Category Archives: Feedback

Zyrtec update

Here’s an interesting twist on my Sunday column. As you’ll recall, I mentioned that my current group insurance has in recent years refused to cover Zyrtec, which I found to be effective in treating my allergies. So I got this message from Zyrtec’s PR firm:

Hi
Brad,

My name is Eric Tatro, and I’m with
Cohn & Wolfe public relations. Today I read your editorial about health
insurance that was posted on your blog, and noticed that you had some trouble
getting your insurance company to pay for prescription Zyrtec.

We are working with McNeil Consumer
Healthcare, who recently announced that the FDA approved Zyrtec and Zyrtec-D 12
Hour (which combines Zyrtec with a decongestant) for use without a prescription.
I thought you and your readers might find this interesting, since allergy
sufferers will soon be able to purchase Zyrtec anywhere over-the-counter
prescriptions are sold without first having to visit an allergist or health care
professional. Also, for many allergy sufferers, Zyrtec will cost up to one-third
less than prescription Zyrtec. Both medications will be available nationwide in
January 2008.

If you would like more information,
you can find a full press kit located at http://www.ZyrtecPressKit.com. The FDA
also issued a press release on the approval, which can be found at http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2007/NEW01750.html.
Of course, please let me know if you have any questions or if I can help in any
other way.

Sincere
thanks,

-Eric

I immediately wrote back to Eric as follows:

    Thanks.
Actually, I heard that last week, but it didn’t affect my column, since it
didn’t affect the fact that up to now, my insurance has refused to pay for
Zyrtec, and HAS paid for allergy shots, which was the point I was
making.
    Here’s an
irony for you, though: I had already learned that my NEW insurance (that for
which I’ll be paying $274.42 every two weeks) WILL pay for a Zyrtec
prescription. Now that it’s going over-the-counter, they might NOT cover the
prescription — I’ll have to check, but that’s my strong
suspicion.
    So if Zyrtec
is available to me only over the counter, and the price is only 30 percent less
than the amount that was so high my current insurance refused to pay (which had
to be really high, when you consider that they DID cover something that had a
co-pay — which would be no more than 50 percent of the total — of $81.95),
then I still won’t be able to afford it. With my high premiums, I will be very
much boxed into whatever my insurance will cover.
    The only
thing that might help me would be if a generic version came available. But from
what you’re telling me, this is one of those situations where the drug goes OTC,
but doesn’t go generic — at least, not yet. Am I right about that? I hope not,
but the fact that the company considers it cost-effective to hire a PR firm to
promote the brand seems to indicate that I’m right.

    Do you have
any idea of when the drug might be available in generic form? It would be very
helpful to know that.
I’ll let you know what he says back. I’ve also made a note to myself to find out at first opportunity whether I’m right about the insurance not helping if it goes OTC, but not generic. Finally, I’ve got a call in to the FDA to ask when Zyrtec will go generic. I realize those of you who don’t need Zyrtec might not care about this in the narrowest sense, but I believe this situation is what English majors (or sociologists or economists or somebody) call a microcosm. Anyway, I’ll be back to you as the plot sickens…

McCain and The Right Stuff (among other things)

This was written as a response to something Phillip said back on this post. I got a little carried away, going from one digression to another, so I’m making this into a separate post. Here’s what Phillip wrote:

I couldn’t agree more about McCain, so again, how is it that he
seems to have dropped off the face of the earth with regards to the GOP
primary race? Now I don’t think he walks on water quite as much as you
do, I have been disappointed by some of the slight "triangulation" he’s
done on occasion, vis-a-vis the religious right, etc., but on a gut
level I share the feeling Brooks was conveying.

I believe there are two main reasons why McCain has faded from the
race: 1) the radicalization of the GOP implemented by the Cheney-Bush
years (yes, the reverse name order is intentional) that we see
manifested, for example, by the GOP Prez hopefuls outdoing each other
for the title of Torturer-in-Chief (acknowledgement to Frank
Rich)…and 2) Age. Sad to say, but I’m afraid that plays into it in a
big way.

Relating to your "Bush-hatred" column of last Sunday, had McCain won
in 2000 I seriously doubt we would have the degree of partisan divide
we do today. Wouldn’t you agree with that, Brad? McCain would (then and
now) view himself as the President of all the people, quite differently
from what we ended up with. This is not a matter of partisan politics,
it’s a matter of character: McCain is indeed a "great" man if that
means being a man of substance and integrity, and the man who slimed
him successfully in SC on his way to the White House turned out to be a
very small and befuddled man way out of his depth who knew nothing of
the larger world, only the cosseted world of comfort and privilege into
which he was born.

Phillip, you are absolutely right about how different things would be if McCain had been elected. The entire world would have been vastly better off. As I said in my previous column linked above, this is the man who should have been president for the past seven years.

And Phillip, I honestly don’t understand why people like bud and Doug have such a powerful compulsion to drag down a man like that. I don’t think he walks on water; I think he is a very human man, with his own frailties like the rest of us. The difference is that he has resolved to discipline himself to overcome those frailties, and to do his best to do the right thing, even when it’s not in his self-interest.

And THAT is why he dropped off the radar — although there is reason to believe he’s climbing back up. It has nothing to do with Cheney and Bush; it has a lot to do with Juan and Rosalita. He ran afoul of the people who just HATE the idea that they are "surrounded" by Mexicans. You’d think we were all in the Alamo, the way these people react.

That brings me to another point. It’s interesting to see how people react to a journalist when he actually says something good about somebody. Because I think Bush hatred (like Clinton hatred, only more advanced) is a corrosively harmful force in our society, I’m seen as a Bush defender, when I actually don’t much like the guy, and harbor bitterness over the wasted years when McCain could have been in his place, the nation would be more united, and Iraq would not have been so shamefully mishandled. But when I raise even mild objections to people having viscerally spiteful reactions to him, suddenly I become part of the problem in their eyes. Even, to some extent, in yours, since you didn’t seem entirely sure that I would agree with you that we’d have been better off with McCain. Because of this I find myself hesitant to demur at your characterization of Bush and Cheney as extremists in their party — but they’re not; you have to look at the Pat Buchanans for that. Ironically, sometime the most polarizing figures are not the most ideologically extreme. Take, for instance, Mrs. Clinton. She’s essentially a mainstreamer, a triangulator in a good sense, which is one reason a lot of folks in her party reject her. But she is the most polarizing candidate among the Democrats, the only one (more so even than Edwards, with his demagogic tendencies) likely to take president hatred to another, worse level. That’s not really fair to her, but there it is. And it’s why, even though I might end up agreeing with her on more issues, particularly foreign policy, I think the country would be better off if Obama got the nomination.

