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The John Tierney Era Ends? John Who?

I have been known to write many a trivial diary. But this is hands down my most trivial - it is about John Tierney, the least impactful NYTimes columnist I could ever remember.

The irony is Tierney, the say nothing worth noticing columnist pens a farewell column urging the new Dem Congress to do nothing:

I'm afraid the election results still haven't registered in Washington. Democrats and Republicans keep making noises about working together to accomplish great things. But that's not what Americans voted for. They voted for gridlock.

They gave Congress a Seinfeld mandate to do nothing. The Democrats offered no bold new ideas, and they were rewarded with victory. Voters would like them to mop up the messes made by Republicans, but that's it. Find a way out of Iraq, and then avoid any more excellent adventures dreamed up by neoconservatives.

Um, great column John . . . But was Tierney the worst columnist of the past two years? I  would have to say yes.

Why Tierney as the worst? Well, not only was he poorly informed, a misogynist, a retrogade and pretty stupid (I think I just described have the reporters in Washington) he was incredibly boring.

David Brooks is a cancerous writer - filling the public debate with vile falsehoods, blatant cheerleading for Republicans and spreading ignorance - but he could get a reaction. I loved using Brooks as a foil. But Tierney? I think this is the first time I have written about him. Talk about the silent forest. The man wrote for the New York Times!

Other bad ones include Broder of course, Hoagland, Sebastian Mallaby and many others.

But what of the good ones? Krugman and Herbert of course. My favorite has been E.J. Dionne  - great political insight.

Who does the Times bring in for Tierney? Jonah Goldberg? James Taranto? Michell Malkin? Kidding of course. They need a genteel conservative - the want their own George Will. Any candidates? I can't think of any personally.

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    Tierney (5.00 / 1) (#4)
    by Radley Balko on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 07:30:23 AM EST
    Perhaps if people on the left actually read Tierney's columns instead of dismissing him as a GOP shill, he'd have had more of an impact.  He was anything but.  He was a libertarian.  I don't remember a single column he wrote that shilled for the White House.  Despite the lefty blogs' caricature of him, he was even critical of the war in Iraq.

    TalkLeft readers in particular should be grateful for Tierney's columns bashing the drug war, draconian sentencing, the DEA's mistreatment of pain specialists, the overuse of SWAT teams, and holding the White House to account for abandonment of federalism on issues like medical marijuana.  He even wrote an entire column attacking Rush Limbaugh for his hypocrisy on prescription drug abuse.

    He was the only consistent and thorough drug war opponent on the major op-ed pages.

    It is too bad you didn't read him more.  

    Not one Radley? (none / 0) (#7)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:06:48 AM EST
    Sure.

    Whatever you say.

    Parent

    On Katrina Radley (none / 0) (#8)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:08:42 AM EST
    You enjoyed his taking the Bush administration to task?

    You could not have because he did not. He SHILLED for Bush on Katrina.

    Parent

    Here (none / 0) (#10)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:18:44 AM EST
    is an example of what Radley likes about Tierney:

    Libertarian voters tend to get ignored by political strategists because they're not easy to categorize or organize. They don't congregate in churches or union halls; they don't unite to push political agendas. Many don't even call themselves libertarians, although they qualify because of their social liberalism and economic conservatism: they want the government out of their bedrooms as well as their wallets.

    They distrust moral busybodies of both parties, and they may well be the most important bloc of swing voters this election, as David Boaz and David Kirby conclude in a new study for the Cato Institute. Analyzing a variety of voter surveys, they estimate that libertarians make up about 15 percent of voters -- a bloc roughly comparable in size to liberals and to conservative Christians, and far bigger than blocs like Nascar dads or soccer moms.

    They're especially prevalent in the West, where half a dozen states have legalized medical marijuana. When Californians approved one of the first medical marijuana laws, in 1996, drug warriors were so convinced it would lead to a catastrophic spike in illegal use by teenagers that they sponsored a study to document the damage. But there was no catastrophe: after the law, marijuana use by teenagers actually declined in California.

