maxparrish
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2005
- Messages
- 2,262
- Location
- SF Bay Area
- Basic Beliefs
- Libertarian-Conservative, Agnostic.
Besides, lets get to Krugman:
He stated:
"... both conservatives and liberals systematically misread facts in a way that confirms their biases. And more information doesn’t help: people screen out or discount facts that don’t fit their worldview...But here’s the thing: this ...effect is not, in fact, symmetric between liberals and conservatives...(conservatives) overwhelming rejection of something that shouldn’t even be in dispute."
Mind you, this is comes from a fellow whose own over the top assertions are often in dispute, and who confess
"Some have asked if there aren’t conservative sites I read regularly. Well, no...I don’t know of any economics or politics sites on that side...that I need to take seriously."
Anyway, he provides three examples, two of which strike me as significant. One is on climate change, and the other being "the frantic efforts to deny that Obamacare is in fact covering a lot of previously uninsured Americans?" and "a lot of talk about how it was Obama’s Katrina, or his Iraq." (He then made a lame comparison to the undisputed botching of the roll out to the disputable success of the Iraqi invasion)...(I do wonder how he can characterize opinion that he confesses he never finds worth reading, but that is a different matter).
'Now here's the thing', assuming somehow he read opinion sources that he never reads, he might have noticed that the doom talk in conservative press after the rollout sounds a lot like the flip side of the gloating when the numbers hit 7.1 million - or the war is lost and flee rhetoric of Murtha and Reid. How one 'measures' such is not clear, but what is clear is that Obamacare is not beyond dispute, nor are the touted numbers. And what constitutes 'covering a lot of previously uninsured Americans' is still in dispute.
To me, all Krugman is telling us is that he considers certain subjects as 'closed' with consensus, and he won't read anything that tells him otherwise.
Not exactly supporting his point, do you think?
He stated:
"... both conservatives and liberals systematically misread facts in a way that confirms their biases. And more information doesn’t help: people screen out or discount facts that don’t fit their worldview...But here’s the thing: this ...effect is not, in fact, symmetric between liberals and conservatives...(conservatives) overwhelming rejection of something that shouldn’t even be in dispute."
Mind you, this is comes from a fellow whose own over the top assertions are often in dispute, and who confess
"Some have asked if there aren’t conservative sites I read regularly. Well, no...I don’t know of any economics or politics sites on that side...that I need to take seriously."
Anyway, he provides three examples, two of which strike me as significant. One is on climate change, and the other being "the frantic efforts to deny that Obamacare is in fact covering a lot of previously uninsured Americans?" and "a lot of talk about how it was Obama’s Katrina, or his Iraq." (He then made a lame comparison to the undisputed botching of the roll out to the disputable success of the Iraqi invasion)...(I do wonder how he can characterize opinion that he confesses he never finds worth reading, but that is a different matter).
'Now here's the thing', assuming somehow he read opinion sources that he never reads, he might have noticed that the doom talk in conservative press after the rollout sounds a lot like the flip side of the gloating when the numbers hit 7.1 million - or the war is lost and flee rhetoric of Murtha and Reid. How one 'measures' such is not clear, but what is clear is that Obamacare is not beyond dispute, nor are the touted numbers. And what constitutes 'covering a lot of previously uninsured Americans' is still in dispute.
To me, all Krugman is telling us is that he considers certain subjects as 'closed' with consensus, and he won't read anything that tells him otherwise.
Not exactly supporting his point, do you think?