Tag Archives: Antique Media

President Thin-Skin

Not only will you be called a racist if you criticise our thin-skinned president (whose name in his youth, by the way, was Barry Dunham) but if you’re a blogger, his minions will take swipes at you in the adoring Antique Media. Well, what can you expect from a fellow who gave his opponents the finger during the ’08 campaign? Some peace prize winner. Peace only if you agree with him.

Via Instapundit.

MORE: Barry’s haters, critics, supporters and worshippers: Which are you? Via Riehl World View.

Barry assaults the First Amendment

The new FTC regulation of bloggers promoting or criticizing products is clearly government intrusion on free speech, and I hope it’s overturned quickly by some smart White House lawyer with more sense than the FTC commissioners. Most bloggers, as media critic Jeff Jarvis says, don’t think they’re doing anything remotely connected with journalism–which, in any case, isn’t included in the regulation. Indeed, keeping a pubescent diary about one’s precious kitties and opining which cat food is best obviously shouldn’t be within government’s jurisdiction.

Even I know the difference between what Antique Media does and what I do here. The FTC apparently doesn’t. Or else, typical of government, just lusts for more power. This time they bent the Constitution. The shocking part is that the FTC has never regulated Antique Media in this regard–making me suspect that this reg has to do with AM’s and politicians’ upset at blogger analysis and attacks. Wisconsin law professor Ann Althouse notes the FTC’s plan for selective enforcement of its regulation will make the assault even more egregious. Because it won’t be against the young cat food endorser. I thought attacks on our freedom were supposed to have ended with Obamalot.

Glenn Beck: antique media’s latest nemesis

"It will be fun reading the New York Times tomorrow morning as it tries to explain another controversy that it failed to report."

                    —Don Surber on Glenn Beck, a sort of serial Matt Drudge, "the guy who ran the gift shop at CBS [and later] made Monica Lewinsky a household name."

Via Instapundit.