
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Debate description coming soon.

New York Times best-selling author, commentator, news analyst and law professor

Conservative Art Critic, Essayist and Social Commentator

Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research

Executive Director of The Creative Coalition

Film Producer, Director and Political Activist

Professor at UCLA, and a Writer of Fiction, Nonfiction, and Screenplays
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New York Times best-selling author, commentator, news analyst and law professor
James is a pundit for NewsMax.com and author of the popular weekly column “The Left Coast Report,” where he takes a humorous poke at the politics of Hollywood. His latest book is Hollywood Nation: Left Coast Lies, Old Media Spin, and the New Media Revolution (2005). Hirsen teaches law at California’s Trinity Law School and Biola University.
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Conservative Art Critic, Essayist and Social Commentator
Roger is managing editor, co-editor and co-publisher of the New Criterion magazine, a monthly review of the arts and intellectual life, and an art critic for the London Spectator. Kimball contributes to numerous journals in the US and England. He is the author of many books, including his most recent, The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art (2004).
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Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research
Joshua studies the UN, neo-conservatism, the history of socialism and communism, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and global democracy, terrorism, and the Bush doctrine. His most recent book is The Future of the United Nations: Understanding the Past to Chart a Way Forward (2005).
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Executive Director of The Creative Coalition
The Creative Coalition is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, social and political advocacy organization for the arts and entertainment industry. She is dedicated to educating and mobilizing the arts community on issues of public importance, particularly the First Amendment, arts advocacy and public education.
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Film Producer, Director and Political Activist
Robert's first feature documentary was Unprecedented: The 2000 Political Election (2002). Most recently he directed and produced Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price (2005). His new media company, Brave New Films, is working on producing films that will influence the debates on the most important issues of the day.
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Professor at UCLA, and a Writer of Fiction, Nonfiction, and Screenplays
Richard chairs the graduate program in screenwriting. His students enjoy great success at the studios and networks.
Learn moreI believe there is some truth to Hollywood's fueling of anti-Americanism abroad, with all the anti-govt. conspiracy movies that are out there.
The only thing I see wrong with your logic is that you seem not to have taken percentage into coedosnratiin. Independent voters are in the minority, and while they can influence a political race if the voting is close enough, it's an impossibility that 100% of them will choose one party over the other. Thus, your logic that 1 (Republicans)+1 (Independents) = 2. Majority , for example, takes a nosedive as soon as you exceed the number of independent voters there are. After that, you can't use them in the equation. It then becomes a question of, will R+I be greater than D+I when the voting has finished, and if so, did the addition of I to both R and D change the outcome of the election as opposed to what the outcome would have been if I had not been present.
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