Intermarkets' Privacy Policy
Support


Donate to Ace of Spades HQ!


Contact
Ace:
aceofspadeshq at gee mail.com
Buck:
buck.throckmorton at protonmail.com
CBD:
cbd at cutjibnewsletter.com
joe mannix:
mannix2024 at proton.me
MisHum:
petmorons at gee mail.com
J.J. Sefton:
sefton at cutjibnewsletter.com


Recent Entries
Absent Friends
Jon Ekdahl 2026
Jay Guevara 2025
Jim Sunk New Dawn 2025
Jewells45 2025
Bandersnatch 2024
GnuBreed 2024
Captain Hate 2023
moon_over_vermont 2023
westminsterdogshow 2023
Ann Wilson(Empire1) 2022
Dave In Texas 2022
Jesse in D.C. 2022
OregonMuse 2022
redc1c4 2021
Tami 2021
Chavez the Hugo 2020
Ibguy 2020
Rickl 2019
Joffen 2014
AoSHQ Writers Group
A site for members of the Horde to post their stories seeking beta readers, editing help, brainstorming, and story ideas. Also to share links to potential publishing outlets, writing help sites, and videos posting tips to get published. Contact OrangeEnt for info:
maildrop62 at proton dot me
Cutting The Cord And Email Security
Moron Meet-Ups





















« In Ohio: Bush by 12 | Main | Dan Rather's Unimpeachable Source »
September 15, 2004

Dan Rather: Unindicted Co-Conspirator

Beldar Blog is quite beyond giving Dan Rather the benefit of the doubt. He says that Dan Rather was not some ignorant dupe, but rather an active conspirator in the fraud, and you should believe him.

So, what do we have, ladies and gentleman?

* A war unpopular with the liberals.

* A major institution rocked by an enormous scandal that actually appears fairly petty and shabby when you look closely at it.

* A cover-up which threatens to be worse than the crime.

* A secret source who has become the object of a thousand guessing games.

* The question, "What did he know, and when did he know it?"

* An co-conspirator, unindicted, but guilty as sin.

* A crime intended to swing an election, most likely assisted by officials of one of the two political parties.

* Improbably enough, a simple secretary, once again somehow smack-dab in the middle of the scandal.

* And, in a stroke of transcendental irony that just may prove that God exists after all (and that he's kind of a josher), Dan Rather at the center of the storm. Only this time he's on the dirty side, where's he always belonged.

Richard Nixon asked Dan Rather, "Are you running for something?"

It's time to ask Dan Rather that again. Because he's not acting like a journalist, nor even like a professional. He's acting like the shabbiest of sleazy machine-politicians, desperately slashing and thrashing his accusers, angry and paranoid that he's finally been caught out.

It is time for Dan Rather to go.

It is time to put our long national nightmare behind us.


posted by Ace at 01:55 AM
Comments



One other parallel: Plenty of public acclaim for the "journalists" who broke the story.

Posted by: Allah on September 15, 2004 02:13 AM

Ace,

Well said.

On these very pages I had argued that Rather had to know that the memos were forgeries.

There yet may be the chance that if Rather didn't know, he at the very least, was prepared to go with them knowing they had a nefarious provenance. Which is all-but the same thing.

The idea that Dan Rather was duped is as absurd as the memos themselves.

I mean really. Did Dan Rather just fall off the back of the turnip truck?

I think not.

Posted by: MeTooThen on September 15, 2004 02:22 AM

Allah,

Maybe you got some public acclaim, NY Sun-boy.

I'm still waiting for Byron Allen to return my fucking call.

Posted by: ace on September 15, 2004 02:30 AM

Sheeeit. Who was it whose posts Hugh Hewitt was calling "devastating" recently?

You made the Swift Blog Vets for Truth class photo, didn't you? Well then.

Posted by: Allah on September 15, 2004 02:42 AM

Is CBS a 527 or a 401(c)(3)? This would actually be funny if it weren't so pathetic.

Posted by: Mike H. on September 15, 2004 03:30 AM

Alternately, if Rather was so far out of the loop as to be genuinely ignorant of what was happening, then he is no longer capable of doing his job and should retire.

Posted by: Eric Pobirs on September 15, 2004 03:32 AM

Nixon is spinning, er, laughing in his grave.

Posted by: rdbrewer on September 15, 2004 11:37 AM

What a backtrack CBS is orchestrating!! First, CBS touted their 60 minutes story as based on groundbreaking new documents that had never been seen before (even by Mr. Killian, apparently). Now that the documents are clearly crude forgeries, we hear that these same “groundbreaking” documents were never really important to the story. This is called liberals “moving the goalposts”. Is the economy coming back? Well, the unemployment rate is still high. Is the unemployment rate down to 5.4%? Well, there are still industries in Ohio that are suffering. Eventually, one gets the impression that Bush must be replaced so long as someone is suffering anywhere in the country.

