Paul Krugman is a Nobel-Prize winning economist who wrote a regular column for The New York Times for 24 years. Recently he left the Times and now writes at Substack.
On Substack, he wrote about why he left. For many years, he wrote, the Times had edited his work very lightly. Recently, his editors had been heavy-handed.
Krugman wrote::
During my first 24 years at the Times, from 2000 to 2024, I faced very few editorial constraints on how and what I wrote. For most of that period my draft would go straight to a copy editor, who would sometimes suggest that I make some changes — for example, softening an assertion that arguably went beyond provable facts, or redrafting a passage the editor didn’t quite understand, and which readers probably wouldn’t either. But the editing was very light; over the years several copy editors jokingly complained that I wasn’t giving them anything to do, because I came in at length, with clean writing and with back-up for all factual assertions.
This light-touch editing prevailed even when I took positions that made Times leadership very nervous. My early and repeated criticisms of Bush’s push to invade Iraq led to several tense meetings with management. In those meetings, I was urged to tone it down. Yet the columns themselves were published as I wrote them. And in the end, I believe the Times — which eventually apologized for its role in promoting the war — was glad that I had taken an anti-invasion stand. I believe that it was my finest hour.
So I was dismayed to find out this past year, when the current Times editors and I began to discuss our differences, that current management and top editors appear to have been completely unaware of this important bit of the paper’s history and my role in it.
Two, previous Times management and editors had allowed me to engage in the higher-level economic debates of the time. The aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis led to a great flowering of economics blogs. Important, sophisticated debates about the causes of the crisis and the policy response were taking place more or less in real time. I was able to be an active part of those debates, because I had an economics blog of my own, under the Times umbrella but separate from the column. The blog, unedited, was both more technical — sometimes much more technical — and looser than the column.
Then, step by step, all the things that made writing at the Times worthwhile for me were taken away. The Times eliminated the blog at the end of 2017. Here’s my last substantive blog post, which gives a good idea of the kind of thing I was no longer able to do once it was eliminated.
For a while I tried to make up for the loss of the blog with threads on Twitter. But even before Elon Musk Nazified the site, tweet threads were an awkward, inferior substitute for blog posts. So in 2021 I opened a Substack account, as a place to put technical material I couldn’t publish in the Times. Times management became very upset. When I explained to them that I really, really needed an outlet where I could publish more analytical writing with charts etc., they agreed to allow me to have a Times newsletter (twice a week), where I could publish the kind of work I had previously posted on my blog.
In September 2024 my newsletter was suddenly suspended by the Times. The only reason I was given was “a problem of cadence”: according to the Times, I was writing too often. I don’t know why this was considered a problem, since my newsletter was never intended to be published as part of the regular paper. Moreover, it had proved to be popular with a number of readers.
Also in 2024, the editing of my regular columns went from light touch to extremely intrusive. I went from one level of editing to three, with an immediate editor and his superior both weighing in on the column, and sometimes doing substantial rewrites before it went to copy. These rewrites almost invariably involved toning down, introducing unnecessary qualifiers, and, as I saw it, false equivalence. I would rewrite the rewrites to restore the essence of my original argument. But as I told Charles Kaiser, I began to feel that I was putting more effort—especially emotional energy—into fixing editorial damage than I was into writing the original articles. And the end result of the back and forth often felt flat and colorless.
One more thing: I faced attempts from others to dictate what I could (and could not) write about, usually in the form, “You’ve already written about that,” as if it never takes more than one column to effectively cover a subject. If that had been the rule during my earlier tenure, I never would have been able to press the case for Obamacare, or against Social Security privatization, and—most alarmingly—against the Iraq invasion. Moreover, all Times opinion writers were banned from engaging in any kind of media criticism. Hardly the kind of rule that would allow an opinion writer to state, “we are being lied into war.”
The story is told in the Columbia Journalism Review, though not in the same detail, by Charles Kaiser. It is not behind a paywall.
Kaiser wrote (in part):
CJR emailed half a dozen Times columnists to ask if they had noticed any difference in the way their columns were edited last year. The three who responded—Maureen Dowd, Gail Collins, and Tom Friedman—all said they hadn’t noticed any change in editing. Friedman also said, “I have a terrific editor in Patrick Healy and have not experienced any change in the editing of my column since we started working together in 2020.”
