A while back I found a site called Neoconservatism Online, which had the kind of propaganda you’d expect from a site with that name. The site has disappeared; all you find now is a bunch of popups from BuyDomain.com telling you the domain is available. Fortunately for my purposes, I had copied what I wanted from it before it died. I felt like I needed a scorecard for the neo-cons, since the ideology isn’t necessarily immediately discernible from what you read. Anyway, from that site, I give you a partial list of the players as self-identified on that site:
Columnist | Publication | Organization |
---|---|---|
Linda Chavez | Commentary | Ethics and Public Policy Center |
Mona Charen | The Public Interest | American Enterprise Institute |
Paul Greenberg | The American Enterprise | Center for the Study of Popular Culture |
Charles Krauthammer | The New Criterion | Empower America |
Michael Medved | The National Interest | The Hudson Institute |
Frank Gaffney, Jr. | First Things | Project for the New American Century |
Jonah Goldberg | The Weekly Standard | Americans for Victory Over Terrorism |
David Horowitz | ||
Michael Barone | ||
John Leo | ||
Michael Ledeen | ||
Jeff Jacoby | ||
Hilton Kramer |
This is by no means a complete list, but if you get as confused as I do when reading something from a source I don’t immediately recognize, it serves as a reference. Use it in good health, copy if you like.
(Note: If anyone wants to “view source” and explain why I’ve got all that blank space between the text and the table, feel free.)
You have all that white space because you have a dozen <br /> tags embedded in your table. Take them out, and your white space will go away.
Aha! Thank you, Mr. Morris. I embedded a carriage return after each row entry in the MT entry box; that’s obviously unnecessary. Now I know better.
You’re very welcome; it looks pretty good. You may want to put a <br /> tag right before your table, to separate it from the preceeding text. Ciao
I too remember this site as i visited it a few times while reseaching neoconservatism in the run up to the war. In my case i was constructing a “deck of cards” ala the “Iraqi most wanted cards”. I called my deck “Crusader Cards” or “Neo-Con Cards”. I got some pictures from the site. If anyones interested you can reach me by email and I’ll send the cards as jpgs. They’re set up to be easily printed on 4X6 notecards. Can’t know the players without a scorecard.