I USED TO THINK
Anyone who reads the New York Times on-line without a pop-up blocker has been subjected to Oracle CEO Larry Ellison exulting that “I used to think. Now, I just read The Economist.” Of course he's kidding. But it's not so funny. Leaf through the past few issues of The Economist, and you'll find unsigned articles calling on Lula to cut back pensions, on David Cameron to promise shrinking social spending, and on the Democratic Leadership Council not to go wobbly against organized labor. Then read over this parade of praise for the magazine - as a news source that saves you the time of having to read any of the other ones. Ted Turner draws a favorable contrast with Time Magazine (yes, that Time Magazine), which apparently is "too populist." No need to worry about populism from The Economist. Now if the same roster of CEOs stepped up singing the praises of, say, the Wall Street Journal, heads would turn over why a "conservative" paper's reporting was being taken as holy writ by so many powerful people (never mind that the news section of the paper isn't so different in bent from what you would get in the Times). But when so many in the global overclass quote chapter and verse from a "neoliberal" paper laying down structural adjustment through shrinking spending and shredded security as the best medicine for every situation, that's another story. Or rather, it's not a story.
2 Comments:
Hey, charles hamlin misspelled "soporiphic." Don't they kick you out of the patriarchy for shit like that? No? Fuck.
um, i mean soporific. d'oh.
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