Baphomet's AdvocateQUOTE
Who cares? Is the NYT still in business?
Off topic
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The important thing here is that the NYT had this story sitting around when they ENDORSED McCain!
The editorial page and the investigative reporters are in different departments. Besides that, the other candidates weren't exactly star material.
Baphomet's Advocate:QUOTE
There are a lot of named sources who have refuted this bit of fluff for nearly a decade yet the NYT runs the story with two unnamed sources? They wonder why no one trusts them or buys their paper.
In regards to the affair matter, you would perhaps be right. However, did he go to bat for the client of the lobbyist? Why did he write
two letters to the FCC which earned him a rebuke from the FCC head? Would you have someone tell a judge or a committee to hear a matter about you to hurry it up?
Amlord:QUOTE
How come it didn't come out then? Or four years ago when McCain was the media darling? Or two months ago before McCain all but sewed up the nomination?
The timing allegation can't be taken seriously. The
Times investigation only began in November. Since that time, a series of meetings with McCain's attorney, Bob Bennett was held and questions were fielded. On top of that, three drafts of the report were created as thed editor and the reporters had a huge disagreement. He won in that they had to tamp down the affair stuff a bit, and were asked to focus more on the lobbyist item. If anything, they held on to it as demonstrated by the above facts and an e-mail released today from
TNR:
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"Our policy is, we publish stories when they are ready. 'Ready' means the facts have been nailed down to our satisfaction, the subjects have all been given a full and fair chance to respond, and the reporting has been written up with all the proper context and caveats." Important as the story may indeed turn out to be, it may have provided the Times' critics with a few caveats too many.
Source.Quite frankly, I'm bothered by the arguments that the article is "unsourced" according to critics. Anonymous doesn't mean unsourced. As a matter of fact, the editor had information corroborated by others before he ran with the report that the reporters came up with. Furthermore,
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In interviews, the two former associates said they joined in a series of confrontations with Mr. McCain, warning him that he was risking his campaign and career. Both said Mr. McCain acknowledged behaving inappropriately and pledged to keep his distance from Ms. Iseman. The two associates, who said they had become disillusioned with the senator, spoke independently of each other and provided details that were corroborated by others.
SourceLabeling the Times as "liberal" isn't good enough. If they were in the wrong, then they should be sued. The Times says they have the evidence to publish the piece, which puzzles me as to why a politician I heard on the radio would say it is "unsourced." He needs to get his facts right or McCain needs to file a tort. Not doing so will tell me that to some degree, the story has credence.
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This thread is set up for partisan bashing, not debating. You have only made the point that if the Republicans can do it, so can the Democrats. This proves my point.
The first question is more than fair and questions 2 and 3 off-set each other. Responses will either be "yes-no" or "no-yes" according to a person's politics. If being "partisan" is to point out what two sources with corrobaration have stated to reporters, and if acting unduly to influence a regulatory decision is "partisan," then I would say that being "partisan" is a good thing. This is a debate board, not a hallowed ground where a given candidate or issue is given quarter.

Use facts about sources or whether or not undue influence was used and run with it. Provide hyperlinks, not one-liner humorous anecdotes and appeals to "fairness."