PJ - When posting the documents from courts, prosecutors, government agencies, and other sources., sometimes I have to write a brief introduction in order to explain the point. So I'm responsible for the introductory paragraphs, but not the SEC filing that contained the primary information, which has been totally ignored by the news media. I'm not a professional journalist, but occasionally, I get a scoop, like
Juanita Broaddrick's statement to the FBI, or the
first report that Clinton was selling pardons in return for contributions to his library, or the
first report of the conflict of interest in CNN's polling, including photos. There are many other examples, and it's not unusual to get an skeptical reaction from someone initially. Sometimes, I ask my friends to post them, but I hereby give them permission to tell you all about it if you need further confirmation.
But I'm about ready to retire from my amateur efforts at investigative journalism. After watching Bill Clinton for 34 years, I've grown weary of it. If you can do a better job, go for it.
PJ - When posting the documents from courts, prosecutors, government agencies, and other sources., sometimes I have to write a brief introduction in order to explain the point. So I'm responsible for the introductory paragraphs, but not the SEC filing that contained the primary information, which has been totally ignored by the news media. Okay but the place to post introductions by the person posting is in the box below the actual article itself. Otherwise blogs and other sources will start quoting your intro as if it were part of the story. And what happens then are the liberals latch on to that to discredit the entire story. You see where I'm getting at?