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Robert McCain repeatedly makes the claim that the media has attacked Sarah Palin unfairly, yet doesn’t provide any specific examples of this. As far as I can tell, the media has accurately reported numerous facts about her political career, such as her support for millions of dollars of earmarks including the Bridge to Nowhere, her commitment to taking away a woman’s right to choose an abortion even in the case of rape and incest, and various political intrigues including Troopergate.
p>Reporting factual information about all the candidates is what I expect from the media. And the media cannot be blamed if these facts cast some candidates in a more favorable light than others. Mr. McCain needs to quit whining. br> — Kenneth Utting br> Jacksonville, Florida /p>From the Ranarian Republic, Gabriel Sabbagh croaked this query — “Who traded an unattractive wife against a rodeo beauty with a lot of money?” — then mused: “Presumably “the other” McCain is not the right man to author a book on these flaws of the Republican Party.”
Perhaps he could do one on Union pour Mouvement Populaire? Let’s see, now…Nicolas Sarkozy traded an unattractive wife against a statuesque Schiaparelli model, dumped her (after being publicly cuckolded), and ushered into Palais d’Elysee a sultry singer/songwriter whose background includes being a peek-a-boo model and having serial affairs with sundry celebrities, some of whom were married.
p>There’s a delightful French phrase maisons de verre . It seems appropriate, no? br> —
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Chris Moraghan| 7.20.10 @ 8:21PM
Don Parnell writes that "anti-English vitriol seemed to donimate radio waves" on one occasion when he turned in to BBC Radio Scotland. The BBC observes strict standards would not allow the kind of thing that he describes. I would also point out that Rob Johnston's letter did not deny that there is a certain amount of Anglophobia in Scottish society: he merely pointed out that such prejudice is not prevalent and that a certain amount of anti-Scottish sentiment exists in England. I am an Englishman who has lived in Scotland for the last 14 years and I can assure Mr. Parnell that if he has "friends in Scotland who have a common hatred of England", then he should chose his friends more carefully. The propagators of xenophobic hatred are a small idiot minority on both sides of the Anglo-Scottish Border. Most people in Britain are not like that.
Bill Kyler| 8.24.10 @ 9:09PM
Re: Don Parnell’s letter (under “I Say, My Dear Fellow” in Reader Mail’s ‘Hail King Henry’, in which he takes issue with Rob Johnston’s letter (under “Finding Scotland” in Reader Mail’s ‘Panic City’).
As an American citizen who has lived for a number of years in England, I agree with Chris Moraghan’s remarks on this matter.
First off, (with all due respect to Mr. Parnell) I cannot help but think that Mr. Johnson (as a Scotsman who lived in England) is better qualified to judge the extent of anti-Scottish prejudice in England than a visiting American: especially since he appears to have been in direct receipt of more than a little of it himself.
Second thing. Mr. Parnell seems to equate “talk of Scottish secession” with Anglophobia. Does this mean he reckons anyone who doesn’t want their country to be ruled by England necessarily hates the English people? Where does that analysis leave George Washington and Mahatma Gandhi? Does Mr. Parnell think the U.S.A. should return to English rule? I know what most Americans would say to that proposition – and it would not be fit to print! But does that really make us England-hating racists?