    In the decade since, as the Marijuana Policy Project documented in a recent study, popular support for legalized medical marijuana has increased in California and in virtually every other state with a similar law. Last year it was favored by 78 percent of respondents in a Gallup poll.

    Yet these realities still haven't registered with Republicans in Washington. This year the White House drug czar, John Walters, and his minions have been out campaigning in Nevada, Colorado and South Dakota, which have marijuana initiatives on the ballot. The drug warriors are still sounding the discredited alarms about youths turning into potheads. Their fervor's not surprising -- they may even believe their own hype.

    What's surprising is the political stupidity of the meddling. Westerners, no matter what they think of marijuana, don't appreciate sermons from federal officials on how to vote. In 2002, when the White House campaigned against another marijuana ballot initiative in Nevada, the state's attorney general said it was ''disturbing'' to see the federal interference in a state election.

    Me? I say where have you been John? This is not new about the GOP. I say the same to Radley frankly.

    Parent

    On stem cell research (none / 0) (#12)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:26:17 AM EST
    Tierney argues against it.

    Again, not on moral grounds, but on libertarian grounds. The limits of Democratic libertarianism at hand.

    Ignore the history of federally funded research to make a dishinest libertarian point.


    Parent

    Here is Tienrey on global warming (none / 0) (#11)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:20:56 AM EST
    When it comes to global warming, we need to balance uncertain future benefits against certain costs today.

    Denying the global warming phenomenon in the face of the science is not admirable.


    Parent

    Tierney on Title IX (none / 0) (#13)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:28:06 AM EST
    This column is an embarrassment:

    When Title IX was enacted in 1972, women were a minority on college campuses, and it sounded reasonable to fight any discrimination against them. But now men are the underachieving minority on campus, as a series by The Times has been documenting. So why is it so important to cling to the myth behind Title IX: that women need sports as much as men do?

    Yes, some women are dedicated athletes, and they should be encouraged with every opportunity. But a lot of others have better things to do, like study or work on other extracurricular activities that will be more useful to their careers. For decades, athletic directors have been creating women's sports teams and dangling scholarships and hoping to match the men's numbers, but they've learned that not even the Department of Education can eradicate gender differences.

    At the University of Maryland, the women's lacrosse team won national championships year after year but still had a hard time getting 40 players to turn out for the team. The men's team had no such trouble, because guys were more than willing to warm the bench even if they weren't getting a scholarship, but the coach had to cut the extra ones to maintain the gender balance. The school satisfied Title IX, but to no one's benefit.

    On or off campus, men play more team sports and watch more team sports. Besides enjoying the testosterone rushes, they have a better chance of glory -- and of impressing the opposite sex. Thirty-four years after Title IX, most women's games still attract sparse audiences. Both sexes would still rather watch men play games, especially football.



    Parent
    Tierney on the EPA (none / 0) (#14)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:30:12 AM EST
    Now that the Supreme Court has gotten itself into the global warming debate, the justices face a choice: Should they rule in favor of environmental groups, or in favor of the environment?

    The court agreed last week to hear a case brought by the Natural Resources Defense Council and other groups seeking to empower the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate emissions of carbon dioxide from cars. To David Schoenbrod, the case sounds unfortunately familiar.

    In 1972, as a lawyer for the council, he started the litigation that forced the E.P.A. to take lead out of gasoline. Technically, it was a victory for environmentalists, but it took so long that Schoenbrod decided his comrades in the movement had made a big mistake -- the same mistake they're now making with carbon dioxide. They keep expecting the E.P.A. do an impossible job.

    They still believe in the Spaceship Earth management style, as Schoenbrod describes it in his book, ''Saving Our Environment from Washington.'' They still imagine the planet as a ship that must be guided by a wise captain, aloof from politicians and voters, who issues orders from the bridge with the help of his trusty crew of technocrats and lawyers.

    More libertariainism cutting against Democratic goals.


