Nick Gillespie | June 20, 2005
Washingtonian mag recently asked DC's ink-stained wretches to name the blogs they must read and has delivered "a fresh crop of blogs and Web sites now has become standard stops, according to an informal survey of Washington journalists."
Hit & Run, which Mark Felt told us is required reading on the former presidential yacht (though to be honest, we're not sure if he meant the Sequoia or the Potomac), makes the list, with the following descriptor:
The libertarians behind Reason magazine strike back with moderate commentary on a variety of topics ranging from public television to Gwen Stefani's "Hollaback Girl."
Moderate isn't exactly the adjective I'd use to describe what goes on here (foul-mouthed, anyone? Or how about "award-winning"?). Was it Barry Goldwater who said that moderation in the pursuit of praise was no virtue? And that extremism in the pursuit of pleasure was no vice? Or was that Barry White?
This seems as good a place as any for a subscription pitch.
Whole Washingtonian list here.
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Well, you're, like, socially liberal and, like, economically conservative, so that means you're all, like, moderate and stuff.
I assume he meant "moderate" relative to some other libertarian blogs. As in: You probably won't find us using the phrase "blood-spattered jackboot" in a post about school lunches.
(Note to self: Be sure to use phrase "blood-spattered jackboot" in a post about school lunches.)
Washingtonian, always a good magazine to use if you need to prop up an end table leg. Nice thick paper, and you know you'll never want to take another look at it.
I've eaten some sketchy school lunches in my day, but I'm pretty sure I'd remember something like that...
It should not be particularly difficult... I have eaten a few
school lunches that were clearly part of some Nazi experiment to
determine the human limits of gastronomical pain. On that
note:
"Winner of tonight's mystery meat contest is Jeffrey Corbin who
guessed 'some kind of beef.'"
Perhaps Tim Cavanaugh can dazzle with us with his knowledge of pop
culture and provide the name of the movie (no goggling, young
Tim).
Meatloaf and Tyranny: How the Thugocrats Pave the Road to Serfdom One Soy Brick at a Time
Looks like the HuffPost hasn't even been able to crack the A-list of blogs, let alone top Drudge as a must-read for tabloid political news. Such a pity.
Julian & Jesse-
I'd like to thank both of you for causing me to choke on the coffee
I was drinking at the time of reading your posts.
In these days of endless hyperbolic screeching from both the bride and the grooms side of the aisle, I suppose being both moderate and interesting enough to read is a great compliment.
Moderate = Thinking both guys suck but keeping a sense of
humor.
This place is awesome!
I agree with Mr. Sanchez. I think "moderate" referred to the temperate nature of Hit and Run as compared to other libertarian web sites. The debates here are rather calm and thoughtful, particularly in comparison to other fora.
I can't wait for Jesse's expose on school lunches. Especially for the piece on the chalupas.
I'm having trouble relating. I spent 12 years in parochial
schools that never served a single lunch. Everyone brown-bagged or
lunchboxed it. In grammar school, if someone forgot his lunch, we
shared, or the kid was sent over to the convent and was fed as if
he was a refugee from the potato famine. In high school we had some
machines that sold sandwiches, but that was it. Oddly, test scores
were excellent, and almost all our high school grads got into
college. Eating a cold lunch every day (thermoses full of soup
excepted) seems not to have been fatal to academic
excellence.
Luckily for my cultural literacy, I did have the experience of
eating dormitory cafeteria food in college, so I get the jokes when
watching Meatballs.
Kevin
The Swiss trained me to kill.
I went to Catholic school for 10 years and public school for 3.
I always had a cafeteria that served lunch but, oddly enough, we
had to pay for it in elementary school and at the public HS. The
Catholic HS gave us lunch for free, and considering the delapidated
state of the facilities and education it seems that they should
have been charging us.
I usually brought my lunch, but man, I still remember having Sloppy
Joe's on Thursdays. I'm not sure if they would fufill the current
health requirements, but they sure were good.
Moderate = being able to consider opposing points of view
without going into hysterics.
Does freerepublic qualify as a blog? Is it even remotely useful as
a source of political commentary? The few times I've been there all
I saw were violent rants.
freerepublic and democratic underground are both useful primarily to the very people they despise.
Moderate isn't exactly the adjective I'd use to describe
what goes on here
But in the post-Gunnels era....
"Who cares about George W. Bush anyway? The man has only one look for Christ's sake! Blue Steel? Ferrari? Le Tigra? They're the same face! Doesn't anybody notice this? I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!"
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