Short diary (unlike my usual) and I don't have links. But 10 seconds ago I watched Rachel Maddow take Pat Buchanan apart, limb by limb, for his diatribe the other day on her show.
She did it in the form of "Whenever we make factual misstatements on this show, we have an obligation to correct the record." (Not a quote, but that's the sentiment.) Of course, that sort of announcement usually means that the show host had made an error.
Uh uh.
She ran a clip of Pat saying "This country was built by white folks" - a line that has gotten hugely panned here and other places. She then showed how Washington DC was built by slave labor. Not quite what Pat had meant, but still.
More to the point was the 200,000 Blacks who fought for the Union in the Civil War, and the 1.2 million who fought in WWII. (According to Pat, it was "white folks" who died at Gettysburg, Vicksburg and Normandy.)
I'm doing this from open-mouthed recollection, and there was a lot more.
But Pat Buchanan is never going to show his face on Rachel Maddow's show again, not after that strafing run. There isn't enough of him left to be patched back together.
Whether he's off MSNBC altogether remains, as they say, to be seen. But given that there was a couple of days' gap between his diatribe and her firestorm, I strongly suspect this was discussed at the highest levels and she was given permission to fire all guns.
Update [2009-7-20 22:20:19 by DanK Is Back]: (Hopefully not the first of many; I haven't started dinner yet.) Rachel got in one more zinger: Pat had claimed he was always and ever opposed to affirmative action. Rachel's staff dug up a memo he wrote in 1971 to Nixon urging that he appoint an Irish Catholic woman (or at any rate a Catholic) to SCOTUS for ethnic and political reasons - exactly what, near 40 years later, he blasted Obama for doing.
Her staff also contacted Yale, who explained that the students choose who gets on the Law Review (Pat had claimed Sotomayor got on by affirmative action).
I do wish she had mentioned Sotomayor won the Pyne Prize, given to the highest achieving undergraduate. No way did "affirmative action" get that for her. But she hit enough other points.