    Parent

    Ripping Gore (none / 0) (#15)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:31:46 AM EST
    If Al Gore's new movie weren't titled ''An Inconvenient Truth,'' I wouldn't have quite so many problems with it. He should have gone with something closer to ''Revenge of the Nerd.'' That's the heartwarming angle to global warming. A college student is mesmerized by his professor's bold measurements of ...


    Parent
    And the language (none / 0) (#18)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:42:07 AM EST
    To be fair, this sort of thinker exists on other continents, too. But what distinguishes the Perfect Latin American Idiot is his persistence. No matter how far the continent falls behind the rest of the world, its populists cling to the same beliefs in socialism and big government, the same distrust of capitalism and free trade, the same conviction that Latin American poverty is the fault of the United States.

    ''Maradona embodies the wonderful possibilities of globalization, yet he does everything in his power to deny people poorer than himself to participate in that world,'' said one of the ''Perfect Idiot'' authors, Alvaro Vargas Llosa, the Peruvian journalist (and son of the novelist Mario Vargas Llosa). ''Everything Maradona and Chavez stand for has been tried before. These populists are repeating the mistakes of the Mexican Revolution, of Brazil in the 30's, of Argentina in the 50's, of Peru in the 80's.''

    The new wave of populists is led by Chávez, who's been using the recent windfall in oil revenues to expand government and solidify his hold on power. But even while $100 million in oil money pours into Venezuela every day ($60 million of that from those terrible gringos north of the Rio Grande), the poverty rate has risen above 50 percent.

    Meanwhile, the poverty rate has declined sharply in Chile, to about 20 percent (compared with about 50 percent in the rest of the continent). Chile has become South America's economic success story by embracing capitalism and making its own free trade agreements with the United States and other countries, most recently China.

    Bush went to the Latin America summit meeting hoping to persuade the rest of the continent to follow Chile's example -- the right message but the wrong messenger and the wrong place. Any American president, especially one as unpopular as Bush, makes too easy a target for the populists and rioters who turned the meeting into their own photo opportunity.

    ''Nothing has ever emerged from a Latin summit,'' said José Piñera, the Chilean reformer who started the first private-account social-security system, and then helped introduce similar systems in two dozen other countries. ''Real change blossoms from good internal public policies. President Bush should not attend and dignify these weapons of mass distraction.''

    When Bush is or President it ill behooves one to call anyone else an idiot.

    Parent

    Argentina (none / 0) (#24)
    by Ernesto Del Mundo on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 12:34:16 PM EST
    Wonder why he didn't mention Argentina's wonderful foray into the world of laissez-faire capitalism under Carlos Menem?

    I was wrong, this guy is worse than Friedman.

    Parent

    Fighting against the persecution (none / 0) (#19)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:45:16 AM EST
    of right wing men:

    I am in debt to liberal scholars across America. After I wrote about the leftward tilt on campus, they sent me treatises explaining that the shortage of conservatives on faculties is not a result of bias. Professors helpfully offered other theories why conservatives do not grace the halls of academe:

    1. Conservatives do not value knowledge for its own sake.

    2. Conservatives do not care about the social good.

    3. Conservatives are too greedy to work for professors' wages.

    4. Conservatives are too dumb to get tenure.

    I'm studied these theories as best I could (for a conservative), but somehow I can't shake the notion that there just might be some bias on campus.

    I can imagine reasons why liberals would be intrinsically more inclined than conservatives to pursue academic careers. But even if that's true, it doesn't explain why there are so many more liberal professors now than there used to be.

    Surveys last year showed that Democratic professors outnumber Republican professors by at least seven to one, more than twice the ratio of three decades earlier. The trend seems likely to continue, because younger professors are far more likely than older professors to be Democrats.

    You could argue that fewer conservatives today want to become professors, but that seems odd given the country's move to the right in recent decades. Conservative student groups and publications are flourishing. Plenty of smart conservatives have passed up Wall Street to work for right-wing think tanks that often don't pay more than universities do, and don't offer lifetime tenure and summers off.

