1/1/2020 - Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
The
Washington Post recently published a surprising indictment of MSNBC host,
Stanford graduate and Rhodes scholar Rachel Maddow.
Post
media critic Erik Wemple wrote that Maddow deliberately misled her audience by
claiming the now-discredited Steele dossier was largely verifiable -- even at a
time when there was plenty of evidence that it was mostly bogus.
At
the very time Maddow was reassuring viewers that Christopher Steele was
believable, populist talk radio and the much-criticized Fox News Channel were
insisting that most of Steele's allegations simply could not be true. Maddow
was wrong. Her less degreed critics proved to be right.
In
2018, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.),
and the committee's then-ranking minority member, Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), each
issued contrasting reports of the committee's investigation into allegations of
collusion between Russia and Donald Trump's campaign team and the misbehavior
of federal agencies.
Schiff's
memo was widely praised by the media. Nunes' report was condemned as rank and
partisan.
Many
in the media went further. They contrasted Harvard Law graduate Schiff with
rural central Californian Nunes to help explain why the clever Schiff got to
the bottom of collusion and the "former dairy farmer" Nunes was
"way over his head" and had "no idea what's going on."
Recently,
the nonpartisan inspector general of the Department of Justice, Michael
Horowitz, found widespread wrongdoing at the DOJ and FBI. He confirmed the key
findings in the Nunes memo about the Steele dossier and its pernicious role in
the FISA application seeking a warrant against former Trump campaign adviser
Carter Page.
In
contrast, much of what the once-praised Schiff had claimed to be true was
proven wrong by Horowitz -- from Schiff's insistence that the FBI verified the
Steele dossier to his assertion that the Department of Justice did not rely
chiefly on the dossier for its warrant application.
When
special counsel Robert Mueller formed an investigatory team, he stocked it with
young, progressive Washington insiders, many with blue-chip degrees and
resumes.
The
media swooned. Washington journalists became giddy over the prospect of a
"dream team" of such "all-stars" who would demolish the
supposedly far less impressively credentialed Trump legal team.
We
were assured by a snobbish Vox that "Special counsel Robert Mueller's
legal team is full of pros. Trump's team makes typos."
Yet
after 22 months and $32 million worth of investigation, Mueller's team found no
Russian collusion and no evidence of actionable Trump obstruction during the
investigation of that non-crime. All the constant media reports that
"bombshell" Mueller team disclosures were imminent and that the
"walls are closing in" on Trump proved false.
Mueller
himself testified before Congress, only to appear befuddled and almost clueless
at times about his own investigation. Many of his supposedly brightest
all-stars, such as Lisa Page, Peter Strzok and Kevin Clinesmith, had to leave
his dream team due to unethical behavior.
In
contrast, Trump's widely derided chief lawyers -- 69-year-old Ty Cobb,
78-year-old John Dowd, and 63-year-old radio and TV host Jay Sekulow -- stayed
out of the headlines. They advised Trump to cooperate with the Mueller team and
systematically offered evidence and analyses to prove that Trump did not
collude with the Russians to warp the 2016 election. In the end, Mueller's
"hunter-killer team" was forced to agree.
When
the supposed clueless Trump was elected, a number of elites pronounced his
economic plans to be absurd. We were told that Trump was bound to destroy the
U.S. economy.
Former
Princeton professor and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman insisted that Trump
would crash the stock market. He even suggested that stocks might never
recover.
Former
Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said Trump would bring on a recession within a
year and a half.
The
former head of the National Economic Council, Steven Rattner, predicted a
market crash of "historic proportions."
In
contrast, many of Trump's economic advisers during his campaign and
administration, including outsider Peter Navarro, pundit Steven Moore, former
TV host Larry Kudlow and octogenarian Wilbur Ross, were caricatured.
Yet
three years later, in terms of the stock market, unemployment, energy
production and workers' wages, the economy has been doing superbly.
The
point of these sharp contrasts is not that an Ivy League degree or a Washington
reputation is of little value, or that prestigious prizes and honors account
for nothing, or even that supposed experts are always unethical and silly.
Instead,
one lesson is that conventional wisdom and groupthink tend to mislead,
especially in the age of online echo chambers and often sheltered and blinkered
elite lives.
We
forget that knowledge can be found at all ages, and in all places. And ethics
has nothing to do with degrees or pedigrees.
No comments:
Post a Comment