You may have noticed that the guys who get on my         nerves the most are the smart enough to know better intellectuals who         instead choose to mislead the public for personal or political gain: Stephen         Jay Gould, Jared         Diamond, Steven         D. Levitt, Michael         Barone, Karl         Rove, Nicholas Lemann,         The         Economist         magazine staff, Charles         Krauthammer, Michael         Ledeen, Francis         Fukuyama, Christopher         Hitchens, and so forth, along with less objectionable characters who         still have their moments of moral weakness, like the great population         geneticist L.L.         Cavalli-Sforza, Richard         Dawkins, Victor         Davis Hanson, Mark         Steyn, and the         Thernstroms.
       
        I'd long         considered         Malcolm Gladwell a prime member of the "Smart Enough to Know         Better" gang ... until I discovered his personal website www.Gladwell.com.         There, Gladwell publishes his thoughts without benefit of The New         Yorker's expert fact-checkers and editors, and it's not a         pretty sight. Instead, you get howlers like:
"Sailer and Poser [sic] have a very low opinion of car salesmen."
and
Now, Gladwell isn't          being paid to say idiotic things like this, which raises the horrifying possibility          that he actually believes them. So, maybe I've gotten Gladwell all          wrong. Maybe Gladwell isn't the Machiavellian mercenary spin-meister I'd          assumed. Maybe he's more the Chauncey          Gardiner of millionaire sales convention speakers.
        
        My apologies to him.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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2 comments:
wow
wow. that's pretty harsh. after spending almost an hour reading your criticisms of gladwell, i am rethinking my affection for his books. in truth, i just finished his last book, david and goliath (i skipped outliers), and it left a lot to be desired. while it had some good stuff, a lot of it kind of sucked, actually.
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