Anyway, back to my point: There are few people I will write about with respect, admiration and even awe (thanks to my recognition of their rarity). On the national scene there is John McCain, and Joe Lieberman. In South Carolina, there is Joe Riley, and increasingly, Lindsey Graham.

Once, there was John Glenn, and I am reminded of him by Gordon’s comments, wondering about the character of anyone who would seek the job. Tom Wolfe wrote of Glenn’s self-esteem mixed with his monklike self-denial. Glenn, to him, was the Presbyterian Pilot, ambitious without the baser manifestations of that quality. I think that maybe Glenn and McCain have more in common beyond the fact that they are both former aviators. Or maybe they have it in common BECAUSE they are former aviators — men of exceptional ability who climbed "right to the top of the pyramid," although in different ways. In any case, I see them both as having the Right Stuff, and McCain possibly more than Glenn.

Correspondent weighs in on Ron Paul event

Ron_paul_2008_wart

Since I couldn’t make it to the Ron Paul event, I asked the correspondent who originally brought it to my attention to tell us about it:

Dear Brad,
    Thanks for the reply. I know it was a busy day,
with Bush and several candidates visiting at the
same time. The Rally was a great success. The West
Columbia Riverwalk amphitheater provided a
charming, intimate setting for Dr Paul to share
his message of peace, prosperity and liberty to
several hundred supporters. Folks came from as far
away as Chattanooga and Atlanta to hear him speak
and have the opportunity to meet him in person.
    I tried to get the campaign to schedule an
interview with your editorial board while he was
in town. Perhaps next visit?  In the meantime, I
hope you will be including him in your series this
week on Republican candidates. I was disappointed
to see no mention today about his historic
fundraising on Monday. At 4.2 million, I believe
it was the largest Republican primary donations in
a 24-hour period ever! Surely that’s more
newsworthy than Obama running a new ad, isn’t it?
    Dr Paul truly is a viable contender, contrary to
what the MSM would like everyone to believe. As a
ten-term congressman, he is extremely
knowledgeable about the destructive issues facing
America. People from all walks like his message
and feel hopeful that we can turn things around
and restore this country to its former greatness
… if they can just hear it. Please allow your
readers to make up their own minds with equal
exposure of all the candidates, not just the
anointed RudyMcRomneyson.

Sincerely,
Jackie

Thanks for the report. Here’s a hint, though: When an editor gives you access to get your message out, you’re probably better off spending your words on that purpose, rather than wasting them complaining.  But the complaints serve a purpose; they give me a setting for correcting several widely-held misconceptions:

  • Here’s an assumption that was not a complaint, but I’ll address it anyway: The Bush visit had no impact on my day. Folks make that mistake a lot — thinking that I have a busy day because of some news event. Those are for the news department to handle. And for that matter, such an event as a presidential visit doesn’t tie down much of their assets, either. But for editorial, the impact is zero. I was busy on Friday because I’m always busy on Fridays — it’s crunch time for production of the next three days’ opinion pages.
  • I have nothing to do with any "series this week on Republican candidates," beyond reading the pieces in the paper just as you do. Again, that’s the newsroom; we’re editorial. McCain fan that I am, if I had anything to do with it, don’t you think the McCain piece would have had a more positive headline than "McCain struggling to win over voters?"
  • Regarding Jackie’s disappointment over lack of coverage of the Paul fund-raising, or belief that it’s more important than an Obama ad — once again, nothing I can do for you, except forward all of your concerns to editors down in our newsroom. And I did that before posting this.
  • "Dr Paul truly is a viable contender, contrary to what the MSM would like everyone to believe…" The more accurate way to phrase that would be, "contrary to what the MSM believe." While I don’t work in news now, I did for 20 years, and I can tell you that I never saw anybody report something in an effort to get people to believe something that the editor doesn’t believe is already true. The concern, for an editor, would be to report the reality, not distort it by giving too much coverage to a nonviable candidate, and too little to a viable one. Bottom line: If Rep. Paul is so popular, he’ll win — so there’s no need to construct elaborate media conspiracy theories.
  • As for the last plea for "equal exposure" — once again, I’ve passed that on.

As for what I do control in my own little bailiwick — I’ll have you note that with this second post, Ron Paul has received more coverage on this blog in the past couple of weeks than any "candidate" other than Steve Colbert. (Or maybe I should say, he’s tied with the Hillary/Obama combo of these two posts.) And Mr. Colbert got the coverage he got for the same reason certain non-news events dominate what we laughingly call "TV news" — I had video of it.

Message from District 5 superintendent

Here’s a handy tip for the future — don’t send me e-mail on Friday and expect me to see it before the next week! I just don’t have time to read the messages on that day.

That said, here’s one more item relating to the District 5 referendum tomorrow. It’s an e-mail sent to me … on Friday… by district Supt. Scott Andersen:

Brad –

Below is a letter I would like you to consider publishing pertaining to D5’s referendum this Tuesday. 

