What a lot of people here need to learn is that people are entitled to dislike Paul enough to not outright support him. Cenk's a big-government centrist. He doesn't dislike Paul because his bosses told him to (hell, his actual boss outright hates Paul, you know, Al Gore), he straight up disagrees with him. And he's completely entitled to disagree with his economic policies. And hell, no matter how much he dislikes Paul, he likes him more Obama and would support Paul over him. So what's the beef? That he doesn't like Paul as much as we do? That he's not blindly wearing a Ron Paul 2012 shirt because we want him to?
He's been fair to Paul considering his point of view. Sure he brings up the newsletter stuff, but to a non-supporter and definitely to a non-Republican, the newsletters are an issue that havent'been dealt with properly. Lew Rockwell's been rumored to have written the racist remarks and that makes a lot of sense considering how much he likes to provoke people. So Paul doesn't bother to name the people who did it and Lew Rockwell, who admitted to having 'hired freelancers' to write them isn't stepping up either. So all we're left with is Ron Paul, with contradictory statements to his name. Now we trust Paul enough to not having lied about this stuff, but why should we the general public to be convinced that a politician who's got 2 different statement to his name, to have actually said the good stuff and didn't actually say the bad stuff? Politicians lie, period. You'd think that libertarians would be happy that people are being distrustful of a politician (that's not to say that what most of the mainstream media is doing isn't merely a smear campaign, it is, so don't think I'm saying that Fox's smears are 'healthy skepticism', I'm just saying, in Cenk's case it is).
There's a difference between what Fox is doing to Paul and to what Cenk is doing to Paul. We gotta look at some of these things more objectively.