In doing some research for Monday’s post about Krugman’s The Conscience of a Liberal, I came across this piece of comedy goal. Donald Luskin of the National Review wrote this essay in 2003 entitled, Krugman’s “Test of Patriotism”. Luskin opens with this paragraph:
The liberal punditocracy is about to face the sum of all fears: a world in which President Bush took the nation to war over all their objections, doubts, and second-guesses — and won. What are liberal pundits to write about now, with Bush emerging victorious from a spectacularly successful war in Iraq with enough political capital and personal credibility to achieve anything he wishes?
How often was the Radical Right wrong during the days of Bush’s Administration? Apparently most of the time.