Saturday, August 16, 2008

Jerome Corsi Is Back, Proving Stupidity Pays Big-Time!

Jerome R. Corsi is a controversial conservative author. He earned a B.A. from Case Western Reserve University in 1968, and was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. Corsi earned a Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University in 1972; his dissertation was titled "Prior Restraint, Prior Punishment, and Political Dissent; a Moral and Legal Evaluation." He has two New York Times #1 bestselling non-fiction books: The Obama Nation and Unfit for Command (with co-author John O'Neill). Both books, the Kerry book written in 2004 and the Obama attack in 2008, are critical of Democratic presidential candidates and have received much criticism, including allegations of serious factual errors. Corsi writes columns for conservative websites such as WorldNetDaily and Human Events in which he promotes conspiracies about the secret formation of a North American Government.

The bat guano conspiracy theories don't end with the Kerry and Obama candidacies. Corsi also promotes the concept of "abiotic oil" featuring the idea that oil is naturally produced underground through methods other than the scientifically-accepted process of converting biological material. In his book Black Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of Oil, Corsi questions the "truism that oil is fossil fuel" and believes the reason the world buys into scientific views of petroleum formation is it would be "disastrous — both to oil companies and to politicians in office" to do otherwise. The bat guano abiotic oil theory is not supported by scientific consensus among petroleum geologists.

So, Jerome Corsi sits atop the best-seller list once again. His partner in crime, Mary (Mad Dog) Matalin, is also covered in slime. Now, the ball is in The Hopester's court: To be, or not to be? If this is the (fair & balanced) question, so be it.


[x Salon]
Corsi: Hey, I'm Just Doing My Job
By Mike Madden

Yes, bestselling conservative author Jerome Corsi may be considered a crackpot — or worse — for some of his work. Like, oh, his theory that the earth spontaneously generates oil that just seeps up into the crust, making it a renewable resource. Or his insistence that there's a hidden plot under way to merge the United States with Canada and Mexico in a "North American Union," replacing the dollar with a new currency called (cue scary music) the amero. Or for his hatchet jobs on — gee, what a coincidence — the last two Democratic nominees for president, John Kerry and Barack Obama.

But the way Corsi sees it, he's just doing his job.

"My job as an investigative reporter is to pursue issues that I think are true or merit investigation, and report the findings as I find them," Corsi told Salon in an interview Friday morning. "Rather than worry about a politically correct investigation that might win favor with politically correct groups [that are] considered respectable, my aim is pursuing the truth of the investigations, wherever they lead me."

In the case of The Obama Nation, his new hit job on Obama, those investigations led Corsi to report that Obama is secretly a Muslim, that he may still use drugs, that he's a radical black nationalist and that he's somehow trying to interfere with Kenyan politics (presumably in his spare time while campaigning for president here). The book has already been aggressively debunked by media organizations, liberal think tanks and the Obama campaign. Corsi, though, says he's performing a valuable service.

"What motivated the book started with the fact that Obama was generally unknown to the public," Corsi said, even though Obama has been running for president for nearly two years now. "He is probably the least vetted presidential candidate we've had in modern times." Corsi said he did some original research for the book, interviewing Obama's relatives in Kenya and rereading books by Saul Alinsky, Malcolm X and others who he says Obama learned dangerous ideas from. But he also cribs from news stories about Obama — which you'd think would make it hard to defend his claim that the mainstream media has "become so enamored with Barack Obama that it has neglected to do the traditional investigative journalist duty, which is to investigate critically."

But don't worry, he's got an explanation for that. When Hillary Clinton was the front-runner for the Democratic nomination, Corsi said, the press went after Obama for political reasons. Once Obama won, though, things changed. "All critical evaluation of Obama was not only dropped, but those who opposed Obama were daring to go do that knowing they'd be abused — like I have," he said.

To Corsi, the push-back from the Obama campaign is basically unfair. "Since the time of Aristotle, ad hominem attacks have been considered fallacious arguments in debate," he said. When I suggested that the Obama campaign might consider his entire book a fallacious ad hominem attack, he shrugged it off. "The campaign is doing to me what they charge me as doing to them." He admits freely that he's trying to defeat Obama. "World Net Daily — where I am a staff reporter — our editorial discipline is that we state our convictions, we openly write editorials and commentary, as well as do news analysis," he said. (As the Associated Press pointed out Thursday, World Net Daily recently led with a banner headline about, um, Bigfoot.) "I make it clear that I am opposed to Obama's candidacy and lay out the reasons why. What I expect is that the public will read that and make up their own minds."

OK, so Corsi — who spent much of the conversation defending his oil theories in great detail, after I asked him if they might not affect his general credibility — thinks his book is a fine work of scholarship. Not surprising. What about Mary Matalin, the Republican consultant who runs the branch of Simon & Schuster that published the book?

