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Reason November 2005 Cathy Young |
An Echo Chamber of His Own Writer Bernie Goldberg used to spend his time disrupting the ideological monotony of the mainstream media. Now he's just preaching to a rival choir. |
Salon.com June 27, 2002 Charles Taylor |
When right-wing fembots attack Ann Coulter dishes out a fresh bookful of hypocrisy, distortion and half-crazed rants. Can't conservatives find a better champion than this? |
Reason October 2002 Sara Rimensnyder |
Bitch Goddess Ann Coulter's perverse appeal |
BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Mike France |
Is There A Market For Nonpartisan News? One of the worst by-products of our venomously partisan political culture is a growing distrust of anyone who claims to be nonpartisan -- particularly journalists. |
Salon.com April 17, 2002 David Talbot |
Fight or flight? David Brock's expose of the Republican attack machine shows that Democrats have to get serious about fighting back. And that doesn't mean Al Gore's Florida-style fisticuffs... |
Reason October 2003 Cathy Young |
Bipartistan Coulterism Who's meaner, conservatives or liberals? |
Reason November 2004 Brian Doherty |
Right-Wingers Redux Are we a conservative nation? Does it matter? Book reviews: The A satirical cartoon of the American political machine... The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America... |
Reason May 2002 Cathy Young |
Intellectual Warfare Pseudo-intellectuals and pseudo-populists duke it out... |
Reason April 2002 Tim Cavanaugh |
Bloviation Nation If news junkies are fed up with palaver, they've got a funny way of showing it... |
Reason April 2007 Cathy Young |
The Impact of Academic Bias American professors do lean to the left -- but are students listening? |
Salon.com July 3, 2001 Joe Conason |
Give him a break Why do pundits heap scorn on writer David Brock, who lied to protect Clarence Thomas, but give a pass to other disgraced journalists -- like Mike Barnicle and John Stossel? |
Salon.com May 17, 2001 Daryl Lindsey & Kerry Lauerman |
Smearing David Brock Ted Olson's defenders say the former right-wing journalist had nothing to do with the Arkansas Project. But the project's own records prove they're wrong... |
Psychology Today Jan/Feb 2007 Jay Dixit |
The Ideological Animal We think our political stance is the product of reason, but we're easily manipulated and surprisingly malleable. The effects of psychological terror on political decision making can be eliminated just by asking people to think rationally. |