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Lowry picks on Dobbs

Rich Lowry on the uber-fascist populist Lou Dobbs:

The other day when he was speaking at a luncheon event in Manhattan, my nodding moment came when he complained that the Iraq War has been going poorly, yet “not a single general has been fired for his failure.” That seemed bracing common sense, but with Dobbs, the longer you listen, the more self-discrediting he becomes.

His trick is to spout clichés drawn from the Right and the Left — any one of which has a 50/50 chance that the average person will agree with it — and give them a patina of freshness by wrapping them in angry and dire rhetoric. That rhetoric is their essential glue, making Dobbs the country’s foremost practitioner of apocalyptic centrism.
[...]
Dobbs is no ordinary corporate basher, since he also rails against political correctness, illegal immigration, “Communist China” and radical jihadists. His economic populism is always sold in terms of the middle class and the national interest. Unless we address the foreign economic threat, he warns, “this century will be named for another nation.” Indeed, he says, “we’re facing a real crisis that will materialize in a couple of years, and we’d better hope that it takes that long.”

Evidence of this imminent crisis is thin. Dobbs basically has to ignore the record stock market, an unemployment rate of 4.5 percent and the 20 years of growth since the early 1980s, interrupted by only two brief recessions. Dobbs is worried because the U.S. imports more than it exports and China sends a lot of its capital here, making us “a debtor nation.” But his alarmist case really relies on the tired stupidities of old-fashioned protectionism.

I despise Lou Dobbs. It just seems like he has become the point man for anti-capitalism in this country.

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