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Posts Tagged ‘Washington Post’

Hoops notes: White guys, good guys and too many guys

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

From the because-I-just-can’t-help-myself department, here are a few basketball notes:

1. The Augusta Chronicle tells its readers that an entrepreneur’s plans to launch an all-white men’s professional basketball league in the southeast are meeting with an oddly tepid response.

In a statement, the All-American Basketball Alliance announced that “only players that are natural born United States citizens with both parents of Caucasian race are eligible to play … “.

The league is the brainchild of Don “Moose” Lewis, a professional wrestling promoter, who calls himself the league’s Commissioner and says he seeks to start teams in 10 or so southern cities.

“There’s nothing hatred about what we’re doing,” he told the Chronicle. “I don’t hate anyone of color. But people of white, American-born citizens are in the minority now. Here’s a league for white players to play fundamental basketball, which they like.”

The Atlanta Journal suggests that the whole thing might be a publicity stunt.

For the sake of Moose’s wallet, I hope so, because everybody who wants to sit and watch white guys play catch is over at the softball field.

2. The Washington Post’s Tracee Hamilton holds forth today on the NCAA’s notion to expand the NCAA men’s basketball tournament from its current field of 65 teams to 96.

This from the folks who can’t pull together a playoff system at all on the football side of things.

Writes Hamilton:

What is it about corporate greed that, when a company is making a kabillion dollars, it immediately begins wondering, “How can I make a kabillion and one dollars?” Capitalism is great, as long as you don’t screw up the product. The expanded field would definitely screw up the product.

Since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1985, has there ever been a year when you watched the Selection Show and thought, “Man, 31 teams got hosed.” No. There have never been 31 teams who deserved to make the field but didn’t. One or two, maybe. Not 31.

3. Former Western Carolina star Kevin Martin, a Sacramento King, is one of the top scorers in the NBA. But he gets a lot of his points at the foul line, and all that foul-drawing has been tough on his 6-7, 185lb. frame. He’s been injured for great swaths of each of the past three seasons.

He’s back on the court now, trying to form a cohesive backcourt with rookie sensation Tyreke Evans.

Moreover, he’s trying to add to, not disrupt, the chemistry that got the young and dynamic Kings off to a hot start. So far, not so good: the Kings have lost four straight since his return. To be fair, the losses were on a tough eastern road swing, but the team’s chemistry problems are evident.

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State investigates Blue Cross and Blue Shield

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

STATEWIDE–Twenty North Carolina legislators have filed a complaint against Blue Cross and Blue Shield concerning its anti-health reform campaign in the Tar Heel state, and, as detailed in this story from the Associated Press’s Gary Robertson, state Attorney General Roy Cooper’s office has launched an investigation.

Robertson’s lead:

State lawmakers and attorneys are scrutinizing Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina for its attempt to influence the national health care debate through direct mail and possibly illegal automated phone calls.

At issue is whether BCBSNC, which operates as a “unique not-for-profit corporation”, has enjoyed tax-protected status in North Carolina and handles an enormous slice of the health insurance market in the state should be conducting campaigns to influence public policy.

BCBSNC has mounted an aggressive statewide campaign against health reform in recent weeks.

Of the 20 policymakers who filed the complaint, only one, Madison County’s Ray Rapp, is from the mountains.

Read Robertson’s story in the Washington Post here.

Read coverage from the Progessive Pulse here.

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Shuler cleared of wrongdoing in land deal

Friday, November 6th, 2009

shr seriesbox2 Shuler cleared of wrongdoing in land dealNATIONAL–11th District congressman Heath Shuler has been cleared by the House ethics committee of any wrongdoing in a Tennessee land deal, according to the Washington Post.

An excerpt from the Post:

According to a letter sent to Shuler Wednesday by the ethics committee, that IG investigation “could not find any evidence that you violated any ethics rules.” And after its own “thorough review,” the committee said it “has determined that your actions in these matters were not improper in any way and did not violate House rules.”

Read the piece here.


