Friday, April 22, 2005

Savaging Friedman


/ pulitzer / vacuity /
Taibbi (a favorite) discusses Tom Friedman's latest book (whose title would please these guys - possibly appropriately), in a classic of nuclear grade criticism.
I am always in awe of the fact that a guy who can't write, whose depth of thought wouldn't wet your ankles and who seems to perceive reality as an SUV commercial, can be considered a major and influential columnist anywhere...
But listen to what Taibbi says about this:

...It's impossible to divorce The World Is Flat from its rhetorical approach. It's not for nothing that Thomas Friedman is called "the most important columnist in America today." That it's Friedman's own colleague at the New York Times (Walter Russell Mead) calling him this, on the back of Friedman's own book, is immaterial. Friedman is an important American. He is the perfect symbol of our culture of emboldened stupidity. Like George Bush, he's in the reality-making business. In the new flat world, argument is no longer a two-way street for people like the president and the country's most important columnist. You no longer have to worry about actually convincing anyone; the process ends when you make the case.

Things are true because you say they are. The only thing that matters is how sure you sound when you say it. In politics, this allows America to invade a castrated Iraq in self-defense. In the intellectual world, Friedman is now probing the outer limits of this trick's potential, and it's absolutely perfect, a stroke of genius, that he's choosing to argue that the world is flat. The only thing that would have been better would be if he had chosen to argue that the moon was made of cheese.

And that's basically what he's doing here. The internet is speeding up business communications, and global labor markets are more fluid than ever. Therefore, the moon is made of cheese. That is the rhetorical gist of The World Is Flat. It's brilliant. Only an America-hater could fail to appreciate it...

1 comment:

DoDo said...

I read it too, excellent trashing.

I only read a few Friedman columns; still have nightmares...