John Stossel looking for a break
There is a problem with writers who learned to craft the language for a television audience. The writing sometimes reads as a surface gloss. Stossel’s book, while interesting, never delves deeply enough to support his assertions. He may be a fine investigative journalist, and the situations he describes as wrong truly appear wrong, but in this book he doesn’t go beyond asserting his opinion as fact.
Particularly frustrating is his tendency to only cite the statistics he contradicts. He tells us about a study released that reporters took to mean one thing, tells us about the stats and numbers quoted, then switches to his conversational tone to say, «actually, the opposite was true» and continue to describe a new context for the statistics. It sounds good, and it might be a necessary expedient for TV journalism where airtime is limited and words are backed up with images, but on paper it reads as though he’s hiding the facts behind assertions and anecdotal evidence.
The book starts off frighteningly self-indulgent. I won’t pretend to solve the debate around journalistic objectivity and I don’t believe that any journalist must refer to herself in the third person (eg «this reporter watched the troops open fire»). Sometimes I believe it’s appropriate to identify one’s self as the source of information, and if a journalist is really doing his job he should sometimes be the only one who saw an event or piece of evidence. There is, however, a line which, once crossed, leaves a journalist firmly in the indulgent self-aggrandizement zone.
Unlike Sarah Vowell’s first-person investigation, Stossel has a specific thesis he’s trying to prove. With Vowell, we get to follow her as she explores the playground of history. Stossel gets in the way of his own facts.
I’ll give Stossel props for this: while he adheres to the Libertarian party line that free markets need no regulation, he does acknowledge that there are non-marketplace interests and factors that require some form of enforcement. He prefers the UL and Consumer Reports styles of self-regulation to FDA-style regulation and state licenses, but does not pretend that problems with secondary effects invisible to the consumer can be addressed voluntarily. He specifically lists protection of the environment next to enforcement of laws against violent crime as items tasked to the government.
Similarly, when writing of the problem of frivolous asbestos lawsuits, he makes clear that he is not denying that many of these suits have been valid. «**No one disputes that asbestos can kill.**» he writes (bolding his), «Those sick people deserve compensation, and bosses who knew of the risk but allowed workers to be exposed anyway deserve to be punished. That’s what the tort system is supposed to do.» So it is clear that he’s not interested in letting negligent employers off the hook or hanging those injured by that negligence out to dry. He’s only interested in putting a stop to frivolous suits.
Stossel is very clear about these extremes, yet not so clear about what should happen in the range closer to the center of the spectrum. More depth would go a long way.
One bit I relate to is about being a liberal «branded» as a conservative for not toeing the party line. I find it amusing to live in San Francisco where I am about as far to the right wing as you’ll find, while I also live in America, where I am about as far to the left as you’ll find. Friends and relatives outside the Bay Area are aghast that I voted for Gavin Newsom for mayor, because he’s so radical. Inside San Francisco, my friends are all aghast that I voted for such a corporate stooge friend of the establishment as Gavin Newsom. It’s kind of fun being the conservative wacko, especially when I’m still way left of center.
Here’s what Stossel says:
> I’m hardly what I would call conservative. I happen to think consenting adults should be able to do just about anything they want. I think prostitution should be permitted. (If quarterbacks and boxers make money with their bodies, why can’t a woman make money with hers?) I believe homosexuality is perfectly natural, that the drug war should be ended, that flag burning and foul language should be tolerated, and most abortion should be legal. This is conservative? Real conservatives should be insulted.
Yeah, sing it brother!
And on further reflection, I’m glad to see this kind of Libertarian thought explored even in a glossed over and oversimplified way. It didn’t do much for me, but I think I’d gladly recommend it to someone who expressed some interest in learning about this perspective on freedom. It is refreshing to hear from someone not pulling to the right or the left but pulling by a set of principles that may borrow from both sides and elsewhere. America needs more of this sort of thing.
You are surprised because a
You are surprised because a nominal conservative doesn’t toe the official party line on the entire platform? Most people, outside of your beloved city, harbor such a range of beliefs. It is unusual, however, to find one in journalism. BTW, out here in the heartland (read: sticks) we call him a libertarian, not a conservative. And everybody loves his specials.
Stossel is to mainstream media the way you are to San Francisco: far enough to the right to be noticeable, yet not far enough to truly deserve the rap.
Dad
Actually, the SF area has
Actually, the SF area has got a strong contingent of libertarians. I’m surprised he hasn’t managed to get hosed down with libertarian doctrine before this, especially being around the computer industry, which harbors a lot of believers in this philosophy.
I haven’t?
I was registered
I haven’t?
I was registered as a Libertarian for years and used to do volunteer work for the LP back in Connecticut, before I moved back to SF. I find that most of the people in the LP are more interested in the right corner of the diamond than the top corner of the diamond, and even then I believe in a society with somewhat more structure than the anarchist poseurs that make the rest of the Party.
Good thought exercises, important ideas, and some pretty bad policy. Stossel is way more moderate than the bulk of the LP, although perhaps right in the middle of the folks that call themselves Libertarians.
No, I said he was branded by
No, I said he was branded by liberals as a conservative for not toeing the liberal party line. I’d agree that he’s a moderate Libertarian, but if I had to pick one or another, I think that he falls on the liberal side rather than the conservative side.
Still, he offered a label for himself: a “classic liberal.” I’m not certain what that means exactly, but I think he thinks of it as being socially liberal and not stupid.
Ironically there seems to be a new wave of Republicans that fits that description, but for the most part the GOP still seems to be in the stranglehold of those who favor corporate welfare and the elimination of civil liberties. So maybe he fits in as a “classic liberal” and a “new-wave conservative” (“Neocon” is already taken).
Anyway, I’ve never seen him on TV. Maybe I should be keeping my eyes open for his specials?
He’s on 20/20. Trust me,
He’s on 20/20. Trust me, he’s a conservative fuck in liberal clothing.