Author Topic: NYT Columnist Kristof Wants to Debunk the 'Crooked Hillary Myth'  (Read 557 times)

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rangerrebew

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NYT Columnist Kristof Wants to Debunk the 'Crooked Hillary Myth'
By Tim Graham | April 24, 2016 | 10:19 PM EDT
 

New York Times columnist Nick Kristof sounded angry in a headline to his Sunday column: “Debunking the ‘Crooked Hillary’ Myth.” Online, they spit out some of the venom, merely asking: “Is Hillary Clinton Honest?”

Kristof’s column concluded: “She’s not a saint but a politician, and to me this notion that she’s fundamentally dishonest is a bogus narrative.” He even dismisses fellow Times columnist William Safire who called Hillary a “congenital liar” in 1996: “this narrative goes way too far.”

    Indeed, when Gallup asks Americans to say the first word that comes to mind when they hear “Hillary Clinton,” the most common response can be summed up as “dishonest/liar/don’t trust her/poor character.” Another common category is “criminal/crooked/thief/belongs in jail.”

    All this is, I think, a mistaken narrative.

    One of the perils of journalism is the human brain’s penchant for sorting information into narratives. Even false narratives can take on a life of their own because there is always information arriving that can confirm a narrative.

    Thus once we in the news media had declared Gerald Ford a klutz (he was actually a graceful athlete), there were always new television clips of him stumbling. Similarly, we unfairly turned Jimmy Carter into a hapless joke, and I fear that the “Crooked Hillary” narrative will drag on much more than the facts warrant.

Let's take a brief moment to giggle over "we unfairly turned Jimmy Carter into a hapless joke."

Clinton defenders like to grade on a curve, and suggest all pragmatic politicians blur the truth a little, even suggesting voters should want someone who blurs the truth like this. On issues, Kristof writes, “she can be infuriatingly evasive,” but “Does that make her scheming and unprincipled? Perhaps, but synonyms might be 'pragmatic' and ‘electable.’ That's what presidential candidates do.”

Kristof is basically Xeroxing a recent column by his former Times colleague, Jill Abramson, whose recent Guardian column claimed “Hillary Clinton Is Fundamentally Honest.” He joins her in dragging out PolitiFact as a defense of her honesty:

    One basic test of a politician’s honesty is whether that person tells the truth when on the campaign trail, and by that standard Clinton does well. PolitiFact, the Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking site, calculates that of the Clinton statements it has examined, 50 percent are either true or mostly true.

Kristof needed a fact-check on the fact-checking citation. This correction was appended: "An earlier version of this column misstated some of the percentages of true statements as judged by PolitiFact."

What Kristof doesn’t do is disclose he’s spoken at many gatherings of the Clinton Global Initiative. He’s a Friend of Bill and Hillary. He did disclose this as he came to the Clintons’ defense in a column last May:

    I’ve admired the Clintons’ foundation for years for its fine work on AIDS and global poverty, and I’ve moderated many panels at the annual Clinton Global Initiative. Yet with each revelation of failed disclosures or the appearance of a conflict of interest from speaking fees of $500,000 for the former president, I have wondered: What were they thinking? (Italics his.)

    But the problem is not precisely the Clintons. It’s our entire disgraceful money-based political system.

Kristof concluded "I’ve covered corrupt regimes all over the world, and I find it ineffably sad to come home and behold institutionalized sleaze in the United States." But the sleaze is always perfectly distributed, so the Clintons never have more than the average.

Kristof never engages in all of the scandals dating back to the 1980s that underline how radioactive Hillary is on honesty. Late in the Sunday column, he labors to dismiss the private email server scandal. He admits only "half-truths" from Hillary and then suggests if she was as slick as her husband, the dishonesty could be overlooked:

    Clinton is thin-skinned, private, controlling, wounded by attacks on her and utterly distrustful of the news media. Where Bill Clinton charms, she stews. My bet is that she and her staff wanted to prevent her emails from becoming public through Freedom of Information Act requests.

    All this is self-inflicted damage, which Clinton compounded with evasions and half-truths, coming across as lawyerly and shifty. A more gifted politician might have gotten away with it, but Clinton is not a natural politician. Her warmth can turn to remoteness on the television screen, her caution to slipperiness.

