May 8, 2006
NYT Op-Ed Columnist - Paul Krugman
Who's Crazy Now?
Some people say that bizarre conspiracy theories play a disturbingly large
role in current American political discourse. And they're right.
For example, many conservative politicians and pundits seem to agree with
James Inhofe, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public
Works, who has declared that "man-made global warming is the greatest hoax ever
perpetrated on the American people."
Of more immediate political relevance is the claim that the reason we hear
mainly bad news from Iraq is that the media, for political reasons, are conspiring to suppress the good news. As Bill O'Reilly put it a few months ago, "a good part of the American media wants to undermine the Bush administration."
But these examples, of course, aren't what people are usually
referring to
when they denounce crazy conspiracy theories. For the last few years, the term
"conspiracy theory" has been used primarily to belittle critics of the Bush
administration -- in particular, anyone suggesting that the Bush administration
used 9/11 as an excuse to fight an unrelated war in Iraq.
Now here's the thing: suppose that we didn't have abundant evidence that
senior officials in the Bush administration wanted a war, cherry-picked
intelligence to make a case for that war, and in some cases suppressed inconvenient
evidence contradicting that case. Even so, it would be an abuse of the English
language to call the claim that the administration misled us into war a
conspiracy theory.
A conspiracy theory, says Wikipedia, "attempts to explain the cause of an
event as a secret, and often deceptive, plot by a covert alliance." Claims that
global warming is a hoax and that the liberal media are suppressing the good news from Iraq meet that definition. In each case, to accept the claim you have to believe that people working for many different organizations -- scientists at universities and research facilities around the world, reporters for dozens of different news organizations -- are secretly coordinating their actions.
But the administration officials who told us that Saddam had an active
nuclear program and insinuated that he was responsible for 9/11 weren't part of a covert alliance; they all worked for President Bush. The claim that these
officials hyped the case for war isn't a conspiracy theory; it's simply an assertion that people in a position of power abused that position. And that assertion only seems wildly implausible if you take it as axiomatic that Mr. Bush and those around
him wouldn't do such a thing.
The truth is that many of the people who throw around terms like "loopy
conspiracy theories" are lazy bullies who, as Zachary Roth put it on CJR Daily,
The Columbia Journalism Review's Web site, want to "confer instant illegitimacy
on any argument with which they disagree." Instead of facing up to hard
questions, they try to suggest that anyone who asks those questions is crazy.
Indeed, right-wing pundits have consistently questioned the sanity of Bush critics;
"It looks as if Al Gore has gone off his lithium again," said Charles Krauthammer, the Washington Post columnist, after Mr. Gore gave a perfectly sensible if hard-hitting speech. Even moderates have tended to dismiss the administration's harsh critics as victims of irrational Bush hatred.
But now those harsh critics have been vindicated. And it turns out that many
of the administration supporters can't handle the truth. They won't admit
that they built a personality cult around a man who has proved almost
pathetically unequal to the job. Nor will they admit that opponents of the Iraq war, whom they called traitors for warning that invading Iraq was a mistake, have been proved right. So they have taken refuge in the belief that a vast
conspiracy of America-haters in the media is hiding the good news from the public.
Unlike the crazy conspiracy theories of the left -- which do exist, but are
supported only by a tiny fringe -- the crazy conspiracy theories of the right
are supported by important people: powerful politicians, television personalities
with large audiences. And we can safely predict that these people will never
concede that they were
wrong. When the Iraq venture comes to a bad end,
they won't blame those who led us into the quagmire; they'll claim that it was
all the fault of the liberal media, which stabbed our troops in the back.
Dumbya, Dick, & Don -- deranged, disconnected and dangerous!