The saddest quotation in last week’s Billings Gazette came from Shonn Lehmann, a volunteer weighing names for a new West End middle school. After fellow volunteer Dana Winchell suggested the district avoid naming the school after a human being because of the politics involved, Lehmann said, “I think that’s what we need to avoid, ticking people off.” (more…) Continue Reading →
Recent Posts
David Crisp: Mortification, then sweet vindication
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Well, I screwed that up. Such was the eloquent sentence that I imagined last week might begin this column. I had just written a piece on the closing of Lee Enterprises’ Capitol bureau, and in it I had made what I thought was the original observation that none of the Lee papers in Montana had reported the closing. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Chuck johnson, Lee Enterprises, Mark Twain, Mike Dennison
Christene Meyers puts familiar byline on first novel
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After 40 years in journalism, Christene Meyers decided to start making things up. The result is her first novel, “Lilian’s Last Dance,” which she introduced to readers here last week as part of Big Read events. Writing the book was, she said in an interview later, the hardest thing she has ever done. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: Culture, 'Lilian's First Dance', Big Read, Billings Gazette, Christene Meyers, Marian Booth Green
Papers go dark when news is about them
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If you are still an old-fashioned reader of Montana newspapers published by Lee Enterprises, then you missed last week’s most intriguing story. News that Lee was closing its Capitol bureau this week and letting go two of the state’s most respected journalists, Chuck Johnson and Mike Dennison, appeared first on the front page of the Great Falls Tribune. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Butte Weekly, Chuck johnson, Great Falls Tribune, Jim Romenesko, John Adams, Lee Enterprises, Mike Dennison
‘Dark money,’ free speech and a long way to go
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In a routine Sunday column about things the Montana Legislature did right in the recent session, Billings Gazette Editor Darrell Ehrlick wrote this sentence: “Free speech is not the right to say anything to anyone without having to sign your name to it.”
Actually, the right to say anything to anyone without having to sign your name to it is pretty much the definition of free speech. That’s why questions about campaign spending have become so tortured in Montana and in the nation as a whole. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Commissioner of Political Practices, Darrell Ehrlick, Disclose Montana Act, First Amendment, Jonathan Motl, Krayton Kerns, Montana Legislature
From the Outpost: Looking for the ever-elusive truth
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Truth can be slippery, as last week’s news showed. Sometimes, the truth comes without relevant facts. In his Sunday column, Billings Gazette editor Darrell Ehrlick noted the decline of press coverage of the federal government in Washington, D.C. It’s a common, and worthy, complaint. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Billings Gazette, Darrell Ehrlick, Lee Enterprises, Media Trackers, Miles Avenue Elementary School, Steve Daines
No rooms for guns on stress-filled campuses
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Senate Bill 143 appears to be dead. Fortunately, the students it aimed to protect are still alive. After passing the Montana Senate in February, the bill failed, 49-51, on second reading Monday in the House. SB 143, introduced by Sen. Cary Smith, R-Billings, would allow students at Montana’s public colleges and universities to carry concealed weapons on campus. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Billings bypass, College Degree Search, Montana Legislature, Montana State University, National Rifle Association, Sen. Cary Smith
Racism? If the shoe fits, wear it
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Sean Hannity knew exactly whom to blame. When two police officers were shot last week during a protest in Ferguson, Missouri, talk radio host Hannity went right after the usual suspects: Al Sharpton, Attorney General Eric Holder, President Barack Obama and the protesters themselves. How, Hannity wondered, could Ferguson residents be protesting when a Justice Department report cleared Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson of wrongdoing in the shooting of Michael Brown, whose death last August sparked ugly protests? Outside agitators like the president must be to blame. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, News, Barack Obama, Cliven Bundy, Ferguson, Justice Department, Rudy Giuliani, Sean Hannity
The tricky question of boycotts
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In January I wrote about Downtown Businesses Against Advertising in the Billings Gazette, a Facebook group organized to protest a Gazette column by Editor Darrell Ehrlick that they perceived as a slam on downtown. “This group is started as a protest to the Gazette and its editorial board,” the page said, “and we encourage all members to transfer their ad dollars to businesses that support downtown, not tear it down.” (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Billings Gazette, Michelle Maki, Montana Legislature, Nicholas Schwaderer, Pub Station, Sean Lynch, Wal-Mart
From the Outpost: What it means to be ‘educated’
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Before his death on Sunday, Lawrence F. Small was the living emblem of Rocky Mountain College. He taught history there for decades, served as dean and as president, founded the Institute for Peace Studies and literally wrote the book about Rocky, “Courageous Journey,” a history of the school. My mostly-on relationship with Rocky goes back 14 years, but that’s not how I knew Small. Instead, he was a member of the Geriatric Writers Kaffeeklatsch, whose Wednesday afternoon meetings I try to attend. (more…) Continue Reading →