Jeff Gannon, the former White House reporter whose naked pictures have appeared on a number of gay escort sites, says that he has "regrets" about his past...
check flipside...
Gannon, or Guckert (whatever he should be called by) quickly goes to ask why he is being victimized by the viscious liberal media:
"Why would they be looking into a person's sexual history? Is that what we're going to do to reporters now? Is there some kind of litmus test for reporters? Is it right to hold someone's sexuality against them?"
John Aravosis quickly pointed out that he could careless about the sexual oritentation but the security issues surrounding the particular issue of Gannon getting into the White House and the blatent hypocracy of [him] "Basically... asking the gay community to protect him when he attacks us."
Gannon shuns any connection in the administration point blank:
Suggestions that White House officials coddled him or gave him special access are "absolutely, completely, totally untrue," Gannon said, adding that he was often among the last to be called on at press briefings and sometimes could not ask a question at all. "I have no friendships with anyone there. . . . The White House, as far as I know, was never aware of the questions about my past."
After dodging connection to the Plume documents, Gannon quickly goes on to end in a very warm and fuzzy close:
"People criticize me for being a Christian and having some of these questionable things in my past," he said. "I believe in a God of forgiveness."
Jeff Gannon has sensed the circling sharks. Cast away as one infected with the plague of scandal, he has been sequestered and left to fend for himself with the traditional armour of victimization.
The administration should stand up for what it has created, if they are behind orchestrating him, and take responsability for this man's career and honor.
The rest of the article can be read here in the good ole Washington Post 2/19 edition.