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Chronicle of the Conspiracy Friday, July 25, 2003
Seater focused his fired on the Times, and I certainly spend a lot of pixels on the Times here, too. That's because the "newspaper of record" has a special duty to be excellent -- so it's especially noteworthy when they are not excellent. But Seater wouldn't seek to defend the Washington Times or National Review, and either would I (though, of course, I write for National Review, and so would argue that at least one of its writers is fully qualified). Seater specifically states that he sees the problem of unqualified journalists as pandemic. Savitz continues,
Far be it from me to argue for credentialism -- especially academic credentialism. I myself don't have a degree in anything at all. And at the New York Times, the one guy who does have academic credentials in economics -- Princeton economics professor Paul Krugman -- is the worst of the lot. Compared to him, ignorance is bliss. The point is that people who write about anything should know what they are talking about -- how they came by that knowledge is immaterial. I'm entirely confident that my career experience has earned me at least the equivalent of a masters in finance, and I consider myself eminently competent to write about markets and economics at the very highest level. But Seater did not pin his argument exclusively on academic credentials. He noted that the Board members also lacked work experience credentials. It would appear that their only ostensible qualifications to write on their subjects for a newspaper as important as the Times is the fact that they write on their subjects for a newspaper as important as the Times. Should apparent qualifications matter, provided that their editorial product is good? No, they should not -- and in that sense, Eric's critique is right on the money. But that money is in a straw man's pocket. Their editorial product is not good, and Seater would not have adduced a theory to explain a bad product if the product were good. The Times editorial writers do not, as Savitz would urge them, "know their own limitations." Savitz concludes,
A clever gotcha, I admit -- sounds like something from one of my Krugman takedowns. But I don't think it really has much force. Seater needn't have journalism credentials, because he is not acting here as a producer of journalism. He is a consumer of journalism, and is expressing his opinions about the product that he consumes. How could anyone argue that he is not an expert on his own consumption experience? He doesn't like the product, and has adduced a theory about why the product isn't better -- which in an important sense is really an axiom, not a theory at all: the product is bad because the people who produced it weren't qualified to produce a good product, which lack of qualification is evident in the fact that the product is bad. That leaves the only question being: what, specifically, is the nature of the lack of qualification? Lacks, by their very nature, are limitless in their potential specifications. But the absence of academic and work credentials would seem a sensible place to start. Stated that way, the only way to refute Seater would be to argue that the Times editorial product is good. If that were true, then any explanation Seater comes up with for why it was bad would be wrong. Eric, do you argue that the product is good? If not, then what's your alternative explanation for why it's bad, if you don't like Seater's explanation? >>Update... Journalist Bill Hobbs weighs in. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 1:32 AM | link
Thursday, July 24, 2003
"According to Drudge, David Brooks of the Weekly Standard will become a New York Times columnist in September. This marks the first time in my lifetime that the Times has had an explicitly conservative columnist. I don't count Safire, who is at best a moderate Republican, and anyway long past his prime. No word on who will be replaced or cut back."One that last point, Bruce, well... I have an idea... Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 9:40 PM | link
Seater continues,
Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 1:05 PM | link
DATE RAPE OR FOOD FIGHT? Here's Novak on the foodfight presided over by House Ways and Means chair Bill Thomas, as the committee worked on the administration's proposal for pension relief. Sounds like Thomas overplayed his hand a bit, but then who ever said that the congress was populated by wise men? And what exactly would you have done when the Democrats tried to obstruct passage of this entirely sensible proposal? Whatever his errors of style, don't forget that thanks to him we got a 25% capital gains tax cut this year. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 10:06 AM | link
DEFICIT DATA Worried about those "record deficits" in the federal budget? The Congressional Joint Economic Committee has just put out this simple guide that puts it all in perspective (and this separate chart supplement). Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 9:55 AM | link