Here’s an obvious point: If the memos weren’t essential to the story, Rather wouldn’t be stubbornly vouching for them despite all evidence to the contrary. It’s an ironic picture watching a person desperately clinging to something that he’s simultaneously insisting is irrelevant.

Posted by: Thoughtful critic on September 15, 2004 11:52 AM

Take my advice Dan! Don't listen to those pajama'd wimps in the Blogosphere. Tough it out, man! Stonewall, cover it up, fight! Never give up, never quit! Courage, Kenneth!

Devil's Designated Tormentor - After Action Report: Subject R. Nixon was observed chortling after he wrote the above email. I cannot attest to each word, but subject Nixon seemed to want me to get the gist of what he then said in a sotto voice: "Take my advice Dan, oh please, yes, yes, it's warm down here and I want to grab your ankles and drag you down to have some company. Ha. ha. ha,". Just to let Nixon know he can't diss the Devil, I jammed my pitchfork into his ass and tossed him into a pool of molten sulfur. Nixon emerged laughing and asked for a purple heart.

Posted by: Dick Nixon in Purgatory on September 15, 2004 01:56 PM
Post a comment
Name:


Email Address:


URL:


Comments:


Remember info?








Now Available!
The Deplorable Gourmet
A Horde-sourced Cookbook
[All profits go to charity]
Top Headlines
Oil prices plunge on bizarre realization that Eric Swalwell may actually be straight. A rapey molester, allegedly, but a straight one.
Classic Rock Mystery Click
This is super-obscure and I only barely remember it. Given that, I'll give you the hint that it's by the Red Rocker.
And I guess you think you've got it made
Oh, but then, you never were afraid
Of anything that you've left behind
Oh, but it's alright with me now
'Cause I'll get back up somehow
And with a little luck, yes, I'm bound to win

Now twenty people will tell me it's not obscure, it was huge in their hometown and played at their prom. That's how it usually goes. When I linked Donnie Iris's "Love is Like a Rock," everyone said they knew that one and that his other song (which I didn't know at all) Ah Leah! was huge in their area.
You know we "joke" about the GOPe just "conserving" leftist things?
David French just posted:

Populists ask what conservativism has ever conserved?
Well its about to conserve birthright citizenship!
Posted by: 18-1

I couldn't hate this queen of the cuck-chair more if it paid seven figures and came with a corner office.
CJN podcast 1400 copy.jpg
Podcast: CBD and Sefton talk birthright citizenship, the 14th Amendment and SCOTUS, no boots in Iran, Artemis II and refocusing NASA, the NBA's hatred of everything non-woke, and more!
In more marketing for Project Hail Mary, scientists say they've found the biosigns indicating life growing on an alien planet. It's not proof, just signatures of chemicals that are produced by biological metabolism, and it could be nothing, but scientists think it's a strong sign that this planet is inhabited by something.
In a paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, a team of scientists announced the detection of dimethyl sulfide (along with a similar detection of dimethyl disulfide) in the atmosphere of an exoplanet called K2-18b. This is actually the second detection of dimethyl sulfide made on this planet, following a tentative detection in 2023.
Tons of chemicals are detected in the atmospheres of celestial objects every day. But dimethyl sulfide is different, because on Earth, it's only produced by living organisms.
"It is a shock to the system," Nikku Madhusudhan, first author on the paper, told the New York Times. "We spent an enormous amount of time just trying to get rid of the signal."

He means they tried to prove the signal was caused by things other than dimethyl sulfide but they could not.
Artemis moon shot a go, scheduled for 6:24 Eastern time tonight
Great marketing arranged by Amazon to promote Project Hail Mary. Okay not really but it does work out that way.
What? Skeleton of the most famous Musketeer, D'Artagnan, possibly discovered in Dutch church closet.
Dumas picked four names of real musketeers out of a history book, D'Artagnan, Athos, Aramis, and Porthos. So there was an actual D'Artagnan, though he made most of the story up. (Or, you know, all of it.)*
Charles de Batz de Castelmore, known as d'Artagnan, the famous musketeer of Kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV, spent his life in the service of the French crown.
The Gascon nobleman inspired Alexandre Dumas's hero in "The Three Musketeers" in the 19th century, a character now known worldwide thanks to the novel and numerous film adaptations.
D'Artagnan was killed during the siege of Maastricht in 1673, and there is a statue honoring the musketeer in the city. His final resting place has remained a mystery ever since.

