palin (who was struck during the altercation). Costello did that with evident glee.

People pointed out the hypocrisy and Costello has apologized (in writing) for the Oct 2014 airing (although Costello does not seem to understand why her October 2014 on air actions are evidence of left wing media bias). This story has still to run as Costello has, as of the time of this posting, yet to give an on air apology nor has CNN taken any action (such as suspension or a fine).


Costello's July 2014 criticism of the NFL is here. http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/26/opinion/costello-ray-rice-domestic-violence/

A Washington Post article summarizing both the July criticism of the NFL, etc. and the October glee at the violence used on Bristol Palin is here.

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Leonardo DiCaprio Preacher for Carbon limits but Mega User of HydroCarbons

I've done the green hypocrisy idea before but this opportunity was too good to pass up. The Daily Mail (of England) had a long article with lots of images on Leonardo DiCaprio's speech, Sept 23, at the UN (first image) which warned of greenhouse warming as well as images of DiCaprio's houses (the image shows a house owned by DiCaprio in Palm Springs, California).

It turns out that DiCaprio has 4 houses (2 in California and 2 condos in NYC). He also is a frequent flier on private jets, rents mega yachts, etc. 

The carbon footprint of Mr. DiCaprio is essentially off the charts. I would estimate it as two orders of magnitude above the average world per capita. The best thing here is that Mr. DiCaprio apparently thinks that because he sometimes drives a Prius hybrid and sometimes bicycles, he is 'not guilty' of carbon hogging (and of hypocrisy). 

I think he is guilty of both.

The Daily Mail article is here

Wednesday, May 07, 2014

A oddly honest admission of possible hypocrisy

An organization called "Transparify" did a study of the transparency of think tanks.

Of course transparency is partially subjective and the definition of a think tanks is also partially subjective.

There were two interesting thing about the study:

1. They found that one of the least transparent think tanks was an organization called "Open Society Foundations" which advocates for transparency.

2. After some additional research they were able to determine that Open Society Foundations is 100% funded by George Soros (the website of Open Society Foundations states that Mr. Soros is the founder of Open Society Foundations but gives no information on the source of funding.

3. Open Society Foundations funded an organization called "The Think Tank fund of the Open Society Foundation". The Think Tank Fund is the only funding source of Transparify, the organization which did the study (the image shows interlocking interests in media companies in the USA).

With respect to Mr. Soros being a hypocrite, the analysis would have to deal with the issue of whether a primary funding source (Mr. Soros himself is not a 'think tank' I presume) needs to deal with the same standards as the various directly (or indirectly) funded organizations.

For now I just appreciate the oddity of the situation.


Study result here.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Appeals Court Catches the EEOC in hypocrisy

The US Equal Employment Commission had taken action against the Kaplan Higher Education Corporation and others. The EEOC charged that Kaplan was discriminating against blacks by looking the the credit history of job applicants.

The court's (US court of appeals for the 6th circuit) begins their opinion with the following:

"In this case the EEOC sued
the defendants for using the
same type of background check that the
EEOC itself uses. The EEOC’s personnel handbook recites that “[o]verdue just debts increase temptation to commit illegal or unethical acts as a
means of gaining funds to meet financial obligations.  Because of that concern, the EEOC runs credit checks on applicants for 84 of the agency’s 97 positions. The defendants (collectively,“Kaplan”) have the same concern; and thus Kaplan runs credit checks on applicants for positions that provide access to students’ financial-loan information, among other positions...."
 
However, the hypocrisy was not the determining fact in the decision in favor of Kaplan. Instead, the court found that the EEOC was unable to demonstrate a disparate impact. This was because Kaplan did not require racial information when people applied for positions at Kaplan.  Instead, the EEOC created an evaluation method where the drivers license pictures were evaluated by a team of 'racial identification experts" who opined on the race of the applicant.Here is what the court had to say about that,

"...The EEOC brought this case on the basis of a homemade methodology, crafted by a witness with no particular expertise to craft it, administered by persons with no particular expertise to administer it, tested by no one, and accepted only by the witness himself...."
 
So, even though there was hypocrisy, it was irrelevant to the decision.

The court's decision is here.

Plastic Bag Hypocrisy?

The NY Times had an editorial endorsing a bill to require retailers to charge $0.10 for each plastic bag they provide custormers.

There were several news articles on this bill, and although I am not sure, I think the charge does not require the NY Times to charge for the plastic bags they provide customers.