    I have thought long and hard about what I should write this week as we lead up to our very important bond referendum vote on Tuesday, November 6.  I have wondered if there was one piece of information that would help theDist5_007
District Five community best decide the course we should take on that day. The impression that I have received is that our community members have been inundated with numbers, facts and a wide variety of opinions.
    Therefore, I am going to share a true story that happened to one of my co-workers.  It has a message that is appropriate for our District Five community at this important juncture in our history.
    He walked into a local restaurant recently with his wife and two children.  As soon as he entered, he heard music playing over the intercom system.  After noticing the music, he saw an elderly couple sitting at a table and eating their burgers and fries while “getting into” the music.  As he approached the counter to place his order, he noticed that the lady working the counter was helping the customers while also “getting into” the music.  As he looked past the lady at the counter, he saw that the gentleman cooking the hamburgers was doing so while moving with the music.  Then as he walked back to the table where his family was sitting, he saw a young father carrying drinks back to his table while singing the song that was playing on the intercom.  Finally, when my friend made it back to his family, he noticed that they too were tapping and moving to the song that was playing.
    After seeing all of this, he paused and thought for a moment.  In that restaurant, at that moment in time, everyone was “tapping their feet” to the same song at the same time.
    And now I ask, what would it be like if, as a community, we all “tapped our feet” for a few brief moments to the same “song” for our children?  Imagine what we could accomplish.
    Imagine what could happen if we agreed as a community that regardless of where a child goes to school in our district, they had a great facility that supports teaching and learning.  Imagine if every student, regardless of where they go to school, and if every teacher, regardless of where they work, had access to technology that truly supported teaching and learning.
    Imagine if we did not have to put our students and staff in unsafe, educationally inappropriate, and fiscally irresponsible classroom portables every day.
    Imagine if we reinvested in our existing facilities throughout Irmo, Dutch Fork and in Chapin so that our neighborhoods had terrific schools that helped keep property values high and businesses prosperous.
    Imagine if we addressed the needs of all of our students by providing them the much needed Career and Technology classes at every high school to ensure that they have a bright and productive future.
    Imagine the opportunity to make all of that happen November 6.

Contrasting Obama, Clinton on licenses

After having read or heard Barack Obama expressing his objections to Hillary Clinton’s answer to the debate question about N.Y. Gov. Spitzer’s driver’s license proposal, I finally asked Amaya Smith with his campaign for a statement of what Sen. Obama thinks about it. (That had been missing from the bits and pieces I had run into up to that time.) Here’s what Amaya said:

Barack Obama supports providing secure identifications to undocumented immigrants as a way to reduce fatalities on the roads, and give our law enforcement personnel the tools they need to fight crime and stop terrorism.  However, this can only be a stopgap measure on the road to comprehensive immigration reform that includes securing our borders, fixing our broken immigration bureaucracy and bringing the 12 million undocumented immigrants out of the shadows and onto a responsible path towards citizenship.  Gov Spitzer’s original plan is consistent with Senator Obama’s views on the issue.

To me, that didn’t sound wildly different from what Hillary had said, so to refresh my memory, I went back to fetch it:

"You know, Tim, this is where everybody plays ‘gotcha.’ It makes a lot
of sense… what is the governor supposed to do? He is dealing with a
serious problem. We have failed, and George Bush has failed. Do I think
this is the best thing for any governor to do? No. But do I understand
the sense of real desperation, trying to get a handle on this —
remember, in New York; we want to know who’s in New York, we want
people to come out of the shadows. He’s making an honest effort to do
it; we should have passed immigration reform.

OK, so Obama’s for it, but has reservations, seeing it as no more than a stopgap. Hillary sees reasons why the governor would do it, and doesn’t want to criticize, but in the end has reservations too strong to be for it. Which is where I am, only I’m not offended by Obama’s position. It makes sense, too. Seems to me like we have two reasonable people here, both of whom see the pros and cons, but they end up a few degrees away from each other, on different sides of a line.

I end up on Hillary’s side. I see how licenses could be a way of bringing underground people out into the open and tracking them — not to mention making New York’s roads somewhat safer. But in the end, I think there are too many negatives to granting the licenses, including homeland security problems. And ultimately, the Congress should have passed the comprehensive immigration reform bill, which would accomplish the goals Obama says he’s aiming for.

If there were a scale with zero being the position of Lou Dobbs (completely against), and 10 being Spitzer (completely for), it seems like Hillary’s a 4, and Obama’s a 6.5 or 7. Not exactly polar opposites.

But then again, I don’t understand the passions this issue generates. Robert Ariail — who has upcoming cartoons both making fun of poor Dennis and hitting Hillary the way Obama is (if anyone still thought Robert marched in step with the rest of us, that should settle it) — and I just had another discussion/argument about the issue this morning, with little ground given by either of us. Robert’s a fence-and-deportation guy; I’m for the defunct McCain/Graham bill.

P.S. — I had lunch with Amaya and Kevin Griffis back on Oct. 18. Nothing eventful, aside from the fact that the maitre d’ had to shunt us off to a private room because although Kevin wore the obligatory sport coat, he wore in with jeans. The purpose of the lunch was for Kevin to introduce me to Amaya, a mission which he accomplished. Consider this to be my official, belated contact report.

Will says he does, too, get that many hits

Just got this message from Will Folks

Brad,

Below is a copy and
paste from today’s hit counter
for FITSNews … 4,175 pageviews as of 4:55 PM and
still another three hours left to go before the counter resets at 8 P.M. for the
next 24-hour cycle. Will probably end up in the 5,500-6,000 range for today (a
lot of people log in from their home computers after work), which is pretty good
for a Friday. We have a pretty hopping story on the workers’ comp issue, though,
so it could be higher.

In reference to your
post of last week questioning FITS traffic
, I don’t generally give out that
specific information but when Ms. Blanchfield with Campaigns & Elections
magazine called and asked me a few weeks ago for my best estimate of our daily
hit count, I gave it to her. That’s what I’ve always done when reporters call,
answer their questions truthfully and to the best of my ability. I’ve copied her
on this e-mail, btw, and in the event she needs additional documentation of our
audience, I’m happy to provide it to her.

Although from time to
time I poke fun at you (today included), I have always respected you and Cindi
and the passion with which you advance the ideas you believe in. Obviously we
disagree on a great deal of things, but that’s the way the world goes. At the
end of the day your website, like mine, is a needed voice in the process as well
as forum for people to share their views.

Anyway, I hope the
two of you have a great weekend. Let’s hope the Gamecocks’ offense shows up in
Knoxville tomorrow, too!

Take care,

W

To which I responded:

That’s
impressive. Beyond that, it’s amazing. Based on the list of referrers, it’s hard
to see how how it’s happening. Who’s your service provider? Is that where the
figures come from?

Maybe y’all can explain it. I can’t.

Confessions of a recovered journalist

Reformed ex-editor Gordon Hirsch left a particularly thoughtful — and, given his background, well-informed — comment on this last post. Full disclosure: I put him up to it — I e-mailed him to ask for his input. And since he came through, I hereby elevate his contribution to its very own post, so it’ll be more visible:

I used to work with Brad a long time ago at The State. It was was my third of four SC newpaper jobs. I don’t practice journalism anymore, but I like to watch. Once you’ve seen how the sausage is made, you understand that journalists can’t even agree amongst themselves on "the issues," much less conspire to attain any specific goal. As for companies they work for, the media biz is all about ad revenues and meeting shareholder expectations of earnings. News is just the "content" that compels audiences to suffer ad exposure.