Krugman said, “I don’t have a feud here. All I know is that I was in fact being treated very differently from the past.”
Krugman was particularly valuable to progressive readers because he was often a lone voice in the wilderness. That was especially true early in his columnist career when he strayed from his brief—to write about economics—in order to strenuously oppose the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. This was striking at a time when the news department allowed Judith Miller to lead the charge on the unproven allegation that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, and most of Krugman’s colleagues—especially Friedman—were strongly in favor of the invasion.
Just six days before America invaded, Krugman wrote, “The original reasons given for making Iraq an immediate priority have collapsed. No evidence has ever surfaced of the supposed link with Al Qaeda, or of an active nuclear program. And the administration’s eagerness to believe that an Iraqi nuclear program does exist has led to a series of embarrassing debacles, capped by the case of the forged Niger papers, which supposedly supported that claim. At this point it is clear that deposing Saddam has become an obsession, detached from any real rationale.”
He served a similar function during the Biden administration, when the media in general and the White House correspondents of the Times in particular exhibited what Krugman called “a real negativity bias. You know, if the price of gas goes up to five dollars, that’s all over the pages. If it comes back down to three dollars, not a peep, right?”
Unlike most of his Times colleagues, Krugman believes Biden “actually was a very, very good president. The fact that Democrats, like every other incumbent party in the democratic world, lost the election should not allow us to overlook the fact that we got the best economic recovery in the world, that we made the first serious efforts to do something about climate change, and we have followed, actually, a quite aggressive foreign economic policy against China that was much more effective than anything Trump did or is likely to do. The Biden administration has basically been trying to cut Chinese advanced technology off at the knees.”
Times watchers are always wary of any sign that the newspaper might be doing anything to bow to its legions of right-wing critics. This is especially true when, as Oliver Darcy put it this week, “Trump has largely bent media and technology companies to his will.”
Kingsbury said it was ridiculous to suggest that the paper made Krugman’s life miserable last year because she wanted to stifle one of the newspaper’s strongest liberal voices on the eve of Trump’s return to the White House.
“Obviously I do push back on the notion that Paul’s views are now missing from the page,” the opinion editor said. “You can come to our pages today and find either other columnists making the arguments he was making or guest essays, or newsletters, or podcasts,” she continued. “For nine months we pounded away at the idea of Trump coming back into office. We were the only major newspaper that endorsed in the presidential race and endorsed Kamala Harris. There’s no part of my report that didn’t routinely tell readers about the dangers and risks of electing Trump.”
All of that is true. But it is also the case that the greatest change that Kingsbury and Sulzberger have made has been the sharp shrinking of the institutional voice of the Times. The number of unsigned editorials has gone from three a day, when Kingsbury took over, to just one a week—even as she has increased the number of columnists by roughly 50 percent. The paper’s editorial voice should be reserved “for the most important arguments,” she said. “We break through more than we did when we editorialized on a daily basis.”
Many New Yorkers were distressed when the paper announced last fall that it would stop making endorsements in local races. More alarm bells went off last week when Semafor reported that the paper was considering abandoning all endorsements. Kingsbury told Semafor there was no plan to eliminate the editorial board, but she did not flatly deny the no-endorsement scenario. “We’re in the process of considering ways to modernize endorsements,” she said, “and while we’re excited about the ideas we’re discussing, there’s nothing substantive to say about it yet.”

If we were standing on an icy lake and booming noises rattled teeth and suddenly a crack zigzagged under our very feet, zooming toward the horizon….well, you get the picture…
Such are the fault lines splintering our republic apart, right before our very eyes. Democracy unraveling.
It’s like we’re in a Hollywood disaster movie.
I’m also often reminded these days of lines from Machiavelli’s The Prince.
That and the film Aliens with the huge mega-corporation that subsumes all human morality so that it can explore space and “build better worlds”. Weyland-Yutani Corporation.
Having said that, I’m certainly hanging on to my NY Times and WaPo subscriptions. Tanking them is just helping the Fox-i-verse, which ain’t going anywhere soon.