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Shuler subject of house ethics investigation

Friday, October 30th, 2009

shr seriesbox2 Shuler subject of house ethics investigationNATIONAL–11th District congressman Heath Shuler is the subject of a House Ethics Committee investigation over a land-swap controversy in Tennessee, according to the Washington Post, which acquired a leaked memo that discloses the investigation.

Here’s the Post’s lead:

House ethics investigators are reviewing an allegation of “preferential treatment” in a land deal involving Rep. Heath Shuler (D-N.C.), a former Washington Redskins quarterback, according to a July committee document obtained by The Washington Post.

Read the Post story here.

The Hendersonville Times News and the Mountain Xpress were the first to report the story in our area.

Our series of posts shown to the left outline the details of the controversy.

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Food: Center lists top ten “most dangerous” foods

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

NATIONAL–The Center for Science in the Public Interest has compiled a list of foods most likely to make you sick.

Here’s a quote from the authors of the report:

“A globalized food system, archaic food safety laws, and the rise of large-scale production and processing have combined to create a perfect storm of unsafe food,’’ the C.S.P.I. writes. “Unfortunately, the hazards now come from all areas of the food supply: not only high-risk products, like meat and dairy, but also the must-eat components of a healthy diet, like fruits and vegetables.’’

Here’s the top ten:

1. Leafy greens
2. Eggs
3. Tuna
4. Oysters
5. Potatoes
6. Cheese
7. Ice cream
8. Tomatoes
9. Sprouts
10. Berries

Of course, these items will make you sick right now. Items that’ll make you sick on down the road come at it from a different angle, and the Center has some thoughts about those foods, too. They think we should tax the hell out of soda pop, for example.

Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center, says this: “Soda is dirt cheap and promotes expensive and debilitating diseases, which in turn run up healthcare costs at all levels of government.”

More reading:

From the New York Times
From CNN
From the Washington Post

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WCU prof defends old-timey lightbulbs in the Washington Post

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

CULLOWHEE–David Henderson, a professor of environmental ethics at WCU, went to bat for light bulb choice in the Washington Post yesterday, arguing that forced use of compact fluorescent bulbs isn’t such a bright way to achieve green progress.

The story has generated over 100 reader comments.

Here’s an excerpt:

The environmental benefits of using only compact fluorescent bulbs are indirect — and less than what could be realized by changing standards governing, for example, coal use. Consider: The benefit of “reducing inefficiency” depends on where the energy is coming from. Improving efficiency without eliminating a harmful source may just free energy that is then used elsewhere. If there is no net reduction in energy use, where is the benefit? Direct regulation of harmful activities, such as putting firm limits on carbon emissions, is more likely to achieve the desired environmental result. (And this would only indirectly influence my bedroom decor.) A great deal of the wasted energy in lighting comes from excessive nighttime lighting in public spaces, which is an excellent issue for government to address. Banning traditional light bulbs as used in private homes seems an effort in the name of environmental protection that has very little payoff.

Here’s Henderson’s piece.

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Report links Shuler to “The Family”.

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Shuler

Shuler

More Reading …

Asheville Citizen-Times
Talking Points Memo
Washington Post

REGIONAL/NATIONAL–A small, secretive and oddly fundamentalist Washington group called, alternately “The Fellowship” and “The Family” has been much in the news lately, for a variety of reasons.

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford and Nevada Sen. John Ensign, philanderers, are both involved — that’s one reason.

Another is the release of Jeff Sharlet’s book The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power, which has gotten press.

The group has been around for decades, and the most public thing it does is put on the yearly National Prayer Breakfast. But it also maintains a residence in Washington, called C Street, where a few congressmen and senators rent apartments and which serves as a meeting place. Owned by a foundation affiliated with the Family, C Street is officially registered as a church.

A christian magazine called theworld.comechoed by John Boyle at the Asheville Citizen-Times — is reporting today that 11th District Congressman Heath Shuler makes his Washington residence at C Street.

