Results tagged “davidbrooks”

Shocker: David Brooks Makes Broad Generalizations

Yes, yes, thank you for sending us 342 emails about how New York Times columnist and Bethesda resident David Brooks wrote something really ridiculous today about District's Ward 3. The column posits that the upper-upper-middle-class section of Washington is populated entirely by trial lawyers, TV news producers and Democratic staffers, and that these people are only upset about the excesses of Wall Street executives because they are envious. They are wealthy, you see, but not as wealthy. A sample:

People in Ward Three have nationalized extravagance and privatized Puritanism. Under their rule, the federal government is permitted to throw hundreds of billions of dollars around on a misguided bank bailout, but if a banker like John Thain spends $1,500 on a wastepaper basket then all hell breaks loose. Dazzling personal consumption is out. Middle-class drabness is in. It’s sad, but there’s nothing to be done.
Ward 3 Council member Mary Cheh told the City Paper that Brooks should be ashamed of himself, which doesn't do a lot to lessen the impression that Ward 3 residents are all humorless, judgmental liberals. Now, clearly Brooks is exaggerating here, in order to make the larger point that the culture war has shifted since the economy tanked and Obama took office. Apart from the liberal part, surely Brooks's household fits right in to the income bracket he's describing. Lines like, "On any given Saturday, half the people in Ward Three are arranging panel discussions for the other half to participate in," could just as easily apply to Bethesda. Is Brooks making huge, largely ridiculous cultural generalizations? Of course he is. He's David Brooks. He's written entire books full of them.

Our friends over at Campus Progress sent us an email about a contest they're sponsoring that should be good for a few laughs. The Social Capital blog's Free Food-a-Thon promises to pit two of the most demanding needs of any Washington intern -- to save money and to eat -- in a battle of epicurean proportions. Here's the deal: Next week, Campus Progress interns will compete, two a day, where they will document their meals/snacks/crumbs...

Attention all you political scientist groupies (we know you're out there!): head over to the Wardman Park Marriott with your cameras and copies of the latest Nation or National Review right away. Because on a weekend where, traditionally, most involved in politics take off for one last weekend away from Swamp City, 6000+ political scientists from the worlds of academia, media, and government are descending on Woodley Park for the annual convention of the American Political Science Association. Attendees include such luminaries as "Bobos in Paradise" author David Brooks, Weekly Standard editor William "No I Wasn't in City Slickers" Kristol, and rapper-slash-pragmatist Cornel West.

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