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Meanwhile, there’s a terrible tragedy in D.C. and who does FELON47 blame….
From the NYT:
“Trump, without citing evidence, blames plane crash on D.E.I. and Democrats”
I’d say it’s unbelievable…but this is America in 2025.
And there are news outlets that will feed this evil crap to the masses.
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“without citing evidence” is the “both sides equal” way that the NYT amplifies Trump’s lies and legitimizes them while also making NYT reporters feel very brave and smug because they agree with right wing Republicans that writing such a rabidly anti-Trump sentence is extremely biased because it bravely included an ambiguous disclaimer in the sentence. The NYT reporter who wrote that is probably already abjectly apologizing and begging forgiveness for writing such a rabidly anti-Trump sentence, since NYT journalist rules apparently prefer that stories about Republicans simply quote what Republicans say in 10 paragraphs and include a disclaimer buried somewhere in the middle where a “partisan Democrat who hates Trump” disagrees.
The NYT believes it is very anti-Trump to mention – as they did in that article – that it is possible that there is plenty of evidence supporting Trump saying that the crash was because of Biden’s DEI policies, and it is possible that something else was the cause, but Trump in his wisdom did not share his reasons for his strong certainty of the cause.
One thing is certain – NYT stenographers believe it is very anti-Trump to mention that there might be some ambiguity in what Trump says, while reassuring the public that Trump aways, always means what he says, and that’s why so many people admire him and why Trump is so superior to those disingenuous Dems.
I actually saw some “liberal” on tv telling viewers that the problem with the Democrats is that they constantly lie and don’t do anything for the middle class that they said they would do, while Trump is admirable for keeping his promises.
It is Orwellian that so many “liberals” on tv and at the NYT believe this is absolutely true.
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I have to admit you lost me there, NYC parent.
The focus should be on trump’s totally inappropriate and just plain wrong comments, I believe.
And, I repeat I’m not dumping my subscriptions to The Times or The Post. No way.
Plus I do know some very brave reporters and editors out there.
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John,
I meant that the focus should be on Trump’s LYING. The focus should be on how a President who continually and blatantly lies no longer has any credibility. That would absolutely be the NYT narrative if Biden or Kamala were constantly just making up lies.
But because this is Trump, we get the supposedly “rabidly anti-Trump NYT perspective” that ALWAYS makes this all about Trump’s unusual “style” – because Trump’s style is supposedly far more “newsworthy” than his credibility. As the NYT keeps reporting ad nauseam, whether anyone objects to “Trump being Trump” depends entirely on whether that person is a left wing partisan Democrat Trump-hater, or one of the very good people the NYT finds who all support Trump because they know he cares about them. The people who don’t exist are those who believe presidents who blatantly lie are always untrustworthy. Which is weird, since that is hardly a wildly left wing crazy idea. It was what the NYT believed until Fox News made then realize it was “too biased” against presidents who lied all the time.
The perspective missing from all NYT stories – because it is far too rabidly anti-Trump — is that when a president blatantly lies over and over again, that president is no longer credible, period.
NYT: “Mr. Trump’s instant focus on diversity reflected his instinct to frame major events through his political or ideological lens, whether the facts fit or not. It is something he has done before: After a terrorist attack in New Orleans a month ago, he blamed illegal immigration, even though the attacker was a U.S. citizen born in Texas. When wildfires erupted in California, he blamed Gov. Gavin Newsom’s water management policies, without any evidence that a different approach would have made a difference in the firefighting effort.”
Nope, what the NYT morality-washes as Trump’s “reflecting his instinct to frame major events through his political or ideological lens” is a very convoluted way to avoid actually making it clear to readers that Trump is lying.
In other words, the NYT will only frame Trump stories as being about Trump’s style and instincts. The shocking truth that the US has a president who cannot be trusted and has lost all credibility (regardless of whether he may say something true on occasion) is absolutely verboten.
If Trump was a broken clock, the NYT would report that sometimes the clock’s time reflected its instinct to frame the time through its own political or ideological lens. The NYT would write about all the good Americans who trusted that clock. The NYT would amplify that the only Americans who point out that a broken clock has no credibility and whatever time it gives can’t be trusted are “partisans” who hate broken clocks and therefore their opinion is no more worthy than the people who know the right time is whatever the broken clock says it is.
