November 23, 2009 • Vol. 15, No. 10 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
Anti-Obama, Pro-America
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
Anonymice Trash Palin

ARTICLES
Afghanistan Myths
by Tom Cotton

Willful Misunderstanding
by James Piereson

Gee Thanks, Nancy
by Fred Barnes

Harvard's Warriors
by Jules Crittenden

Hot Air in Copenhagen
by Irwin M. Stelzer

Barack in Beijing
by Gordon G. Chang

FEATURES
The NEA at the Tipping Point
by David A. Smith

Connecting the Dots
by Stephen F. Hayes and Thomas Joscelyn

BOOKS & ARTS
Memories of War
by Edwin M. Yoder Jr.

Healthy Obsession
by Tevi Troy

Blessing and Burden
by Hillel Fradkin

Tree Musketeers
by Sara Lodge

Soft Landing
by Emily Esfahani Smith

Machine Dreams
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
The Accidental Wine Tourist
by Richard Starr

NOT A PARODY
Who could forget these signs?


« Counterinsurgency Success in Haswa | Main

Score Another for Bob Owens

He reported it first: MoveOn got a sweetheart deal for its 'General Betray Us' ad.

If [Jake] Tapper's numbers are correct, MoveOn.org paid just 38.89% of a full-cost, nationwide ad, or a 61.11% discount off of a full-rate ad. While I'm fairly certain that nobody pays "sticker" prices, 61% off seems a rather sweet deal.

Now the New York Post weighs in:

According to Abbe Serphos, director of public relations for the Times, "the open rate for an ad of that size and type is $181,692."

A spokesman for MoveOn.org confirmed to The Post that the liberal activist group had paid only $65,000 for the ad - a reduction of more than $116,000 from the stated rate.

And Jake Tapper gives a nod to Owens and puts the question directly to the Times:

Mathis says the newspaper tries "to keep our advertising columns as open as possible" and "there are many instances when we've published opinion advertisements that run counter to the stance that we take on our own editorial pages." As an example of how the Times is open to all points of view in advertisers, Mathis points out that on September 11, 2007, "we published a full-page advertisement from Freedom'sWatch.org, an organization whose view is opposite of MoveOn.org."

Freedom's Watch spokesman Matt David, however tells me the group was charged "significantly more" than MoveOn.org for its ad. The organization says it plans to run a response to the MoveOn.org NYT ad in the Times, "and we plan to demand the same ad rate they paid," David says.

Jules Crittenden: "It isn’t editorializing. It’s subsidizing propaganda."

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