Part of my job at The State was to make final, deadline decisions about what to report or print, what not to report or print, and prominence of story placement in the paper, three editions a day. As a result, I spent much of the next morning answering to readers who phoned to accuse "us" (me?) of bias, poor judgment, or just plain stupidity. I can’t remember anybody ever calling to say, "Good job," although there were those rare letters to the editor to that effect, mostly from partisan types whose compliments made us cringe.

After all, the practice of good journalism is supposed to be an "objective" and "fair" process, free from personal prejudices and the influence of those who would try to sway "the media."

In reality, everything about the editorial process involves subjective decision-making, governed by experience and notions of fairness and objectivity, as best we can apply them as human beings on a daily basis. What’s interesting or important to me may not be to you. Multiply that fundamental disconnect in all people and their belief systems, and you’re wrong most of the time by a lot of other people’s standards. You get used to it, but (good) editors never stop listening to complaints from the gallery, because that’s how we learn to respect other points of view — and that’s how readers got our attention. If you cared enough to call, we’d listen. It’s a lot like government and, yes, the squeaky wheel oftens gets the grease.

The same was true of the newsroom and its people. For example, much of what Brad considered crucial, I did not, but I respected his passion and diligence. We discussed, argued, debated, all day long sometimes. Ditto for just about everybody else on staff. We disagreed amongst ourselves as much as any other group of  individuals. As a result, by the end of each day, we were more informed than when we started. Everybody had their say, time ran out, and we made a decision about what to publish, and where to "play it."

Of the McCain story at issue here, I have no recollection, but I can imagine how the newsroom debate might have gone. There are political implications, fairness issues, insights into McCain’s character, all worthy of consideration. But in my opinion, it’s a mean little story at the expense of an intensely private little girl whose parents were, ummm, distracted by "other matters."  Personally, I remember feeling compassion for Chelsea. She seemed quite frightened by it all, a sitting duck for for the commentators on all things Clintonian.

Adolescence is tough enough without having the Washington Press Corps at your birthday party. Is that "objective" on my part? Fair? Nope. But it still seems "right." So, in the end, I probably would have agreed with The Washington Post that the story was "too vicious to print."

If McCain benefitted as a result, so be it. I could handle your call the next morning with a clear conscience. As far as I know,  that’s still allowed in newspapers today.

Why do people always believe the worst of the press?

As tends to happen on a blog, this post about one subject rapidly degenerated into a spitting match about something else altogether. This time, the digression was led by two of our resident cynics, "bud" and Doug.

bud mentions a tale about something unsavory John McCain once said (at least, I guess he said it) at some obscure, non-televised event. Weldon expressed incredulity that it had ever happened, and Doug provided a link to a 1998 piece on Salon.com that says it did happen, and what’s more, the MSM is wicked for not having repeated the horrible thing Sen. McCain is supposed to have said.

To which I can only say yeah, Doug, I found the same story when I went looking to see if Weldon was right — and I practically laughed out loud at its premise.

Since I don’t know this David Corn guy, I’ll ask bud — What’s it like to feel so put-upon by the world that you will believe the most implausible explanations, as long as they involve deviousness and conspiracy?

I was never in a position to make the decision about the Chelsea "joke" — I had been out of newsrooms for years then, and I don’t recall it coming up in handling op-ed stuff — but from years and years of making such decisions and working with others who made the same decisions, I suspect I understand why those two lines were not repeated.

One reason I do what I do — writing columns, doing this blog, doing pretty much anything and everything I can think of to be transparent short of walking down Gervais Street naked (and believe me; you don’t want to see that) — is to help people understand what we (newspaper editors) do and why we do it. I think that’s important for a number of reasons, not least the fact that people seem to go out of their way to ascribe devious motives to newspaper people (I refer you to this distraught lady). They’ll believe anything other than that we do what we do for the reasons we say we do them. That’s just beyond possibility to them.

bud responds to all this introspection by doing his best to seize upon the unlikeliest explanation — and preferably, the one that would insult me the most. After a year or two of blogging, I had succeeded in communicating to bud that the polarization of our society into left and right, Democrat and Republican, was repugnant in the extreme (the very post of which we speak was related to this concern). So what was his response? It was as follows: "You’re a partisan, Brad! A big, fat partisan! You’re the worst of them all, you lousy hypocrite! Hey, everybody, look over here! Check out the partisan!," etc.

And now this. For the record, here’s what I think about the Chelsea "joke" story:

  • When bud mentioned it, I assumed it was true. It even sounded vaguely familiar, like maybe I heard it second-hand somewhere.
  • I believed it because one of McCain’s character flaws — big shock, folks, he’s got ’em like everybody else — is a disturbing taste for the really inappropriate joke. Remember "Bomb, Bomb Iran?" I don’t know if it’s an old sailor’s thing, or what. I do know that he has a rather twisted bemusement, arising from his personal experience, that causes him to smile at what some people think is "horrible." You can see him thinking, "You call THAT horrible? You don’t know anything." But whatever the explanation, there’s no excuse for it. Not for a joke like this.
  • I wondered whether the Republicans he told it to laughed. They probably did. There’s something about the mob mentality, when they gather for these partisan functions, that makes Democrats and Republicans laugh at pretty much anything that’s cruel or demeaning to someone on the "other side."
  • Of course no reputable news source printed it. You know why? Because I can’t think of a single legitimate journalistic reason to repeat something that cruel about a kid who is in the public eye through no fault of her own. If it were just a grossly inappropriate joke about Janet Reno, that’s one thing. But Janet’s a big girl (no joke intended), and someone who has agreed to be a public figure. No, Janet Reno shouldn’t have to take that, either. But she’s not the one editors would worry about. Note that the fact that he’d said something awful was reported, and enough about it was said to make any sensible person not want to hear more. All the wicked MSM did was fail to repeat the joke itself.
  • Yes, the press has always liked McCain. You know why? He’s so accessible. He puts up no barriers. He makes himself completely, absurdly accessible to us. (If anything, telling a joke like this, making a jerk of himself, is a twisted manifestation of this.) You just can’t imagine how sick we get of the ramparts most public figures erect. When we run into a guy like McCain — and it’s a rare thing, especially at this level of politics — there’s a natural tendency to like the guy. It’s a basic reflex on our part, sort of like a man automatically liking a good-looking woman who takes her clothes off. You may not agree with her politics, but you can’t help but take it kindly.
  • People who think that liking McCain equates to covering up his flaws are totally out to lunch. Remember, what is it we like about the guy (and I’m using "we" in a broad sense to include the press at large; I have additional reasons why I like him as a candidate)? His openness. The fact that we get to show him with all his scars and warts and wrinkles and bad skin and mean temper and horrible, horrible, and even dangerous jokes. But that’s still no reason to join him in being mean to a poor kid.
  • What do people think it means for the press to "like" McCain? I’ll tell you what it means to me — they like having the guy around. That does not necessarily translate into wanting to see him achieve his goals. How many reporters or editors (besides me) do you think actually voted for McCain when given a chance, or will vote for him this time around? I’d be surprised if the number was large. And if they wouldn’t even vote for him (again, just my supposition here), how stupid would they have to be to compromise their integrity and self-respect (we do have such qualities, you know, despite what you seem to think) to help him succeed?
  • What is wrong with people who get all huffy and make accusations of malfeasance when someone uses good judgment and doesn’t repeat something that would do no good for anyone, and would harm innocents? Has their value system been so distorted by the partisan, tit-for-tat madness we see on 24/7 TV "news" that they would do anything, no matter who gets splashed, to reflect discredit upon someone of whom they disapprove? How sick is that?

I probably thought some other stuff, too, but I’d forgotten it by the time I got to the bottom of that list. That’s one reason I blog — a desperate attempt to keep up with stream of consciousness. My stream may not be deep, but it’s pretty wide.

Y’all better get on the stick!

Aren’t blog readers supposed to keep bloggers straight — correcting errors, filling in omissions and such?

Well, if so, y’all are NOT pulling your weight around here.

Y’all know that I’m trying to put together a really useful, comprehensive blogroll that will make y’all’s lives easier (well, mine too, but I’m trying to lay the guilt trip on you). I sort of expected, knowing that my readers are not shy, that I’d get a chorus of shouts to the effect of "You forgot…!" and "How about…?"

But aside from a complaint that I don’t have FITS News on the roll (which I had pointed out first), I haven’t gotten much help with the chores.

Anyway, here are some current ones (as in, they’ve posted this week) I came up with in just one extra cast of the net today:

 

Some of these I had run across before, and forgotten. Others were new to me. I haven’t really examined them closely to see how relevant they are, or whether the authors are identified fully (although I saw without looking closely that at least one was). But I DID see that all have posted in the last couple of days, and that’s key. Some or most or all need to be on the roll.

In fact, it seems I hurt poor "Kaolin’s" feelings with my omission.

Also, I see that Crack the Bell was revived after I dropped it for inactivity — but only briefly (last post in August). Tim’s gonna have to do better than that to make the active-duty roster.

Anyway, I’ll ask again: IS THERE ANYBODY I’M MISSING HERE?

His-a culpa

Tom1

Just received this mea culpa from Tom Davis, regarding the infamous fund-raising letter for ReformSC:

It was a big mistake…
… for me not to have included a reference to restructuring in that email piece
I sent out a few weeks ago for Reform SC.  Not sure what else to say.  I made a
mistake.

This reminds me of something Tom had said to me about this before, and which Chad Walldorf mentioned again at lunch yesterday (the post about which was probably the impetus for Tom’s e-mail): Tom wrote that letter in a huge hurry during preparations to go on an ecodevo trip to China. Make of that what you will.

Whatever my suspicions of the governor, his anti-government fraternity brothers, and such, I remain convinced that Tom means well. But no matter how sincere he and Chad are, if the money behind ReformSC is about less government, without regard to better government, it will bear watching.

Tom2

A no-win call

Last night, when I finally got a moment to check phone messages (which I did instead of working out, which is what I should have done), I heard one of the sort that is a no-win situation for all concerned.

It was an extremely distraught woman, who was upset because something had been in the paper involving her husband, and someone had written a letter to the editor about the issue in question, and the letter had been critical of her husband. It ran sometime over the weekend.

The lady was upset about a number of things. The newspaper’s offenses were legion in her mind. The call had come in to the publisher’s office early Monday, and his assistant had forwarded it to the publisher, the executive editor (who is responsible for all of the newspaper except the editorial pages), and me. One got the impression that the letter was her last straw, and she was very, very, very upset with us for publishing it. She took it personally.

In the course of the call, she said something one often hears on such calls, along the lines of, if you want to know what sort of man my husband is, you should ask me, or one of the many people who know him and admire him. Of course, there’s no way to explain to someone who’s hurting like that that she’s talking about something that is outside our purview. No one in the editorial department had sought to do anything with regard to her husband. No one was writing about him, or seeking comment of any kind about him. We received a letter  expressing an opinion, and we ran it. Just a letter among many. That’s what letters to the editor are for — to express a broad swath of opinion other than our own, on a broader scope of issues than we will ever get around to writing about.

Here’s the really bad part: When you get a call like this, you want to do something to help the person. But what do you do? You can’t unpublish the letter; it’s out there — even assuming that we would do so (I have no idea; since its impossible, there’s no use speculating). She suggests a remedy, couching it in the form of yet another accusation toward us, another count in the long indictment of ill will that she imagines we hold toward her husband. This is a very common feature in this sort of phone call: She claims that we have received letters sticking up for her husband, but intentionally, because we are so hateful, not published them. Well, I knew that was dubious when I heard it; but when I heard it there was no one around to check the facts with, so it had to wait until today.

As I thought, we had received two or three letters critical of the lady’s husband, but none defending him. We had no interest in running any more letters criticizing him — indeed, no interest in more letters on the subject, except that we would have been happy to run one saying what a great guy he is, if only because it would ease this woman’s pain, and hurt no one. Sure, we could call her and tell her that there were no letters saying good things about her husband so she needed to rustle some up, but what do you suppose that would accomplish, other than making her feel worse? Yeah, it might stop her from badmouthing us to anyone who would listen (and might not, since she might not believe it), but hey — we’re in the business of being criticized. We can take a certain amount of that, unjust as it would be. To tell her that those friends who assured her they were writing us to set the record straight were lying, or merely hadn’t followed through on their intention, would be a lot more painful to her than any amount of bad talk out there could be to us.

