Krugman Cracks Down on Bill Kristol, Hard
by Robert Wenzel
Check this out. Left wing interventionists fighting right wing interventionists.
The Bill Kristol led "Emergency Committee for Israel" is out with an ad claiming that Occupation Wall Street is anti-Semitic. The ad and my comment on the absurdity of this is here.
Paul Krugman has joined the criticism. He writes:
- Over the last couple of days, I’ve been getting mail accusing me of
consorting with Nazis. My immediate reaction was, what the heck? Then it
clicked: the right wing is mounting a full-court press to portray Occupy
Wall Street as an anti-Semitic movement, based, as far as I can tell, on
one guy with a sign.
- The key to understanding this, I’d suggest, is that movement
conservatism has become a closed, inward-looking universe in which you
get points not by sounding reasonable to uncommitted outsiders – although
there are a few designated pundits who play that role professionally –
but by outdoing your fellow movement members in zeal.
- It’s sort of reminiscent of Stalinists going after Trotskyites in the old days: the Trotskyites were left deviationists, and also saboteurs working for the Nazis. Didn’t propagandists feel silly saying all that? Not at all: in their universe, extremism in defense of the larger truth was no vice, and you literally couldn’t go too far.
- It’s sort of reminiscent of Stalinists going after Trotskyites in the old days: the Trotskyites were left deviationists, and also saboteurs working for the Nazis. Didn’t propagandists feel silly saying all that? Not at all: in their universe, extremism in defense of the larger truth was no vice, and you literally couldn’t go too far.
John Gray wrote in Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia:
- Many of the older generation of neo-conservatives began on the
anti-Stalinist far Left – Irving Kristol, the political godfather of the
movement, wrote an autobiographical essay called 'Memoirs of a
Trotskyist' – and the intellectual style of that sectarian milieu has
marked the neo-conservative movement throughout its history.
(p.122)
So when Krugman calls a Bill Kristol move reminiscent of a Stalin-type tactic used against Trotskyites, Krugman is slapping Kristol hard, real hard. It's not quite calling Kristol, Hitler, but calling his tactics Stalin-like, given the history, is not that far away.
http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2011/10/krugman-cracks-down-on-bill-kristol.html --
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