SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ThirdEye who wrote (222258)1/25/2002 4:34:45 PM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Maybe. But you've got to put an asterisk next to any NYT story - not like they don't have a self interest in this:

Krugman and Enron
On Monday, we said we thought Andrew Sullivan was going a bit
overboard in his criticisms of Paul Krugman for benefiting from Enron
largesse to the tune of $50,000. Sullivan's position looks much better
today, after Krugman's stunningly dishonest and defensive column in
response (link requires registration). Krugman resorts to the Hillary
Clinton defense, that he's the victim of a vast right-wing conspiracy:

A bizarre thing happened to me over the past week:
Conservative newspapers and columnists made a
concerted effort to portray me as a guilty party in the
Enron scandal. Why? Because in 1999, before coming to
The New York Times, I was briefly paid to serve on an
Enron advisory board. . . .

It's tempting to take this vendetta as a personal
compliment: Some people are so worried about the effect
of my writing that they will try anything to get me off this
page. But actually it was part of a broader effort by
conservatives to sling Enron muck toward their left,
hoping that some of it would stick.

Krugman is engaging in what psychologists call "projection." It was, of
course, liberals and Democrats--Krugman included--who started
"slinging Enron muck" at the Bush administration. And now Krugman
responds to questions about his own conduct by slinging muck at
conservatives.

Krugman's defense is that he complied "scrupulously" with the Times'
conflict-of-interest rules, ending his relationship with Enron when he
joined the paper, and disclosing it when he wrote about the company
for the first time. This is fine as far as it goes, but it leaves him open
to the charge of intellectual dishonesty: He wrote a puff piece on
Enron while on its payroll, then vilified the company in anti-Bush
polemics once he joined the Times. Maybe he changed his mind for
intellectually defensible reasons--but if so, you'd think he'd hasten to
say what they were.

Today's column adds lots of evidence to bolster the charge of
intellectual dishonesty, giving Times readers--most of whom, we'd
venture, are hearing about the dispute over Krugman's conduct for
the first time--an appallingly one-sided account. Krugman doesn't
identify the "conservatives" he says are persecuting him, which would
be easy enough to do since it's mostly one man: fellow New York
Times contributor Andrew Sullivan. But there's a problem: Even if
Sullivan is a conservative, he has not been picking on Krugman alone.
He's also been relentless in criticizing three conservative pundits who
also served on Enron's advisory board: William Kristol, Lawrence
Kudlow and Irwin Stelzer. Today he also blasts our Peggy Noonan for
having done some speechwriting work for Enron in 1997.

As Sullivan notes, Krugman also does not mention the amount Enron
paid him, saying only that it "was actually somewhat less than other
companies were paying me at the time for speeches on world
economic issues." Krugman leaves it to the reader's imagination
whether this means a few hundred dollars, a few thousand or more.
We suspect even the rich folks who read the Times would be
surprised to learn Krugman earned $50,000 for what he says was very
little work. (We disagreed with Sullivan when he faulted Krugman for
not including the amount in his earlier, pro forma disclosures. Here,
though, it is quite central to the subject about which Krugman is
writing.)

One lesson from this whole episode is that complying with
conflict-of-interest rules isn't the same thing as being honest. And
indeed, such rules can end up serving as a license for dishonesty.
Krugman defends himself on the letter of the law while evading the
real issues his conduct raises. It's reminiscent of Bill Clinton's legalistic
parsing of his own words in an effort to claim he didn't really lie under
oath. It is telling that Krugman pooh-poohs the idea that the Enron
scandal is "a reflection of Clinton-era moral decline." His own behavior
is one bit of evidence that it is.

opinionjournal.com



To: ThirdEye who wrote (222258)1/25/2002 4:54:14 PM
From: goldworldnet  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
I agree with Willie Sutton.....

But what do you think about campaign finance reform?

* * *