This guy is long past the day when he had anything but the foggiest awareness of what the heck is going on in the world.

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brithume-murtha.jpg

Brit Hume

 Brit
Hume couldn’t control himself this morning on FOX and was frothing
at the mouth in his attacks on Murtha over Iraq. It was not much
different than what you might read on a Freeper website. Murtha
has endured a barrage of personal attacks since he spoke out against
the war, (which seems like a decade ago.) but Hume really made a
jackass out of himself by questioned his state of mind.

video_wmv Download (5404) | Play (2854) video_mov Download (1412) | Play (1559)

HUME: That sound bite from John Murtha suggests that
it’s time a few things be said about him. Even the
“Washington Post” noted he didn’t seem particularly
well informed about what’s going on over there, to say the least.
Look, this man has tremendous cache among House Democrats, but he is
not — this guy is long past the day when he had anything but the
foggiest awareness of what the heck is going on in the world.

And that sound bite is naivete at large, and the man is an absolute
fountain of such talk, and the fact that he has ascended to the
position he has in the eyes of the Democrats in the House and perhaps
Democrats around the country tells you a lot about how much they know
or care about what’s really going on over there. (h/t TP for the transcript)

Does he mean THE Washington Post that’s trying to get Libby off?

Crooks and Liars

WordPress 2.1 “Ella”, named for jazz vocalist Ella Fitzgerald

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On behalf of the WordPress.org community of commiters, contributers, and volunteers, I’m very proud to announce the immediate availability of WordPress 2.1 “Ella”, named for jazz vocalist Ella Fitzgerald. Here’s a sampling of what’s in the new version:

* Autosave makes sure you never lose a post again.
* Our new tabbed editor allows you to switch between WYSIWYG and code editing instantly while writing a post.
* The lossless XML import and export makes it easy for you to move your content between WordPress blogs.
* Our completely redone visual editor also now includes spell checking.
* New search engine privacy option allows you take you to indicate your blog shouldn’t ping or be indexed by search engines like Google.
* You can set any “page” to be the front page of your site, and put the latest posts somewhere else, making it much easier to use WordPress as a content management system.
* Much more efficient database code, faster than previous versions. Domas Mituzas from MySQL went over all our queries with a fine-toothed comb.
* Links in your blogroll now support sub-categories and you can add categories on the fly.
* Redesigned login screen from the Shuttle project.
* More AJAX to make custom fields, moderation, deletions, and more all faster. My favorite is the comments page, which new lets you approve or unapprove things instantly.
* Pages can now be drafts, or private.
* Our admin has been refreshed to load faster and be more visually consistent.
* The dashboard now loads instantly and brings RSS feeds asynchronously in the background.
* Comment feeds now include all the comments, not just the last 10.
* Better internationalization and support for right-to-left languages.
* The upload manager lets you easily manage all your uploads pictures, video, and audio.
* A new version of the Akismet plugin is bundled.

…and much, much more. There are little easter eggs hidden everywhere, so the best way to find everything new is to just try it out.
Developer Features

Developers will especially love this release, as it has much cleaner code than 2.0 and includes hundreds of enhancements that will enable a new generation of richer plugins. Here’s a taste of some of the things included:

* Psuedo-cron functionality let’s you schedule events much like cron.
* Users admin can now comfortably handle hundreds of thousands of users.
* The new WP_Error class cleans up how we do error reporting and handling.
* The javascript loader makes it easier for plugins to include rich functionality.
* Tons of new hooks and APIs.
* We’ve started to fill out our code inline documentation.
* Image and thumbnail API allows for richer media plugins.
* Custom header, color picker, and image cropping framework.

2.1 also includes over 550 bug fixes.
The Future

What’s really exciting for me is what’s coming in the future. First of all, the 2.0 series was an unparalleled success, with over 1.8 million downloads, and thanks to the work of Mark Jaquith we’re committing to maintaining stable security and bug fixes on the 2.0 branch until 2010.

More exciting for most of our users, though, is our new development cycle. Based on everything we’ve learned in the past 3 years of doing WordPress, we’ve decided to shift to a more frequent release schedule like Ubuntu, with major releases coming several times a year. So, for the first time in WordPress’ history, I have an answer to when the next version is coming out: April 23rd.

