Saturday, April 1, 2006

Creeps 'n' plagiarists

creep [noun]: an unpleasant or obnoxious person

1. THE UNLUCKY MR. TOM FUENTES. Poor Tom Fuentes. It must be such a drag to have his rotten luck. I mean, so many of the people he associates with turn out to be creeps.

Let’s get the creepiest of these creeps out of the way. According to Gustavo Arellano of the OC Weekly,

[C]hurch documents obtained by the Weekly reveal that [Tom] Fuentes for five years supervised a priest caught in flagrante delicto with a 13-year-old boy in a Sacramento area graveyard…[Pedophile priest Jerome] Henson first came to the diocese in 1983 to direct its television department, where he remained for six years. As communications director, Fuentes oversaw the television department five of those years.” (See Henson)

Sheesh. The Weekly tried to talk to Fuentes about all this, but he wouldn’t return their calls. Can you blame him? He must be mortified.


uentes is closely associated with attorney Mike Schroeder. Indeed, Tom was recently spotted at Mike's birthday party. Schroeder's the attorney and advisor of Mike “Scandal Boy” Carona, OC’s Sheriff, and Tony “Sleazeball” Rackauckus, the OC D.A.

No doubt thanks to some Fuentean string-pulling, the IVC Foundation gave Carona an award. And Tony Rackauckus? He showed up in the district a year or so ago to swear in new Trustee officers.

Carona and Rackauckus are total creeps. I bet Tom's really disappointed in those boys.

Fuentes is on the board of Eagle Publishing, which own Regnery Publishing. Regnery publishes such gems as Unfit For Command, the infamous fact-challenged “swift boat” expose that smeared Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry during the last Presidential election campaign. Check out their catalog! Regnery (hence Eagle) is a creep publishing company.

The chairman of Eagle Publishing is founder Thomas L. Phillips of Orange County. (N.b.: most of our board members have partied at one time or other at Phillips’ fancy schmancy home in Corona del Mar.)

Phillips is on the Board of Trustees of the “Phillips Foundation,” which includes our own Thomas Fuentes (plus Alfred Regnery).

Tom’s colleague on that board is uber-Creep Robert Novak—you know, the “journalist” at the heart of the Valerie Plame scandal. Novak, who writes a column, has been known to interview—

You guessed it! –His pal, Tom Fuentes.


hen there’s Tom’s boss, William Lange, who heads LFC (Lange Financial Corporation). Back in 1997, Lange was sued by the Justice Department for fraud. The case was settled out of court.

Jeez, if the guy was innocent (i.e., not a creep), why didn’t he insist on his day in court? Inquiring minds wanna know.

Let’s get back to Regnery Publishing. As I said, Regnery publishes Unfit For Command. You remember! For 13 weeks, it sat on top of the New York Times’ best seller list, and it helped Mega-Creep George Bush get elected.

The book was written by Jerome Corsi. Guess what? Corsi’s a full-on plagiarist.

I know this because I watched Keith Olbermann’s show on the 27th. On that day, the very funny Mr. Olbermann named Corsi his “worst person in the world”:

…our winner [is] Jerome Corsi, author of the infamous swift boat book “Unfit for Command.” He has admitted now to lifting research and information and seemingly entire passages from the column of another conservative columnist Debbie Schlussel. The admission comes after Schlussel complained about plagiarism and posted Corsi‘s WorldNetDaily column side by side with her original. Jerome Corsi, himself, evidently [is] the captain of a none too swift boat—and [he’s] today‘s worst person in the world. (Schlussel)

Corsi’s obviously a creep.

Another Regnery “star” is David Horowitz. According to Regnery, Horowitz’s new book—The Professors—is about “Terrorists, racists, and communists—you know them as The Professors.”

OK, you know lots of professors, right? Are they terrorists, racists, and communists?

Didn’t think so. Horowitz is another creep.

I could go on all day listing the creeps in Fuentes’ world, but let’s leave it at that for now.

Tom, you’ve got our sympathy.

