Full Court PressCharles Kaiser on new New York Times columnist William Kristol
"You can't blame the people who run the Times for thinking the paper belongs to them. But those of us who have grown up with it secretly believe it's ours. The Times is in the same position as the Jews: It's expected to behave better than everybody else."
FIT TO PRINT? Kristol(Photo: Getty Images) Many Times readers consider Kristol a third-rate neocon apparatchik, a stark symbol of the steep decline of the Washington culture—and arguably the most consistently mean-spirited and wrong-headed pundit of our time (examples below). Hence the outrage of that diminishing number of people who still think of the Times as the indispensable engine of American journalism. "Lunacy institutionalized" was one of the milder reactions FCP received on the day of the announcement. Outrage was followed by bafflement after editorial page editor Andy Rosenthal described Kristol as "a captivating writer and keen observer of the political landscape." Rosenthal added, "The idea that the New York Times is giving voice to a guy who is a serious, respected conservative intellectual—and somehow that's a bad thing. How intolerant is that?" Well, it is true that Kristol is a conservative. Kristols and Rosenthals go back a long way together. Bill's father, Irving, and Andy's father, Abe—both charter neocons—were good friends, and Irving Kristol was a proud member of the "Rosenthal for President" lunch club, which also included Bill Buckley, Dick Clurman, Bernard Kalb (known as Bruno Frescobaldi) and Arthur Gelb. And when Andy Rosenthal covered the Bush I White House with Maureen Dowd, Bill Kristol—then vice president Dan Quayle's chief of staff—was a source for both Times reporters.
IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE Rosenthal An e-mail I received from comedy writer Jon Schwartz offered the best explanation for the nearly universal befuddlement over Bill Kristol's appointment: Like you, I've spent a fair amount of time around the people who run America. And things like this from Rosenthal make me feel they've really gone bonkers. (It could also be that they've always been nuts and I'm only noticing it now, but I get the feeling they've gotten significantly worse.) It's as though an NFL coach decided to start a four-foot, 65-pound Korean eight-year-old at middle linebacker, and when he got criticized, responded: "People are mad we're using a player of such tremendous size and experience, just because he's Korean. How intolerant!"Here is Schwartz's essential point: "It's as though an NFL coach decided to start a four-foot, 65-pound Korean eight-year-old at middle linebacker, and when he got criticized, responded: 'People are mad we're using a player of such tremendous size and experience, just because he's Korean. How intolerant!'" Which could be why Time dispensed with Kristol's contributions last month after he had penned one feeble column after another for the newsweekly. |
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