In recent weeks, we’ve been repulsed by some of Kristof’s work... Increasingly, Kristof’s work seems sloppy and strange. Maybe he’s simply over-extended. Do you believe he recently learned that corporate tycoons can be greedy?
... The Daily Howler
Too many people cheered when Nick Kristof, the NY Times house liberal, semi-reversed his opinion that unions in this country are more of a threat than ISIS. Nice to see my pal at Raging Horse blog take this shot in his
must-read piece on the Kristof
column.
How nice of Nicholas Kristof to arrive at that conclusion that unions
should not be “eviscerated.” But note well, my fellow public school
teachers, Kristof’s stipulating that the non-evisceration be limited
“to the private sector ” which, in the all out war against all public
institutions, should strikes us as particularly weasel-like and ominous.
Such words, in an article that ostensibly defends unions, could only
bring comfort to the likes of Obama, Cuomo, Walker, Rainer and all their
patrons who know that the first step to a “Right To Work” or union
free nation is the evisceration of public unions. Nicholas Kristof is not our friend.
Former teacher Bob Somerby at The Daily Howler takes an even harsher tone by eviscerating Kristof himself:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2015
Like Brian Williams, a brand: Once again, we find ourselves puzzled by Nicholas Kristof’s latest column. It appears in this morning’s New York Times. The column starts like this:
KRISTOF (2/19/15): Like many Americans, I’ve been wary of labor unions.
Full-time union stagehands at Carnegie Hall earning more than $400,000 a
year? A union hailing its defense of a New York teacher who smelled of
alcohol and passed out in class, with even the principal unable to rouse
her? A police union in New York City that has a tantrum and goes on
virtual strike?
More broadly, I disdained unions as bringing corruption, nepotism and rigid work rules to the labor market, impeding the economic growth that ultimately makes a country strong.
I was wrong.
All through the column, Kristof says he’s been wrong, oh so wrong, about unions—at least about private sector unions.
What a guy! Here’s how the column ends:
KRISTOF: Lawrence F. Katz, a Harvard labor economist, raises
concerns about some aspects of public-sector unions, but he says that
in the private sector (where only 7 percent of workers are now
unionized): “I think we’ve gone too far in de-unionization.”
He’s right. This isn’t something you often hear a columnist say, but
I’ll say it again: I was wrong. At least in the private sector, we
should strengthen unions, not try to eviscerate them.
In
comments, the usual suspects rushed to praise his honesty and his
courage. We had a different reaction to the puzzling fellow’s latest
puzzling column.
Kristof is 55 years old. He went to Harvard, then to Oxford as a Rhodes
Scholar. For all those reasons, we think this part of his column is
rather hard to believe:
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