This story is just not going to go away, despite the big-press silence this week. Based on my conversations in the last 36 hours with Washington contacts, here's how I'm very sure it's going to turn out -- and it will hinge on two key questions. Was Plame really a covert operative? Yes, but this will be difficult to officially confirm and there will be debates as to just how covert she really was, and what real harm was done by outing her. Who outed her, the White House or the CIA? Both. Both are understandably furious with Wilson -- the White House for the embarrassment he has caused and for what they see as his disingenuous and partisan statements in the media. But outing Ms. Plame was not to punish Wilson, but to refute him: Ms. Plame's involvement in Wilson's selection for the Niger assignment trivializes him, makes him seem less an expert and more of a hack on a nepotistic boondoggle. The administration officials who spoke to the press probably weren't even thinking about outing Ms. Plame, as such -- after all, Wilson had effectively already done that when he outed himself by going public with his CIA-sponsored work. And therein lies the reason why the CIA is furious at Wilson -- what he has done is an enormous breach or protocol and security. Friends in our blog neighborhood have weighed in with a number of comments. Bill Hobbs has tracked down Wilson's Democratic and anti-war background, and has documented the heavy-duty scandal-mongering emanating from the leftist side of the blogosphere. But I think Bill may be trying a bit too hard to put the best face on what is, in fact, an incident of some importance, and one that does not exactly cover anyone with glory. Tom Maguire has a useful timeline of the Plame "affair," although it is incomplete in that it doesn't mention our pathbreaking work in the matter (sniff). And he's groping close to the truth when he draws the distinction between sources cited as "administration officials" and "government officials." Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 2:14 AM | link
Tuesday, July 22, 2003
Shortly after my column was published, a reader told me about an article on the website of New York Newsday of which I had been unaware. This article appeared to corroborate Krugman's claim. Corroborate, but not justify -- the timing of its publication makes it unlikely that it was Krugman's source (and even if he had advance knowledge of the story he did not cite it), so its corroboration may have been nothing more than a stroke of luck -- one that has saved Krugman from having made an over-reaching claim. And the Newsday piece only corroborated, it did not prove. It remains unclear whether the Newsday story is accurate; its claims have not been corroborated or even repeated by any other major newspapers as of this writing. I decided yesterday that it would be prudent to remove the post from this website while I evaluated the new information -- for good or for ill, that's one of the things we web publishers can do. But at the same time, I committed to myself that that it would be re-posted as soon as possible with whatever amplifications or corrections were required. Krugman may bury his problems, but not me. What follows is my entire original post -- not a word has been altered. At four points I have inserted comments to incorporate new information, presented in gray type and set off by ***asterisks. I smell another New York Times retraction coming up. And a big one. Paul Krugman has made a statement in his Times column today which -- if it had been directed against a private individual rather than public officials -- would almost certainly trigger a libel suit. It's an extraordinarily serious allegation, tantamount to accusing Bush administration officials of treason.
Krugman has been raking President Bush over the coals for his "16 words" in the State of the Union address -- so now, let's do a little raking with these "18 words" of Krugman's. Let's start by putting Krugman's 18 words in context (which is more than Krugman ever does when he quotes President Bush):
Okay, let's look at this statement under the microscope, and watch a lie being born. We'll start with the first sentence: "And while we're on the subject of patriotism, let's talk about the affair of Joseph Wilson's wife." First, we're not "on the subject of patriotism." It's a peculiar error for a newspaper well known for being heavily copy-edited, but other than the title of the column -- "Who's Unpatriotic Now" -- there's was no reference to patriotism in the column whatsoever. And similarly, there's no "affair of Joseph Wilson's wife" -- these two paragraphs are the attempt to invent one. ***Another reader alerted me to
an
online column by David Corn on the website of The Nation, published on
July 16, two days after the Novak column mentioned in Krugman's column. It has
been quoted, discussed, and linked on several other websites -- none of great
note, but arguably this constitutes an "affair." This matter was also mentioned
prominently in a feature on Wilson on "NBC Nightly News"
on Monday evening, aired as
Krugman's column was going to press. The Newsday article appeared even
later than that, posted on the paper's website at 9:48 PM, EDT. The second sentence: "Mr. Wilson is the former ambassador who was sent to Niger by the C.I.A. to investigate reports of attempted Iraqi uranium purchases and who recently went public with his findings." What a coincidence -- it just so happens that Wilson "went public" by publishing an op-ed in none other but the New York Times itself on July 6. Considering that Krugman's Times column is a defense of copyrighted material that appeared in the Times, journalistic ethics demand that this potential conflict of interest be disclosed. But then... The third sentence: "Since then administration allies have sought to discredit him — it's unpleasant stuff." What's the "unpleasant stuff"? Krugman never says -- so we are left to imagine a vicious smear campaign that does not, in fact, exist. CIA director George Tenet discussed Wilson's report (without naming Wilson) in his courageous statement in which he expressed regret that the Niger intelligence had been cited in the State of the Union address. While Tenet argued both that the investigatoin was incomplete and that elements of it partially supported the Niger intelligence, he said nothing whatsoever disparaging of Wilson. Presidential spokesman Ari Fleischer said in a press briefing the day after Wilson's Times op-ed that there was "zero, nada, nothing new here." And in another press briefing the day after Tenet's statement, Fleischer forcefully argued