    At think tanks and other research institutions outside academia, there's a much higher percentage of Republicans than there is on university faculties. Apparently, despite their greed and other failings, many conservatives do want to become scholars, but they can't find work on campus.

    One reason is the structure of academia, where decisions about hiring are made by small independent groups of scholars. They're subject to the law of group polarization, derived from studies of juries and other groups.

    ''If people are engaged in deliberation with like-minded others, they end up more confident, more homogenous and more extreme in their beliefs,'' said Cass Sunstein, a law professor at the University of Chicago. ''If you have an English or history department that leans left, their interactions will push them further left.''

    Once liberals dominate a department, they can increase their majority by voting to award tenure to like-minded scholars. As liberals dominate a field, conservatives' work comes to be seen as fringe scholarship.

    ''The filtering out of conservatives in the job pipeline rarely works by outright blackballing,'' said Mark Bauerlein, a conservative who is an English professor at Emory. ''It doesn't have to. The intellectual focus of the disciplines does that by itself.''

    Suppose, he said, you were a conservative who wanted to do a sociology dissertation on the debilitating effects of the European welfare state, or an English dissertation arguing that anticommunist literature from the mid-20th century was as valuable as the procommunist literature.

    ''You'd have a hard time finding a dissertation adviser, an interested publisher and a receptive hiring committee,'' Bauerlein said. ''Your work just wouldn't look like relevant scholarship, and would be quietly set aside.''

    Social scientists call it the false consensus effect: a group's conviction that its opinions are the norm. Liberals on campus have become so used to hearing their opinions reinforced that they have a hard time imagining there are intelligent people with different views, either on campus or in politics. Last year professors at Harvard and the University of California system gave $19 to Democrats for every $1 they gave to Republicans.

    Conservatives complain about this imbalance in academia, but in some ways they've benefited from being outcasts. They've been toughened by confronting skeptics on campus and working at think tanks in Washington involved in the political fray. They've come up with ideas -- welfare reform, school vouchers, all kinds of privatization schemes -- that have been adopted around the country and the world.

    But how many big ideas from liberal academics are on anyone's agenda? Democratic politicians are desperately trying to find something newer than the New Deal to run on next year. They're glad to take campaign contributions from professors, but they're leery of ideas from intellectuals who've have been talking to themselves for so long.

    Sorry Radley, this column could only be written by a Right Wing shill.


    Parent

    David Horowitz (none / 0) (#20)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:46:49 AM EST
    Journalists and legal scholars have been decrying ''cronyism'' and calling for ''mainstream'' values when picking a Supreme Court justice. But how do they go about picking the professors to train the next generation of journalists and lawyers?

    David Horowitz, the conservative who is president of the Center for the Study of Popular Culture, analyzed the political affiliations of the faculty at 18 elite journalism and law schools. By checking all the party registrations he could find, he concluded that Democrats outnumber Republicans by 8 to 1 at the law schools, with the ratio ranging from 3 to 1 at Penn to 28 to 1 at Stanford.

    Only one journalism school, the University of Kansas, had a preponderance of Republicans (by 10 to 8). At the rest of the schools, there was a 6-to-1 ratio of Democrats to Republicans. The ratio was 4 to 1 at Northwestern and New York University, 13 to 1 at the University of Southern California, 15 to 1 at Columbia. Horowitz didn't find any Republicans at Berkeley.



    Parent
    Against Helping New Orleans (none / 0) (#21)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:49:43 AM EST
    Hurricane Katrina set off a 1930's nostalgia craze in Washington, with liberals pining for F.D.R. and conservatives promising their own New Deal. But after looking at polls and talking to people now coping with Hurricane Rita, I don't see this craze spreading beyond the Beltway.

    Along the Gulf Coast I heard politicians clamoring for new federal programs, but also citizens doubting they would do any good. The cynicism toward government reminded me of another decade, the 1970's, partly because that was the decade of Watergate, but mainly because that was when I did my one stint of public service.

