Either you don't watch the news, or you turn a blind eye,
Actually, I don't watch the news. I no longer have any news channels and I don't watch network news at all. I don't listen to any talk radio except for Jim Rome on occasion and local sports shows. I occasionally (if I am in the car) listen to the local morning show with Paul W. Smith. My total radio/tv news time in a week is generally less than an hour.
but either way, you should do your own research.
I wouldn't know how to begin searching for something like that. But your comments led me to think you were talking about someone on this board, and I hadn't seen it so I was wondering who.
Your tone shows you think I lie, but that would be a false accusation as well.
Tone? How do you pick tone up from gray words on a blue background? You should read closer. My post suggested that I was curious as to who you were talking about. I didn't think you lied. I just didn't know who you were talking about, which was why I asked.
Don't be so testy and judgmental. Just because we disagree on some stuff doesn't mean you should read the worst into everything I say. Believe it or not, when you get your bias out of the way, I am generally a pretty nice guy.
I'll get you started here.
I have heard on various programs,
I listen to none of them. I have never heard Snow (aside from a few press briefings), Savage, or Ingram (isn't in Ingraham though?). I have heard OReilly less than one hour total during his whole broadcasting career and can't stand to listen to him. The only time I heard his radio show, Napolitano was guest hosting. I haven't listened to Rush for longer than five minutes in probably eight years or more.
While the following 25, still serving Senators, voted twice to impeach Clinton over the same thing that Scooter Libby did, yet are either silent or supporting of the Libby commutation:
I have not seen anything from any of these people. But silent or supporting? That's a pretty wide range. Is it your view that anyone who does not openly condemn the Libby commutation (that left the jury verdict, fine, and probation in place) is in favor of it?
I don't think there was anything egregious in commuting the sentence. I think Democrats are hypocrites to complain about prison overcrowding because of white collar criminals in prison (as some did on the Tavis Smiley debate pandering to a black audience) and then complain that prison isn't being populated by Libby (the ultimate white collar crime ... covering up something that never happened to begin with).
I am kind of wondering why you think Libby should have so much greater a punishment than Clinton had for doing the same thing? (Except Clinton lied by saying something didn't happen when it did. Libby lied about saying something didn't happen when it didn't, apparently.)
Clinton didn't get any jail time and didn't lose his job. He paid less of a fine. So in the end, I don't really care. But I wonder about why you think Libby's sentence should not have been commuted.