A political commonplace
Sep. 1st, 2003 01:07 amAtrios (that name again) linked to a Matt Drudge puff piece promoting a new book. The book, Losing bin Laden, by Robert Miniter, is about how Clinton had dozens of opportunities to take out bin Laden but failed to do so because... well, because he was a bad person, as nearly as I can tell.
I think we can safely count on the book not to note, for instance,
What I really want to highlight, though, is this:
In the comments section to Atrios's post, "cosmic grappler" summarized the whole situation thusly:
Well said.
I think we can safely count on the book not to note, for instance,
On May 5, the administration announced that, rather than adopting [the recommendations of the bipartisan] Hart-Rudman [commission on counter-terrorism], it was forming its own committee headed by Vice President Dick Cheney, who was expected to report in October. "The administration actually slowed down response to Hart-Rudman when momentum was building in the spring," says Gingrich.
(--Harold Evans, in the Columbia Journalism Review)
What I really want to highlight, though, is this:
In the comments section to Atrios's post, "cosmic grappler" summarized the whole situation thusly:
Let's see, Drudge reporting on a Regnery pub, penned by a WSJ editorial writer, pimped by Robert Novak in the Washington Times. Is there another group anywhere with less credibility than this bunch?
Sweet Jesus.
Well said.