James Moore is an Emmy-winning former television news correspondent and the co-author of the bestselling, Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential. His second book, Bush's War for Reelection included his groundbreaking ten year investigation into the president's National Guard record. He has been writing and reporting from Texas for the past 25 years on the rise of Rove and Bush and has traveled extensively on every presidential campaign since 1976. He is also the author of The Architect: Karl Rove and the Master Plan for Absolute Power. His political columns and insights have been published in leading newspapers and periodicals around the globe. Moore is also an award winning documentary film producer. His current book project, When Horses Could Fly: A Memoir of the American Dream is a narrative examining the hopes and dreams of southerners in the aftermath of World War II.

Blog Entries by James Moore

Why We Worry about Vaccines

212 Comments | Posted October 1, 2009 | 10:39 AM (EST)


Even as doctors try to reassure the public, and TV news anchors get their swine flu shots on the morning news, there remains a great unease about vaccinations in the US. People hesitant to take the needle are marginalized as anti-vaccine nuts, regardless of the many justifiable reasons to distrust...

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I'm Scared, Ma

44 Comments | Posted September 22, 2009 | 06:20 AM (EST)


At McGrath Elementary up in Michigan we were learning a lesson no other generation of children had ever been taught. Our school was new and the paint smelled fresh and the metal trim of the windows shined even on the innumerable gray days. The desks we had been given had...

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The Roses of October

1 Comments | Posted September 17, 2009 | 03:29 PM (EST)


When we lived in our little white rented house a few miles north of the big river there were two bushes that grew in a corner of the back yard. They struggled because an old cottonwood and two orange trees took most of the sun and when the slanted rain...

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The Real Health Care Scare

89 Comments | Posted September 8, 2009 | 12:20 AM (EST)


In all of the white-hot vitriol being spewed over a national health care plan, very little attention is being directed at the pharmaceutical companies and the potential conflicts of interest involving the doctors doing their research. In America, we are generally of the belief that by the time a drug...

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The Lies of Texas Are Upon You

1171 Comments | Posted September 4, 2009 | 03:09 PM (EST)


"Life in Lubbock, Texas, taught me two things: One is that God loves you and you're going to burn in hell. The other is that sex is the most awful, filthy thing on earth and you should save it for someone you love." - Butch Hancock, Musician, the Flatlanders

A...

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The Wolffe at the Door

89 Comments | Posted August 4, 2009 | 12:04 AM (EST)


When Richard Wolffe went to work for Austin-based Public Strategies, he was merely keeping viable a tradition whereby those of us formerly in journalism make transitions to more lucrative careers. The former Newsweek correspondent, however, has been caught attempting to change the game. Both Wolffe and his employer seem to...

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Say It Ain't So, Keith O

343 Comments | Posted August 1, 2009 | 11:52 AM (EST)


I read with great sadness about NBC's decision to have Keith Olbermann back off of his criticism of Bill O'Reilly. I'm trying to convince myself the New York Times' piece was satire but I did that with Judy Miller's Iraq reporting and that taught me I don't understand satire. Who...

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A Part of Their Rage Belongs to Us

35 Comments | Posted June 23, 2009 | 09:51 PM (EST)


The genteel interview of the former empress of Iran conducted by MSNBC Tuesday is a vital example of how American political sensibilities are dangerously lacking context. We watch on the web and television as Iranians die in the street demanding proof of a democratic election and we are mostly...

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The Inelegant Internet

31 Comments | Posted June 10, 2009 | 06:20 PM (EST)


The Internet may one day prove to be the most profoundly transformative creation of humankind. There is also the possibility it can turn into a garbage dump of the human mind where the glittering is buried beneath the refuse. The overwhelming flow, redirection, and accumulation of information have the potential...

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Hope to Heartache: General Motors and the American Dream

35 Comments | Posted June 1, 2009 | 12:43 PM (EST)


The end of General Motors will mark a painful conclusion to a distinctly American story. Forgotten in the collapse will be the millions of people who migrated from South to North to take a chance and build the most successful company yet seen in the history of business. Their lives...

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The Talkin' Torture Blues

Posted April 24, 2009 | 11:06 AM (EST)


The man at the airport bar was watching Dick Cheney on FOX News. (No matter where I travel, FOX News is on the monitors, which explains much about our nation's present predicament.)

"I gotta admit," the man said. "I agree with him. I don't like him much, but I agree...

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What's Left of Texas

Posted April 17, 2009 | 12:56 AM (EST)


"If I owned Texas and hell, I'd rent out Texas and live in hell." - U.S. Gen. Phillip Sheridan, 1866

When they held their constitutional convention in a cotton gin on the edge of the Texas Hill Country, they seemed a merry band of pranksters. The Republic of Texas Militia,...

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Cuba: Island in the Dream

Posted April 14, 2009 | 12:57 AM (EST)


"Freedom is what you do with what's been done to you." - Jean Paul Sartre

The news that America's policies toward Cuba are changing will further humanize our country while de-humanizing Castro's government. We minimize our political gains with the people of Cuba when we further their hardship under Castro...

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A Second Act for Spitzer?

Posted March 19, 2009 | 12:25 PM (EST)


"Too many of us look upon Americans as dollar chasers. This is a cruel libel, even if it is reiterated thoughtlessly by the Americans themselves." - Albert Einstein

There is an attorney who can get to the bottom of our current financial crisis and lay the blame and guilt at...

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The Death of a Brand

Posted March 18, 2009 | 10:58 AM (EST)


There is an old saw in marketing and public relations that if you don't quickly brand your company's products and services the public will brand them for you. Whether that brand ends up being good or bad becomes secondary to the fact that you are not likely to ever get...

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The Amazingly Fantastic Freedom Institute and Technicolor Political Dream Machine

Posted March 15, 2009 | 03:36 PM (EST)


Even in retirement, George W. B**h (I refuse to write his name any longer) and his retinue of sycophants cannot stop from being disruptive and culturally, as well as ethically, disconnected from reality. The Crawford Cowboys have picked a fight with Southern Methodist University in Dallas over a think tank...

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And a Comic Shall Lead Them

Posted March 10, 2009 | 10:28 PM (EST)


"It is a curious fact that people are never so trivial as when they take themselves seriously."
- Oscar Wilde

I am inclined to wonder if there is a line somewhere in the Book of Revelation that proclaims "and a comic shall lead them." Jon Stewart has set new...

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The Train That Never Was

Posted March 8, 2009 | 10:31 PM (EST)


We were bound for glory. The hard work was completed. Environmental scoping had found the least disruptive route for a high-speed train from Miami to Orlando and then over to Tampa. We had branded the project FOX for the Florida Overland Express. A sleek red-tail in full stride was to...

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I Hope Rush Succeeds

Posted March 3, 2009 | 11:31 AM (EST)


Never envisioned myself writing a sentence like this but I hope Rush Limbaugh succeeds. Yep, I hope he spreads his vile as far and wide as he possibly can through his EIB (Extremely Ignorant Broadcast) network. Through his outreach, even more Americans will come to know the absurdity of Limbaugh's...

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The Great American Makeover

Posted February 25, 2009 | 09:22 AM (EST)



"America is the land where people find whatever they have lost." - Gunter Grass

I vaguely recognized the nation President Obama was describing as he spoke to a joint session of congress. This was America, the one I have been reading and hearing about since I was a...

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