In a Library of Congress blog, Ellen Terrell tells us that a quote often attributed to President Calvin Coolidge – “The business of America is business” – is an abbreviation. What Coolidge actually said to the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Washington D.C. on January 17, 1925 was this: “After all, the chief business of the American people is business. They are profoundly concerned with producing, buying, selling, investing and prospering in the world.” Terrell adds a codicil to her correction: “Given that the speech was before a news trade group, Coolidge was talking about the role of the press in a modern, democratic America and included warnings about the evils of propaganda. But more specifically, he was talking about the role of the press in free-market America.” For conservatives in the U.S. squaring up against their opposite number, neo-progressives and socialists, the correction may be a distinction without a difference. “W...
“The difference between the right word and the wrong word is the difference between a lightning bolt and a lightning bug” -- Mark Twain Everyone in Connecticut, perhaps including political writers, should know by this time nearly everything they were afraid to ask about Maine Democrat U.S. Senatorial prospect Graham Platner . Thomas Feeney in the Washington Examiner has provided us with a shortened version of Platner’s resume. Leveling a criticism at what is still amusingly called The Mainstream Media, Feeney writes: “There is also no excuse for not looking at the candidate’s social media profile. Clearly, the Democrats missed what one news outlet characterized as “a slew of horrifying posts made on Reddit [in which he disparaged] women, rape victims, minorities, veterans, cops and working-class voters. Moreover, might it not have seemed off-putting to voters that the candidate sent sexual text messages to numerous women while he was married, as reported nationall...