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Going Nuclear

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hook| 12.14.12 @ 3:24PM

Matthews isn't bright; he is intellectually dishonest as the day is long; he is continually committing slanders of the most absurd sort; he openly campaigns for Obama has lied about Palin, Bachmann, W, Romney, Gingrich and anyone who might pose a threat to his beloved incompetent and destructive president. But what do you expect from someone who thinks Jimmy Carter, a wonderful person.

When talking late in Obama's first term about how the economy was the fault of the last president, "a man of limited ability," he conveniently failed to mention that his hero had a supermajority for two years and put himself in a small minority of presidents who truly can and do affect the economy.

He doesn't have the guts to interview strong conservatives and generally interviews people who agree with him, and even some of those seem embarassed.

He is a disgrace as a pundit.

chuck| 12.16.12 @ 12:15PM

Chris who??

Does anybody watch this crap?

Vance P. Frickey| 12.16.12 @ 6:48PM

I guess Matthews is the moldy tomato in the fridge. Seriously, though, one can discern a lot by who supports a party or a political "side." Among liberal pundits, Fox News gets Juan Williams, who is impassioned, articulate and generally makes the best case that can be made for liberalism when he speaks. He was released by PBS for commenting about the First Lady's designer tastes and exotic vacations when her husband had just won re-election on the dire state of the economy - observations shared by many of the people sharing the bill for Michelle Obama's Spanish Adventure

NBC News gets Chris Matthews, Laurence O'Donnell and Brian Williams. I'd rather listen to Juan Williams. I think that liberalism as it exists inside the Beltway has shown its intellectual and moral bankruptcy by one of its most influential news outlets dismissing a thoughtful and intelligent commentator for questioning how the First Lady showed her sensitivity toward the fifteen-twenty percent of the American people who are unemployed. If that comment had been directed at Laura Bush during her husband's administration (as PBS's Daniel Schorr or Bill Moyers might have done), Juan Williams would still have been working at PBS.

More Blog Posts by Yogi Love

http://spectator.org/blog/2012/12/14/going-nuclear

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