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238 pages, Paperback
First published February 25, 2001
"...this inability to see liberal views as liberal that is at the heart of the entire problem. ...the media...can so easily talk about "right-wing" [Republican, Christian, etc.], but the only time they utter the words "left-wing" is when they're talking about an airplane. Conservatives must be identified because the audience needs to know these are people with axes to grind. But liberals don't need to be identified because their views on all the big social issues...aren't liberal views at all. They're simply reasonable views, shared by all the reasonable people the media elite mingle with at all their reasonable dinner parties..."
"The media elites can float through their personal lives and rarely run into someone with an opposing view. This is very unhealthy and sometimes downright ridiculous, as when Pauline Kael, for years the brilliant film critic at the New Yorker, was completely baffled about how Richard Nixon could have beaten George McGovern in 1972: "Nobody I know voted for Nixon." Never mind that Nixon carried forty-nine states. She wasn't kidding."