A few weeks ago,
conservatives dogpiled Joe Klein, a writer at Time, for calling Americans “
too stupid to thrive.” Klein was writing in response to a
CNN poll indicating that 63 percent of Americans think that stimulus funds are wasted on current public works projects.
Far from dissuading others, Klein's experience seems to have set a pattern.
Jacob Weisberg,
Slate's left-leaning editor, has now trotted out his own vision of a
"childish, ignorant American public" at the root of our economic woes
and political deadlock. He writes that Americans are more negligent
than stupid, since “a lot more people are watching American Idol than
are watching
Glenn Beck."
For this, Weisberg, too, has been bashed by the right. Even a few
liberals are chiding Weisberg for jumping to another condemnation of the
American public
- 'Jacob Weisberg Is An Idiot,' bluntly notes Dan Collins
at POWIP, arguing that Weisberg has overlooked an important player:
“There’s another major actor in this equation that somehow gets elided
in Weisberg’s account, and that is the legacy media, who were so busy
shilling for this one-term Senator and presenting him as a secular
messiah that they overlooked his strange associations and socialist
leanings. … The legacy media conned a lot of people. They got what they
wanted, politically. Now, it’s not their fault, oh no.”
- Fun Reading, But Misguided Matthew Yglesias
at Think Progress thinks Wiesberg puts way too much stock in polling:
“The fact that the public, in response to opinion polls, delivers
contradictory desires about the details of public policy just shows
that most people have a second-order desire to not invest their time
learning the answers to these questions. If you tried to decide how to
build highway overpasses by polling people, you’d have (a) paralysis,
(b) shitty highways, (c) snarky articles about how public ignorance
rather than bad engineering was to blame. But the reality is that that
would be a dumb way to build overpasses.”
- You’re Surprised? Tim Cavanaugh
at Reason chides Weisberg for failing to see the real source of
American disenchantment: “Weisberg is not just wrong in his parsing of
American disenchantment. He's wrong to think it's a tragedy. Increasing
numbers of Americans in the vast lands to be found outside the D.C.
Beltway (join us, Jacob, the water's fine!) understand that government
delivers far too little at far too high a price… Skepticism about
authority, expectation of better performance, and a determination to
get more for your dollar are not problems that need to be solved.
They're bedrock American ideals.”
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