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Glenn Beck
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From Daily Planet Staff Reports
Following his April 22 address at The Asheville School, journalist-writer-pundit David Brooks fielded a broad array of questions for about 20 minutes.
A male student asked, “You talked about polarization of society.” He then said “many feel certain journalists are disingenuous,” including Rush Limbaugh, Rachel Malow, Glenn Beck and others.
“One of those is a friend — and the others, I don’t have any use for,” Brooks replied. “Sometimes you get ‘truthiness’ instead of the truth.”
“Distancing yourself from the things you’re covering and not being an activist is important for journalists,” he said. “If everyone’s doing the wave, you need to be the one not doing it.”
He added, “Sometimes it feels like the newspaper is like the whaling industry — and we won’t be around because of you guys, but standards should be preserved.”
A male student asked how Brooks viewed the future of American culture in
50 and 100 years.
De Tocqueville (1805-1859), a French political thinker and historian,
“wrote about American culture in the 1800s — and not much has changed,”
Brooks replied. “There are traits that run deep in our nature —
subconscious ways we see reality (as Americans) that are different.”
Brooks added that “when people predict the future, they tend to
underestimate technological change and overestimate psychological
change. We’ll just have dumber movies and better TV.”
A male student asked about Brooks’ views concerning Thomas Jefferson and
Arthur Laffer.
“I’m a Hamiltonian,” Brooks answered. “He created a political system
with a design for limited government to give people a chance to
succeed.”
Under Hamilton’s view, “government has a role to enhance social
mobility.”
This notion, he said, contrasts with Jefferson, whose philosophy was
“government governs best that governs least.”
The audience laughed when, Brooks noted that he “once gave a talk at
Monticello (Jefferson’s homeplace in Charlottesville, Va.) and 15
minutes into my discussion, lightning struck ... Thomas Jefferson was
trying to kill me!” He explained that Hamilton and Jefferson did not
like each other.
A female student asked how Brooks sees women’s future roles in politics.
“I mentioned the important of social skills,” Brooks replied. “Women
were twice as accurate as in smelling fear” in a recent study. “Right
now, 120 women graduate for every 100 men” in undergraduate colleges.
The ratio is 150 women to 100 men in graduate schools.
“I think now, women are much better educated than men ... That will
translate to political power. So I’m going the way of the dodo.
Another female student asked if Brooks agrees with Rousseau’s famous
quotation — that man was basically good by nature.
“I guess I don’t,” Brooks replied with a smile. “Are people naturally
good? I think they are naturally good — and complicated ... We’re guided
not by reason and logic, but by our affections.”
“When you’re attracted to someone, you know it deeply,” Brooks said. “We
have certain senses about us — and they’re built in deeply.”
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