From there is a lame spin that if she had an actual government email, it could have been just as compromised by Putin. But none of that spin has anything to do with whether she's honest and trustworthy. Hiding your server from the public suggests a lack of trust in the public, so why should the public trust her?
Source URL: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/tim-graham/2016/04/24/nyt-columnist-kristof-wants-debunk-crooked-hillary-myth

rangerrebew

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Re: NYT Columnist Kristof Wants to Debunk the 'Crooked Hillary Myth'
« Reply #1 on: April 25, 2016, 10:45:09 am »
NYT Times Declares Hillary Clinton ‘Honest’ Because She Only Lies Half The Time

http://downtrend.com/71superb/nyt-times-declares-hillary-clinton-honest-because-she-only-lies-half-the-time

April 24, 2016| by Brian Anderson

Great News! The New York Times says that Hillary Clinton is honest. Yes, the most deceptive tentacle of the leftist media octopus just declared the queen of bullshit a member of the truth-telling club. That’s like The North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA) saying Jerry Sandusky is okay to be around young boys unsupervised. And the truly funny thing, as if this isn’t already hilarious, is that the NYT says Hillary is honest because she only lies half of the time.

Nicholas Kristof is as liberal as they come and he is furious that people don’t trust Hillary Clinton. In his NYT column he tells us:

    …when Gallup asks Americans to say the first word that comes to mind when they hear “Hillary Clinton,” the most common response can be summed up as “dishonest/liar/don’t trust her/poor character.” Another common category is “criminal/crooked/thief/belongs in jail.”

    All this is, I think, a mistaken narrative.

This, combined with the fact that only a third of the country thinks Hillary is “honest and trustworthy” is the stuff of liberal nightmares.

    …I fear that the “Crooked Hillary” narrative will drag on much more than the facts warrant.

And just what are those facts? Get ready to laugh:

    One basic test of a politician’s honesty is whether that person tells the truth when on the campaign trail, and by that standard Clinton does well. PolitiFact, the Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking site, calculates that of the Clinton statements it has examined, 50 percent are either true or mostly true.

PolitiFact is a liberal “fact-checking” organization that specializes in covering up lefty lies. They prove that a democrat lied and then somehow still rate it as “mostly true.” They also prove that a Republican told the truth and then rate it “mostly false.” This is an incredibly biased source for honesty and they still only give Hillary a 50% truthfulness rating.

If Hillary is telling the truth 50% of the time, it stands to reason that she is lying 50% of time. This is Kristof’s proof that Hillary is honest? If someone lies half the time; that person a liar. Hell, 20% bullshit makes a person a bullshitter, so 50% is some weapons-grade dishonesty. Even pathological liars don’t lie that often.

This defense of Hillary’s honesty manages to get worse, if you can believe it:

    It’s true, of course, that Clinton is calculating — all politicians are, but she more than some. She has adjusted her positions on trade and the minimum wage to scrounge for votes…

Yeah, Hillary is honest because she’s more calculating than anyone else, flip-flops on issues, and panders for votes. You’re probably thinking at some point in this article Kristof is going to say something nice about Hillary to prove she’s an Honest Jane, but you’re wrong:

    Does that make her scheming and unprincipled? Perhaps, but synonyms might be “pragmatic” and “electable.”

Kristoff then brings up Hillary’s paid Wall Street speeches and e-mail scandal, asking, “Why on earth would she do such a stupid thing?”

Then there is this:

    All this is self-inflicted damage, which Clinton compounded with evasions and half-truths, coming across as lawyerly and shifty.

I’m getting the impression that liberals feel like telling the truth half the time and telling half-truths is in reality a mark of honesty.

After calling Hillary a scheming unprincipled liar, Kristof comes to this conclusion:

    She’s not a saint but a politician, and to me this notion that she’s fundamentally dishonest is a bogus narrative.

I didn’t just go through this article and cherry pick the negative things Kristof said about Clinton; this was his actual argument. If an unapologetic liberal has this must trouble proving Hillary is honest, its pretty clear that she is a lying sack of shit. This is not news to most of us, but it’s nice that the liberal media has finally admitted it.
« Last Edit: April 25, 2016, 10:49:31 am by rangerrebew »