Missing Homework
Glenn, I'm astonished by your evident lack of familiarity with Christopher Hitchens's work. A bi-partisan Senate investigating committee determined that Joe Wilson did indeed lie when he claimed that his wife did not suggest him for the assignment to Niger. That same committee concluded that Wilson's visit did not refute the findings of British intelligence but, rather, lent support to them. Here are links to several pieces Hitchens has published on Slate.com that deal with Iraq's attempts to purchase yellowcake from Niger:
"Wowie Zahawie"--www.slate.com/id/2139609/
"Clueless Joe Wilson"--www.slate.com/id/2140058/
"Case Closed"--www.slate.com/id/2146475/
"Into the Fray"--www.slate.com/id/2144017/
"Hello. Zahawie, My Old Friend"--www.slate.com/id/2148995/
"Christopher Hitchens Responds"--www.slate.com/id/2150433
If you want to pretend that MoveOn hasn't made a practice of comparing Bush to Hitler, you run into a brick wall of reality. Among the dozens of articles castigating MoveOn.org for its despicable ads, Tammy Bruce's "Move On Freudian Nazi Ad" remains one of my favorites:
www.Frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=11604
Following a storm of protests from the Republican Party, Move On agreed to discontinue the ads.
Stephen Hayes has published in the Weekly Standard a series of articles detailing the operational contacts between the Mukhabbarat and al Qaeda. If you want to argue that he doesn't know what he's talking about, you must acknowledge the existence of those articles and demonstrate that you are in possession of information that contradicts them.
The Wall Street Journal's editorial yesterday provides perspective on a travesty that consumed the mainstream media for far too long.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/hottopic/?id=110009555
Sandy Berger's theft of sensitive national security documents was a serious crime for which he received a slap on the wrist. A Republican guilty of a comparable felony would surely have gone directly to jail. I have no desire to exonerate the Republican Party for the corrupt practices it has allowed to flourish in the dozen years it has controlled Congress. I am no mindless water-boy, a la Perry Logan, for incoherent organizations of pathologically ambitious, comprehensively mediocre people. I contend, however, that the uncritical acceptance of one side's spin, promoted by a highly partisan national media, serves the country poorly. Liberal myths are still myths.
Hitchens is not the one whose views are shallow and uninformed here.
Glenn, I'm astonished by your evident lack of familiarity with Christopher Hitchens's work. A bi-partisan Senate investigating committee determined that Joe Wilson did indeed lie when he claimed that his wife did not suggest him for the assignment to Niger. That same committee concluded that Wilson's visit did not refute the findings of British intelligence but, rather, lent support to them. Here are links to several pieces Hitchens has published on Slate.com that deal with Iraq's attempts to purchase yellowcake from Niger:
"Wowie Zahawie"--www.slate.com/id/2139609/
"Clueless Joe Wilson"--www.slate.com/id/2140058/
"Case Closed"--www.slate.com/id/2146475/
"Into the Fray"--www.slate.com/id/2144017/
"Hello. Zahawie, My Old Friend"--www.slate.com/id/2148995/
"Christopher Hitchens Responds"--www.slate.com/id/2150433
If you want to pretend that MoveOn hasn't made a practice of comparing Bush to Hitler, you run into a brick wall of reality. Among the dozens of articles castigating MoveOn.org for its despicable ads, Tammy Bruce's "Move On Freudian Nazi Ad" remains one of my favorites:
www.Frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=11604
Following a storm of protests from the Republican Party, Move On agreed to discontinue the ads.
Stephen Hayes has published in the Weekly Standard a series of articles detailing the operational contacts between the Mukhabbarat and al Qaeda. If you want to argue that he doesn't know what he's talking about, you must acknowledge the existence of those articles and demonstrate that you are in possession of information that contradicts them.
The Wall Street Journal's editorial yesterday provides perspective on a travesty that consumed the mainstream media for far too long.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/hottopic/?id=110009555
Sandy Berger's theft of sensitive national security documents was a serious crime for which he received a slap on the wrist. A Republican guilty of a comparable felony would surely have gone directly to jail. I have no desire to exonerate the Republican Party for the corrupt practices it has allowed to flourish in the dozen years it has controlled Congress. I am no mindless water-boy, a la Perry Logan, for incoherent organizations of pathologically ambitious, comprehensively mediocre people. I contend, however, that the uncritical acceptance of one side's spin, promoted by a highly partisan national media, serves the country poorly. Liberal myths are still myths.
Hitchens is not the one whose views are shallow and uninformed here.