If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from David Brooks, who in his column today, “The Battle of the Regimes,” closes with: If African nations succumb to the delusion of autocracy, we’ll have Putins to deal with...
Continue reading...new york times
New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 29 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is the opening line from David Brooks’s column today, “No War is an Island,” in which he writes: It’s amazing how much of the discussion of the Gaza war is based...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 16 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from Maureen Dowd, who in her truly awful column today, “Where’s the Oval Avatar?,” writes: There are three problems with this unbearable metaphor: Barack Obama is not in captivity, he’s...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 9 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is, of course, from Maureen Dowd, who in her column today, “Silicon Valley Sharknado” (no, really), writes: That leaves me free to worry about rampaging robots. HOW THE F ARE YOU...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 8 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from frequent guest of the show David Brooks, who in his column today, “The Creative Climate,” writes: This creative process is furthest along, I’d say, in the world of B...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 7 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from Paul Krugman, who in his column today “Beliefs, Facts and Money,” writes: Well, it turns out that money is indeed a kind of theological issue. Huh, but I don’t...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 1 July 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from David Brooks, of course, who in his column today, “The Evolution of Trust,” writes: People are renting out their cars to people they don’t know, dropping off their pets...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 25 June 2014
If you frequent this here premier “web log,” there’s a good chance you may once or twice have read the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from the Mustache of Wisdom himself, Thomas Friedman, who in his column today, “ISIS and SISI,” writes: Unfortunately, it might take exhausting all other options before a critical...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 18 June 2014
If you’re one of the three people who reads this here premier “web log ,” you may once in a blue moon have checked out the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from Thomas Friedman, who in his column today “What to do with the Twin?” writes: The post-Saddam generation of...
Continue reading...New York Times Columnist Line of the Day – 22 April 2014
If you’re one of the three people who reads this here premier “web log,” you may have once checked out the New York Times op-ed page. You might even recognize the names of the columnists, who every day spout the most conventionally wise of the conventional wisdom. This is a feature that is dedicated to these folks, highlighting one line that is either funny, ridiculous, strange, or actually intelligent or well-written. Today’s is from David Brooks, who in his column today, “The Leadership Emotions,” writes: This kind of leader is warm-blooded and leads with full humanity. So,...
Continue reading...

Recent Comments