Some info:

From a National Public Radio story about Sharlet’s book:

Founded in 1935 in opposition to FDR’s New Deal, the evangelical group’s views on religion and politics are so singular that some other Christian-right organizations consider them heretical …

The group’s approach to religion, Sharlet says, is based on “a sort of trickle-down fundamentalism,” which holds that the wealthy and powerful, if they “can get their hearts right with God … will dispense blessings to those underneath them.”

Members of the group ardently support free markets, in which, they believe, God’s will operates directly through Adam Smith’s “invisible hand.”

The Family was founded in 1935 by a minister named Abraham Vereide after, he claimed, he had a vision in which God came to him in the person of the head of the United States Steel Corporation.

More, including the radio piece, here.

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Washington Post on NC health care crisis

Monday, April 20th, 2009

STATEWIDE–Today’s Washington Post details North Carolina’s health insurance situation, whict the Post deems the worst in the nation.

An excerpt:

In the past two years, North Carolina’s number of uninsured has climbed 22.5 percent, the biggest jump in the nation, according to an analysis by the North Carolina Institute of Medicine, a quasi-state agency. Nationwide, about 22 percent of adults do not have health insurance. Here in North Carolina, 25 percent of adults — or 1.8 million people — have no coverage. An additional 9 percent are underinsured.

For most Americans, health insurance and employment are linked. Every 1 percent increase in the jobless rate translates into 1.1 million people losing coverage nationally, according to the independent Kaiser Family Foundation. North Carolina’s unemployment rate has doubled in the past year to 10.7 percent, making it the fourth-highest in the country.

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WCU’s Herzog defends th’ honnah uh suthun dawgs.

Monday, January 26th, 2009

CULLOWHEE–Western psychology prof Hal Herzog told the Washington Post that he’s studied societal attitudes and behaviors toward animals for over twenty years. What he didn’t tell them is that if you live in Cullowhee, you can do that from your porch.

Here’s an excerpt:

There is distinct geographic disparity in the distribution of adoptable pets because spay-and-neuter campaigns have been much less successful in Southern states than in other parts of the country. For instance, the per capita rate of unwanted pet euthanasia is 40 times higher in my home state of North Carolina than in Connecticut. It seems a lot of people in the South don’t like restrictions on the sex lives of their pets any more than they like zoning laws or gun control.

There is, however, an upside to my region’s historic resistance to animal birth control. It is that, on the whole, our shelter dogs make better pets than the shelter dogs in other parts of the country. Michael Mountain, co-founder of Best Friends Animal Society, the nation’s largest sanctuary for abandoned pets, says that animal shelters in the urban North are “overrun with pit bulls.” And because a higher proportion of dogs in Northern shelters have been neglected or abused, many of them suffer the canine equivalent of post-traumatic stress syndrome. That means that they are not good candidates for adoption into the average home.

And here’s the story.

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High praise for local writer Ron Rash’s “Serena”

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

CULLOWHEE – The verdict is in – book critics across the country are falling in love with “Serena,” the latest novel penned by Ron Rash, Western Carolina University’s Parris Distinguished Professor of Appalachian Culture.

Since the September publication of “Serena” by HarperCollins, the positive reviews have been coming in fast and furious for Rash, a descendant of Southern Appalachian families who was raised in Boiling Springs, earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English, and wrote three collections of poetry and two collections of short stories before transitioning to writing novels.

shr rash2 High praise for local writer Ron Rashs “Serena”

Read the Reviews

New York Times
Wilmington Star-News
Creative Loafing
About.com: Contemporary Literature
Washington Post
Raleigh News and Observer
BookPage.com
San Francisco Chronicle
Christian Science Monitor
Seattle Times

shr line High praise for local writer Ron Rashs “Serena”

In early November, Rash learned that “Serena” had been named to the Publishers Weekly “Best Books of the Year” list, and that the novel had come in at No. 7 on the online retailer Amazon’s list of the 100 best books of 2008. Those accolades have been accompanied by a flurry of glowing reviews in newspapers and magazines across the nation, including the New York Times, in which reviewer Janet Maslin praised Rash’s “elegantly fine-tuned voice.”

