Good morning, and welcome to the New York Times. The
Grey Old Hag finally
got one of its own reporters on the week-old week-long
ACORN
pimp/prostitute stories that’s exposed the radicals using
their own rules, but not surprisingly the Times has
their unique way of doing things. The spin? The well-worn
“conservatives get a scalp” approach, almost as tired as the
weekly Sunday talk show “he said, she said” stories. In other
words, it was about the political baseball game rather than the
scummy behavior. This is how reporter Scott Shane saw it:
Conservative advocates and broadcasters were gleeful about
the success of the tactics in exposing Acorn workers, who
appeared to blithely encourage prostitution and tax evasion. It
was, in effect, the latest scalp claimed by those on the right
who have made no secret of their hope to weaken the Obama
administration by attacking allies and appointees they view as
leftist.
The Acorn controversy came a week after the resignation of
Van Jones, a White House environmental official attacked by
conservatives, led by Glenn Beck of Fox
News Channel, for once signing a petition suggesting that Bush
administration officials might have deliberately permitted the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Even before Mr. Jones stepped down,
Mr. Beck had sent a message to supporters on Twitter urging them to
“find everything you can” on three other Obama appointees.
Appointees “they view” as leftist? Only a leftist himself would
phrase it that way, because the effort is to expose actual
leftists. The leftists are blind to who they actually are,
believing instead that they are mainstream. And as for Beck’s
appeal for help, the Olde Media is still playing catch-up on the
new way of doing things: We Twitter, we Facebook, we communicate
because we already know the hearts and minds of those three
appointees (Cass Sunstein, Mark Lloyd, and Carol Browner).
More from Shane:
In a statement over the weekend, Bertha Lewis, the chief
organizer for Acorn, said the bogus prostitute and pimp had
spent months visiting numerous Acorn offices, including those
in San Diego, Los Angeles, Miami and Philadelphia, before
getting the responses they were looking for.
Nice of Shane to cover Bertha’s butt by leaving one city out of
her
original statement (which appears to have been
removed from ACORN’s Web site)
from the weekend:
This recent scam, which was attempted in San Diego, Los
Angeles, Miami, New York,
Philadelphia to name a few places, had failed for months before
the results we’ve all recently seen.
Videographers James O’Keefe and Hannah Giles (the “pimp” and the
“prostitute”) unveiled on Monday
the helpful ACORN employees in Brooklyn, belying Lewis’s
claim that their efforts failed there. Just a coincidence that
ACORN took down her statement at the same time the Times
scrubbed its hometown’s name from her remarks?
Repeat after me, Scott Shane: “I am Van Jones, I am Van Jones, I
am Van Jones…”