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'WSJ' vs. 'NYT' Smackdown!
12 hours ago ago from Fitz & Jen
Jen: This morning we referred you to NYT David Carr's media column who took the opportunity of looking at the WSJ after two years under Rupert Murdoch's ownership. In the piece, Carr alleges that since the takeover, the WSJ has started to tilt right in the news pages, particularly because of its new Washington DC bureau chief. WSJ editor Robert Thomson responds: The news column by a Mr David Carr today is yet more evidence that The ...
Related contentWSJ managing editor responds to Carr’s column
13 hours ago ago from Get a News Job dot com
From: Thomson, Robert Sent: Monday, December 14, 2009 11:06 AM Subject: Statement by Robert Thomson on The New York Times The news column by a Mr David Carr today is yet more evidence that The New York Times is uncomfortable about the rise of an increasingly successful rival while its own circulation and credibility are in retreat. The usual practice of quoting ex-employees was supplemented by a succession of anonymous quotes and ...
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Sharmine Narwani: US Swagger Equals Foreign Policy Disaster
13 hours ago ago from Huffington Post
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Saturday announced Iran's willingness to begin swapping in increments its enriched uranium for the higher-grade uranium offered by six world powers. But the concession is unlikely to be accepted by the United States, in what has become an old pattern: "Do it our way or else." US officials are already suggesting that Mottaki's proposal -- which would see Iran immediately part with one-third of ...
Related contentWilliam McGurn: Obama's War of Words
4 hours ago ago from Wall Street Journal
Karl Rove: Obama Can Win in Afghanistan Eliot Cohen: A Wartime President Pervez Musharraf: The Afghan-Pakistan Solution Ditto for John Kennedy. In his memoir "Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History," Kennedy adviser and speechwriter Ted Sorensen did not dismiss the power of the spoken word, but neither did he confuse it with action. "[A]fter all is said and little is done, a speech even an elevated, eloquent speech is still just a ...
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