Rash was recently notified that “Serena,” which is already being translated into Dutch and French, will be on a soon-to-be-released list of the New York Times’ best books of the year. Novelist Pat Conroy has stated that Rash’s fourth novel “catapults him to the front ranks of the best American novelists.”

Rash said the praise for “Serena” is encouraging because “it’s the book I worked on the hardest. It’s nice to get a good response to it,” he said.

As the literary praise comes his way, Rash stays busy as he teaches Appalachian literature and creative writing at WCU, and continues to prepare his next published work, a collection of short stories. He also is being called upon more often to present readings across the country, and in recent months has been to Boston, Portland and Cincinnati. “The best part of that is getting to meet writers I admire,” Rash said.

The Southern Appalachians are a common theme that runs throughout Rash’s poetry, short stories and novels, and “Serena” is no different. The novel tells the story of a timber baron, George Pemberton, and his ruthless wife, Serena, who come to the North Carolina mountains to create a timber empire.

Rash says each of his three previous novels began with a single image that came to his mind, but “Serena” started with two images: a huge table that he saw at a resort in Waynesville that had been hewn from a single piece of yellow poplar, and an image of a woman riding a ridge crest on a “magnificent white stallion” that popped into his head while he was driving through the mountains. That woman is his fictional Serena.

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The Scots-Irish and the African-American

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

SYLVA–It was one of those sequences of odd serendipity that comes up now and then, when each event seems tied to the one that came before.

Thursday morning I flipped on the radio in time to hear a “Morning Edition” story about Richard Trumka, a former steelworker and a current labor leader with the AFL-CIO, who’s been working the backroads, stirring the pot for presidential contender Sen. Barack Obama. He gives speeches on the role of race in the race, and, as befits his former profession, he’s quite a firebrand. He doesn’t preach to the choir, he speaks to mostly rural steelworkers, and he takes it directly at ‘em.

He tells them that while there are many reasons to vote for Obama, there’s “only one really, really bad reason to vote against Barack Obama. And that’s because he’s not white.”

During each speech, he tells the story of an encounter he had with a woman in the Appalachian mining town where the both lived. After a string of excuses, the woman told him she wouldn’t vote for Obama because of his race.

Trumka said he told her to look around at their town. “This town is dying — literally dying,” he told her. “Our kids are moving away because there’s no future here. And here’s a man, Barack Obama, who’s going to fight for people like us, and you won’t vote for him because of the color of his skin? Are you out of your ever-loving mind?”

Later, the same morning, a Sylva friend talked to me of her surprise at the number of McCain/Palin signs she’d seen in nearby Swain County. She’s no neophyte–she understands southern mountain voter dynamics–but she also runs a thriving, though commodity and labor-intensive business that puts her in a strong position to understand how rotten things have gotten in the past eight years.

She sees clearly that a vote for more of the same government we’ve got is in direct opposition to the best interests of most everybody in this region.

In some senses Swain County has a beef with regulation-heavy feds. Nearly three-quarters of the county belongs to the federal government. But this entire region also benefited deeply from the arrival of the TVA and from FDR’s depression-era New Deal, a fact that helps cause an odd political dynamic across the southern mountains. The Republican Party, in structural terms, hardly exists at all. But the advantage of being a Democrat dwindles in inverse proportion to the level of office a candidate seeks. The mountain democratic machine is disproportionately made up of old-time pols, many of whom are of clannish and independent Scots-Irish heritage, and many of whom are socially conservative in the same way that Sarah Palin is socially conservative.

Friday, I picked up on a story in the Durham Herald-Sun regarding Smoky Mountain High graduate Katya Hill’s direction of a stage adaptation of Joe Bageant’s “Deer Hunting with Jesus; Dispatches from the American Class War.

Bageant comes from a rough background in Winchester, VA., as a child of hard-working parents each with an eighth grade education and with a 250-year family history in the same town. He went on to make a name for himself as an editor and writer, and he eventually returned to Winchester, where he knows ever-body, and wrote an hilarious and wrenching book that takes a frank look at America’s growing, permanent white underclass. Bageant speaks in honest terms about why this group consistently votes against it’s own best interests — and why it so despises “liberals”.