So I decided we would wait a couple of days, and see if any positive letters come in. If they don’t, I might call the lady — but I will hesitate to do so, because I really don’t want her to get upset all over again.

A few minutes after I made that decision, Warren Bolton (I had forwarded the call to my associate editors) came in with a letter that took her side, but didn’t ever get around to saying anything positive about her husband. It was just a diatribe against the newspaper — essentially a rant, including a word or two we would not run in a family newspaper. While it made reference to the fact that the husband’s character is different from the way the writer perceived him as having been portrayed, it did not elaborate. It did not tell us in any way what a good guy he was; it was too occupied with what bad guys we were. And it wasn’t even particularly explanatory on that point. It would stir the pot further, but not accomplish the goal.

So we’re still looking for a letter defending the man. We’ll run that, assuming it is an acceptable letter by the usual standards (which are not terribly stringent). We have no other interest in the subject. But until such a letter arrives, there’s nothing we can do.

Disappointed in this post without a denouement? Well, my purpose in writing it was to provide another glimpse into the way the editorial page works, which is one of the main reasons I started the blog. If there’s a moral to the story, it is this: If you hear someone tell you that we are seeking and publishing letters on one side of a subject, and suppressing opposing views, doubt it. I can’t think of a case when we have ever done that, and I can’t imagine why we ever would. The motives that people imagine when they accuse us of such make sense to them — because of their own emotional involvement or point of view on the subject — but not to us. For us, having differing, publishable views is always a good thing. But we have to receive them to publish them.

Ultimate S.C. Blogroll (a work in progress)

UPDATE: Here is the current version of the spreadsheet mentioned below…

Determined to inject some sense and organization to my sorta, kinda list of S.C. blogs in the rail at right, which I have long labeled "Fun with links" because it was nice and vague, I put together the attached spreadsheets.

Basically, I was trying to separate wheat from chaff, and provide a true list of S.C. blogs, along with some kind of hierarchy of timeliness. So I went through my list of links to see who had posted most recently (only seven out of 33 had posted today), then — to add some depth to that metric — how many times they had posted in the past week. (Among true S.C. blogs, The Palmetto Scoop and The Shot/The Chaser ran away from the pack.)

What I was seeking to do was to put my links in some sort of order, and it seemed that the most useful order for my readers would be one that honored timeliness. That would put TPS and The Chaser at the top, and "I Don’t Believe The State" at the very bottom (no posts since June 21; I had already purged all blogs less fresh than that).

But wait: Those stats don’t stack up to Andrew Sullivan‘s or Dave Barry‘s. But they lose points because they’re not S.C. blogs, which is the point. Then, there are links to things that aren’t blogs at all, but which I wanted to keep, such as to SC Hotline and Peggy Noonan‘s columns. (Earlier, I had created a new category called "Resources," and maybe SC Hotline belongs there. While I’m at it, I might create a list of links to recent work of top columnists, with a separate heading, as a home for Peggy.)

Finally, I decided I would afford extra points in my hierarchy to blogs that are written by a single person (as opposed to South Carolina ’08) and are not anonymous (which would downgrade "not very bright," despites its timeliness).

Anyway, do me a favor, if you’ve got the time — go over the spreadsheet, and give me feedback to improve it. The kind of feedback I’m looking for would include:

  • Names of blogs that should make the list, but aren’t here (plus all the relevant info you can provide). I’m guessing some might wish to advocate for FITS News, and others I’m just not thinking of. Speaking of Will, perhaps I should add a "taste" scale to my spreadsheet.)
  • Identities of authors where I’ve got them wrong, or have wrongly judged them to be anonymous or pseudonymous. For instance, there might be someone who doesn’t give his name, but wouldn’t mind if asked. I am NOT seeking to expose private citizens who wish to be unknown, despite what some think.
  • Whether you think a given site qualifies as a South Carolina blog. On the sheet I put together, I just said Y or N on that, but it occurs to me that I should have a scale on that score. There are some blogs based in SC that have nothing to say that you can’t find on any other blog in the nation — that is to say, they just watch cable TV news and parrot their particular sides party line on the subject. Such blogs are worth next to nothing. In fact, I’m going to go in and assign a 1-10 scale as to S.C. relevance, and save a separate version of the spreadsheet, here. Tell me if you agree/disagree with the ratings.
  • Finally, is it a blog at all? Some, such as John Wrisley‘s, I’m not at all sure fit the category.
  • Any other points I’m forgetting.

Your help will be appreciated.

Katon Dawson’s audio response

Katon Dawson responded to my post about the Democratic Primary schedule, in which he says that a referendum would not be allowed under the legislation that put the state of South Carolina in charge of paying for the parties’ presidential primaries.

Only instead of leaving a typed comment, he left a phone message. Here’s the audio.

A good day to spend time reading the comments

Rather than posting more new stuff today, I’ve been busy this morning with some discussion threads on this post and, to a lesser extent, on this one. I urge you to go join in; they’re interesting. On this one, we have, in addition to the usual suspects, a thoughtful response to Chad Walldorf, a major player in the topic under discussion.

Chat with Brownback, Ron Paul

Recently I’ve been getting these e-mails, but haven’t had time to stop and check out the opportunities offered. Maybe some of y’all could check it out and report back to the group:

    Republican candidates Sam Brownback and Ron Paul will be live online in
two separate hour-long sessions at washingtonpost.com today to answer
reader questions.
    To submit questions and join the discussion please see the following
links:

  1. Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kansas) will be online at 11 a.m. ET
  2. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) will be online at 3 p.m. ET.

Up where that ol’ demon lives

A reader, apparently doubting the Energy Party axiom that sharply increasing the price of gasoline via a tax increase would lower consumption, defund our enemies, clean our air, prevent catastrophic climate change and help the Cubs win the World Series, raised this point on my last post:

Hasn’t the price of gas gone up about $1 over the past 2-3 years?
People were saying in 2005 that a $1 increase in the gas tax would
reduce consumption. Did it?