If the Republicans told NYT reporters that a broken clock says the time is 4pm, the NYT would dutifully write hundreds of stories about how very important Republicans, and all the very good Americans who trust the clock because they know the clock is trustworthy, say it is 4pm. Once in a while the NYT would reveal their “anti-broken clock bias” because one of the 100 articles in the NYT telling us what time the broken clock says it is includes a disclaimer in the middle about how some partisan clock-hater disagreed (their reasons for disagreeing left out of the article since that is not relevant to the important narrative that many very good people say it’s 4pm because the clock tells them it is! Only partisans disagree.)
The NYT does far more harm than good. Because people actually believe the NYT would give us an early warning of fascism, when all they are doing is telling us to sit back and let it happen because the good people in America say it’s not fascism at all, and the only ones who disagree are people who hate Trump for no valid reason except their extreme partisanship.
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I was shocked by Trump’s immediate conclusion that the crash was caused by DEI. Was the flight controller a woman or a Black? Did he know? He reflexively voices his bigotry.
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Thanks for the further explanation, Public School Parent. I went to bed so I missed it until now. I appreciate the time you put into your comments. If there’s one thing that retirement out of my classroom has shown me, it’s that I’m not as smart as I thought, ha. ha.
I think watching ABC’s “World News Tonight” yesterday also helped me to understand where you are coming from. The way John Muir et al framed the bizarre tRump comments about the tragic crash and DEI…. I think I could feel what you are explaining.
ABC reported on tRump’s comments but ignored a very important exchange.
In fact, CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins did follow up at that press conference and asked tRump about what real evidence he has to support his DEI claim.
tRump then berated Collins using the sort of dog whistles that will send those violent elements of the MAGA world after her. He doesn’t have to threaten her (but it IS a threat.) Because any violent people who follow him get the signal, so to speak.
ABC avoided that part of the story altogether, in essence leaving one of their own fellow journalists hanging in the wind, undefended.
Oddly enough, the NY Post has the story, perhaps because some of their readership might gleefully enjoy the spectacle of tRump attempting to shut down a woman who is speaking out? “Trump rips CNN’s Kaitlan Collins…” The NY Post headline reads.
Here’s a KEY part of that exchange between tRump and Collins:
“Collins replied: “Does it comfort their family to hear you blaming DEI policies?”
“The president said he could give Collins a list of names who lost their lives and that the White House is coordinating closely with American Airlines and the military before he took a parting shot at Collins — who recently added the role of Chief White House Correspondent.
“I think that’s not a very smart question,” he said.
Collins said he was “blaming air traffic controllers” before getting cut off by Trump.
“I’m surprised coming from you,” he told the primetime host.
https://nypost.com/2025/01/30/media/trump-rips-cnns-kaitlan-collins-after-she-grills-him-about-blaming-democrats-and-dei-policies-over-dc-plane-crash-not-a-very-smart-question/
So, tRump gets away (again!) with calling a reporter “not smart” and then sends out this dogwhistle to the Proud Boys and Oathkeeper types out there….she’s on the LIST, go get her!
Someone who dares to really question tRump, and a woman no less!
At that moment, all the reporters in that room could’ve walked out. Traffic on Pennsylvania Avenue should’ve come to a halt. Citizens everywhere ought to have taken to the streets demanding that tRump leave the United States forever. His behavior had violated the norms of what we as Americans expect of our president. His unthinking assumption about DEI and the crash is deplorable. Talk about implicit bias. But that moment and the millions of moments when citizens cast their ballots on November 5 and those many moments after January 6 when Republicans everywhere could’ve taken a brave stand and rejected MAGA….those moments are gone forever. We’ve missed them as nation. Lies piled upon lies upon lies, on and on and on. A Mount Everest of lies.
With people who want to believe those lies, fervently. It’s not reason, it’s like faith…a religion. For some peoples it’s been cleverly grafted onto their religious beliefs or even subsumed them.