that Wilson was presenting a one-sided view of his investigation for the media. But there was no "unpleasant stuff" whatsoever. About the most "unpleasant stuff" I can find is the fact that Bush and security advisor Condoleezza Rice affronted Wilson's pride by not having known about his work prior to the inclusion of the "16 words" in the State of the Union -- a regrettable omission that they freely admit. The fourth sentence: "But here's the kicker: both the columnist Robert Novak and Time magazine say that administration officials told them that they believed that Mr. Wilson had been chosen through the influence of his wife, whom they identified as a C.I.A. operative." Isn't it remarkable that Krugman would quote conservative icon Robert Novak as an authority on anything more important than the time of day? Well, partisan punditry make strange bedfellows. Here's what Novak said in a July 14 Chicago Sun-Times column:
And here's what Time reported in a July 17 story:
This is a "smear job"? To say that Wilson's wife "suggested" or "was involved" in Wilson's trip? For one thing, who's to say it's not true -- according to Novak, the CIA agrees Plame was "involved" -- and if it is true, is it still a smear? And what if it's false -- what exactly is the "unpleasant stuff" here? Is it the implication that Wilson's wife finagled an all expenses paid trip for her hubby to Niger? Now maybe if he were investigating Iraqi uranium purchases from Maui I could see the point, but it seems to me the most "unpleasant" element of it is that it suggests that Ms. Plame must not like her husband very much. *** These remarks were, perhaps, too flip. They were made assuming strongly that Ms. Plame is not a covert operative, in which case exposing her involvement is only a matter of casting doubt on Wilson by suggesting nepotism. But if she is a covert operative, then exposing her could endanger her. In Newsday, Wilson asserts that the purpose of that would be "to keep anybody else from coming forward." Now on to the fifth sentence: "Think about that: if their characterization of Mr. Wilson's wife is true (he refuses to confirm or deny it), Bush administration officials have exposed the identity of a covert operative." Huh?! When did "their characterization" of Ms. Plame go from being an "operative" (per Novak) or an "official" (per Time) to being a "covert operative"? That's Krugman's characterization. That's not reporting... that's not commentary... it's just plain old making stuff up. Apparently the Times has learned nothing about fact-checking from the Jayson Blair scandal -- or perhaps Krugman longs for the same kind of Pablo Picasso-like "retirement" from the Times that former executive editor Howell Raines told Charlie Rose he intends to enjoy -- now that he's been chucked out onto the hard pavement of West 43rd Street. *** This is the heart of the matter: Did Krugman have
reasonable grounds to make the leap from "operative" and "official" to "covert
operative"? Maybe Ms. Plame is, in fact, exactly that -- but one thing's for
certain: nothing in his Times column provides grounds for saying so. The
fact is that in his column he offers no source beyond Novak and Time, and
those two sources simply don't justify what Krugman said. Okay, we're almost there -- one sentence to go: "That happens to be a criminal act; it's also definitely unpatriotic." Well, there we have it. It's one thing for Krugman to use every dirty trick in the book to disagree with the policies of the Bush administration (though even there, only an utterly amoral partisan would agree that his end justifies his means). But this is something far worse. He has accused the Bush administration of endangering the life of a "covert operative" by exposing her. He has, in essence, accused the Bush administration of a conspiracy to commit treason. If that's not what he really means -- if that's not what the New York Times means -- then it is most urgent that a retraction be immediately forthcoming. *** I suspect that the Times will rely on the seeming official admission in Newsday to justify not making a retraction. And surely this subject will appear in their pages again soon, as well as the pages of the Post and the Journal. My best guess at this time is that it will turn out that Novak's original sources were administration officials simply eager to trivialize Wilson, and themselves trivializing in their own minds any impropriety in revealing Ms. Plame's CIA connection. After all, they may well have reasoned, Wilson had "outed" his own CIA connection already by going public with his CIA-sponsored mission. It will probably turn out that Ms. Plame is, indeed, a covert operative of some kind, and that will be further confirmed obliquely by various government sources (but that's not the kind of thing that the CIA is likely to ever admit on official letterhead). In the meantime, we can be sure that the administration's enemies will do all they can to make this whole sorry "affair" as controversial and damaging for the administration as possible. >>Correction [7/22/2003]: As originally written, I mistakenly referred to Wilson's investigation as a "report" as though it had been assembled in written form; it had not. I have amended the text above to reflect this. >>Correction [7/23/2003]: A reader named John Corn has kindly informed me that the name of the columnist mentioned above is David Corn, not John Corn. My apologies to both Corns. I have amended the text above to reflect this. >>UPDATE... Be sure to read
Matthew Hoy's comments today on this Krugman column. He's caught
Krugman in the act of a Dowd-like "phantom correction." Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 2:08 AM | link
Monday, July 21, 2003
Bloomberg's Caroline Baum wrote in, saying,
Reader Sean Davis chimed in with the same observation, and backed it up with the numbers.