Posted by: Gary | Oct 9, 2007 1:39:59 PM

Yes, it did (go up a dollar) and no it didn’t (depress demand). But I believe that’s because the price was so low to start with — near historic lows, adjusted for inflation.

I’m sort of reminded of one of my favorite books and movies, "The Right Stuff." The filmmakers had the brilliant stroke of having Levon Helm narrate the film, enabling him to say such things as (and you have to hear it in that gravelly Arkansas accent):

There was a demon that lived in the air. They said whoever challenged
him would die. Their controls would freeze up, their planes would
buffet wildly, and they would disintegrate. The demon lived at Mach 1
on the meter, seven hundred and fifty miles an hour, where the air
could no longer move out of the way. He lived behind a barrier through
which they said no man could ever pass. They called it the sound
barrier.

Well, as it turned out that, to paraphrase Sam Shepard as Yeager, the damned thing didn’t even exist. At least, it didn’t exist in the sense of being something that would rip your ears off if you tried to go through it. So test pilots kept pushing the limit back. When Scott Crossfield actually passed Mach 2, Jack Ridley (also portrayed by Levon Helm), assures Yeager et al. that there are still frontiers to be challenged:

The real test wasn’t Mach 2. That demon lives at about 2.3 on your machmeter.

So it is that I find myself saying that ol’ demon that’ll kill the SUV wasn’t really to be found at $3 a gallon. That demon lives more at about $4 or $5 on your gas pump.

Kidding aside, I think an immediate, all-at-once increase of a dollar or even two — something that can only be achieved with a tax increase — would have a shock effect that gradual increase would not. The debate leading up to such an increase would be filled with such emotion, such doomsday moaning and crying, that when it actually happened, it would have a tremendous psychological effect.

Admittedly, that effect might wear off if that was then the permanent price, as others have suggested and I have endorsed. But even if consumption crept back up, less of the money would be going to the petrodictators, and more would be going into paying for research for ways to become independent of those sources for good.

Mercury

What if the Brits gave up on the American experiment?

The last few days have revealed to me that among my readers at least, Joe Biden gets a lot of respect. Sort of makes you wonder why he’s not doing better in the polls. But there are detractors, and some of them have thoughtful things to say as well.

So far, I give the prize in that department to our own Michael Rodgers, who (in case you missed it back here) parodied the Biden/Brownback approach to Iraq thusly:

I just heard that some members of Britain’s parliament have decided that the US government isn’t living up to its promise.  They propose to partition our country into three regions based on ethnicity & skin color.  They propose three classifications: white, black, and hispanic.  They say that anyone who doesn’t clearly fit into any category will have to apply to become a member of one of those three categories, and a draft will be held, like in one skit from Chappelle’s Show.  They say that whites will live in the north and the rockies, blacks will live in a line from Michigan down to Louisiana and Florida, and hispanics will have the southwest.  All white Floridians will be required to move to New Jersey (unless they wish to apply to be black, and then they can stay if approved by the black caucus, unless they get drafted by the whites first).

The members of British parliament say that they have the votes to achieve such a resolution, and that it’s only a matter of time.  They say it’s necessary to prevent violence between the races in that unstable and fledgling US democracy they created just a few short centuries ago.  They cite the recent race violence in Jena, Louisiana and recent gang activity in Mauldin, SC as proof of the unstable nature of the citizens of the US.  The parliamentarian’s rallying cry is that "the Americans of all races are just not ready for democracy." 

Critics in parliament say that there is progress being made, and that this new partition plan should be shelved for 90 days until Washington can deliver on their promises.  These critics of the partition plan cite recent convictions of members of the mob by Patrick Fitzgerald in Chicago as proof of progress for justice and the rule of law over sectarian violence.

American polls strongly indicate that they oppose such a partition plan.  Also Washington declares the plan ridiculous on its face.  President Bush declared, "America is a stable, unified government that is in complete control of it legal and illegal population.  Just because we use vigilante minutemen to patrol our Southern border does not mean we have no respect for the law."  President Bush elaborated, "Before we invaded Iraq, I sent Colin Powell to get the UN to pass a resolution that contained language that I feel allowed me to invade Iraq legally.  That’s how I respect international law.  And I got the US Congress to give me a resolution authorizing me to invade Iraq.  That’s how I respect the US Constitution."  Finally, President Bush declared, "And that’s why the USA is a strong country that shouldn’t be partitioned by Britain."

There is support for the partition plan in Washington, though.  After all, why shouldn’t an outside force decide how a new democratic government should be formed?  Hey, if Britain wants to pay the bills and get access to our natural resources, why shouldn’t they decide how to partition the USA?  The British have an excellent history of successful nation building by partitioning.  They split the Indian subcontinent into India and Pakistan, and, while there have been some wars, and now both India and Pakistan are nuclear powers, all in all, it turned out to be a complete success.

Supporters of the USA partition see it as an example of how the US should partition Iraq.  They scoff at the notion that perhaps the United Nations should be the organization that debates such outside actions imposed on fledgling democracies.  "That’s a bankrupt institution," they say, "that can’t even organize a plan to help Darfur."  Critics counter that it was Colin Powell’s efforts with the United Nations that gave President Bush’s invasion of Iraq the semblance of legitimacy that it has.  They say that Condoleezza Rice should report back to the United Nations, and that the Security Council should decide whether to recognize or reconstitute the Iraq government.  With the US, as well as Russia, Britain, China and France, holding veto power on the Security Council, perhaps neither partition plan will pass there.

But the British parliament may go it alone and partition the USA.  And perhaps the US Congress will go it alone and partition Iraq.  Hey, at least it’s a plan.

Who would qualify for SCHIP?

Noticing questions raised in response to this post, a colleague passed along info collected yesterday, after an editorial board discussion of the issue:

The claim: The proposal would allow coverage of families earning $83,000.
The facts: The bill essentially sets an income ceiling of three times the poverty rate for a family of four – $61,950. Beyond that, the federal government would not pay a state its full SCHIP match, which averages about 70 percent. New York state is seeking a waiver that would allow its residents to qualify if their income is not above four times the poverty rate – $82,600 for a family of four. The current administration or future administrations would have to approve that request. New Jersey would still be allowed to cover families with incomes three and one-half times the poverty rate – $72,275 for a family of four.

