CNN Media Gang Member Manu Raju is the Newest Winner of the Duranty-Blair Award for Journalistic Infamy!
Robert E. Lee was not only a great general, but is on the short list for the greatest American who ever lived. (That’s after Nana, The Boss, and my chief of research, natch.) Indeed, many people who have not known the three figures I just listed, have made powerful arguments that Gen. Lee was the greatest American who ever lived.
But Lee was a patriotic Virginian, and as such, made a fateful decision to lead the Army of Northern Virginia, rather than the Army of the Potomac, which he was also offered, in the American Civil War.
As part of the one-sided, genocidal war on whites, which has raged for generations in America, contumely is heaped upon all things Confederate, whom racists seek to eliminate from our history, at the same time that they obsessively vilify them. (How one is to do both things, is never explained.)
The CNN Division of the DPUSA is part of the seditious conspiracy to undo the 2016 election. One of its tactics is to state or suggest that President Trump is a racist. (Also that he is insane, a criminal, etc.)
The Duranty-Blair Award recognizes those journalists whose work embodies the spirit of Walter Duranty and Jayson Blair, two of the most notorious journalists in the history of the Fourth Estate. It is no accident that both men worked for the New York Times.
Manu Raju joins other CNN Duranty-Blair laureates:
Award-winning, New York-based freelancer Nicholas Stix founded A Different Drummer magazine (1989-93). Stix has written for Die Suedwest Presse, New York Daily News, New York Post, Newsday, Middle American News, Toogood Reports, Insight, Chronicles, the American Enterprise, Campus Reports, VDARE, the Weekly Standard, Front Page Magazine, Ideas on Liberty, National Review Online and the Illinois Leader. His column also appears at Men's News Daily, MichNews, Intellectual Conservative, Enter Stage Right and OpinioNet. Stix has studied at colleges and universities on two continents, and earned a couple of sheepskins, but he asks that the reader not hold that against him. His day jobs have included washing pots, building Daimler-Benzes on the assembly-line, tackling shoplifters and teaching college, but his favorite job was changing his son's diapers.