The Real Voice of America

In his opinion column for the Toronto Sun, Eric Margolis, although admitting that this is not necessarily a reliable nor scientific method of assessment, shares his observations on the changing tenor of his incoming mail which may be a harbinger of real changes in American attitudes toward Bush and the war.

I’ve received a huge e-mail response from around the globe in reply to my last Sunday Sun column. In it, I contended that George Bush’s fabricated war against Iraq was a far worse crime than Watergate, and said the president and his men were either liars or unbelievably inept.

These messages do not represent a reliable cross-section of U.S. public opinion, of course. They are simply what was known as a “convenience sample” when I worked in market research. But they reveal much about the changing mood in America.

Most were well-written messages from intelligent, educated people appalled by what their government had done.

I was stunned by the volume of bitterly anti-Bush mail from his home state, Texas.

In response to last week’s shocking admission by Bush’s arms hunter, David Kay, that “We were all wrong,” a Chicago reader wrote: “No, David. You were wrong. Do not include me in your idiocy.”

…read more

Glenn Reynolds Responds

From: Glenn Reynolds pundit@instapundit.com

I’ve been following that story for a long time. Just search “zeyad”
in my search engine.

Antiwar either knows this, and is trolling, or is a bunch of idiots.
Or both.

My reply:

You have not commented on the post linked to, in which Zeyad complains about the reception of such news in America. I put a link to your earlier post, and a link to a Google cache of all your posts on Zeyad. By the way, Professor, I don’t recall any mention on your site of Zeyad’s rape-all-the-Sunnis diatribe. Perhaps you could point me to it.

Best,
Matt Barganier

Update/Note: By “put a link,” I mean to say that those links were included in the original post. I did NOT add them after the response from Reynolds.

Possible Motive Behind Ricin Letters?

In my years of politics, I have heard from many Capitol Hill staffers that Congressmembers hate constituent mail.

Is it possible that someone has found a solution? I tend not to be much of a conspiracy theorist, but I had been wondering about possible motives behind the ricin letters.

Whatever the motive, it appears that writing letters to your congressional representative may soon become a thing of the past. Of course, there is still email, although most of Congress has been ignoring email for years.