What is Ross Douthat talking about?
Truth be told, I don't enjoy Ross Douthat, the NYT columnist. I find his columns about policy to be poorly thought out, and his comments about the Catholic Church to be downright offensive.
Ross is a great Republican, but a lousy Catholic. And the only reason he is a great Republican is the depths of depravity the party has sunken to in the last few years. Any shred of logic, empathy, or compassion was carefully pruned from party policy years ago.
His latest opinion piece on Sunday dove further into the recent Commentary article that David Brooks wrote about last week. First off, Brooks is more of an original thinker than Douthat. Case in point, other than Brooks writing about the Commentary article first, is that Brooks takes the time to make thoughtful suggestions. The point of Sunday's Douthat column is to make illogical suggestions which allow him to hide tax cuts for the wealthy behind a thin veneer of "getting people back to work."
I think what I find most offensive is he discards all economic theory about the causes and cures of the Great Recession and implies people are not working because they are lazy. He openly states that there is no practical purpose for his suggestions.
But, there are no practical reasons for his rabid Anti-Pope rants, either. Other than he is a great Republican and lousy Catholic.
Ross is a great Republican, but a lousy Catholic. And the only reason he is a great Republican is the depths of depravity the party has sunken to in the last few years. Any shred of logic, empathy, or compassion was carefully pruned from party policy years ago.
His latest opinion piece on Sunday dove further into the recent Commentary article that David Brooks wrote about last week. First off, Brooks is more of an original thinker than Douthat. Case in point, other than Brooks writing about the Commentary article first, is that Brooks takes the time to make thoughtful suggestions. The point of Sunday's Douthat column is to make illogical suggestions which allow him to hide tax cuts for the wealthy behind a thin veneer of "getting people back to work."
I think what I find most offensive is he discards all economic theory about the causes and cures of the Great Recession and implies people are not working because they are lazy. He openly states that there is no practical purpose for his suggestions.
But, there are no practical reasons for his rabid Anti-Pope rants, either. Other than he is a great Republican and lousy Catholic.
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