    . . . That was the moment I lost faith in government, and I kept remembering it as I listened to people along the Gulf Coast. Some of them sounded like people who'd stopped believing, too -- and for much better reasons than mine. They had seen hurricane-force ineptitude.

    'I've learned my lesson from Katrina,'' said Dartanian Sanders, a laborer from Abita Springs, La., who'd spent three days driving through two states seeking help for his family. ''The lesson is to save money and be self-reliant. Counting on the government in an emergency is like sending your kids to a candy store where the guy is selling drugs.''

    The scenes from New Orleans prompted calls in Washington for a new war on poverty and racism. But in a national poll after the hurricane, conducted by the Pew Research Center, Americans' attitudes on poverty and racism were largely unchanged compared with previous polls; if anything, they were slightly more likely than before to criticize the government for giving too much money to the poor.

    The poll did find one notable change, when it asked whether the government is almost always wasteful and inefficient. The number of skeptics saying yes had been declining fairly steadily over the previous decade, falling to 47 percent last December. But after Katrina, the trend reversed and the skeptics became a majority, with 56 percent viewing government as mostly wasteful.

    For those dreaming of another New Deal, the most hopeful finding in the poll was that about 3 in 10 people trust the government to do the right thing most or nearly all of the time -- about the same percentage as before Katrina. But that's still a distinct minority. And as the Pew Center notes, it's in ''striking contrast'' to people's feelings after the Sept. 11 attacks, when 6 in 10 trusted the government.



    Parent
    On IRaq (none / 0) (#22)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:54:50 AM EST
    Tierney was NOt criticial and was a full throated supporter of this Debacle.

    He prominently used the phrase "cut and run."

    You are not correct on this Radley.

    he was however very critical of the Plame investigation.

    Parent

    Rove Shilling (none / 0) (#23)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:56:29 AM EST
    Karl Rove's version of events now looks less like a smear and more like the truth: Mr. Wilson's investigation, far from being requested and then suppressed by a White House afraid of its contents, was a low-level report of not much interest to anyone outside the Wilson household.

    So what exactly is this scandal about? Why are the villagers still screaming to burn the witch? Well, there's always the chance that the prosecutor will turn up evidence of perjury or obstruction of justice during the investigation, which would just prove once again that the easiest way to uncover corruption in Washington is to create it yourself by investigating nonexistent crimes.



    Parent
    a question (none / 0) (#1)
    by chemoelectric on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 12:31:53 AM EST
    Who's John Tierney?

    Never heard of him (none / 0) (#2)
    by Ernesto Del Mundo on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 12:41:40 AM EST
    But he can't be worse than Friedman.

    Well, the Times should, (none / 0) (#3)
    by Linkmeister on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 01:50:08 AM EST
    if consistent, name a moderately liberal columnist to suck up to our side.  That was Tierney's function while he was there, right?  To suck up to the Republicans?

    That's more or less a sarcastic joke, but still...

    Tierny was great on the "war on drugs" (none / 0) (#5)
    by lilybart on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 08:58:26 AM EST
    Please give Tierney credit for his columns on the insanity of making drugs illegal. He argued very forcefully for legalization of marijuana. I thank him for this and the Times for printing these columns.

    Wow - you're reading something different than me (none / 0) (#6)
    by JT on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 09:20:41 AM EST
    It appears that "Big Tent" has driven a stake through the heart of the myth of a "libertarian democrat".

    Tierney's columns here (none / 0) (#9)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:16:10 AM EST
    Judge for yourself -

    link.

    If you see Tierney as the champion of Liberraeian Democrats, well, then I think you ignore most of his work.

    That said, I wrote a column right here at TalkLEft on the limits of the idea of the libertarian Democrat.

    You can check it out.

    Parent

    No Libertarians under the Big Tent? (none / 0) (#16)
    by JT on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:33:13 AM EST
    No, what I meant was that there appears to be no possibility of such a beast existing.  Perhaps we agree on that point?

