Some hits, some misses, and some maybes that aren't maybes
As might be expected 20/20's John Stossel got some of this right and some of it wrong, which is to be expected when you're a TV media type who's used to keeping it shallow and who doesn't have time to do much reading.
What he got right: "Clueless Media" (Chapter One), although a more accurate chapter title might be "Captured Media" of which of course Stossel is a prominent member. He deprecates PBS and touts the commercial media, and points out that his stories have actually bit the hand that feeds him on more than one occasion. However anybody who watches television with any discernment knows we need PBS.
His format for this book includes a lot of gray bars in this form:
MYTH: The media will check it out and give you the objective truth.
TRUTH: Many in the media are scientifically clueless and will scare you to death.
What he got wrong: Case in Point A ("scientifically clueless"): Stossel references The Bottomless Well: The Twilight of Fuel, the Virtue of Waste, and Why We Will Never Run Out of Energy (2005) by Peter W. Huber and Mark P. Mills to claim that tar sands in Alberta, Canada "alone contain enough oil to meet our needs for a hundred years." What he doesn't mention is that extracting that oil is currently not cost-effective, and when it is, it will require not only massive amounts of water (which will by then be perhaps a more fought-over commodity than oil) but will pretty much destroy the surrounding environment, which might be more valuable than the oil!
"The Bottomless Well" is the only book he references on the energy crisis. I hope it's not the only one he's read.
Case in Point B: Stossel doesn't think there are too many people on the planet. People are wonderful. We need more of them. He argues speciously (relying on unreferenced and unquoted ideas from the late wide-eyed economist Julian Simon who believed there was no end to economic growth) that more people mean more talent, "more brains that might cure cancer," etc. But what he misses is that more people also bring more clueless idiots and various sociopaths, etc., who must be clothed and fed and kept off the streets. This is not to mention what each human footprint does to the environment.
Looked at closely Stossel is an ersatz libertarian who has swallowed the supply-side fiction that we will not only never run out of energy because we humans are so clever, but that resources are as abundant as human desire and ingenuity--the kind of argument loved by corporate entities because that allows them to exploit the planet's limited resources without qualm.
What he got right: The public schools are a mess.
What he got wrong: The solution is vouchers and home schooling. It is ironic that one of the things that made the US arguably the greatest country on earth was mandatory public education. What Stossel wants is to turn education entirely over to the private sector. Get government out of the education business. How soon they forget. The real solution is higher pay for teachers, an end to a system that pits administrators and teachers against one another, and higher standards overall. Vouchers would end public education and create a society similar to those in banana republics without much of a middle class.
What he got right: men and women really are different in some ways and so politically correct methods of artificially enforcing a phony sameness of opportunity won't work.
What he got wrong: the idea that it's okay to encourage women to go into bars by offering them free drinks and free food. PC types who object to ladies night freebies are wrong, but Stossel's naive endorsement of such barflying is equally wrong.
Size matters. Yes, he got that right. Women prefer bigger men, especially taller men.
Polygamy, no. It is curious that Stossel endorses polygamy on the grounds that the women he interviewed in Utah and Arizona were happy with their big families. He should interview the omega males who do not have spouses or families. The reason polygamy is outlawed in almost all modern societies is that it leads to political instability because it creates a class of males without wives and children, which is one of the problems in the Middle East. Yes, the average woman might prefer to be the fourth wife of a man with riches, but such a society is unstable. Stossel didn't look far enough.
And yes, chiropractors cannot cure asthma with spinal adjustments; and yes the stock market is a gambling casino with the odds in your favor; and yes, TV stock market experts usually aren't.
But no it's not a "maybe" that we humans are causing global warming (see page 202). It's a big fat YES WE ARE and we better do something about it now.
There's a lot more of this hit and miss. But to be honest, if I counted up every assertion that Stossel makes and kept score, I'd say he got most of them right. However, read with discernment.
I guess I should mention that Stossel has nary a negative word to say about the "...Lies, and Downright Stupidity" of the Bush administration, which is why I label him an "ersatz libertarian": real libertarians despise the policies of the Bush administration. Real libertarians also oppose the phony "war on drugs." But Stossel apparently doesn't see any mythologies or stupidities there. Actually I'm sure he does, but for some reason doesn't mention them in this book. One wonders why--well, one knows why: fear of criticism from social conservatives.
I should also note that this book is endorsed by Fox's Bill O'Reilly. Perhaps that is enough said.
--Dennis Littrell, author of “The World Is Not as We Think It Is”