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To: Wharf Rat who wrote (181899)12/6/2009 9:48:07 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 361875
 
Friday, December 01, 2006
The Tom Friedman disease consumes Establishment Washington

(updated below)

Someone e-mailed me several days ago to say that while it is fruitful and necessary to chronicle the dishonest historical record of pundits and political figures when it comes to Iraq, I deserve to be chastised for failing to devote enough attention to the person who, by far, was most responsible for selling the war to centrists and liberal "hawks" and thereby creating "consensus" support for Bush's war -- Tom Friedman, from his New York Times perch as "the nation's preeminent centrist foreign policy genius."

That criticism immediately struck me as valid, and so I spent the day yesterday and today reading every Tom Friedman column beginning in mid-2002 through the present regarding Iraq. That body of work is extraordinary. Friedman is truly one of the most frivolous, dishonest, and morally bankrupt public intellectuals burdening this country. Yet he is, of course, still today, one of the most universally revered figures around, despite -- amazingly enough, I think it's more accurate to say "because of" -- his advocacy of the invasion of Iraq, likely the greatest strategic foreign policy disaster in America's history.

This matters so much not simply in order to expose Friedman's intellectual and moral emptiness, though that is a goal worthy and important in its own right. Way beyond that, the specific strain of intellectual bankruptcy that drove Friedman's strident support for the invasion of Iraq continues to be what drives not only Tom Friedman today, but virtually all of our elite opinion-makers and "centrist" and "responsible" political figures currently attempting to "solve" the Iraq disaster.

In column after column prior to the war, Friedman argued that invading Iraq and overthrowing Saddam was a noble, moral, and wise course of action. To Friedman, that was something we absolutely ought to do, and as a result, he repeatedly used his column to justify the invasion and railed against anti-war arguments voiced by those whom he derisively called "knee-jerk liberals and pacifists" (so as not to clutter this post with long Friedman quotes, I'm posting the relevant Friedman excerpts here)....
glenngreenwald.blogspot.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (181899)12/6/2009 9:49:20 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361875
 
Don't worry, Obama is not listening to Friedman...but our president is listening to key players in the Military Industrial Complex - they want more war and record defense budgets and that's what they get...Notice how Obama has kept Bush's former Defense Secretary -- was that a good move...?? I don't think so.



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (181899)12/6/2009 10:52:50 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361875
 
I saw Tommy speak years ago..
his support for the War..(machine)
had me frame him
as a bright..
clear spoken..
Compromised
A Hole..

that view still holds...