How do you deal with people who just say, that’s what we believe -regardless of any facts? They might even know it’s lies. But that’s what they want to believe. Or, the lies are entertaining. tRump’s fun. Or, all the politicians lie so who cares, they say. Or, the actual haters and racists who are a subset of tRumpworld…
I don’t think it’s ever easy to be a good reporter and it’s incredibly tough now.
I did the job. I know reporters.
You used the word “smug” to describe them and I just don’t agree.
We’re all dealing with a very difficult moment in history. Moments that just keep piling up.
What experience do most of us have living in what seems to be transforming into an authoritarian regime? And, we turn around, and there are neighbors, friends, loved ones cheering this disaster on….some of them reveling in it. Others still so miserable, their unsated anger truly frightening.
I’m going to organize the opposition. And, I’m going to try to cut everyone some slack. To show some mercy, even to the people who hate my Democratic guts.
Because history shows, when America has been at its best, that’s what we do. That is one of the real things that can actually make us great.
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John,
Last night, Lawrence O’Donnell showed tape of Reagan reacting to a plane crash in the Potomac. He spoke with sadness, compassion, and empathy. That’s the appropriate response to a tragedy.
Trump, as you saw, is incapable of those feelings. He is an insecure bully. His reaction is to blame someone. Lash out. DEI? Was the air traffic controller a woman? A Black? A visually handicapped person?
He misdirected everyone who was watching to hunt for a villain. They should have been grieving.
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Thought of that too last night, Diane.
Lenny Skutnik was called out at the State of the Union address by President Reagan who cited Skutnik’s bravery at the crash site AND the fact that he was a government employee. And, Skutnik was applauded by everyone.
Now government employees are just another one of the FELON47’s “enemies within”. Absolutely sick and diabolical. And, sad. Just so sad.
What lesson is our president teaching our children now in 2025?
1982 seems like yesterday….and yet a million miles away.
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Lenny was part of the Deep State
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He is teaching our children that it’s good to be a bully and a bigot, that you should never admit error, that you should find a scapegoat.
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I had read that CJR story about Krugman a little while back and the most shocking thing (not mentioned in the story) is that if the NYT editors felt completely confident in pressuring a prize-winning COLUMNIST (one with serious academic credentials in economics) to make his columns about the economy more negative to emphasize it as Biden’s failure, imagine the pressure that lowly reporters with (maybe) some undergrad economic courses were under to present Biden’s economy in the most negative terms.
It explains a lot about why every NYT story seemed to amplify right wing narratives about the economy (1,000 stories about how terrible inflation was and a single one every few months that mentioned something positive about the economy.) NYT reporters knew that was what their editors wanted, or they would suffer retribution (or what the NYT editors characterize as the proper and necessary consequences that are given when anyone shows “bias” by daring to challenge a false narrative that the Republicans want the NYT to amplify as truth.)
The NYT has become useless dreck. Do you know how the NYT just covered Trump’s press secretary’s first press conference where she blatantly lied and told Americans that Biden had spent $50 million in foreign aid on providing condoms to Gaza?
Informing Americans that a Republican lied is NOT allowed in the NYT. Instead, the NYT informed readers that the IMPORTANT news was this:
“White House Press Secretary Makes Steely and Unflinching Debut
Karoline Leavitt used her first briefing in the role to warn veteran reporters that they were increasingly irrelevant.”
The story quoted people praising her, with a paragraph in the middle offering the mildest of criticism of her “style” in the midst of endless positive observations about how good she is. Really, the NYT has now embraced that mild criticism of Republicans’ “style” is allowed as long as the main narrative is how they are admirably executing what President Trump wants. The fact that Republicans lie to do this is not considered “newsworthy”, but NYT stenographers must dutifully quote their most blatant lies with no context. How stylishly or firmly the Republicans do Trump’s bidding and say what Trump wants them to say is simply something NYT reporters believe is most important for readers to know. Fox News can say “even the liberal NYT” is so impressed with Trump’s non-DEI picks who are obviously so superb at their job, and here is the NYT quoting the Republican about how awful Biden’s DEI picks were and blaming them! If the NYT doesn’t want its own readers to know what is true and what isn’t — but does want readers to know how stylishly the Republicans give the information that the NYT dutifully transcribes without mentioning it is false — then the NYT’s only purpose is its’ games. And pretty soon readers will tire of that rationalizing that the bread and circuses is better than truth, and will leave.
