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Is Don Luskin Really This Idiotic and Shameful?

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Composed Thinker Donating Member (874 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 03:10 PM
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Is Don Luskin Really This Idiotic and Shameful?
I think the answer is yes:

RUSSERT JOINS THE KRUGMAN COUNTER-CONSPIRACY Paul Krugman's book -- The Great Unraveling -- hits the bookstores today. Are you surprised to learn that Krugman's publisher, W.W. Norton, has repeatedly refused my requests for a review copy of the new book?

But other than that inexplicable omission, America's most dangerous liberal pundit is in full book-promo mode. He's dropped his teaching duties at Princeton for the quarter. His personal website lists 14 speaking engagements around the country, with more to come (a helpful reader suggested that coconut cream pie works the best for such occasions). And the inevitable media interviews are already starting, kicking off with a whole hour Saturday with Tim Russert on CNBC.

For the next month or so, it's going to be all Krugman all the time. It's going to be painful to have to listen to it -- over and over and over again -- all the trademark Krugman talking points we've all come to know and hate so well. Bush lied. Maximum deficits for minimum stimulus. Bush is Hitler. Rolling back the New Deal. Bush lied. The media is conservatively biased. Tax cuts for the rich. Did I mention that Bush lied?

I've been getting pretty depressed at the prospect. About the only good I could see coming of it was that maybe Krugman would crowd out Al Franken. But when I saw the interview with Russert, I stopped worrying. Now I'm hoping that this 15 minutes of fame for Paul Krugman is going to be his undoing. Because in situations where he's separated from the prestige and credibility of his New York Times column -- and when people can talk back -- Krugman will no longer seem the Great and Powerful Oz. He'll stand revealed as nothing more than that man behind the curtain.

The nervous, stammering, shifty-eyed, twitching, ill-tailored, gray homunculus slumping across the table from Tim Russert Saturday night was simply not recognizable as the titan who strikes fear in the hearts of conservatives everywhere each Tuesday and Friday morning. He had all the talking points, but they seemed to be coming from someone else's mouth. It was as though, through some terrible casting mix-up, the part of Paul Krugman was being played by Woody Allen.

Ideas that would have been devastating if presented in that fabulously self-assured Krugman style on the pages of the "newspaper of record" came off, at best, like run-of-the-mill talk-show chatter. Speaking only for himself -- not costumed in the institutional persona of the New York Times -- and knowing that a smart interlocutor might question sources, detect contradictions, or ask tough follow-ups, empowering self-assurance was replaced by crippling self-consciousness. The least bad parts, of course, were when Krugman was able to stick close to the familiar ground of his prepared talking points. But in those moments when Russert asked some tough questions and forced Krugman to improvise, the wheels really came off.

And I'm delighted to report that, as you will see, my Krugman Truth Squad columns for National Review Online had a key role to play in the wheel-removal process. In fact, I think we may have to make Russert an honorary member.

The first challenge from Russert came a quarter way thought the interview, when he asked Krugman how he pleaded to the charge of being "America's most dangerous liberal columnist." Sound familiar? Krugman stuck to the media-training playbook reasonably well: he stammered out a good-humored guilty plea, and got back to his talking points right away. You guessed it: Bush lied.

Russert saved the toughest challenge for the final segment of the hour-long interview -- an old interviewer's trick that relies on the subject being then both at ease and exhausted. Coming out of the commercial, after doing the obligatory flash of the book jacket for the camera (operators are standing by), Russert opened with,

"RUSSERT: The National Review Online has the Krugman Truth Squad.

"KRUGMAN: Yeah.

"RUSSERT: They monitor every word you write. And they will pick apart every column, and say 'He no longer is just an economist. He's an ideologue, and he just is trying to twist facts in order to prove a political point.'"

Cut away from a close-up of a scowling Russert, making a gesture of "twisting" with his left hand. A shot of Krugman now, from over Russert's shoulder -- the camera slowly zooms closer as the question sinks in and Krugman's body language goes from "okay, we're in the home stretch... I think I did pretty well on this thing" to "oh shit." It's a Mike Wallace "60 Minutes" moment.

Here's the best Krugman could come up with.

"KRUGMAN: They would say that, wouldn't they? Um, no, I mean it's, it's, I'm subject to a level of scrutiny I don't think anyone else in, in journalism is. Um , I think that given, given that I'm writing 100 columns a year, uh, the number of things they've actually been able to make stick is pretty small. So it's, I think I'm doing okay. It's, it's not fun. It's more, part of the reason why few, not very many people do the kind of thing I'm doing. If you take on our current leadership, um , you will be pursued, you will be stalked. So far, so far just stalked, uh, intellectually, but it's, it's pretty scary sometimes."