2. ARE CONSERVATIVE STUDENTS VICTIMS OF DISCRIMINATION? Speaking of Horowitz, you might want to check out an article that appeared in the Chronicle on the 30th. As you know, Mr. Horowitz has promoted the idea that conservative students face “discrimination” in the college classroom. Well, a new study suggests otherwise.

Here’s an excerpt from that article ("Study Casts Doubt on Claims That Conservative Students Face Discrimination in Classes," by Jennifer Jacobson):

Study Casts Doubt on Claims That Conservative Students Face Discrimination in Classes

A study showing that conservative and liberal students do equally well in courses with politically charged content casts doubt on conservative activists' claims that liberal faculty members routinely discriminate against their conservative students.

The study found no difference in the grades conservative and liberal students receive in sociology, cultural anthropology, and women's-studies courses. It also found that conservative students tend to earn higher grades than their liberal classmates in business and economics courses.

Titled "What's in a Grade? Academic Success and Political Orientation," the study was conducted by Markus Kemmelmeier, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Nevada at Reno, who was the lead author; Cherry Danielson, a research fellow at Wabash College; and Jay Basten, a lecturer in kinesiology at the University of Michigan.

The researchers published their paper in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin last October, but it has attracted little attention, even as activists like David Horowitz continue to press state legislatures to adopt a so-called academic bill of rights to make college campuses more "intellectually diverse" and more tolerant of conservatives.

Mr. Kemmelmeier's study follows two others, published within the past seven years, that found that conservative students tended to earn slightly lower grades in majors such as sociology and anthropology. The professor, who describes his politics as slightly left of center, says he did not undertake the study to contribute to the ongoing discussion of political bias on college campuses, but to address ongoing questions in social psychology about the choices people make regarding their interaction with organizations and what personal characteristics contribute to their success within those organizations.

The earlier studies are "consistent with what Horowitz might suggest -- that conservative students are actually not doing all that well in fields that are thought more left-leaning," says Mr. Kemmelmeier. But there's a problem with that argument, he says: The students' performance "has nothing to do with bias" on the part of their professors.

In a four-year longitudinal study that began in the late 1990s, he surveyed 3,890 students at a major public university in the Midwest. Asked to describe their political orientation, 2.7 percent identified themselves as far left, 34.6 percent as liberal, 42 percent as middle of the road, 20 percent as conservative, and 1.2 percent as far right.

Mr. Kemmelmeier then compared the transcripts of a variety of students taking the same courses, specifically courses taught in the economics department and the business school (which Mr. Kemmelmeier considered "hierarchy-enhancing," or conservative) and those taught in American culture, African-American studies, cultural anthropology, education, nursing, sociology, and women's studies (which he considered "hierarchy-attenuating," or liberal).

He found that in the latter courses, students' political orientations had no effect on their grades -- which, the study says, suggests that disciplines such as sociology and anthropology "might be more accepting of a broad range of student perspectives," while economics and business classes "appear to be more sensitive to whether student perspectives are compatible with those of the academic discipline."

In economics and business classes, the study found, conservative students earned better grades. It also found that conservative students were likely to graduate with higher GPA's in those courses than liberal students who entered college with similar SAT scores….

Prayer, scandal, liars

1. CAUSE OF LOW MORALE IDENTIFIED: PRAYER. This just in. The cause of low morale in the district has been identified. It’s prayer.

That’s right, ever since Trustee Tom Fuentes showed up in the SOCCCD, there’s been lots more prayer, and creepier prayer, too. And things have been goin’ downhill, man.

Well, according to a landmark study whose results were announced this week, not only does prayer not help people, it causes “performance anxiety.” As Bob Park reported yesterday:

The long-awaited study of intercessory prayer for coronary bypass patients was released yesterday...A small increase in complications, attributed to "performance anxiety," was found in a subset of patients who were told that strangers were praying for them. Otherwise, there was nothing. Scientists are relieved of course; science is tough enough without having to worry that somebody on their knees in East Cupcake, Iowa can override natural law. The study of 1800 patients took almost ten years and cost $2.4M, mostly from the Templeton Foundation. Of course, there are calls for further study. Where do we start? What are the units of prayer? Do prayers of Pat Robertson count more than those of death-row inmates? What is the optimum posture of the supplicant? Where can we learn these things? (What's New?)