When working for the NYT has the same credibility as working for the National Enquirer, our democracy might actually be saved. Because at least the dreck the NYT publishes fawning over neofascist Republicans and assuring readers that everything is normal (just “changed”) will be treated like the unreliable dreck coming from Truth Social, instead of giving the “NYT liberal” stamp of approval and legitimacy to the dreck coming from Truth Social.
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The most egregiously awful thing that Trump’s press Secretary did was to say that the trillions in cuts had not been rescinded, only the memo had. One judge had already stayed the order. Another judge said that he was blocking the cuts because the press secretary had said they weeent really rescinded. No one knew what she meant.
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We knew the reason Krugman left the Times the day it was announced. Sadly he only alluded to the problem in the last few years . Never directing his criticism of the Media directly at his own employer. Like when Greenspan left the Federal Reserve to give lectures those with sense knew, he knew the shit was going to hit the fan. One does not leave a post at the pinnacle of their professions lightly. Yesterday Trump made one of the most disgusting displays of behavior I have ever witnessed. Most times he opens that putrid mouth it spews vile garbage. But yesterday went far beyond. There should have been no sane washing of this. I already cancelled WAPO the Times is next.
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Have no fear: the NYT is and always will be overwhelmingly left-wing in their news pages, opinion columns, and editorials. A few years ago market research found that 91% of NYT subscribers always vote straight Democratic. Every day on almost every topic the reader comments are obviously very one-sided: the NYT reader comments sections are the biggest left-wing echo chambers in America.
Paul Krugman wants to be regarded as a fearless freethinker who is beholden to no one. As this linked essay shows, he changes his opinions to conform to whatever the current left-wing dogmas are.
https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/paul-krugman-immigration-economy
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Krugman changes his opinions because of evidence. JUST LIKE DIANE RAVITCH.
You are obviously a right wing Diane Ravitch-hating troll, so the question is why are you on a blog run by someone who has changed her opinions because of evidence, when you likely only admire people like RFK Jr. and Trump who change their opinions to get gullible fools to give them their hard earned money or put them in power where they can enrich themselves with your tax dollars while screwing you over! LOL! Trump cares about his voters as much as he cared about the people who gave him money to attend Trump University or to help veterans. I know you think Trump ran his fake university because he really cared about students, so nothing I can say will make you stop looking so foolish. But I suggest you give your hard earned money to buy some Trump crypto. Hurry, don’t waste your time here, Trump says it will make you almost as rich as attending his university!
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If the The New York Times is a “leftwing echo chamber,” it’s a very tiny one as compared to the vast rightwing echo chamber made up of Murdoch, Sinclair, Truth Social, Alex Jones, Joe Rogan, and Sinclair. Somehow these billionaire-controlled outlets manage to persuade their audience that Trump cares about them. Trump cares only about Trump. He makes Reagan look like a bleeding-heart liberal. Reagan spoke movingly when the Challenger space shuttle exploded. He spoke with love and compassion when a plane crashed in the Potomac in 1983.
Trump has not an ounce of compassion in him. He can’t even fake it. He is the biggest bully I’ve ever seen in public life. A mean-spirited cowardly bully.
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The New York Times is “overwhelmingly left-wing”? Bwahahahahahaha! Get it together, eh?
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And is anyone surprised? The NYT is a corporation, a business, and is beholden to shareholders and to Wall Street. When it comes down to truth versus profits, profits win.
The deadly fact for our republic is that it cannot survive without courageous, independent news media…and with the death of such media, our republic dies.
Simple as that.
Our republic is on its deathbed, and other than voices crying in the wilderness of a relative handful of obscure media channels, there is no one to resuscitate it, especially the spineless, devious Democratic Party.
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So every member of the Democratic Party is “spineless” and “devious”?
I don’t know…I had a backbone this morning when I walked our 85 lb. Sheepdog. And, I only wish I could be more devious, ha, ha. Probably have more fun in life.
I was recently hired to be an extra in a ‘major motion picture’ that was just filmed in our area. And, I was hoping to get to be a villain in the movie.
