Monday, November 16, 2009

Young conservative journalist Hannah Giles speaks in Santa Barbara

Click here for the story. When it comes to exposing corruption, Hannah Giles and James O'Keefe are running rings around the Truth to Power news organizations. Not to mention the pitiful 11 fact-checkers at AP.
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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

ACORN Goes for Broke (American Spectator)

As its financial resources dwindle, radical advocacy group and organized crime syndicate ACORN may have to file for bankruptcy protection before Christmas, ACORN insiders say.
"They may have to file for bankruptcy if they don't have several big pending grants approved or get emergency loans," a highly placed ACORN source told me over the weekend. This information bolsters Rep. Darrell Issa's (R-Calif.) claim last week that ACORN is in turmoil amidst internal power struggles and on the verge of bankruptcy.

Anonymous said...

Giles and O'Keefe should win the Pulitzer but the state-run media won't award it to journalists who made them look ridiculous and useless.

Anonymous said...

Sarah Palin/Hannah Giles for President/Vice President in 2012!

A true dream team!

Anonymous said...

Somebody who poses as something other than a journalist isn't a journalist. She did an important thing, but it's not journalism.

Anonymous said...

It's actually much higher than today's journalistic standards. She reported on a corrupt organization that the phony real media wouldn't even investigate.

Anonymous said...

In a segment of her interview with Oprah Winfrey, which was posted online but did not air on television, Sarah Palin was asked whether her family had voted on her decision to accept John McCain's offer to join him on the Republican ticket in August of 2008.

"This time, there wasn't a family vote," Palin told Winfrey. "Other steps in my political life, I've polled the kids, and I have abided by some of the results of the polls that the kids have partaken in. This time, no."

But in September of 2008, Palin told an entirely different story to Fox News' Sean Hannity.

"What was your family's reaction?" Hannity asked. "Was there time to huddle and have a hockey team meeting?"

"It was a time of asking the girls to vote on it, anyway," Palin told Hannity. "And they voted unanimously, yes. Didn't bother asking my son because, you know, he's going to be off doing his thing anyway, so he wouldn't be so impacted by, at least, the campaign period here."

"So asked the girls what they thought and they're like, absolutely. Let's do this, mom."