Georgia GOP judge disses Big Birther Mama

September 16, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 6 Comments
Filed under: BLOG de KEN, POLITICS 

U.S. District Court Judge Clay Land is my new hero. OK, well, maybe not hero. But I always thought Land had integrity.

I used to cover Land for the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, back when he was state Sen. Clay Land, R-Columbus. He was a very conservative state legislator. Scary-smart lawyer type. The kind of guy who could exploit minor flaws in his debating foe’s logic and who could deflate Democratic proposals with airtight arguments. The way I saw it, he usually used those smarts in defense of wealth and corporate interests, but he also had a sense of fair play, was big on ethics and was very much of straight-shooter.

I guess they don’t make Republicans like they used to. Now, Judge Land of the Middle District of Georgia is being lambasted as treasonous by Orly Taitz, who’s one of the lead conspiracy theorists in the Obama-wasn’t-born-in-the-U.S. birther movement. Read more

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Jim Walls’ hopeful project

March 23, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 3 Comments
Filed under: MEDIA/TECH 

Former AJC projects editor Jim Walls has given himself a tall order: Getting facts to take precedence on the Internet.

That ought to be about as easy as an ant moving a rubber tree plant.

But maybe Walls and those who help him in publishing his new Atlanta Unfiltered website can at least achieve two other other things: Fill the gap in public records reporting that has opened with the downsizing of newspapers around the state, and clear a path toward better online journalism.

I hopeful. Walls’ project should be exciting for anyone in Georgia who believes that basing political decisions on real information is better than basing them on rumors and innuendo. The site already contains a no nonsense report on a pending $25,000 ethics fine facing recently elected Public Service Commissioner Lauren “Bubba” McDonald, and it simply links from a short blurb to a document showing big salaries at the Children’s Wish Foundation.

Walls’ name may not be as widely known as some of the familiar bylines that have disappeared from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution over the last couple of years. But he was a force behind some of the daily’s best work in the ’90s and during this decade. While I was reporting on last year’s AJC staff cuts, his name came up more often than anyone else’s when I asked staff members whom the paper would miss most — save perhaps business columnist Maria Saporta.

Unlike Saporta — who is a brand unto herself — Walls was an inside guy for much of his time at Georgia’s largest local news-gathering organization. As one high-ranking editor told me, Walls is a “reporter’s editor” — the kind of guy who built allegiance from writers because he cared so deeply about their work.

It’s not surprising that Atlanta Unfiltered aspires to that kind of integrity. From Walls’ note to his readers:

The Internet is overflowing with opinions. Facts? Not so much.

This site is about restoring the balance. We dig up and share public records on ethics and transparency in  government and public institutions — all with minimal interpretation.

The site includes some smart, inviting ideas such as opportunities for readers providing tips and documents, and even taking tutorials in doing their own investigations. This is the kind of empowering, populist journalism that I was thinking about when I mentioned the potential of the web in a January AJC column. If such sites become popular and spur true citizen journalism, perhaps we’ll all end up better informed, even if fewer people are employed as traditional journalists.

Such citizen journalism has been used sporadically but effectively by one of my favorite sites, Talking Points Memo. In an earlier e-mail exchange with me, however, Walls stressed that he’s steering clear of advocacy and opinion. As Sgt. Friday used to say, “Just the fact, ma’am.”

UPDATE: Responses from Walls to two e-mailed questions:

Q: Do you see any models for Atlanta Unfiltered (if so, what)?
A: I haven’t really modeled my site after another one, if that’s what you mean. I got the idea of posting documents from The Smoking Gun. What type to post, the topics, the tone of the language all came to me in a sort of fever dream on a long drive from DC to Atlanta last year. I’m starting with a focus on ethics in government because it’s relatively simple.

Q:There are relatively few techno bells and whistles (e.g. links to other sources, Web. 2.0, etc.) on the site. Is that by design or do you expect to add more interactivity as you move along?

A: I have reached the limits of my techno knowledge with the site that you see (exceeded them, really). I’m focusing on content & reporting at the moment. I don’t have time now to moderate readers’ posts, so I’m not going to get into that for a while. I do have some modest bells and whistles in the works, and some more ambitious ones. But I wanted to get started rather than sit around thinking about it any longer.

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