Let's really savor this. Coming out of a awesomely long pause like you just never see on television, one that probably had some guys in the CNBC control room really twitching, Krugman says "I think that given, given that I'm writing 100 columns a year, uh, the number of things they've actually been able to make stick is pretty small."

What a mind-bogglingly inept defense. It's not a defense at all -- it's a confession! He is confessing that he lies -- but, he has an excuse: he had to write 100 columns a year! He was too busy to tell the truth!

Was he too busy to tell the truth even about the number of columns he writes in a year? In the last twelve months he's written 93 columns, not 100. But surely -- he would say -- picky, picky, picky -- he was just speaking in round figures! After all, as he once wrote, "For God's sake: whatever you think of my politics, I am a competent economist, and know how to use numbers."

That's what he wrote on his personal website after the Krugman Truth Squad outed his outrageous error-cum-lie about President Bush's tax cuts -- the one he pulled in April claiming that each $500,000 in tax cuts would only produce one $40,000 job (neglecting to mention that the $500,000 would be spread over 10 years and the $40,000 was for a single year, and that the $40,000 itself would generate offsetting tax revenues). It would apply just a ineptly to any of the other fast-and-loose statistics scams that Krugman has pulled, such as when he wrote in early August that real per capita state spending in California had grown by only 10%, when the Krugman Truth Squad exposed that the very source he himself cited had it at 13.4%. Or how about when Krugman wrote in mid-August that American soldiers in Iraq were only getting two 1.5-liter bottles of water per day, and were suffering "heat casualties"? I exposed here the fact that this was only the soldiers' bottled water -- and that there was ample water from other sources which, in fact, was part of the Army's "forced hydration" program.

Were these, I wonder, examples of "things they've actually been able to make stick"? I've yet to see anything but lame self-defenses on Krugman's website after the dozens upon dozens of lies, errors distortions and misquotations the Krugman Truth Squad has documented -- and I've never seen a retraction or correction in the Times for any of them. But then again, we're dealing here with a "competent economist" who told Russert that the "number" of such things was "pretty small."

Russert then followed up with a specific reference to the Krugman Truth Squad column of August 25:

"RUSSERT: There was one interesting analysis where they said, 'Well, Krugman writes that things in California are a disaster, they're just awful, and then later writes another column about Arnold Schwarzenegger saying, "You know, Arnold, things really aren't all that bad."'"

Yep. In his August 1 Times column, Krugman had written "the Golden State is degenerating into a banana republic." He said it was in "a severe fiscal crisis" and undergoing a "slide into irresponsibility." But now Krugman tells Russert,

"KRUGMAN: Um, I don't think I ever said things were a disaster... The problem is that the budget developed a big hole, um, mostly because the California tax system relies heavily on income taxes which meant it was getting a lot of money from stock options and Silicon Valley, which went away... Um, and, you know, actually, they're, the truth is they're not coping with it all that badly... Next year's deficit is 8 billion dollars, which is nasty but, but manageable... But you don't want to, you don't want to overstate it."

When that was done, Russert started in on Krugman's involvement as a paid consultant to Enron -- and at that point, Krugman probably wished that Woody Allen really were playing him. And then the credits rolled, and it was over. And Krugman got to take his microphone off and pull the little rubbery disposable earphone out of his ear and go back to his hotel room and mutter about how terrible it is to be "stalked, uh, intellectually," and tell himself that his book will probably sell pretty well anyway, despite the conservatively biased media. Hey, "It's pretty scary sometimes.

http://www.poorandstupid.com/chronicle.asp
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htuttle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 03:15 PM
Response to Original message
1. Who?
.
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Composed Thinker Donating Member (874 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 03:19 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Luskin is...
a who has his own site, poorandstupid.com, in addition to running something involving investments. I believe he crashed and burned with investments a few years ago. He also writes for the National Review, and with some others, he has a "Krugman Truth Squad," trying to reveal the lies and distortions of Krugman. Luskin strikes me as a tool, and despite my best intentions, I wish he would just go away.
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LondonReign2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 03:19 PM
Response to Original message
2. Wow, what shade of glasses was this dude wearing?
Edited on Mon Sep-08-03 03:20 PM by LondonReign2
I saw the interview. Russert was amazingly non-confrontational, and Krugman said just about everything he wanted to say unchallenged by The Rotund One. Only through the lenses of unabashed hatred could this idiot think Krugman came off poorly.
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Composed Thinker Donating Member (874 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 03:21 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. I didn't see this interview...
or the Bush speech, because I was playing tennis with a friend. But it makes no difference, because while my school is great and gives me 6 HBO Channels, I don't have MSNBC or CNBC.
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Composed Thinker Donating Member (874 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-08-03 10:45 PM
Response to Original message
5. BUMP
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