It wouldn't be beyond Krugman to draw the CBO into the Bush conspiracy. Remember, this is a guy who thinks the media is dominated by conservatives. Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:03 PM | link
Krugman claims that Bush lied about burgeoning federal budget deficits in order to ram through his tax cuts, just as he supposedly lied about weapons of mass destruction to push through the war against Iraq. The very first line of Krugman's column confidently takes it as given -- beyond any need for discussion or proof -- that Bush lied about Iraq.
If this is another untrue sentence, what was the first one? If it's the famous 16 words about African uranium -- "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa" -- then Krugman has started his own column with a sentence that is untrue (perhaps I should say another sentence that is untrue). Because whatever else one may criticize about the intelligence concerning African uranium, Bush's statement itself was indisputably true. But for Krugman, Bush is a liar even if what he says is true. And having thus falsely impugned the president's character in the column's first paragraph, Krugman goes on to make a very serious accusation. Krugman charges that Bush's budget projections were the result of a conspiracy of deliberate fraud. Krugman repeats this four times in the column:
Yet for the apparent gravity of this accusation, Krugman does not offer even the slightest shred of evidence. No details on how numbers were "cooked" or "fudged," no testimony from analysts who were "pressured." Nothing. Just baseless accusations by a Princeton economics professor writing in the pages of the "newspaper of record." By the time a week is out, these charges will be repeated elsewhere, as facts, with the New York Times cited as their authoritative source. The closest thing Krugman offers to evidence is to point out that the administration's budget projections have not been perfectly accurate. But has any president's budget projections ever been perfectly accurate? As David Hogberg put it on his Cornfield Commentary blog,
Krugman not only accuses Bush of lying about the deficit -- he claims, as he has done in many previous columns, that the deficit is leading toward a fiscal catastrophe. He says, "Right now the U.S. government is running deficits bigger, as a share of G.D.P., than those that plunged Argentina into crisis." James Clarke points out on his Right On Everything blog that Argentina's financial crisis was not caused by its deficits, but by the effect of its rigid currency exchange rate mechanism on its central bank's ability to regulate its money supply: its "peg to the US dollar may have been faulty." And, incredibly, Krugman -- whose claim to fame as an economist is in the area of international trade -- agrees! Both in the article posted on his personal website and in his Times column covering the Argentine crisis, he blames the exchange rate mechanism and never even mentions deficits once. Yet now, it's deficits that "plunged Argentina into crisis." Even the most casual scan of the history of federal budget surpluses and deficits reveals that over the last quarter century, big deficits (as a fraction of GDP) have occurred in recession years like the present ones, as a result of falling tax receipts. Many economists would argue that the willingness to tolerate deficits in recessions is one key to getting out of those recessions. But David Hogberg notes that this causes problems for Krugman's anti-Bush arguments:
Neo-Keynesian? Or just a traditional tax-and-spend liberal? You make the call, but I can't think of a single instance in which Krugman has objected to government spending. In fact, he's protested that Bush isn't spending enough on homeland security; he's endorsed Richard Gephardt's proposal to provide tax credits to extend medical insurance to the uninsured; he's blasted the GOP for wanting to cut spending on social programs; he's excoriated Tom DeLay for blocking refundable child credits for people who pay no taxes; and he's urged extension of unemployment benefits and aid strapped states. So deficit spending is great when Krugman wants it, or when Keynes prescribes it -- yet when Bush does it, Krugman dismisses it as a mere excuse, as "the last defense of the budget deficit." But does Krugman admit it will help the economy?
Krugman ignores the fact that Bush's tax cuts were for all Americans who pay income taxes, not just the rich. Be that as it may, he never explains why Keynes' deficit prescription would normally work, but will not work now in the presence of tax cuts for the rich. Does Keynes' theory hold that such tax cuts somehow suppress the demand that the deficit spending stimulates? And if tax cuts for the rich don't generate much employment, would more be generated by Krugman's prescription for tax cuts that would be "temporary, and go largely to low- and middle-income families"?
Now who's cooking the numbers around here...? Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 5:37 AM | link
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