"Bush's Agenda Loses Focus" is one article.
"A Sliding Scale for Victory" is another; it's a "news analysis"
with the sub-head, "As the conflict in Iraq enters its fourth year and
civil war threatens, the Bush administration is again working to lower
expectations."
It's just another day on the op-ed pages of the Los Angeles Times,
right? Wrong. It's the above-the-fold
front page (.pdf image) of this Sunday's paper (March 19,
2006).
"Bush's Agenda Loses Focus" begins as follows,
"A growing Republican chorus is calling for a staff
overhaul inside President Bush's beleaguered White House, but some
conservatives say such a change would stop far short of fixing what
they view as a serious flaw: an unfocused domestic agenda.
"The war in Iraq is dominating the attention of Bush and his top
aides, these critics say, while the recent departure of the
president's top domestic policy advisor after just one year has left
the White House without an obvious conductor to direct the sometimes
disparate policy-making machine."
That, my folks, qualifies as the front-page, above-the-fold, lead
news story in today's Los Angeles Times. The other article is
labeled as a "news analysis" piece, but can you really tell the
difference?
And if there weren't enough Bush-bashing for one page, the Times
really made sure you got the message by also including an above-the-fold
color photo of a war protester in Athens. This was despite
the fact that war protests were only moderately attended this year (see
here,
here,
and here).
And we are supposed to view the Times as an objective source of
straight, honest news? Forget about it.
The great LA Times watchdog
Patterico saw this egregiousness also.