Even better, the development will be driven primarily by the features you guys are voting for on the ideas board. (But wait, there’s more: the ideas board now has a new Hot-or-Not-like interface for rating a bunch of ideas at once, so go get your vote on and have a say in WordPress 2.2.)

WordPress › Blog

ADDING FUEL TO THE WALTRIP TOYOTA FIRE: SOME of the good ol' boys in the NASCAR paddock are having a pretty good laugh to themselves right about now

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This whole thing is starting to smell really bad, no pun intended. Were NASCAR inspectors looking especially close to the new Toyotas? Again, why would MICHAEL WALTRIP  RACING pull this at the start of the first season?
It’s been LOTS of publicity for the sport in general during an already (ESPN) packed week that had plenty of stories besides this. You know what they say about pub. But, I bet SOME of the good ol’ boys in the paddock are having a pretty good laugh to themselves right about now , adding fuel to their Toyota-hating minds’ fire.

Sailors, Mountaineers Rejoice: Cheap VHF Radios With Auto-Record

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Gadgets…

Picture_4_24

It’s an obvious idea of clear utility: standard handheld and
fixed-mount radios that record everything automagically, at
consumer-friendly prices. Loud boat engines and hard-to-decipher
messages will no longer be a problem, according to Cobra Electronics
press release, thanks to their Rewind-Say-Again radio, an all-terrain
model that straddles VHF and GMRS two-way radio. It always keeps the
last 20 seconds in mind, and repeating a misheard communication is
accomplished simply by pressing a button.

The MR F80 B Rewind-Say-Again radio will be offered soon for $210. Cobra will be at the Miami Boat Show for the rest of this week.

Product Page and Press Release [Cobra Electronics]

Gadget Lab

BROADFLASHBACKING: BOB SOMERBY CALLS OUT JEFF GREENFIELD FOR STICKING TO HIS OWN SCRIPT

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We’re surprised because
it’s Jeff Greenfield. Of all the pundits our analysts followed
through the 2000 White House campaign, we thought that Greenfield may
have done the best job of standing apart from the scripting. On March
5, 2000, E. R. Shipp described— to a T— the way the press
was reporting the race. We ourselves had long described the way the
corps would “novelize news”— would shape facts to fit a
preconceived, pleasing story. To Shipp, then the Washington
Post’s ombudsman, it was like her paper was scripting a drama:

SHIPP: [R]eaders react— sometimes in a nonpartisan way, more often not— to roles that The Post seems to have assigned to their actors in this unfolding political drama.
Gore is the guy in search of an identity; Bradley is the Zen-like
intellectual in search of a political strategy; McCain is the war hero
who speaks off the cuff and is, thus, a “maverick”; and Bush is a
lightweight with a famous name…As a result of this approach, some
candidates are whipping boys; other seem to get a free pass.

In this column— the most
righteous work from the mainstream press corps all year— Shipp
was criticizing Ceci Connolly’s hapless “Love Canal” reports,
which were written in December, 1999. But Shipp perfectly nailed the
general process by which the press was inventing the news. In
Shipp’s view, the Post wasn’t really reporting what
happened; the paper instead had laid out a “drama,” and was bending the
news to fit its preconceived story. No one else, throughout this
election, did such a good job of describing the way the mainstream
press throws truth away in order to tell preferred tales.

And now, the process is being
extended into the press corps’ election post-mortems. The
Official Press Version of Election 2000 is now being set into stone. In
Newsweek’s November 20, 2000 edition, Evan Thomas
started the process; his 4500-word piece, “What A Long, Strange Trip,”
retold the election from beginning to end, relating the tale exactly as
the press corps had told it in real time. Other scribes are now
publishing books that tell the Official Approved Story. And just as
Shipp suggested in her piece, events are being rearranged to tell the
story as it was scripted; the election’s Key Events are being
reshaped and told as the press likes to tell them. If scribes have to
invent, rearrange or bury some facts, well, that’s the price that
we pay for “drama”— for the pleasure that comes from the scripted
tales the press planned to tell from the start.