Writes Bageant at one point: “Being born lower class in working America makes some of us, probably most of us, class conscious for life. Consequently, a good deal of this book is about class in America, especially the class from which I sprang, the bottom third of Americans constituting the unacknowledged working- class poor: conservative, politically misinformed or oblivious, and patriotic to their own detriment.”

Then, also today, fellow blogger Gulahiyi was kind enough to send me a copy of Kathleen Parker’s recent column in the Washington Post, in which she talks at some length with author and Western Carolina University professor Ron Rash, and also with author and US Senator James Webb, both of whom have written trenchant, widely popular books that cast in sharp relief the history of we Scots-Irish, and why we act the way we do.

Says Rash, “One thing about Appalachian people is that they don’t bitch and moan.”

Both Webb and Rash make clear through their writings that any sense of entitlement is distasteful to Appalachian people in general, mainly because they’ve done for so long with so little. But the writers also illustrate in different ways the fact that when “outlanders” show up in our verdant hills, it’s usually to take something they need, whether it be timber, votes, minerals or tough boys to fight and die. They don’t show up again until they need something else. In that way, through exploitation, African Americans and white Appalachian Americans share more in common than they know.

Together, my little string of events wrapped itself neatly around what makes this election so compelling.

As Webb wrote recently in the Wall Street Journal: “The greatest realignment in modern politics would take place rather quickly if the right national leader found a way to bring the Scots-Irish and African-Americans to the same table.”

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Small town mayor to vice president? Columnist says not so quick, please.

Monday, October 20th, 2008

NATIONWIDE–Washington Post op-ed contributor Catherine Iino doubts that small town executive experience would translate well — or quickly, anyway — to Washington.

“… while it is a privilege, to use Sarah Palin’s word, to live in a town small enough that we can make special arrangements for someone who is too ill to come in and fill out an application for fuel assistance, the country cannot afford another administration that makes special arrangements for its cronies”

Read the column here

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Columnists mark Helms’ passing

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

This piece didn’t get too much attention when I posted it a few days after Jesse Helms’s death. There are some interesting thoughts gathered here, though, so I thought I’d trot it out again …

STATEWIDE/NATIONAL-Jesse Helms, one of the strongest figures in North Carolina’s far-from-bland political history, passed away last week.

Here are a few of the more interesting goodbye columns culled from a broad selection:

Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe suggests that Helms’ clearest sin wasn’t racism, but a ‘tenacious political correctness.’

Marc Thiessen, current chief White House speech writer and former Foreign Relations Committee spokesman for Helms, defends Helms’ legacy in the Washington Post.

Jesse Helms and Ronald Reagan

Jesse Helms and Ronald Reagan

shr line Columnists mark Helms’ passing

John Fund, columnist for the Wall Street Journal, presents Helms as an expert at defending and promoting embattled minority viewpoints, and points out that he introduced tactics used today across the political spectrum. Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader echoed this viewpoint in a recent interview with the Raleigh News and Observer, saying, “I think [Helms'] legacy is that no matter how wrong you are on how many issues, if you stick to it you can win.”

More from the N&O: “Nader said that Helms had ‘enormous determination and stamina’ when pushing his conservative causes, something he does not think current liberal senators have. ‘They don’t have that stick-to-it-iveness that Jesse Helms had,’ he said. ‘They’re not hungry to win the way Jesse Helms was.’”

In a long piece, John Nichols, of The Nation, traces Helms’ political career, excoriates him for racism, and outlines ties between Helms and the McCain campaign.

Closer to home – and with greater nuance – Jack Betts of the Charlotte Observer and Jim Jenkins of the Raleigh News and Observer share some parting words.

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“Budget Heirways”

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

The British and international press has been worked up the last few days over Prince William’s shenanigans as an officer in the military. He recently earned his pilot’s wings from the Royal Air Force, and turns out he’s been joyriding here and there in a $10 million Chinook helicopter, buzzing his relatives, attending a cousins’ bachelor party and landing in his girlfriend’s parent’s back yard.

The RAF has been refreshingly stoic about the thing, refusing to be defensive or give ground to the critics.

