“An element of pretense” is the scandal that the Washington Post finds at the heart of the Bush administration’s treatment of the Wilson/Plame affair: “In Plame leaks, long shadows.” I won’t at this point belabor the partiality and misdirection at play in this double-byline, page-one above-the-fold story in the premier newspaper of the nation’s capital. “An element of pretense…” among the leading actors of a presidential administration. Who’d a thunk it? In the future, reporters VandeHei and Allen should adopt the pseudonym “Candide” to suggest the innocence they bring to their reporting, or perhaps “Captaine Renault” to suggest its fabricated nature. For the Post to place this dud of a story– not only devoid of news, but itself enveloping its readers in the cloud of unknowing that characterizes MSM coverage of the story — on page one is deserving of special recognition of some kind.
UPDATE: I had inserted a faulty link while working from a laptop in Washington. I have fixed the link to the Post article.
-
-
Donate to PL
-
Our Favorites
- American Greatness
- American Mind
- American Story
- American Thinker
- Aspen beat
- Babylon Bee
- Belmont Club
- Churchill Project
- Claremont Institute
- Daily Torch
- Federalist
- Gatestone Institute
- Hollywood in Toto
- Hoover Institution
- Hot Air
- Hugh Hewitt
- InstaPundit
- Jewish World Review
- Law & Liberty
- Legal Insurrection
- Liberty Daily
- Lileks
- Lucianne
- Michael Ramirez Cartoons
- Michelle Malkin
- Pipeline
- RealClearPolitics
- Ricochet
- Steyn Online
- Tim Blair
Media
Subscribe to Power Line by Email
Temporarily disabled
Notice: All comments are subject to moderation. Our comments are intended to be a forum for civil discourse bearing on the subject under discussion. Commenters who stray beyond the bounds of civility or employ what we deem gratuitous vulgarity in a comment — including, but not limited to, “s***,” “f***,” “a*******,” or one of their many variants — will be banned without further notice in the sole discretion of the site moderator.