Ban on pet projects mostly symbolic
“This earmark ban shows the American people we are listening and we are dead serious about ending business as usual in Washington,” Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, in line to be House speaker next year, said Thursday.
Yet earmarks remain popular with many lawmakers who consider it part of their jobs to win money for deserving projects back home — and view the projects as a way to please voters.
Or as kids in the schoolyard call it, LIAR LIAR PANTS ON FIRE.
Seriously, that’s what this is. It’s a whole story about how there really is no ban on earmarks, and how even if there was, it wouldn’t do what these teawads claim it would do which is to make ponies appear in Washington, and instead of just saying something along the lines of “this is just total crap,” we get mealy-mouthed words like “symbolic.” And people wonder why nobody loves the AP anymore.
This is my favorite part of the whole thing, though, the description of the feature:
EDITOR’S NOTE — An occasional look at assertions by government officials and how well they adhere to the facts.
Well, I mean, I guess if you really want to put your shoulders into it, you couldoccasionally take a look at assertions by government officials and how well they adhere to the facts.
The rest of the time, you should just uncritically spew out whatever they tell you, and certainly don’t “fact check” anything. That’s up to other “fact-checking” organizations anyway, except when you want to make a fancy “fact check” feature.
I mean, I’m sorry, I thought seeing how various versions of the facts squared with reailty was kind of your entire JOB. Certainly it’s the one you like to pretend has been deeded to you alone among all media by God and we filthy bloggers should shut up, so I’m confused as to why this sacred trust is only exercised once in a while.
A.