Of course it is possible, though unlikely, that NY Times editorial writers think the ill effects of plastic bags described by the NY Times (litter, clogged storm drains) do not come from newspaper bags. If they are that clueless, then they are not hypocrites.

The NY Times editorial is here.
A news report, from another publication is here.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Hillel Foundation, the American Studies Association and Hypocrisy

 A few weeks ago, the American Studies Association (ASA) voted to boycott all Israeli scholars (I think that means no Israeli could present papers at meetings - of course, why any Israeli would be presenting papers at meetings of the American Studies Association is an open question. The ASA boycott was based, on the 'lack of effective academic freedom of Palestinian scholars and students...".  The ASA boycott was opposed by numerous organizations including the Hillel Foundation.
For some years, the Hillel Foundation (We are contributors to the Hillel Foundation), has had a policy to reject the formal participation of those who boycott Israel at official Hillel events.

Recently, one Hillel (the Swathmore campus Hillel) voted to call itself the 'open Hillel' and to allow such participation.

Supporters of the Hillel at Swathmore have accused the national Hillel foundation of being hypocritical in opposing the ASA boycott while undertaking a boycott of their own. 

For Hillel not to be hypocritical, there must be substantive difference between the two cases, and, there is.

1. The ASA policy bans all Israelis, whatever their belief, whatever their academic merit, whatever the topic of the presentation or paper. The national Hillel policy bans only individuals.

2. The ASA policy aims at a highly tangential population and seems odd on its face. After all, how many Israelis are even interested in American studies. The national Hillel policy bans a group that is much larger (a lot of anti Israel groups are on American campus).

3. The ASA policy seems to single out Israel and, in fact, their boycott policy falls under the national Hillel policy (which dates a few years before the ASA boycott). That is, the national Hillel policy mentions boycotts and those with double standards (the ASA doesn't seem to acknowledge that some groups are discriminated against other than Palestinians). 

Thus, I don't think Hillel can be fairly called hypocritical in this case.

Notwithstanding that, I personally, don't understand the national Hillel policy. It seems to me that national Hillel ought to allow, on a case by case basis, supporters of the boycott, those with double standards, etc. to address Hillel if such persons are otherwise of good will.

The open Hillel policy is here.
The national Hillel policy is here.
Information on the ASA policy is here.
A NYTimes editorial following a NYState Legislature action is here

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

You're a slease; Oh yeah, you're worse, you're a hypocrite.

The primary for the Democratic candidate for Governor of Maryland is this year. The leading candidates are Doug Gansler (left, the current Attorney General of Maryland) and Anthony Brown (right, the current Lieutenant Governor of Maryland).

Gansler implied Brown was unethical because Brown's campaign had accepted some $30k or so of donations from individuals in firms with ongoing contracts building, maintaining or managing the State Healthcare website (the Maryland health care website is arguably the third worst of the nations worst performing health care websites - Oregon and Minnesota are worst. In addition, Brown was formally tasked by Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley with leading the website effort).  Gansler does not use the word 'hypocrite' nor does he imply any criminal or civil wrong doing. He does however fail to mention that the $30k involved is below 1% of the Brown campaign funds raised so far.

Brown countered by accusing Gansler of hypocrisy because Gansler's campaign had accepted contributions from individuals in companies that do business with the State (the scale of this is unknown). 

Gansler then said that the latter contributions (that is the ones to the Gansler campaign) are less important that the former (that is the ones to Brown) because the individuals in companies that contributed to the Gansler campaign were awarded contracts based on bidding while the firms that contributed to Brown are in an ongoing effort managed by Brown. Gansler could have said (he did not) that the contributions to Brown's campaign were a type of protection racket given that many of these firms should be fired for bad work.

First up, Gansler. He didn't accuse Brown of hypocrisy. 
Next up Brown. He did accuse Gansler of hypocrisy. Gansler's defense, that is, that the two situations are dissimilar, is a reasonable one even if the dissimilarity isn't that much (by the way, Gansler's implication that all Maryland contracts awarded by bid are on the up and up is laughable - bidding language can be, and frequently is 'tilted' to produce certain results- and selection panels are easily influenced by 'hints'). 

In fact, I think that maybe the issue that Gansler was trying to emphasize was that the website that Brown was 'in charge of' isn't working.

The idea for this post came from Irwin. He had seen an article in the Baltimore Sun that reported on these issues.