Nope. I was paid to look like an old guy, heaving a bowling ball….all night long. It came easy to me.
Damn! Isn’t it enough that FELON47 and millions of his minions are beating up on us Dems right now.
And, I’ll still take the NY TIMES over the NY POST any day of the week.
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Read the following article in The Guardian:
Capitulating to Trump: why people are warning about ‘Vichy’ America
As Trump creates unprecedented chaos, Democrats have offered little more than platitudes – sparking comparisons to France’s collaborationist second world war regime
At the dawn of the second Trump presidency, defiance has given way to compliance.
While Donald Trump has rapidly and ruthlessly thrown the federal government into unprecedented chaos, the leaders of the Democratic party have offered up little more than limp banalities and platitudes. “Presidents come and presidents go. Through it all. God is still on the throne,” tweeted the House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, at the end of Trump’s first week in office.
Asked who was leading the caucus’s pushback, the Senate minority whip, Dick Durbin, told Semafor on 23 January: “I can’t answer that. Give us a little time.” Another senator said, “We’re obviously in a bit of disarray,” though Senate Democrats have arrayed themselves enough to provide bipartisan support for a number of Trump’s cabinet appointees.
For the leftists and liberals who had hoped to see the opposition party mount some kind of opposition to Trumpism, this spectacle of capitulation has inspired a new historical analogy, or at least a new insult. “La Résistance is dead. Welcome to Vichy France.”
“If you want an analogy for the present state of America it’s perhaps not an out-and-out fascist regime, but a Vichy regime,” wrote John Ganz, in a Substack newsletter on 21 January. “It’s partly fascist but mostly just a reactionary and defeatist catch-all. It’s a regime born of capitulation and of defeat: of the slow and then sudden collapse of the longstanding institutions of a great democracy whose defenders turned out to be senile and unable to cope with or understand modern politics.”
Ganz was not the first to invoke the collaborationist regime that administered part of France after its rapid and spectacular defeat by Germany at the beginning of the second world war. In November, after Joe Biden welcomed Trump back to the White House and promised a “smooth transition”, the political cartoonist Ted Rall reimagined their Oval Office meeting as an updated version of the infamous handshake between Adolf Hitler and Philippe Pétain that marked the fall of France’s Third Republic and rise of the Vichy era.
“Vichy Democrats” has become an increasingly popular expression of disgust with the feckless opposition party
“Unlike you fascists, we promise a smooth transition of power … to you fascists,” Biden/Pétain says to Trump/Hitler in the cartoon https://rall.com/comic/democrats-welcome-fascist-trump, titled Aloha to the Vichy Democrats.
Indeed, “Vichy Democrats” has become an increasingly popular expression of disgust with the feckless opposition party, whether in viral tweets (“The Vichy Democrats are really proud of themselves for peacefully handing over the country to a person they said was a fascist,” wrote the X user SxarletRed in response to the California senator Adam Schiff’s boast that the Democrats had certified Trump’s election without launching a failed insurrection) or a headline by Esquire (“Vichy Democrats take note: the Republican Congress is coming for everything https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/a63397452/supreme-court-debate-tiktok-ban/”). On the alternative social media site Bluesky, the senior US senator from Pennsylvania, best known for wearing gym shorts to Congress and his recent rightward shift, has been deemed “John Fetterman (D-Vichy)”.
Others have used “Vichy” to denounce Jewel for playing at Trump’s inauguration (“Add one more to the Vichy list https://bsky.app/profile/mattzollerseitz.bsky.social/post/3lgbfkeugf225”), to characterize cooperation with immigration enforcement by a university (“This Vichy behavior should never be forgotten https://bsky.app/profile/jphillll.bsky.social/post/3lgl7uh6ek22o”) or as a sobriquet for entire institutions that are perceived as being collaborationist (“Vichy Twitter https://bsky.app/profile/ryanlcooper.com/post/3lgedjpvhac27” or “Vichy media https://bsky.app/profile/beijingpalmer.bsky.social/post/3lgu3w3g2o22k”).
