Hi Don,
You wrote: "Unfortunately, she cannot defend herself because she is not saying anything."
If Rother is not saying anything, then some imposter has [issued a statement][1] in her name. ;-)
[1]: http://www.sandiegoreader.com/documents/2013/mar/…
Your questions about the U-T are noted, but they do not bear on the veracity of Rother's story. Her account simply does not square with the facts as laid out in the emails and the scope of work that delineated her assignment. Indeed, it raises more questions:
-- What kind of "legitimate balanced journalism" would concentrate on the "negative information" and rely on other reporters to find positive information, as Rother claimed was her intent?
-- Why would legitimate journalism require contracting through a campaign committee?
-- What is the text of the updated scope of work Rother refers to in her statement?
-- When was this updated scope of work adopted?
-- If such an updated scope of work actually exists, why wasn't it in the documents released by the FPPC?
I believe Rother's assertion that she didn't want to be associated with anything but a pure information-gathering project. "Associated" is the key word -- such statements require careful parsing. Far from being a reluctant opp researcher, Rother even implied in an email that she would like more such assignments. She just wanted her name kept out of it.
As Gayle said earlier, "transparency is everything", but Rother wanted opacity.
Given such huge holes in Rother's story, I think you've needlessly committed yourself to defending her veracity. Regardless of what you were told off-the-record, you would be entirely within journalistic ethics to maintain a discreet silence. — March 29, 2013 10:57 p.m.
No April Fools Joke: Fletcher Joins Democrats
[The April Fool's post][1] was made by Barry Jantz on SD Rostra, a local conservative/libertarian Web site. Little did he know ... [1]: http://sdrostra.com/?p=33368— May 5, 2013 8:39 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Once upon a time there was a wonderful forest in a magical land called Dona Egis. The weather was balmy, the crops hale, and noisome dragons lived far away in the fetid, troll-infested swamp of Nos Alleges. Until one day, when the town crier spread word that the forest was afflicted by a mysterious blight. Immediately, the magicians, apothecaries, soothsayers, thaumaturgists and hierophants went to work discerning which trees were blighted. "These trees!" said the magicians, consulting their magical tomes. "No, those trees!" said the soothsayers, reading the entrails of goats. "What blight?" said a few. And so on. At last, a venerable but hale woodcutter/scribe raised his voice. "While there is indeed a blight in the forest, I am absolutely certain that one tree is free of this dreadful scourge," said the woodcutter/scribe, named Daubed Nor. He gestured to a willow tree by a creek, called by the locals the Rives Organdie. "Now go investigate these other trees," he said, reading from a list. The locals pondered this news while sipping their mead, a tasty Robing Newest. They respected the woodcutter/scribe not only for his forestry skills, but also for his work at Rhea Detre, a venerated scribe guild. "But look at the cankers on the trunk!" cried a humble scribe apprentice named Dryad Atoning. "Shouldn't you examine this willow tree more carefully?" The wise old Daubed Nor shook his head knowingly at the credulous whippersnapper. "Nay, you have been bewitched by my trickster rival, Ancestral Gumshoed!" Nor cried. "Go investigate the other trees! Why would you want to examine this fine poplar when I've declared it blight-free?"— March 31, 2013 10:48 a.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don. So unskeptical reporting about Rother's statement is fair, but pointing out the contradictions in her account is "nitpicking". Free Bauder! Best, Bradley— March 30, 2013 12:57 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Hi Don, You wrote: "Unfortunately, she cannot defend herself because she is not saying anything." If Rother is not saying anything, then some imposter has [issued a statement][1] in her name. ;-) [1]: http://www.sandiegoreader.com/documents/2013/mar/… Your questions about the U-T are noted, but they do not bear on the veracity of Rother's story. Her account simply does not square with the facts as laid out in the emails and the scope of work that delineated her assignment. Indeed, it raises more questions: -- What kind of "legitimate balanced journalism" would concentrate on the "negative information" and rely on other reporters to find positive information, as Rother claimed was her intent? -- Why would legitimate journalism require contracting through a campaign committee? -- What is the text of the updated scope of work Rother refers to in her statement? -- When was this updated scope of work adopted? -- If such an updated scope of work actually exists, why wasn't it in the documents released by the FPPC? I believe Rother's assertion that she didn't want to be associated with anything but a pure information-gathering project. "Associated" is the key word -- such statements require careful parsing. Far from being a reluctant opp researcher, Rother even implied in an email that she would like more such assignments. She just wanted her name kept out of it. As Gayle said earlier, "transparency is everything", but Rother wanted opacity. Given such huge holes in Rother's story, I think you've needlessly committed yourself to defending her veracity. Regardless of what you were told off-the-record, you would be entirely within journalistic ethics to maintain a discreet silence.— March 29, 2013 10:57 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don, I just don't see the evidence that Citizens United endangers anything. The political left hyperventilates about how CU allows gazillionaires like the diabolical [Koch Brothers][1] to buy elections. But the record of gazillionaires in buying elections is decidedly mixed. Just ask Vice President Charles Koch, Senator Michael Huffington, Governor Jane Harman and President Mitt Romney. [1]: http://reason.com/assets/mc/mwelch/2011_04/Kochto…— March 29, 2013 9:41 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don, You wrote, "She started the job as an opp researcher." But in the U-T article, [Rother said][1]: *"I also want to note that at the outset, I was brought on board with the assurance that, according to campaign attorney Jim Sutton, this project was apolitical and legally protected under the First Amendment and the Citizens United case."* I can't reconcile these apparently conflicting statements. But maybe you can explain how they can both be true. [1]: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/mar/23/caitli…— March 29, 2013 7:48 a.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don, I don't see anything wrong with Citizens United, which simply allows people to use their money for political speech. It seems like good constitutional law to me. I do think campaign contributions should be disclosed and put on the Internet ASAP. The leftie media's frenzied attacks on CU and the Koch Brothers is just politics. They just hate that the libertarian cause has backers whose wealth eclipses even George Soros. (As you probably know, the Kochs lean libertarian; Charles Koch was actually on the vice-presidential ticket of the Libertarian Party in 1980).— March 29, 2013 7:39 a.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don, Rother's claim she was trying to turn opp research into journalism strikes me as a (very contrived) cover story. Remember, her role was supposed to be secret. That was a blatant deception by someone who presented a public facade of being just an impartial reporter. Why believe her now? As for the rest, of course politicians routinely dig up dirt on each other. But mixing opp research and putative journalism at the same time is a church/state violation.— March 28, 2013 4:36 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Don, How much does Roberts get? I plan to hold out for at least double.— March 28, 2013 4:23 p.m.
Investigative author Caitlin Rother amplifies her remarks on DeMaio
Hi Randy, Indeed, I have a secret life as a paid operative of the Koch Brothers. That's how I can afford my luxurious lifestyle. ;-)— March 28, 2013 7:35 a.m.