    Parent
    Of the Tierney stripe? (none / 0) (#17)
    by Big Tent Democrat on Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 10:39:03 AM EST
    Of course not.

    Look what this man wrote:

    When there are three women for every two men graduating from college, whom will the third woman marry?

    This is not an academic question. Women, who were a minority on campuses a quarter-century ago, today make up 57 percent of undergraduates, and the gender gap is projected to reach a 60-40 ratio within a few years. So more women, especially black and Hispanic women, will be in a position to get better-paying, more prestigious jobs than their husbands, which makes for a tricky variation of ''Pride and Prejudice.''

    It's still a universal truth, as Jane Austen wrote, that a man with a fortune has good marriage prospects. It's not so universal for a woman with a fortune, because pride makes some men determined to be the chief breadwinner. But these traditionalists seem to be a dwindling minority as men have come to appreciate the value of a wife's paycheck.

    A woman's earning power, while hardly the first thing that men look for, has become a bigger draw, as shown in surveys of college students over the decades. In 1996, for the first time, college men rated a potential mate's financial prospects as more important than her skills as a cook or a housekeeper.

    In the National Survey of Families and Households conducted during the early 1990's, the average single man under 35 said he was quite willing to marry someone earning much more than he did. He wasn't as interested in marrying someone making much less than he did, and he was especially reluctant to marry a woman who was unlikely to hold a steady job.

    Those findings jibe with what I've seen. I can't think of any friend who refused to date a woman because she made more money than he did. When friends have married women with bigger paychecks, the only financial complaints I've heard from them have come when a wife later decided to pursue a more meaningful -- i.e., less lucrative -- career.

    Nor can I recall hearing guys insult a man, to his face or behind his back, for making less than his wife. The only snide comments I've heard have come from women talking about their friends' husbands. I've heard just a couple of hardened Manhattanites do that, but I wouldn't dismiss them as isolated reactionaries because you can see this prejudice in that national survey of singles under 35.

    The women surveyed were less willing to marry down -- marry someone with much lower earnings or less education -- than the men were to marry up. And, in line with Jane Austen, the women were also more determined to marry up than the men were.

    You may think that women's attitudes are changing as they get more college degrees and financial independence. A women who's an executive can afford to marry a struggling musician. But that doesn't necessarily mean she wants to. Studies by David Buss of the University of Texas and others have shown that women with higher incomes, far from relaxing their standards, put more emphasis on a mate's financial resources.

    And once they're married, women with higher incomes seem less tolerant of their husbands' shortcomings. Steven Nock of the University of Virginia has found that marriages in which the wife and husband earn roughly the same are more likely to fail than other marriages. That situation doesn't affect the husband's commitment to the marriage, Nock concludes, but it weakens the wife's and makes her more likely to initiate divorce.

    It's understandable that women with good paychecks have higher standards for their partners, since their superior intelligence, education and income give them what Buss calls high ''mate value.'' They know they're catches and want to find someone with equal mate value -- someone like Mr. Darcy instead of a dullard like the cleric spurned by Elizabeth Bennet.

    ''Of course, some women marry for love and find a man's resources irrelevant,'' Buss says. ''It's just that the men women tend to fall in love with, on average, happen to have more resources.''

    Which means that, on average, college-educated women and high-school-educated men will have a harder time finding partners as long as educators keep ignoring the gender gap that starts long before college. Advocates for women have been so effective politically that high schools and colleges are still focusing on supposed discrimination against women: the shortage of women in science classes and on sports teams rather than the shortage of men, period. You could think of this as a victory for women's rights, but many of the victors will end up celebrating alone.

    Radley Balko sees no evil in Tierney because of Tierney's faux libertarianism.

    I can get past his hatred of women.

    Parent

    Good riddance (none / 0) (#25)
    by dutchfox on Wed Nov 15, 2006 at 12:55:30 PM EST
    I never liked him, but he'll remain at the NYT, reporting on NYC stuff and will start an online blog on the Science pages. (Science pages?). Oh, well.