A lot of Dumas's stories are based on bits of real history. The plot of the >Three Musketeers, about trying to recover lost diamonds from the queen's necklace, was cribbed from the then-almost-contemporaneous Affair of the Queen's Necklace. And the Man in the Iron Mask is based on real accounts of a prisoner forced to wear a mask (though I think it was a velvet mask).
* Oh, I should mention, Dumas says all this, about finding the names in an old book, in the prologue to his novel. But authors lie a lot. They frequently present fictions as based on historic fact. The twist is, he was actually telling the truth here. At least about these four musketeers having actually existed and served under Louis XIV.
Fun fact: You know the beginning of A Fistful of Dollars where the local gunslingers make fun of Clint Eastwood's donkey and Eastwood demands they apologize to the donkey? That's lifted from The Three Musketeers. Rochefort mocks D'Artagnan's old, brokedown farm horse and D'Artagnan is incensed.
A commenter asked which should be read first, The Hobbit of LOTR?
Easy, no question -- read The Hobbit first. It's actually the start of the story and comes first chronologically. It sets up some major characters and major pieces in play in LOTR.
Also, the Hobbit is Beginner-Friendly, which LOTR isn't. The Hobbit really is a delightful book, and a fast read. It's chatty, it's casual, it's exciting, and it's funny. In that dry cheeky British humor way. I love that the narrator is constantly making little asides and commentary, like he's just sitting next to you telling you this story as it occurs to him.
LOTR is a very long story. Fifteen hundred pages or so. The Hobbit is relatively short and very punchy and easy to read. If you don't like The Hobbit, you can skip out on LOTR. If you do like it, you'll be primed to read LOTR.
Oh, I should say: The Hobbit is written as if it's for children, but one of those smart children's stories that are also for adults. Don't worry, there's also real fighting and violence and horror in it, too.
LOTR is written for adults. (It's said that Tolkien wrote both for his children, but LOTR was written 17 years later, when his children were adults.) Some might not like The Hobbit due to its sometimes frivolous tone. Me, I love it. I find it constantly amusing. Both are really good but there is a starkly different tone to both. LOTR is epic, grand, and serious, about a world war, The Hobbit is light and breezy, and about a heist. Though a heist that culminates in a war for the spoils.
The Hobbit Challenge: Read two more chapters. I didn't have much time. Bilbo got the ring.
I noticed a continuity problem. Maybe. Now, as of the time of The Hobbit, it was unknown that this magic ring was in fact a Ring of Power, and it was doubly unknown that it was the Ring of Power, the Master Ring that controlled the others.
But the narrator -- who we will learn in LOTR was none of than Bilbo himself, who wrote the book as "There and Back Again" -- says this about Gollum's ring:
"But who knows how Gollum had come by that present [the Ring], ages ago in the old days when such rings were still at large in the world? Perhaps even the Master who ruled them could not have said."
In another passage, the ring is identified as a "ring of power."
I don't know, I always thought there was a distinction between mere magic rings and the Rings of Power created by Sauron. But this suggests that Bilbo knew this was a ring of power created by Sauron.
Now I don't remember when Bilbo wrote the Hobbit. In the movie, he shows Frodo the book in Rivendell, and I guess he wrote it after he left the Shire. I guess he might have added in the part about the ring being a ring of power created by "the Master" after Gandalf appraised him of his research into the ring.
I never noticed this before. I know Tolkien re-wrote this chapter while he was writing LOTR to make the ring important from the start. And also to make Gollum more sinister and evil, and also to remove the part where Gollum actually offers Bilbo the ring as a "present" -- Bilbo had already found it on his own, but Gollum was wiling to give it away, which obviously is not something the rewritten Gollum would ever do.
But I had no memory of the ring being suggested to be The Ring so early in the tale.
Finish the job, Mr. President!
Melanie Phillips lays out the case for the total destruction of the Iranian government and armed forces. [CBD]
Recent Comments
AltonJackson: " g'mornin', 'rons ..."

[/b][/i][/u][/s]I used to have a different nic: "JJ, bad link for "Counterpoint: with backstabbing ..."

Cow Demon: "Some clown named Zul Mohammed is running for Carro ..."

Martini Farmer: "Yonder Horde ..."

NaCly Dog: "Also with good stuff: https://midwestchick.com/ ..."

NR Pax: "[i]A US Marine was fatally stabbed during a massiv ..."

Have ya noticed?: "Not much ceasing in this ceasefire. ..."

Washington Nearsider: Gotterdammerung: "At this point it certainly looks as if President T ..."

NaCly Dog: "Heart tugging Lego video: https://t.co/90kDp2X ..."

The media we all ignore : "They're mostly peaceful missiles. ..."

San Franpsycho: "Good morning again dear morons and happy birthday ..."

Huck Follywood: "Famous people get some weird fans, as Judith Durha ..."

Bloggers in Arms
Some Humorous Asides
Archives