Bash the Messenger

Aug 272009
 

I tend to doubt it.

WSJ headline: “Calm in Crisis Won Fed Job.”

Another possibility is that anyone Obama knows would be even worse. Or maybe he thinks Bernanke is sufficiently maleable. But one thing Obama certainly didn’t value at the time was “calm in crisis.” He was trying to stir up our fears so he could get the big stimulus spending package passed. He has an aide who thinks a crisis is not something to be wasted. It isn’t likely that our President all of a sudden got religion and decided that calmness is good, after all. If that’s what he really wanted, he could try firing Rahm Emmanuel.

Aug 192009
 

It’s hard to think about Robert Novak’s passing without getting teary about it. I can’t say I’ve followed his articles forever. I never saw him on TV. But I do remember reading him back when there were such things as newspapers and the byline was Evans and Novak. Maybe 10-15 years ago I came to realize that one reason I liked his articles in comparison to those of many pundits was because they always contained new information. Then, a few years ago I learned that this was intentional. I can’t find the quote on the web just now, but he and Evans decided that they would not produce a column that didn’t contain some new information.

Out on the MSM there are many grudging, snide tributes to Novak, and a few sincere ones, too. The WSJ editors gave one explanation for why we’ll miss him so much:

All of this earned Novak the moniker of “conservative” in Washington’s taxonomy, but above all he brought to his work a reporter’s skepticism about the powerful. This is in contrast to most modern Washington journalists, who have become apologists for the federal government’s dominance in American life. Novak was as hard on Republicans who failed to live up to their small-government principles as he was on Democrats who sought to expand the welfare state.

Aug 052009
 

I dislike headlines like this one from CNN: “Ex-Rep. Jefferson convicted of corruption

The problem is, it gives people the idea that corruption is illegal. If corruption was illegal, then Rahm Emanuel would be in the slammer for trying to give out federal stimulus funds only on condition that recipients speak favorably about the stimulus program. Of course Emanuel should lose his job over that, but I’m not sure it’s something for the criminal courts.

Jul 302009
 

Information like this is among my favorites.

“During the height of the Viking raids, it’s reasonable to say it was unsafe to live anywhere within 20 miles [32 kilometers] of the coast.” (National Geographic)

I’m referring to the part in brackets.

It’s good to know that 32 kilometers would have been dangerous. Which isn’t to say that 33 kilometers wouldn’t have been dangerous as well.

Jun 282009
 

In the weekend WSJ, Gerard Baker tries mightily to raise the double standard. The scene might not make quite as good a monument as the statue of the soldiers raising the flag on Iowa Jima, but it ought to count for something in the journalism profession.

The article is titled Sex Americana. Subheadline: “Infidelity is no longer a career-killer for politicians. Bur weirdness, mendacity and ineptitude just might be.” The article is of course about Sen. Mark Sanford. (Why that topic rates a full page on the front of the Weekend Journal, and the firing of Gerald Walpin does not, deserves a front-page article all its own.)

Especially since the Clinton days, the media have a hard time hounding someone out of office for marital infidelity. They need an angle to show why this one should go, while in the case of the other guy we need to move on so he can stay. And Baker thinks he has found one:

For all the talk of yet another politician dragged down by an uncontrollable libido, it may well be the sheer strangeness of Mr. Sanford’s behavior, rather than his original sin, that will do him the most political harm.

Though adultery was, and still is perhaps for a minority of voters, an automatic disqualification for political office, the fact is that the moral rules by which American politicians are judged are complex and changing.

There you have it. According to Baker, Sanford didn’t follow the usual pattern:

There was, for once, no adoring wife, standing by her man, gazing dewy-eyed at the flawed hero. There was no attempt by the sinner to explain his sin in artfully phrased self-exonerations; no references to some inner demon, an abusive father, an addictive personality or the indescribable pressures of working so hard for the good of the American people.

Therefore, goes the innuendo, Sanford needs to go because he is weird.

To tell the truth, the weirdness is one of the things I liked about this whole affair — especially the part where Sanford was out of touch for several days. We need more of that in our executive officers.

As to the apology in front of the cameras, I didn’t see it and don’t plan to watch it on YouTube, either. My entertainment comes from mocking the newspaper coverage, which hardly leaves time for watching the actual events the professional journalists are writing about. But Dorothy Rabinowitz saw it, and she didn’t seem to think it was weird at all, as such things go. To her it was the same old, same old:

We can now add the sad-eyed Gov. Mark Sanford, making his tearful public confessional, to the galaxy of similar fallen stars we have seen in this state before. The question no one has ever answered is how they all fell into the grip of the same delusion: namely, that the way to retrieving dignity is to go before the microphones to issue craven apologies to a list of purported victims.

So she seems not to have seen the same apology that Gerard Baker saw. But maybe Baker isn’t even convinced by his own innuendo, because towards the end he seems to have changed his mind about what it might take to get Sanford booted:

[He] seems to have spent state money on furthering the affair. If anything undoes him, it will be that.

Well, yes, that would do it. But I suppose if we’re going to be concerned about how state money is spent, we might also have to be concerned about the abuses that Gerald Walpin was trying to stop, and we couldn’t have that now, could we? Better to stick with the weirdness angle.

Jun 212009
 

Quote of the weekend

The Times implies, without quite saying it, both that it approves of Obama’s evasions (“the United States must take special care”) and that it would approve if he took a different approach (“he may have to speak out more forcefully”). It’s hard to know whether to describe this as a posture of total deference to the president or of complete indifference to the underlying subject.

Jun 172009
 

When Obama’s first stimulus bill was making its way through Congress, we kept hearing about “shovel ready” projects that could get started right away. Then it turned out there weren’t so many such projects.

But now we see that some projects truly are shovel ready.

Last night the scandal involving the firing of federal watchdog Gerald Walpin made it onto the front page of Google News, though not to the very top. In the wee hours of the morning you could find it, not on the front page, but pretty high up if you clicked on U.S. news. Around 9 a.m. EDT it was 19th on U.S. news, and now it’s not there at all. It looks like the news media have been burying it as fast as possible.

There you have it. That story was shovel ready.

Jun 042009
 

This is just creepy. Yes, a speech can be an important and influential event, but for it to have such an impact so quickly? And how would a reporter have any possible way of knowing these things without doing extensive polling?

Why not just tell us what Obama said and what the crowd reaction was? That’s all we really know for now.

Washington Post headline: “Muslims Seem Won Over by President; U.S. Adversaries Unmoved.”

CAIRO, June 4 — President Obama’s choice of Egypt as the site of his address to the Muslim world endeared him to Egyptians, who are always proud to host a foreigner and show off their history.

That he came to downtown Cairo, instead of heading to the Sinai beach resorts where the country’s diplomatic gatherings are often held, told them he was serious about connecting on a personal level.

When he sprinkled his speech with words from the Koran and balanced support for Israel with a strong call for a Palestinian state, the deal was closed.

Maybe the Washington Post now hires clairovoyants as reporters?

Jun 042009
 

Well, yes, I imagine he is. In the same category:

  • Bill Gates appears open to making money from software
  • Ann Coulter appears open to critizing “liberals.”
  • Ford Motor Company appears open to making some cars
  • The Reticulator appears open to making snarky comments about Obama’s lapdog media

Obama appears open to some health insurance mandates” (LA Times headline)