Well, perhaps not surprisingly either, Matalin says she's just in it to sell books. "Threshold is a small line, publishing books and authors on the conservative continuum from libertarian to religious to intellectual to historical," she told me by e-mail. "What we decidedly do not do is work with or for any campaign or party. (Despite the impression the press is leaving, I personally, while a committed conservative, have not worked for a campaign or the party since 1992. Including this cycle)."

That's not true, actually; federal campaign records show the Republican National Committee paid Matalin more than $70,000 in 2003, and the Bush-Cheney campaign reimbursed her for $364 in travel expenses in 2004. So you might also want to take a few grains of salt with Matalin's claim that she doesn't know of any bulk sales of the book, even though the Times reported that this was a significant factor in its rise on the bestselling list.

No matter what the motivation, one thing is clear — Matalin and Corsi are making buckets of money from this gig. Ben Smith reported Friday that the book is selling at least 40,000 copies a week. When I spoke to Corsi Friday, he was staying in a ritzy hotel in New York; the last time I interviewed him, he was hopping on a plane to go to a speaking appearance. He has become a well-paid celebrity through his "investigations." Maybe if Obama succeeds in fighting off Corsi's latest effort, this one will be his last.

[Mike Madden is Salon's Washington correspondent. Madden attended University of Pennsylvania and graduated in 1998. He is currently working as a Washington Correspondent at Salon Media Group. He has worked with The Arizona Republic as a Washington bureau, Gannett as a Correspondent, and The Philadelphia Inquirer as a Suburban Staff Writer.]


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Let Them Drink Gatorade?

The Dopester won the Tour de France seven times. Most folks give him a pass because he is a cancer survivor. However, cheatin' is cheatin' and the boy took the needle. The Dopester belongs in the same cell block with Marion Jones and very likely — Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens — in the Hall of Shame. Now, The Dopester is guzzling water like a member of the Saudi royal family. We lucky denizens of Austin, the capital of Texas, are living in the grip of a nasty drought. Months and months of hot weather with no rain and The Dopester has been irrigating his gardens to the tune of 330K gallons of water in a month! The Dopester has been away (where it's cooler) while the water meter dials at his McMansion have been spinning, so little or none of the water has been used for bathing or flushing. The arrogance of celebrity is an intoxicating brew. The Dopester has traded one drug for another. He gets juiced on himself and wastes water like none other. If this is (fair & balanced) égoïsme, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
Champion Cyclist And Now Champion Guzzler Of Austin Water
By James C. McKinley Jr.

Casa de Armstong
Copyright © 2008 Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman



Lance Armstrong is one of the favorite sons of Texas and a model citizen known as much for his social conscience as his cycling. So it came as a surprise when it was revealed this week that he is one of the biggest individual users of water in Austin, where he lives.

Say it ain’t so, Lance.

In July, Mr. Armstrong, who won the Tour de France seven times, used a whopping 330,000 gallons of water at his lush Spanish-colonial home, with an acre of gardens and a swimming pool, city water authority officials said.

This tremendous flow of H2O, which is 38 times what the average household in the city uses in the summer, comes as Texas is going through a dry spell and officials are asking people to cut back on watering their lawns. “We are definitely short on rain,” Lisa Rhodes, a spokeswoman for the authority, said with a sigh.

Mr. Armstrong declined to be interviewed. He has been in Colorado and California all summer and only noticed the surge in water use when he saw his bills go up, his spokesman, Mark Higgins, said in an e-mail message. (The bill for July was $2,460.) “Lance and all the folks involved are looking into it and will for sure get it under control,” Mr. Higgins wrote.

The Austin American-Statesman, which broke the story on Friday, quoted Mr. Armstrong as saying he was unaware his water use was so high. “I’m a little shocked,” he told The Statesman. “There’s no justification for that much water.” He added, “I need to fix this.”

But city water records suggested that his home has long been a guzzler of water, using an average of 158,000 gallons a month since January 2007. Then, in June, the cyclist shot ahead of the pack, topping the city’s list of residential water users for the first time, officials said. That month his house and garden drank up 222,900 gallons.

Daryl Slusher, an assistant director of the Austin City Water Authority in charge of conservation, said the city had ruled out a leak. Mr. Slusher offered to scrutinize Mr. Armstrong’s irrigation system and perhaps recommend native species that require less water.

Getting Mr. Armstrong on board with water conservation would be a public-relations boon, Mr. Slusher said, although it was a disappointment that Mr. Armstrong had ended up on the top of the city’s water-gluttons list.

“I was surprised he was No. 1,” Mr. Slusher said. “But his response is very encouraging.”

[James Courtwright McKinley, Jr. was the Mexico City bureau chief of The New York Times and is now based in Houston. McKinley is a 1984 graduate of Cornell University.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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