August 13, 2010
I discovered a conspiracy
In a curious coincidence, the "official" (e.g. MSM) "conservative" (e.g. GOP) commentators arose like one to promote gay marriage (for example, Glen Beck and some dude on Sirius Fox whom I heard while testing Sirius radio). Not only that, but they push the same argument: "it does not hurt me, so whatever".
I am not going to speculate as to why it happened (remove it from the table before November etc.), or how it happened (what is the GOP answer to JournoList), but only observe. Still, for people who decried how the liberal media received marching orders courtesy of Ezra Klein, they seem to be too in lockstep.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at
09:33 AM
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Well, it's been a topic that has occasionally surfaced on various "conservative" commentators. Several like Glenn Beck, Jerry Doyle, and Neal Boortz have been right on the edge, either saying it's OK, or saying that they don't mind partial rights such as Civil unions. I bet if you looked at Mark Levin or Sean Hannity, they would have a different opinion.
The 3 I mentioned above including Beck are not actually members of the GOP anymore, despite their large audience among GOP members.
As for Fox news on Sirius, I haven't really bothered to listen to it. I find most of the hosts on there to be rather dull. On Sirius Patriot there's at least 2 interesting shows. Mike Church and the Wilkow Majority. I suspect at least one of those two would share the opinion that "it doesn't hurt me, so whatever."
It's worth noting that sometimes certain hosts actually listen to other hosts, so if one is later in the day they may be mimicking an earlier host.
Posted by: Kazriko at August 13, 2010 11:12 AM (pH05c)
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