The Washington Post ran a piece Thursday, and the reporter wrapped it up with a nice quote, attributed to Martin Oxley, 35, a London cinema manager: “If William can’t run around and act like he’s going to be the king, then who can?”

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Jacoby: The Age of American Unreason

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

NATIONAL–On September 11, 2001, when Susan Jacoby was walking home in a daze to her Upper East Side apartment, she ducked in to a bar for a well-earned drink, and eavesdropped as two well-dressed young men talked about the attack. “Worse than Pearl Harbor” said one. The other hadn’t heard of Pearl Harbor. His buddy explained that at one point the Vietnamese had attacked a naval base and plunged America into the Vietnam War.

Jacoby decided to write a book.

It isn’t her first, she’s written seven. But her current release, The Age of American Unreason, is getting considerable play. She argues in a non-iconoclastic way that there is a general hostility to knowledge at play in our culture. She argues that anti-intellectualism (too much learning is dangerous) and anti-rationalism (there are no such things as evidence or fact, only opinion) have peaked at the same time, the result being a tsunami of stupidity. We know less, she points out, even as the number of years we spend being educated grows.

“This is the last subject that any candidate would dare raise on the long and winding road to the White House. It is almost impossible to talk about the manner in which public ignorance contributes to grave national problems without being labeled an “elitist,” one of the most powerful pejoratives that can be applied to anyone aspiring to high office. Instead, our politicians repeatedly assure Americans that they are just “folks,” a patronizing term that you will search for in vain in important presidential speeches before 1980. (Just imagine: “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain . . . and that government of the folks, by the folks, for the folks, shall not perish from the earth.”) Such exaltations of ordinariness are among the distinguishing traits of anti-intellectualism in any era.”

Links for further reading:

www.susanjacoby.com
Jacoby essay in the Washington Post:
New York Times op-ed

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Consumer Nation

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Meyerson in the Washington Post:

“If 19th-century England was a nation of shopkeepers, the United States today is a nation of shoppers, and our role in the world economy is to buy what other countries — or U.S.-based corporations with factories in other countries — make. It was not ever thus. In the four decades following World War II, our largest employer was General Motors; for the past decade, it’s been Wal-Mart. GM followed in the footsteps of Henry Ford, who by 1913 had concluded that he needed to pay his workers enough that they could afford to buy a new Ford. Wal-Mart, by contrast, pays its workers so little that they are compelled to shop at Wal-Mart.”

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Some folks might not agree

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

On September 11, 2001, when Susan Jacoby was walking home in a daze to her Upper East Side apartment, she ducked in to a bar for a well-earned drink, and eavesdropped as two well-dressed young men talked about the attack. “Worse than Pearl Harbor” said one. The other hadn’t heard of Pearl Harbor. His buddy explained that at one point the Vietnamese had attacked a naval base and plunged America into the Vietnam War.

Jacoby decided to write a book.

It isn’t her first, she’s written seven. But her current release, The Age of American Unreason, is getting considerable play. She argues in a non-iconoclastic way that there is a general hostility to knowledge at play in our culture. She argues that anti-intellectualism (too much learning is dangerous) and anti-rationalism (there are no such things as evidence or fact, only opinion) have peaked at the same time, the result being a tsunami of stupidity. We know less, she points out, even as the number of years we spend being educated grows.

An excerpt:

“This is the last subject that any candidate would dare raise on the long and winding road to the White House. It is almost impossible to talk about the manner in which public ignorance contributes to grave national problems without being labeled an “elitist,” one of the most powerful pejoratives that can be applied to anyone aspiring to high office. Instead, our politicians repeatedly assure Americans that they are just “folks,” a patronizing term that you will search for in vain in important presidential speeches before 1980. (Just imagine: “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain . . . and that government of the folks, by the folks, for the folks, shall not perish from the earth.”) Such exaltations of ordinariness are among the distinguishing traits of anti-intellectualism in any era.”

More reading:

www.susanjacoby.com

Jacoby essay in the Washington Post:

New York Times op-ed:

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