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Joshua Livestro : ウィキペディア英語版 | Joshua Livestro Joshua Livestro (born 16 December 1970 in Amersfoort) is a Dutch columnist and political writer. He was a former assistant to EU commissioner Frits Bolkestein. Livestro read political science at Leiden University and philosophy at the University of Cambridge. Livestro was active in the Edmund Burke Foundation, a conservative think tank. During his studies, Livestro was an active checkers player, and became national students' champion in 1994. He writes a column about foreign affairs for ''De Telegraaf''. Livestro succeeded Ronald Plasterk as a columnist for the Sunday morning television talkshow ''Buitenhof''. Plasterk became an education and culture minister in the fourth Balkenende cabinet. The producers of ''Buitenhof'' fired Livestro after just four months, saying that his columns were subpar. Livestro said in a ''Telegraaf'' op-ed that he was fired for his "right-wing views," that the show routinely ignores alternate viewpoints and even censures columnists' views. He also called one of the broadcaster of ''Buitenhof'', the NPS, a "left-wing funnel," where "a ''DDR'' mentality reigns." In wake of Livestro's firing, political parties D66 and VVD asked parliamentary questions to the culture minister, Ronald Plasterk, who incidentally was Livestro's predecessor at ''Buitenhof''. Plasterk answered that there was enough diversity in Dutch public television. Livestro later wrote a longer account his experiences at ''Buitenhof'' for Pajamas Media.〔 On 25 November 2010, the Dutch daily newspaper ''NRC Handelsblad'' published an article which names Livestro an advisor to Sarah Palin; Livestro confirmed the announcement by telephone from his home in Nottingham, England.〔 (www.nrc.nl )〕 ==References==
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