MY MESSAGE IS CLEAR, BLOIS' KEEPS CHANGING
It's clear after listening to Blois' radio interview yesterday and reading his op-ed that he is floundering and he is trying to find a coherent message to defend his lawsuit.
1. Blois claims damages in excess of $50,000, yet he can't prove that he has been damaged.
2. Blois said he sued me to begin a dialogue, yet he hasn't emailed me, called me, or posted on my blog.
3. Blois' new claim is that "anonymous blogs are emerging as a tactic comparable to the 527 groups in 2004."
Because Blois hasn't found a message that will help his cause, so he keeps changing the message.
My message is simple and it hasn't changed.
1. Blois is a Democrat consultant and he is suing a Republican blogger dedicated to exposing Minnesota Democrats. There is a clear partisan advantage for Blois to shut down my blog.
2. Both the very existence of political blogs (all of them) and the free exchange of political ideas (free both in terms of the openness that blogs provide and the actual lack of cost) could conceivably make Blois' subscription based publication, Politics In Minnesota: The Weekly Report, less financially successful. As such, blogs might hurt Blois' pocketbook.
1. Blois claims damages in excess of $50,000, yet he can't prove that he has been damaged.
2. Blois said he sued me to begin a dialogue, yet he hasn't emailed me, called me, or posted on my blog.
3. Blois' new claim is that "anonymous blogs are emerging as a tactic comparable to the 527 groups in 2004."
Because Blois hasn't found a message that will help his cause, so he keeps changing the message.
My message is simple and it hasn't changed.
1. Blois is a Democrat consultant and he is suing a Republican blogger dedicated to exposing Minnesota Democrats. There is a clear partisan advantage for Blois to shut down my blog.
2. Both the very existence of political blogs (all of them) and the free exchange of political ideas (free both in terms of the openness that blogs provide and the actual lack of cost) could conceivably make Blois' subscription based publication, Politics In Minnesota: The Weekly Report, less financially successful. As such, blogs might hurt Blois' pocketbook.




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