Meet the new guy at the White House

When [tag]Claude Allen[/tag] was forced to resign from the White House after getting caught in some unfortunate shoplifting incidents, the West Wing was temporarily without a chief domestic [tag]policy[/tag] advisor. It probably didn’t matter too much — the Bush gang shows about as much interest in policy as the president shows in sightseeing in France — but yesterday, the [tag]White House[/tag] announced Allen’s replacement.

[tag]President[/tag] [tag]Bush[/tag] appointed a longtime scholar at the American Enterprise Institute yesterday to be his top domestic policy adviser, a post that has been vacant since February, when Claude A. Allen stepped down after being charged with stealing more than $5,000 in a phony refund scheme.

[tag]Karl Zinsmeister[/tag], who has worked the past 12 years as editor in chief of the American Enterprise magazine, is slated to assume his White House post June 12. At the institute, he focused on examining cultural issues, as well as social and economic trends. His columns for the magazine included pieces praising Wal-Mart’s efficiency and extolling the role of religion in forming the glue that bonds communities.

Zinsmeister has almost no experience in government — he worked on the Hill 20 years ago — but with an extensive writing background, [tag]Zinsmeister[/tag] naturally offers potential White House critics plenty of material to comb through. The WaPo noted, for example, that Zinsmeister wrote nearly a year ago, “With the exception of periodic flare-ups in isolated corners, our struggle in Iraq as warfare is over,” a boast that was silly at the time, but even less credible now.

But as it turns out, that’s just the tip of the rhetorical iceberg. The New York Sun’s Josh Gerstein reviewed some of Zinsmeister’s recent work to help get a better understanding of the new top-policy dog for the White House. Unfortunately, I’m afraid he’ll fit right in with the ideologues who are already there.

In a 2004 interview with the Syracuse New Times, the future White House aide declared, “People in Washington are morally repugnant, cheating, shifty human beings. The mom who charters a bus for her kids to go to a rave is as bad as the lady with the crackpipe. We have sickness at the top and bottom of our society and we have a big middle, sensible with common sense and decency and morality.”

Just as with Mr. Snow, some of Mr. Zinsmeister’s writings could cause embarrassment to the White House. He has engaged in some mild criticism of Mr. Bush’s budget policies. In a recent issue of the American Enterprise, Mr. Zinsmeister wrote, “Though he talks a good line about battling government bloat, our current president has shown an eerie lackawanna when it comes to actually keeping a lid on the federal Pandora’s box.”

Mr. Zinsmeister has also written candidly on race, arguing that black communities have developed crippling problems that overlap in a way unseen in other parts of America. “The point of the conservative concern over black underclass life is that the pathologies run so much deeper there,” he wrote in 1996, citing his mentor Moynihan. “We desperately need to find out what it is in contemporary [tag]black[/tag] culture that makes for these exceptional breakdowns.”

The American Prospect’s Greg Sargent added that Zinsmeister wrote about [tag]race[/tag] relations in 1996, “The brutal reality is that whether in the selection of juries or the choice of neighborhoods to live (or get lost) in, colorblindness has become a real risk today…The penalty for the person who, ignoring race, turns down the wrong street today can literally be death.”

I’m curious — where does the White House find these guys?

CB,
That’s why you had the American Enterprise Institue, and the Heritage Foundation, and numerous other right-wing echo chambers, as well as Bob Jones University and Patrick Henry, to provide a steady supply of koolaid drinkers who have been carefully taught what to think and say.

I know you were probably asking rhetorically, but I couldn’t resist.

  • “I’m curious — where does the White House find these guys?” – CB

    The Minutemen turn them up from under rocks in the Yuma desert while waiting to call in illegals crossing the border.

  • “His columns for the magazine included pieces praising Wal-Mart’s efficiency and extolling the role of religion in forming the glue that bonds communities.”

    And this guy is going to dream up policies to help that ” big middle, sensible with common sense and decency and morality.” Exactly how do they stay in the middle after Wal-Mart comes to town??

    And if Mr. Zinsmeister wants to see the biggest problem facing black America, he need only look in the bathroom mirror tomorrow morning. What black America needs is for Zinsmeister’s America to put their foot back where it belongs, which isn’t on the neck of Black America.

    Of course, the slaveowners always believed the darkies loved that slavery, too.

  • First, props to Zinsmeister, regardless of his politics, for the awesome phrase “eerie lackawanna,” which plays off the name of the now defunct Erie-Lackawanna Railroad. (History of the EL here: http://erielackhs.org/EL/ELHOME.html). Perhaps he’s a closet trainspotter.

    Second, he’s the author of “Dawn Over Baghdad: How The U.S. Military Is Using Bullets And Ballots To Remake Iraq,” which was published in June 2004. It has sold, according to Bookscan, fewer than 5000 copies. He also wrote “Boots on the Ground: A Month with the 82nd Airborne in the Battle for Iraq,” which was published by St. Martins Press in September 2003. It did better, according to Bookscan, selling nearly 15,000 copies.

    The Publishers Weekly review of the latter noted it was partly a conservative polemic and “readers…should be prepared to wade through pages and pages of splenetic rants against the anti-war movement and Zinsmeister’s fellow journalists, whom he dubs ‘left-wing, cynical, wiseguy Ivy League types.’ Such flaws, unfortunately, are not entirely redeemed by the book’s outstanding array of color photographs. Sounds like an ideal man for the White House.

    One might see in Zinsmeister’s remarkable decline in sales from his first book to the second a reflection of the considerable drop off in support of the war during the time between their publication dates.

    You can search through both on Amazon. Have fun with it.

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1594030901/qid=1148591715/sr=1-3/ref=sr_1_3/102-3154970-0336938?s=books&v=glance&n=283155

  • Most Human-chimp Differences Due To Gene Regulation — Not Genes

    Interesting. And absolutely no reason to suppose this mechanism would be restricted only to ‘human-chimp’ differences with 99% common DNA. What about 99.5% common DNA, such as between whites and negroes?

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases…0309190112.htm
    “The scientists provide powerful new evidence for a 30-year-old theory, proposed in a classic paper from Mary-Claire King and Allan Wilson of Berkeley. That 1975 paper documented the 99-percent similarity of genes from humans and chimps and suggested that altered gene regulation, rather than changes in coding, might explain how so few genetic changes could produce the wide anatomic and behavioral differences between the two.”

  • I think that quote sounds better like this: “The point of the liberal concern over Republican overclass politics is that the pathologies run so much deeper there… We desperately need to find out what it is in contemporary Republican culture that makes for these exceptional breakdowns.”

    Because, let’s see, we’ve got William Jefferson on one hand, and Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove, Norquist, Abramoff, Frist, Burns, Santorum, Delay, Hastert, Boehner, Ney, Cunningham, Goss, Foggo, and god knows who else on the other hand.

    But Jefferson’s black, so let’s single him out as a crook, because there are few enough black people – especially in positions of power – that they can be identified and busted if they’re doing anything illegal. But if you start busting crooked white Republicans, you’d have a lot more work cut out for you.

    Where would you start?

    Or where would you stop?

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