Here’s the full news story from which that was gleaned:

By KEVIN FREKING
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) – Congress’ proposal to expand a child health care program gives states the financial incentive to expand eligibility for coverage to families of four earning about $62,000 a year.
   That’s a figure that seldom emerges in the claims and counterclaims being tossed about.
   The Bush administration and many Republicans oppose the proposal as a big step toward socialized medicine. They much prefer to cite $83,000 – the ceiling that would apply to families of four only in New York state, and then only if the Health and Human Services Department approves a requested amendment to the state’s current SCHIP plan.
   Democrats, 45 Republicans in the House, many Senate GOP colleagues and other supporters of the expansion prefer to rattle off the figure $40,000. They say that about 70 percent to 80 percent of enrollees in the program would be children in families with incomes less that twice the poverty level. The poverty level is defined by the Census Bureau as $20,650 for a family of four.
   Just what would happen under the bill passed Tuesday by the House, up for a vote later this week in the Senate and then sure to get a veto from President Bush? Here are some of the claims, and what in fact the bill would actually do:
   The claim: The proposal would encourage families to substitute public insurance for private insurance.
   The facts: The Congressional Budget Office projects that about 3.8 million people would become insured as a result of the bill, and about 2 million more will move from private coverage to public coverage. CBO Director Peter Orszag said the substitution rate of one-third was "pretty much as good as you’re going to get" absent a mandate on employers to provide coverage or the insuree to buy it.
   The claim: The proposal would allow coverage of families earning $83,000.
   The facts: The bill essentially sets an income ceiling of three times the poverty rate for a family of four – $61,950. Beyond that, the federal government would not pay a state its full SCHIP match, which averages about 70 percent. New York state is seeking a waiver that would allow its residents to qualify if their income is not above four times the poverty rate – $82,600 for a family of four. The current administration or future administrations would have to approve that request. New Jersey would still be allowed to cover families with incomes three and one-half times the poverty rate – $72,275 for a family of four.
   The claim: The bill would make it easier for children of illegal immigrants to get government-sponsored health coverage.
   The facts: Currently, states are required to seek proof of U.S. citizenship before they provide Medicaid coverage, except in emergencies. The states now require applicants to show documents like birth certificates or passports in order to prove U.S. citizenship and nationality. The bill would allow applicants to submit a Social Security number instead.
   Michael J. Astrue, commissioner for the Social Security Administration, said that matching a Social Security number with an individual does not allow officials to verify whether someone is a U.S. citizen.
   The claim: The proposed 61 cent tax on a pack of cigarettes is a tax on the poor.
   The facts: According to a recent analysis by the National Center for Health Statistics, smoking rates are higher for those who live in poverty or near poverty than among wealthier individuals. Also, a more dated analysis cited by the National Center for Policy Analysis, a conservative think tank, states that two-thirds of federal tobacco taxes come from those earning less than $40,000 a year.

Click on the links, folks

Just got this comment on a previous post:

Does having the word "reform" in the title of this organization
blind you to what is going on? The stated purpose of Governor Sanford’s
new advocacy group is to function as a PAC, supporting candidates who
back Sanford’s agenda to "modernize" the state government by giving the
Governor more policy-making authority. You miss two important points.
So far Governor Sanford’s thrust in modernization has been to shift the
tax burden (drop top income tax rate, shift property tax on high-end
properties to sales tax) more toward middle and lower income citizens.
The other key point he has pushed is private school vouchers. His main
tool has been public deceptive bashing of the public schools laced with
Libertarian rationale and shadow groups targeting the Republican and
Democratic opponents of his scheme. The seed money for this group came
from his left-over war chest funded largely by out-of-state and local
well-heeled donors. He plans to use PAC money to threaten legislators
who don’t back his agenda as thoroughly as he wants. If it walks and
quacks like a PAC, it’s a PAC. Wake up, Brad.

Posted by: Harry Harris | Sep 27, 2007 8:26:09 AM

To which I respond:

Oh, I’ve been awake, Harry. I’m the guy who ran down the street SCREAMING THE NEWS (click on the link if you’ve forgotten).
    This post is about the fact that at least NOW he’s talking about actual
reform. To start with, his libertarian extremist agenda was all that
was being mentioned. Now at least there’s a decent goal in the mix. I take that for exactly what it’s worth, and no more.

Which brings me to my real point today: EVERYONE, PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINKS. Before you
assume that I, of all people, don’t "get it" when it comes to Sanford’s
extremism
, CLICK ON THE LINKS. Everything that I write should be seen
within the context of everything else I’ve written. The wonderful thing
about writing on the Web is that you can address the point of the
moment, and link to all the context. It saves you and me both from a lot of boring
repetition.

At least, it’s boring to me.

Seriously, this ability to simply continue a dialogue without all the repetition may be the greatest charm of a blog to me. The extent to which that connectivity is interrupted — such as, when something I wrote in the paper is no longer available online — is probably one of my greatest frustrations. That’s why you’ll see me go to the trouble to imbed Word files with old columns and such — that’s my workaround, and I take the time to do it because the background is important.

Yes, I know that sometimes my links are a bit frivolous, just because I get such a kick out of playing with the device. If it will help, I’ll try to be more disciplined about it, and limit the links to the really important stuff. Let me know if you think I need to do that, and I will at least try — but only if y’all will follow the links that remain. This goes both way, you know.

Privacy freaks are SO sensitive

This morning I received this criticism from certain party who will remain nameless:

    Huh???

One of our widest divides is between me and Cindi Scoppe on privacy. She is always concerned about protecting it; my own attitude can be represented, with only slight exaggeration, as "privacy, schmeivacy."

    Where did you come up with THAT gross, wild overstatement of my position?
    Do I care about privacy? Yes. About as much as the typical American. (You, sir, are atypical.) Am I "always concerned about protecting it" — ie, the OPPOSITE of you? Absolutely not. I would come up with examples, but frankly I don’t think about it often enough to have a ready supply of examples to give you.
    One of our widest divides? I can only assume you are engaging in outrageous hyperbole for the sake of making a blog post work.

You see how touchy these privacy freaks can be?

Next thing you know, she’ll say I violated her privacy by posting this. Just watch.