Today’s ‘Wide Open’ Posts (092507)
- PD Is Among the Food-Stamp Challenged
- “You’re Not In Cleveland!“
This is the latest (HT Instapundit).
Kaus: “….. is GQ not only spiking the piece but refusing to let Green place it elsewhere? That would be full-service journalism for the Clintons.” Yeah, a “service” that one of the Clintons is very familiar with.
I am told from time to time that MoveOn is not really a radical organization.
Wrong. MoveOn is run by people whose first, and second, and third instincts, if given any opening, are to silence opponents. They are petty tyrants in training.
You doubt? Consider how many people had to be involved in the decisions leading to this:
MoveOn.org’s thin skin
(MoveOn) has been sending out cease-and-desist letters to CafePress, a website that lets people offer custom-designed t-shirts, coffee mugs and the like for sale. Last week it demanded that the site remove eight (parody) items, arguing that they violated MoveOn’s merchandising trademarks.
Trademark law doesn’t confer monopoly rights over all uses of a registered phrase or symbol, however, and it wasn’t created simply to protect the trademark owner’s interests. Instead, it’s designed to protect consumers against being misled or confused about brands.
….. To its credit, CafePress refused to take down five bumper stickers ….. “While we understand that negative commentary is unsavory, our shopkeepers’ parodies of the MoveOn.org trademark are permissible here, especially when one considers the First Amendment implications raised by the social and political importance of your organization, the policies it advocates, and the countervailing messages conveyed by the parodies,” wrote Daniel Pontes of CafePress to Carrie Olson, MoveOn’s chief operating officer. Olson had been the one requesting the takedown.
MoveOn is not run by a bunch of legal newbies. They know what fair use is, but went after the CafePress vendor anyway in the name of intimidation, pure and simple. And they got their way, sort of; the vendor involved is “retooling,” and says, “….. lest ‘the group that shall not be named’ think this is a right-wing conspiracy, it isn’t. I’m a Democrat. Or, I will be until tomorrow.”
Closer to the truth: MoveOn is International ANSWER with a very thin veneer of civility that washes away at the slightest provocation.
Glenn Reynolds: “They told me that if George W. Bush were reelected simple Internet parodies would be ruthlessly suppressed by a political commissariat. And they were right!”
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When Iraq vet Paul Hackett seemed about to upset Jean Schmidt in August 2005 in Ohio’s heavily GOP Second Congressional District, and almost did, it was somehow seen as a referendum indicating flagging support for the Iraq War — even though Hackett got as close as he did by pretending to be a Bush-supporting war hawk in his local TV ads, while cursing the president and calling him a chickenhawk for the benefit of Old Media.
So if Republican Jim Ogonowski (HT Patrick Ruffini), a 28-year military vet whose brother John was the pilot of American Airlines Flight 11 on 9/11, gets close to, or even upsets, Niki Tsongas on October 16th in Massachusetts’ 5th District, it will be seen as a referendum of support for General Petraeus and continuing on his recommended course ….. Right?
Someone’s definitely nervous ….. and unspeakably petty.
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Noonan on Greenspan. What she said.
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Follow this:
From Asheville, North Carolina:
September 20, 2007 12:15 am
Josh Gallamore never got the message I left about the hero role he played recently in saving the life of a young man who lost control of his car.
The accident occurred when 24-year-old Adam Cox, who has an inoperable brain tumor, suffered an unexpected seizure on the way home from driving his wife to work.
Cox’s Kia was weaving and out of control on Sardis Road, three cars ahead of Gallamore’s van.
When Gallamore, 23, read Sunday’s paper and saw the column on the man he’d saved, he called. The Cox family didn’t have a phone number for him and wanted to thank Gallamore in person.
Cox was diagnosed with a brain tumor at age 3 and not given much hope. Today, he’s beat most odds but has some health problems, though he hadn’t had a major episode in five years.
When Gallamore saw Cox’s car careening and crossing the yellow lines, he knew something was wrong.
“I jumped out of my vehicle and ran after this man to save his life regardless of whether or not he should be driving,†Gallamore said, addressing the negative comments on the Citizen-Times message board. “I’m very glad I was there when I was. There’s a reason I was there and a reason (Adam) is here after 21 years, and they said he wouldn’t make it.â€
Gallamore, who was working at Shoney’s at the time, said Cox’s car was traveling about 35 mph. He passed the two cars in front of him so he could see what was going on.
“I pulled around and saw him jerking,†he said. “I followed him a little ways and saw him going toward the bank, so I parked my van in the middle of the road and ran after his car.â€
Gallamore said the act seemed “instinctive.â€
“I just got there at the right time and was just happy I got the car stopped,†he said. “I’m a fast runner. I was actually amazed I did catch him.â€
Go here for the rest of the story.

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