Jewish World Review Feb. 14, 2002 / 3 Adar, 5762

Bob Tyrrell

Bob Greene
JWR's Pundits
World Editorial
Cartoon Showcase

Mallard Fillmore

Michael Barone
Mona Charen
Linda Chavez
Ann Coulter
Greg Crosby
Larry Elder
Don Feder
Suzanne Fields
Paul Greenberg
Bob Greene
Betsy Hart
Nat Hentoff
David Horowitz
Marianne Jennings
Michael Kelly
Mort Kondracke
Ch. Krauthammer
Lawrence Kudlow
Dr. Laura
John Leo
David Limbaugh
Michelle Malkin
Chris Matthews
Michael Medved
MUGGER
Kathleen Parker
Wes Pruden
Sam Schulman
Amity Shlaes
Tony Snow
Thomas Sowell
Cal Thomas
Jonathan S. Tobin
Ben Wattenberg
George Will
Bruce Williams
Walter Williams
Mort Zuckerman

Consumer Reports

Enron as underdog?


http://www.NewsAndOpinion.com -- IS there not anyone out there among America's famously outspoken pundits willing to utter a kind word for Enron? Whatever happened to our columnists' vaunted iconoclasm? What about their compassion or their readiness to champion the underdog? Surely, those woebegone Enron execs trooping up to Capitol Hill practically in chains are underdogs. Who among the big-mouth pundits will stand up and say: "Wait a minute. Hold it. Give the guys a break." Are they waiting for the intercession of Human Rights Watch?

This is a perfect time for the brusque, beefy, no-nonsense Jack Germond to prove his stuff, or for The Washington Post's Richard Cohen once again to display his talent for "independence," as he did with Bill Clinton. Remember during the Clinton presidency what came to be the Cohen Cycle? Clinton would step in the fecal matter, and Cohen would purr: "Lay off the guy. He's got a job to do. Who hasn't eaten the first stone?" or something like that. Then things would quiet down. Clinton would again dirty his shoes, and Cohen would write, "This time he's gone too far."

Or how about the inimitable Maureen Dowd publishing a playful and girlish column at her venerated site on the op-ed page of The New York Times? Surely she could tap out a clever column about the Enron executives' neat haircuts, or their membership at posh golf clubs, or something about Rodeo Drive. Typical of her, it would have the Light Touch. It would bring in all manner of knowing detail about the typical Enron executive's lifestyle, his wife's lifestyle, his pedicurist's lifestyle or that of his highly pedigreed dog. It would be another of Dowd's "Makes-you-think" pieces. Surely I am not the first to observe that she is more than a writer of occasional columns, she is a sociologist -- like Flaubert!

So when will the Enron execs get the compassionate treatment that so many of our pundits are famous for? Or if not compassion, how about one of their famous "contrarian" pieces arguing that, contrary to received opinion, Enron was actually a brilliantly conceived modern corporation, very progressive and -- what would they call it? -- New Democrat. I suppose The New York Times' Dismal Science columnist, Paul Krugman, already wrote this piece. At least I thought I saw such a piece written by him some time ago in, I believe it was, Fortune. Now Krugman is leading the lynch mob against his former Enron heroes.

His indignation against Enron seems to have developed after it was revealed -- not by Krugman, mind you -- that he had received $50,000 for being a member of a mysterious Enron advisory group of pundits, most of whose members we now know have last names that begin with the letter K. There is Krugman and pundit William Kristol, to name but two. Only one other paid advisor has been identified, but there must be more.

Possibly Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina will expose the rest of them, and that detail about their last name's beginning with K ought to raise the curiosity of the cornpone senator from the Senate Commerce Committee. Obscure little details catch his eye. He notes on the Sunday morning talk shows that weird relationships can be drawn between members of the Bush administration and at least one pharmaceutical company from Indiana and the unfortunately named Ken Lay, whose first name, you will note, begins with K.

But to return to Enron, its executives paid these pundits lavishly. Is it possible that the country's other pundits have also been on the take? Does that explain why not one has come forward with a good word for Enron? Perhaps they are following the Krugman tactic of heaping contempt on Enron to prove their own probity.

Well, it is all very disappointing. Doubtless as time goes on some of my conservative colleagues will leap to Enron's defense. It is just a matter of the conservatives' waiting until Enron's plight becomes absolutely hopeless. Doubtless then Pat Buchanan will heave up a column, perhaps arguing that Enron is a 100 percent American company with a lineage going back to the Mayflower. Cal Thomas will discover that Enron is a deeply Christian corporation. Arianna Huffington will see Enron's empty pension funds as examples of "compassionate conservatism." Or is she working some other angle these days?

As for me, I have now written my Enron column. Before the moral grandstanding becomes a pundit's legal obligation owing to a clause or two in Congress' oncoming campaign finance reform, I wanted to file a laugh or two. Led by Hollings and his colleagues, laughter might soon be malum prohibitum when writing about politics.



JWR contributor Bob Tyrell is editor in chief of The American Spectator. Comment by clicking here.

02/07/02: Freed from the presence of money -- hard or soft -- most politicians would be just as bad
01/31/02: Needed: Bush to make a preemptive strike against his enemies …. Ones who'd like to see him fail even during war
01/24/02: Hucksters will move on to make their next marks
01/17/02: Debonair prez should begin to do the High Life
01/10/02: Move over Twinkies --- "the acne medicine made him do it!"
01/03/02: Leaving the Nazis looking comparatively humane
12/27/01: A "self-made journalist"
12/20/01: Calamities and unanticipated benefits
12/13/01: America's grief ought not to give comfort to those who caused it
12/06/01: Leahy, the strict civil libertarian!? A short-term exploiter of the Constitution is more like it
11/29/01: Welcome to Afghan, Maryland?
11/26/01: So, why don't more folks hate us?
11/15/01: America's quagmire and other certainties
11/09/01: No longer the smug statists, the prodigal Keynesians?
11/01/01: The New Seriousness
10/25/01: Bright lights and the Taliban
10/18/01: Is bin-Laden propaganda from Western intelligence?
10/12/01: No yellow ribbons
10/05/01: Bubba's back --- again!
09/28/01: Exposing peacetime's frauds
09/21/01: So protected, we're vulnerable
09/14/01: At Barbara Olson's home
09/11/01: Duh! All conservatives are racists
08/31/01: Arafat's terrorists have created their own hell
08/24/01: Time for some political prophecy
08/16/01: They claim to be doing so much good
08/10/01: Visiting the source of the White House braintrust
08/03/01: Morality and reality
07/31/01: Blinded by success?
07/24/01: The latest Kennedy capitulation in Massachusetts
07/13/01: Talk about tawdry
07/06/01: Delighting in the Dictator
06/29/01: The Godphobes
06/21/01: Fashionable Washington is sempiternally in a stew
06/15/01: The limits of hypocrisy
06/08/01: Flagging our general apathy

© 2001, Creators Syndicate