Bret Stephens: Out Of The Bubble
Bret Stephens: Out Of The Bubble
Stephens offers something different at the Times. And not everyone is pleased.
Source: Bret Stephens, used with permission
“There’s a problem with ideological, political, and intellectual silos in this country,” he told me. “As columnists, too often we’re preaching to our respective choirs and not to anyone else. I deeply believe that that has to change.”
His first column, Climate of Complete Certainty: How about a reasonable conversation on what to do about our warming planet?
But not everyone shares his willingness to see other perspectives. When Stephens vocally opposed Donald Trump, the internet backlash was swift and severe. And even before writing his first article for the New York Times, an online petition to have him fired had already gathered more than twenty-five thousand signatures. Luckily, the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist has a thick skin. “What has interested me, almost from a sociological perspective, is the ease with which one can start what amounts to a digital mob online,” he told me.
Over the course of his career, and 550 columns, Stephens wrote a small number of columns from which people have recently cherry-picked phrases, and posted what he calls “hilariously incorrect” assessments of his views. (Remember, his first article asks for a conversation about what to do about a warming planet.) The tweetstorm includes posts such as this:
Democracy dies in the darkness. So, too, the climate. Thanks, Times, for spreading fake opinion.and this:
I'm gonna lose my mind. The ideas ppl like @BretStephensNYT espouse are violently hateful & should not be given a platform by @NYTimes.Violently hateful?
“Opinion journalism is still journalism, not agitprop,” Stephens insists. “The elision of that distinction and the rise of malevolent propaganda outfits such as Breitbart News is one of the most baleful trends of modern life.” With a hint of sadness, Stephens recalls a French maxim, “les extremes se touchent” (the extremes touch). “People who consider themselves tolerant and open-minded on the political left,” he told me, “are, in their digital behavior, every bit as intolerant as the most caricatured version of a Trump supporter.” He finds this frightening, and potentially dangerous.
When William Safire arrived at the New York Times in 1973,
he was met with something of a frosty reception, but had a long career
there, nonetheless, and won the respect of people who were his
ideological opposites. Stephens is grateful for the welcome he has been
given at his new home. “Overwhelmingly, people at the Times
have been extraordinarily gracious and lovely, and have embraced me in
the most generous way. They really live up to the word, ‘liberal’ — not
in the typical, partisan sense, but in the truer sense, as in ‘free and
open-minded.’ And I think that’s why I was brought here. To offer
something different. To sometimes make readers uncomfortable, or even
angry, but at least to make them think. And if that’s what I’m able to
do at the Times—not earn the agreement of my readers but at
least cause them to reexamine their assumptions—then I’m succeeding. And
if I can offer a proverbial stone on which they can sharpen their
intellectual blade and strengthen their arguments, then so much the
better.”
There may be a silver lining in the tweetstorm. Costa Samaras, a scientist at Carnegie Mellon, responded to the Times piece by tweeting this:
There may be a silver lining in the tweetstorm. Costa Samaras, a scientist at Carnegie Mellon, responded to the Times piece by tweeting this:
Sincere offer for @BretStephensNYT: there's an entire field of folks who study robust climate policy under @deepuncertainty. Come talk w/ us.Stephens, who called the offer “gracious and civil,” accepted. ♦
Source: Shaoming Chen/Freeimages.com
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“Do you ever read any of the books you burn?”
He laughed. “That's against the law!”
“Oh. Of course.”
—Fahrenheit 451