Daily Kos

View Story | 399 comments

  •  dKos community at its best (none / 0)

    I've thoroughly enjoyed this diary discussion.  Just goes to show that while Karl Rove has intimidated the MSM into submission, the Kossacks will not back down in our search for the truth.

    Keep on keepin' on!

    •  True, but... (none / 0)

      ...regardless of how things here pan out, be sure that Rove & pals will be looking to smear dKos however they can.  If you can't attack the facts, discredit the messenger.  They've done it time and time again.  If they feel that anything going on here could be a threat, be sure there will be some sort of pre-emptive attack...

      Then again, maybe they're sitting back laughing at all of this.  Who knows?

      •  You mean... (none / 0)

        Kinda like Tom Delay saying that his opponent was funded by a terrorist group called the DailyKos?

        A statement so idiotic it's laughable, but it represents the kind of shit that MAJOR leaders of the GOP are ready to say about anyone that disagrees with them.

        Internet != Truck

        by ragnark on Sat Jan 29, 2005 at 04:07:16 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  Agree (none / 0)

          And I think it would be worthwhile to give some thought as to how to respond to such slander campaigns.  Community press releases?  Mass letters to the editor and call-ins to shows?  A combination of these?  Or something else?
    •  I found this on Buzzflash- (4.00 / 2)

      "Jeff Gannon" and Karl Rove -- one degree of separation Who is the conservative pseudo-journalist who calls himself "Jeff Gannon" and has a hard-to-get White House press pass, so he can toss softball questions at President Bush and rewrite press releases for a right-wing outlet called Talon News?

      We wish we knew. We're on the trail, though. Here's a few more interesting things about Gannon, whose unlikely West Wing access is shedding new light on the unseemly White House propaganda machine.

      One thing is that there's an excellent chance he's a native Pennsylvanian (wouldn't you just know it?). His "bio" on the Talon News site states "Jeff is a graduate of the Pennsylvania State University System and holds a Bachelor of Science in Education." The vast majority of students who attend Penn State, either at State College or its many satellite campuses, tend to be in-state residents.

      More interesting is that he and Karl Rove seem to share a mentor -- a largely under-the-radar wingnut named Morton Blackwell. It seems that "Jeff" also is a graduate of the the Leadership Institute Broadcast School of Journalism -- a conservative propagandist training school that was founded and is run by Blackwell and that operates on an $8 million annual budget which comes from God knows where.

      Remember the lame stunt during the Republican National Convention in NYC where many delegates taunted war hero Kerry by wearing purple band-aids that said: "It was just a self-inflicted scratch, but you see I got a Purple Heart for it"? It was Blackwell, a GOP delegate from Virginia, who handed the band-aids out to the conventioneers.

      Less well known is that Blackwell -- who was the youngest Barry Goldwater delegate in 1964 -- is also a former national executive director of the College Republicans, who had trained the teen-age Karl Rove to be a "field organizer." According to a May 2003 New Yorker article, it was Blackwell who urged Rove to shun the growing reliance on pollsters and media consultants and go back to the grassroots. We all know how that turned out.

      We'd never heard until tonight of the Leadership Institute Broadcast School of Journalism, which apparently trains hundreds of "Jeff Gannons" every year. They were hiding in plain sight.

      There's one other thing that raises our curiosity about who or what is behind "Gannon." It seems that when he wasn't bashing Kerry, he paid a ton of attention to the Thune vs. Daschle Senate race in South Dakota. One blog that seemed to think "Gannon" was an authoritative journalist and linked to at least one of his reports was called "Daschle v. Thune."

      If that name sounds familiar, it should. It later was reported that the author of the blog, Jon Lauck, was a former Thune campaign staffer and was paid $27,000 by Thune's 2004 campaign while he was producing the Web site.

      So let us get this straight: The top Democrat in the Senate loses a race where the GOP sets up a phony blog that passes along news reports from a pseudo media organization, written by a reporter given White House credentials under a fake name. Our head is spinning. Will the propaganda fiasco become George W. Bush's Watergate? Stay tuned.

      I am wondering if they picked it up from here?

      "Time is for careful people, not passionate ones"

      by roseeriter on Sun Jan 30, 2005 at 01:37:21 AM PDT

      [ Parent ]

View Story | 399 comments