Archive for the ‘thomas friedman’ tag

Thoroughly Modern Do-Gooders #

March 21st, 2008 | In Worth Considering 

This David Brooks column, like his recent one of Rank-Link Imbalance, seems a tad to generic for it’s own good. But I liked this bit:

But the new do-gooders have absorbed the disappointments of the past decades. They have a much more decentralized worldview. They don’t believe government on its own can be innovative. A thousand different private groups have to try new things. Then we measure to see what works.

It strikes me as a good counterargument to Thomas Friedman’s slightly silly concerns in “Generation Q”, which I took issue with at the time.

America Doesn’t Need William Kristol #

January 16th, 2008 | In Worth Considering 

I’ve been waiting for a counterpoint to this for some time, and Salon has finally offered it. In a piece that’s more about realism than Kristol himself, Stephen Walt argues that what America (and thus the NY Times Op-Ed page) needs is some hard-nosed realists.

Hiring Kristol did not bring an “opposing view” to the Times’ Op-Ed page, of course, because columnist David Brooks already represents the same worldview that Kristol does. Nor does the Times’ roster of liberal pundits provide a full complement of “opposing views.” Most liberal commentators share the neocons’ belief that it is America’s right and responsibility to exercise “global leadership,” even when that role involves the aggressive use of American military power and constant interference in other countries’ affairs. The Times’ Thomas Friedman was an energetic supporter of the Iraq war until it went south, and Nicholas Kristof is a passionate advocate of U.S. intervention in Darfur. Columnists like Maureen Dowd and Frank Rich have been sharply critical of the neoconservatives’ worst follies, but both proceed from the familiar liberal internationalism that has characterized the American foreign policy establishment for many years.

What’s missing in America’s mainstream media is the voice of realism. As the label implies, realists think foreign policy should be based on the world as it really is, rather than what we might like it to be. Realists see international politics as an inherently competitive realm where states constantly compete for advantage and where security is often precarious. But realists understand that being overly alarmist and aggressive can get states into just as much trouble as being excessively trusting or complacent. …