What Is True/Slant?
275+ knowledgeable contributors.
Reporting and insight on news of the moment.
Follow them and join the news conversation.
 

Feb. 3 2010 - 11:49 pm | 116 views | 1 recommendation | 0 comments

Truth in Advertising: ‘Now that Democracy is for Sale’

This spoof of the recent Supreme Court decision allowing corporations to make political donations would be funny if it wasn’t such a sad statement on the five activist (conservative) justices who reversed decades of law. Wait—it’s not a spoof! The liberal public relations firm Murray Hill Incorporated announced the other day that it has filed to enter the Republican primary in Maryland’s 8th Congressional District.

Until now, corporate interests had to rely on campaign contributions and influence peddling to achieve their goals in Washington,” Murray Hill wrote. “But thanks to an enlightened Supreme Court, now we can eliminate the middle-man and run for office ourselves.”

We wish him/her/them/it the best of luck.


Comments

No Comments Yet
Post your comment »
 
Log in for notification options
Comments RSS
 

Post Your Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment

Log in with your True/Slant account.

Previously logged in with Facebook?

Create an account to join True/Slant now.

Facebook users:
Create T/S account with Facebook
 

My T/S Activity Feed

 
     

    About Me

    I’ve been a sports journalist for most of my 36 years in this profession. I’ve been a writer and an editor. I’ve covered little league games and Super Bowls, worked on a tiny paper in Manassas, Va. and helped start ESPN the Magazine. Now I’m writing for True/Slant, freelancing, writing a book, and teaching journalism at Stony Brook University. I’ve lived and died with the Jets, Knicks, and Yankees. That stage of life is pretty much over now, though what happens to all three teams still interest me. And the playoffs are still appointment television. I now see sports almost always as a metaphor for what is happening around me. I see college athletic programs exploiting poor minority athletes and wonder why it exists and what it says about us. I watch a former White House press secretary manage Mark McGwire’s return to baseball and wonder why we can’t have an intelligent conversation about performance enhancing drugs. I read about former NFL players committing suicide after years of playing with concussions, and wonder how the NFL owners, coaches, trainers—and fans—can sleep at night. This is pretty much the reason I continue to write about sports. You write what interests you, and reach a wide audience. Everyone read and heard about the Duke Lacrosse story. Everyone talks about the Super Bowl. Everyone has their take on steroids. Sports is a common denominator, second only to religion, and its closing in fast. For Tiger Woods, that was unfortunate. To those of us in the business, it’s amazing.

    See my profile »
    Followers: 35
    Contributor Since: May 2009
    Location:New York