And for a perfect look at this cheesy process, we suggest that you go read Jeff Greenfield. His new election book is titled, “Oh, Waiter! One Order of Crow!” and
we suggest that you open as fast as you can to his account of Bush and
Gore’s first debate. Clearly, this was one of the pivotal events
in the 2000 White House campaign. And writers like Greenfield will nip
and tuck with the truth— all so you will think it happened the
way they like to tell it.

Greenfield’s account of this
debate perfectly fits the Official Press Story. According to this
iconic tale, officious Gore lost all three debates— and perhaps
the election— with his obnoxious, disruptive behavior. In the
debates, the American people got a chance to see what an unlovely
creature Vile Gore really was. And no only that— this debate
confirmed the portrait of Gore which the insightful press corps had
dished all along. The first debate confirmed the wisdom of the press
corps and its view of reality.

That’s roughly how the press
told the tale in real time— with a couple of days to get its
story together— and that’s precisely how Greenfield tells
it. The debates were “remarkable,” Greenfield says. And then he tells
us why:

GREENFIELD (page
193): The vice president, a veteran of forty debates during his
political career, the man who had demolished Ross Perot on a free-trade
debate on Larry King Live, the man with a sharp instinct for the political kill, lost all three debates. He lost them not because George W. Bush was especially impressive, but because Gore managed— in every one of the debates
to ram home the impression that he was precisely the smug,
condescending politician of the stereotype who would in fact say
anything to be president. This is a harsh conclusion. What makes it
especially sad is that some of Gore’s most devoted supporters
share it, even if they would use different words to describe it.
[Greenfield’s emphases]

One has to chuckle at
Greenfield’s last statement. What are we told? “Some of
Gore’s most devoted supporters” (unnamed, unquoted) share
Greenfield’s view, although “they would use different words to
describe it.” They would use different words to describe it!! By
that standard, of course, the Pope shares Charlie Manson’s views,
and Christopher Hitchens agrees with Pol Pot. Enjoy a good laugh while
you can, though, dear readers— what follows from Greenfield may
prove less amusing. But that last sentence drives home one key
point— there is simply no end to the silly constructions this
press corps is willing to conjure.

According to Greenfield, Gore lost all three debates (Greenfield’s emphasis), showing to voters in every one of the debates
(Greenfield’s emphasis) that he “would in fact say anything to be
president.” “This is a harsh conclusion,” Greenfield mourns— but
he’s willing to spin you a bit to sustain it. In
Greenfield’s account of Bush and Gore’s first debate, he
makes bald misstatements of simple fact— and fails to let you
know the way he described the debate in real time. That’s right,
folks— immediately after the debate occurred, it was Bush whose conduct Greenfield lightly decried. But that was then, and his is now, as Jeff Greenfield gets with the program.

Jeff Greenfield

THE HARDBALL DRINKING GAME

Stories

Lately,
feedback on “Hardball” has been scarce, with readers
telling us they can no longer bear to watch, especially since Pat
Caddell is the primary “Democratic” spokesman provided for
“balance”.
  MWO needs your
updates, so we have come up with a way of easing the pain in hopes
of helping you make it through — even think you’re enjoying — this
awful show. 

Chris
says “Let’s Play Hardball”
Sip
Chris
introduces Pat Caddell as a political consultant
Big
sip
Chris
interrupts a Democrat
Sip
til he stops
Chris
drools
Sip
Chris
mentions Churchill
3
sips
Chris
mentions Tip O’Neill
1
sip first time, 2 sips second time, etc.
Pat
Caddell mentions Jimmy Carter
Big
sip
Nobody
mentions Bill or Hillary Clinton for 9 minutes
Down
half a bottle/glass
Chris
brings up – for absolutely no reason – the fact that he is Catholic
Sign
of the Cross – sip 
When
Chris hosts Christopher Hitchens
Inhale
alcohol fumes emanating from your television set
Chris
whores for Bush
Sip
til he stops
Pat
Caddell bashes Democrats
Down
half bottle/glass – throw other half at TV
Chris
says “sublime masculinity”
Crush
bottle/glass in your bare hand. 

Media Whores Online