You know what, David? Fuck you.
If you don't understand the absurdity of your argument, which is literally "former presidents, no matter how obviously criminal, should be above the law", why in the fuck is anyone giving you a microphone?
I hope you look like a total dipshit when DoJ releases the details of the search warrant. And I'm sure you will. And I'm sure you'll have exactly zero self-reflection, and will be allowed to publish destructive garbage forever more.
Btw, thanks for enabling the eventual rise of Trumpism by perhaps unintentionally running intellectual cover for the GOP in the years leading up to 2015. You fucking idiot.
In David Brooks' defense, he's never understood why people vote for anyone, and no one has ever required him to do more than stare into his navel for answers. This is his microcosm - Politico gets an off-the-record un-sourced quote from a Republican strategist and David Brooks recycles it into a New York Times column. He doesn't have to grapple with the greater meaning or context of any of it, he just adds 4-word summaries of screeds from "theamericanconservative.com", Ron DeSantis and Mark Levin and then wrings his hands about how nobody is civil anymore. I mean, let's think about this for a minute. Damon Linker started out as a 5 cent a word online-only columnist for The Week, a print magazine that exists solely to chop up everyone else's news into little blurbs to read on the shitter. It's literally Print Reddit. Eventually The Week decided that 5 cents a word was too much for columnists that nobody except people who want to get emails from Print Reddit (guilty) will ever see. He got a couple articles in the New Republic but is now "area substacker" without being Glenn Greenwald first. Linker's substack, for what it's worth, is eight links to Twitter and an "I told you so" about how he has long maintained that Trump shouldn't be prosecuted because, fundamentally, There are two fundamental truths here: 1) The overwhelming majority of print journalism has no frame other than "both sides." You've got Democrats, you've got Republicans, and you need the official Democrat viewpoint, and the official Republican viewpoint, and then you thread the needle between the two positions and people put 25 cents in the vending machine so they can complain about newsprint on their hands. That's the job, and it will never change. 2) The overwhelming majority of print journalism is disappearing up its own ass. The Plame Affair is old enough to vote. "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in US" is old enough to drink. Spitballing here but I don't think many adults could put Tippecanoe, Chappaquiddick and Watergate on a timeline in order and a certainly don't see evidence that anyone under 25 has the same relationship with media as I do. The fact that David Brooks links to a bunch of hot takes on Twitter that link to a bunch of hot takes on Twitter says as much about the country as a bunch of MAGA hats do - there's a crisis of leadership, not that the Republicans are wedded to a bad leader. There's this idea that the Republicans won Roe and now they're gonna ban abortion all across the land. And yeah - they're certainly going to try. But when 20% of the Kansas GOP votes against it, the problem is not "what are Republicans going to do" the problem is "what are Republicans." Which, you would think, would be the sort of question David Brooks has made his career asking. Thing is, though? If he ever comes up with answers he will cease to be David Brooks. Every nattering nabob of negativity is in the same boat - if they come to a decision, or reach an insight, they lose their schtick. Much like the anti-gay-marriage movement, the pro-life movement and the Trump campaign. What will you do if you catch the car? Far better to bark from the couch. The Republicans who run things actually have to sign bills and legislate and veto things and open bridges and shit. The Republicans who determine policy basically just need to give white people something to be mad at. The lolbrooks clique doesn't want to talk about that internal tension because it doesn't sell newspapers to 'boomers so instead they tweet at each other about how everything is bad for the Democrats. I'm reading Galbraith's "The Affluent Society" right now. It's where we get the term "conventional wisdom." Want a bitchin' quote? The conventional wisdom, particularly among print editorialists, is But as Damon Linker wrote in a Substack post,
I guess you could say I simply don’t agree with those who insist that not going after Trump will be even more dangerous than pursuing his prosecution. It’s possible they’re right.
The enemy of the conventional wisdom is not ideas but the march of events.
The NYTimes Pitch Bot account might be the final push I needed to cancel my subscription. "Why the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago is bad news for Biden" was just too real. Ugh but they do some of the last remaining legit journalistic digging going on in this country. UGH
I give money to the Washington Post because (A) it's dumbly cheap through Amazon (B) one of my high school friends is a reporter there last I checked (C) they occasionally do good work. I give money to the Wall Street Journal because (A) they pay their journalists well to dig into things they fucking well feel like (B) they paywall the shit out of everything and it's super-annoying not being able to read their stuff. Their editorial board is awful, unspeakably so, but the NYT hasn't been much better. And the NYT saw Jayson Blair, doubled down with Judith Miller and then hired Brett Stephens. Fuck the NYT.
It was a thing of beauty watching him cry on PBS on election night 2016. At first you thought he was crying because he feared for America, but then you slowly realized that he was wrestling with his own culpability in the grand scheme to elevate hollow market worship that trump represented the reductio ad absurdum of. At this point, he should really stick to the dime store social psychology that he’s been honing for the past five years now.
For anyone who's never watched David perform in his inorganic meatsuit, this week's PBS News Hour is particularly illustrative: The most insightful moments into Brooks are when he is not talking. Other than a brief glance near the beginning, he never breaks from either looking down at the desk/papers in front of him or mercilessly staring into the soul of the anchor. I don't think the virtual Jonathan Capehart instance is a green screen, I think it's an actual TV. And he pointedly won't look at it. There's no need to psychoanalyze his gestures or speech, because this guy is already clearly the mayor of Uncanny Valley. Chuck E. Cheese animatronic-tier weird.