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Re: Welcome Senator Feingold (3.00 / 0)

maybe its like pornography and indency laws. You can't quite define it, but you know it when you see it. The Thune/Daschle bloggers would definitely be illegitimate.
by srolle on Thu Mar 10, 2005 at 12:40:43 PM EST
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Re: Welcome Senator Feingold (none / 0)

How do you put a definition into words that would exclude the Thune bloggers without including Chris and Jerome?

What the Thune bloggers did was media intimidation. We have the identical problem with the national media. The problem with the media is too little access for alternative media, not too much access. I don't know how you pass legislation to give the media a spine or improve their journalistic skills. Maybe they could be required to read the Daily Howler before they start work every morning. Bob is on a roll with Sen. Hagel and our clueless media on Social Security lately.

I recall when Bush first suggested privatization, Bob Somerby predicted the media would do their usual feckless job. He was right.

The answer is not more government regulation. The answer is more freedom and a more robust response from the campaign and the media. I don't know how you fix our intert media, but restrictive legislation is not the solution.

by Gary Boatwright on Thu Mar 10, 2005 at 01:19:17 PM EST
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Re: Welcome Senator Feingold (none / 0)

it would be tough.

maybe you could just demand full disclosure. Any blogger that was paid by any political organization (campaign, 527, or any other advocacy group registered as such in the tax code) must have that affiliation displayed prominently on the front page for 2 years, and then kept in an archive linked from the front page ad infinitum.

Journalists wouldn't be intimidated by a blogger, who they knew was a campaign surrogate. It doesn't hurt the blogger at all, if they engage in real blogging. It would even give the blog legitimacy with readers.

by srolle on Thu Mar 10, 2005 at 01:27:25 PM EST
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Re: Welcome Senator Feingold (none / 0)

Absolutely on disclosure. I would favor rigorous transparency and disclosure without question. The public and the media could both use remedial education on bias and point of view.
by Gary Boatwright on Thu Mar 10, 2005 at 01:32:49 PM EST
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