Monday, March 18, 2019

NYT Columnist David Leonhardt Repeats Post-Christchurch, DNC Talking Points

N.S.: These talking points are all over the place right now.


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President Trump keeps encouraging violence. It matters.
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Monday, March 18, 2019

Op-Ed Columnist

Op-Ed Columnist

There was a lot of news last week. A college-admissions scandal. A plane crash. An awful terrorist attack. Beto O'Rourke's campaign announcement. So maybe you missed the president of the United States muse aloud about violence by his political supporters.
My column this morning is about that threat. President Trump keeps encouraging both violence and white nationalism — and white-nationalist violence is rising. That's not a coincidence. He doesn't deserve blame for any specific attack. But he deserves blame for using the world's biggest bully pulpit to corrode our democracy and public safety. He's engaging in behavior that has scary historical echoes and real-world effects.
Related: "Violent white nationalists think Trump is a white nationalist," Judd Legum writes, in a detailed post at Popular Information. "The President of the United States is dismissing the threat of white nationalism, using white nationalist rhetoric, and aggressively pursuing policies favored by white nationalists."
Senator Substance
Among the 2020 Democratic candidates, Elizabeth Warren has jumped out to a big early lead in the ideas competition. She has the most ambitious, detailed policy agenda of any candidate. After sitting down with her for two recent conversations — including one you can listen to here — I wrote about her platform in a Sunday Review column.
I don't agree with every Warren proposal, as I explained. But she has correctly diagnosed the biggest problems facing the American economy and has proposed a coherent post-Obama vision for the party. I hope the other 2020 candidates also offer clear visions — and, ideally, different ones — for fixing an economy that has created so much frustration.
If you want to dig in deeper on Warren's agenda, you can read John Cassidy in The New Yorker or the former Obama administration officials Lily Batchelder or David Kamin on Twitter.
Of Warren's proposal to put workers on corporate boards: Vox's Matthew Yglesias and the Roosevelt Institute's Susan Holmberg have praised it. Eric Levitz of New York magazine has compared it with Bernie Sanders's platform, and Jeffrey Miron of Harvard has criticized it.
Of Warren's plan to break up big tech: Michael Tomasky praises it in The Daily Beast. The Washington Examiner editorial board — not normally a Warren fan — offers partial praise. Megan McArdle of The Washington Post lists her criticisms.
My colleague Paul Krugman has also written several recent columns praising Warren's emerging agenda.


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He doesn't deserve blame for any specific attack. He does deserve blame for the increase in white-nationalist violence.
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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mark Steyn made,what Tucker Carlson thought,was an enlightened statement tonight.
"Less free speech leads to more violence."
That connotates the masses rising up in protest to regain their lost right.I would humbly disagree.The violence in that case would be inflicted ON the masses BY the government,seeking to squelch free speech even further.
So I have to add a sentence to Steyn's observation:
"Less free speech leads to more violence...on its citizens."
--GR Anonymous

Anonymous said...

The seven year old chess champion. The colored kid. Of course. See! They are not so stupid as you think they are.