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/31/vichy-france-trump-democrats
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Quikwrit.. before all our writing here goes under the fold and into the blog’s “previous posts” bucket…
I have to admit when I glanced over your latest, long comment my initial reaction last night was, hmmm, is all this stuff written by a very smart human or some kind of A.I. digital smartbomb dropped on Diane’s blog? I mean, “Quikwrit”, is that a clue?
No offense if you are a true member of my species. I guess you can take it as a compliment.
Sort of reminds me of when I was calling for Kamala last October and I got sucked into this computer answering machine program at someone’s house. I was doing my campaign pitch and an utterly vacuous teenage robot girl I guess (?) picked up the phone and went into this stream of consciousness set of questions giving me next to no time to answer. Like what’s my favorite color? I started goofing around, too. It was a welcome break from my HOURS of phone banking. The whole phony thing made me chuckle especially after a while when the girl went on repeat. (Probably this fake answerer is so …2005.)
I guess that was better than when a real life woman voter in Philly answered and proceeded to call me out for “not having ovaries” when I raised the pro-choice issue. (I guess she got on Kamala’s call list by mistake. Judging by the election returns apparently there were more than a few of those sorts voters out there.)
Anyhoo…. The Guardian article you cite, Quikwrit (if you are indeed humanoid) also pokes some holes in the Vichy comparison at the end. Including one BIG hole. Those counter-arguments are important.
My take: I think we’re breaking new, very tragic ground here in 2025. I mean, people back in 1940 weren’t wondering if that was a real life human speaking propaganda to them on the radio.
Meanwhile, I’m soon heading out to be trained to run for office by none other than the good ‘ole Democrat Party, my local version. Wonderful people. Mainly older folks like me at the meetings I’ve been to. Hanging in there, working hard. Keeping the faith and still managing to find some humor and generosity of spirit despite these cold, miserable times.
Knock them if you will, all. But it’s the other main game in this U.S. of A. of ours right now. I mean, I’m now legally recognized by the county’s Board of Elections. I’m on a website, so that must make it real, ha, ha. I’m the Chair of the Town Committee. (Well, I’m also the only member of the Town Committee at this moment, in this heavily Republican corner of rural Upstate.)
But it’s a start.
Keep warm, Quikwrit. Or, should I say, keep charged?
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It seems FELON47 has taken over the media faster than the country. The CEOs and billionaires that control most of the news media can’t all be MAGA lunatics.
That begs for an answer to this question. What did they do that the January 6, 2021, Traitor knows about them that he’s using to blackmail and control them?
Were they all Jeffrey Epstein’s clients? Has he threatened to use his DOJ to investigate and go after them like he’s using the DOJ to go after the names on his enemies list?
90% of the news media is owned by six corporations. Six CEOs or billionaires. This wouldn’t’ happen if the news media was owned and controlled by hundreds or thousands instead of six.
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And what has the CONVICTED FELON’S DUI hire Hegseth been up to?
From another substacker-R. Hubbell:
“On Wednesday, Hegseth ordered that the military suspend all observances or recognition of the following holidays:
American Indian Heritage Month
Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday
Holocaust Remembrance Day
Black History Month
Juneteenth
Women’s Equality Day
National Hispanic Heritage Month
Pride Month
National Disability Employment Awareness Month
Asian American Pacific Islander Awareness Month”
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Maybe Trump movement is not MAGA but MAWA.
Make America White Again.
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After that he went home and put his feet up, content he had properly cleaned up the perverse military of the deep state. We are in deep state, I mean….
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Uh-huh.
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I’ve been reading the Times since the 1970s. They abandoned democracy then when Abe Rosenthal introduced various sections, like Style for example, to appeal to suburban readership. At that point, the coverage that good government groups was getting, which inspired hearings on corporate malfeasance for example on Capitol Hill, started to dwindle. The most recent incarnation of the Times has definitely taken another rightward turn again to increase revenue. The Times, as Krugman has said, thinks it can become a national paper by appealing to Midwestern right-wing readers. They sanewash Trump and Republicans, and their visceral hatred of Biden might as well be coming from Fox. As for liberals on the opinion pages, it’s a joke. The paper is dead.
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For all of its faults, the main one being “both-siderism,” the Times is the only national news media that has no fear of Trump. He can’t cancel any federal contracts.
I do wish they would publish transcripts of his spontaneous remarks.
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