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October 16, 2007

Pelosi's pause

Seems Bill Paparian's prediction of Speaker Nancy Pelosi's intent to not let the Armenian Genocide bill reach a vote is coming true:

Bill to Condemn Genocide in Jeopardy By ANNE FLAHERTY

WASHINGTON (AP) — A House vote to label the century-old deaths of Armenians as genocide was in jeopardy Tuesday after several Democrats withdrew their support and sounded alarms it could cripple U.S. relations with Turkey.

The loss of support is a major setback to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic leaders on Capitol Hill, who have fiercely defended the resolution to Republicans and the Bush administration as a moral imperative in condemning the World War I-era killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

President Bush called Pelosi on Tuesday to ask her not to call for a House vote on the resolution.

"The president and the speaker exchanged candid views on the subject and the speaker explained the strong bipartisan support in the House for the resolution," Pelosi spokesman Nadeam Elshami said, noting that Bush initiated the phone call.

For the record.

There is no copyright on information -- it just is. I do chuckle and sigh, however, every time I see someone copy-paste specific facts lifted directly from my stories.

I'm glad people read our web updates online, especially when they show up on other folks' web pages an hour later. But when they insist on pretending it was their work ... well ... maybe they could help subsidize my paycheck? Believe it or don't, I work pretty hard to cultivate relationships and sources to have an idea of what's going on and get it in the paper and/or on our web site.

Some of us don't wait for press releases to rewrite into a 'story' ... we go out and leverage the relationships we have, the knowledge of who knows what (and how), and experience to ask the right questions of the right people.

Most professional media organizations understand the nature of the work and the why it's important to give credit. From time to time, we'll reference something as "according to the Los Angeles Times" or "the Pasadena Weekly reported ... " And vice-versa.

Why? Because it's honest. It's not our job to deceive. Our business and profession is about straining for an honest representation of facts, not bending it for the sake of trying to look good.

Example: This report on the Rose Parade controversy from abc7.com, which was mostly based on my stories and gave credit when referencing my break of the Oct. 29 meeting:

The Pasadena Star-News reports today that the council will hold a special session Oct. 29 to air out the matter, and possibly take steps.

I don't expect that level of honesty from everyone, I'm just saying. For the record. <.<

Super Tuesday

Love it when pols pretend to be comfortable with animals. Or work.Big names descend on Pasadena today.

Former Mexican President Vicente Fox gives a free lecture @Caltech's Beckman Auditorium at 8 p.m.; Governor Arnold is at the Western Justice Center at the moment.

The Roll

Our SGVN blogs

Hallway Monitor
Caroline An's experiences the Pasadena Unified School District.
The Public Eye
SGVN Public Editor Larry Wilson muses on life, newspapering and the Velvet Underground.
Scott Galetti Talks Prep Sports What else is there to say? Scott's a cool guy who posts about local prep sports.
Crime Scene
Tribune crime guy Frank Girardot wants to know where the bodies are and what they're stuffed into.
Editors' Corner
Edward Barrera and Kate Kealey, las editors libres, reflect on the news in general with a dash of newsroom insidering.
Leftovers from City Hall
More city hall news and tidbits from around the Valley, brought to you by reporters Jennifer McLain and Tania Chatila.
Fred Robledo Talks Prep Sports
Tribune sports dude Fred Robledo's monster prep sports blog.

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