OK, so the scientists said that the negative effect of prayer was “small.” But those guys haven’t heard Trustee Tom pray!

If there’s a God, He’s pissed.

2. LOCAL REPUBLICANS: FOR ONCE THE SCANDAL IS KINDA SMALL. Did you hear about the latest local Republican scandal? This time, it’s a mini-scandal, I guess, so they're movin' in the right direction. This is from this morning’s OC Register:

More than 100 Orange County residents who thought they were simply signing petitions to cure breast cancer, punish child molesters or build schools were duped into registering as Republicans, an Orange County Register investigation found.

The ruse took place over several days in December and January at shopping centers throughout Anaheim, Santa Ana, Buena Park, Westminster and Garden Grove, where paid petitioners begged, cajoled, lied and committed forgery to get so-called Republican converts. Petition circulators were paid as much as $7 for each GOP registration.

Orange County election officials have received complaints from 167 people who were flipped to the Republican Party without their permission. The Register found the problem was far wider, interviewing 112 others who were not only switched, they were tricked and deceived. Among the victims is a lifelong Democrat who was pressured to fill out forms even though she didn't have her glasses and couldn't see what she was signing.

The Register traced the bogus registrations to Christopher Scott Dinoff, who took out 13,000 blank affidavit cards from the Orange County Registrar of Voters Office, records show.

…In Orange County, local GOP Chairman Scott Baugh said he considers his party a victim in the scam.

"Not only do we get hit for the dollars we are paying vendors, but if they are reluctant Republicans, we are also wasting money on follow-up mailers and efforts to contact (them)," Baugh said.

…Many of those [victims] interviewed by the Register were college students or people with a limited command of English.

"We really don't know how the system works, and we're a little more naive than the rest of the population," said Evelyn Maldonado, 19, a Santa Ana College sophomore who was approached by a signature gatherer after class.

…Dinoff was hired by a subcontractor for Bader and Associates, the Newport Beach consultant used by the GOP to conduct the registration drive.

…Orange County Republican officials say they took immediate action when they learned of "over-aggressive" petitioners, refusing to pay for anymore registrations from Dinoff.

But Frank Barbaro, Orange County Democratic Party chairman, isn't so sure that the Republican Party is blameless. Barbaro said the GOP benefited because the boosted numbers strengthened the party's fundraising ability in the heated 34th District.

"It gives the Republicans all this energy," Barbaro said. "They take those numbers around the state and raise money, saying, 'We can win that district.'" (Click GOP Scandallet)

3. GOOD NEWS/BAD NEWS FOR SHERIFF CARONA. One of Trustee Tom’s pals, OC Sheriff Mike “Rat Bastard” Carona, got some good news and some bad news this week.

The bad news? Well, on Wednesday night, the Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs voted to endorse Bill Hunt, Carona’s chief challenger in the upcoming election. Ouch!

As you know, that came on the heels of a similar setback: a week earlier, the OC Republican Party’s Central Committee declined to endorse Carona for reelection.

Meanwhile, Hunt submitted a ballot statement that described Carona as a “failure” whose administration brought “scandal after scandal.”

Carona’s people cried foul and took the matter to a judge, who ruled this week that Hunt’s verbiage amounted to a “personal attack.”

Personal attack? Here are some more "personal attacks":

• Raghu Mathur’s chancellorship has been a failure.
• Raghu Mathur is a liar.
• As a faculty member, Raghu repeatedly ignored process and went directly to trustees.

These are no more “personal attacks” than is the assertion that Carona’s administration has been beset by scandal, which is demonstrably factual.

I guess that, in the judge’s view, if you say something harsh or unpleasant about someone, then that’s a “personal attack,” even if it’s true plus pertinent. By that standard, “Saddam Hussein was a dictator” is a personal attack.

If you want to hear some real personal attacks (that's when you say things about people that are harsh and false), listen to Raghu's 9-minute speech of Monday night. (See Raghu Blames Faculty)

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...