Second only to grumbling about CNN and MSNBC, Times bashing is a regular feature of social media and family gatherings.Īnd conservatives have had good reason to wonder about this venerable 172-year-old publication, originally called “The New-York Daily Times” and first published 10 years before the Civil War (and one year after the Deseret News, which started in 1850). She supplies the definitive condemnations and advances the vision of a better world.In our American culture’s continuing interest in virtue signaling, there may be no more reliable way of signaling you’re on the “right” conservative team than by complaining about The New York Times. Michelle believes her role at the New York Times is to make sure there is a record of the outrages that we’re living through. She lays out the policies that progressives hope to enact, and the strategies that could win them the power to do that. One of the things Michelle hopes to look at going forward is what progressives might be able to accomplish in a post-coronavirus world - things that perhaps seemed impossible no longer seem quite so out of reach. Right now, with coronavirus, she writes that we’ve in some sense already moved into a post-Roe world as some governors have used the pandemic as a pretext to ban almost all abortion, on the grounds that they’re non-essential. It Will Be Worse,” looking at how abortion bans in Alabama and other states portend a troubling future in which more women are criminalized for seeking abortions. And she pulled no punches, with columns like “Post-Roe America Won’t Be Like Pre-Roe America. In a year that saw some of the harshest attacks on abortion in decades, her writing on this topic was especially valuable. Michelle is a powerful and respected voice on reproductive rights - she is clear-eyed about the devastating impacts of abortion restrictions, and she understands the motivations of those who seek to strip women of their bodily autonomy. But that pattern doesn’t hold when the president himself is a paranoid right-wing demagogue.” In “Trump Is a White Nationalist Who Inspires Terrorism,” she notes that “during Republican presidencies, paranoid right-wing demagogy tends to recede, and with it, right-wing violence. Michelle doesn’t shrink from stating hard truths that other writers merely dance around. In so doing, she turned a spotlight on an underappreciated aspect of the Trump story: the damage the president has done not just to American democracy, but also to nations, like Ukraine, poised between authoritarianism and democracy, and to their fragile reform movements. She reports from places like Ukraine, where she went in fall 2019 after the Trump/Zelensky scandal broke, to talk to some of the young reformers struggling for liberal democracy against authoritarianism, who were shocked and confused that the partner they thought they had – America – was now all suddenly taking the other side. She writes eloquently about “democracy grief” – the gloom and anger we feel when watching our treasured institutions be destroyed. Michelle speaks to people who were jolted to awareness by the calamity of Trump’s election and who are remaking our politics through their activism and organizing. She is also a reporter and her reporting forms the building blocks of her commentary. In her bi-weekly columns on the New York Times’ op-ed page, she sets out to make her readers feel like they’re not alone in their horror at what’s happening to the rule of law and our institutions. Michelle Goldberg is a voice for people who wake up every day and cannot believe what’s going on in this country.
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