This is a great article in the Guardian, an interview with Paul Krugman.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1045302,00.htmlSome great stuff (please read the whole article, this is just for effect and for the little Dean-ism at the end).
Excerpt:
"Turned out the world was different from what we imagined... for the past two-and-a-half years, I've watched what began as dismay and disbelief gradually turn into foreboding. Every time you think, well, yes, but they wouldn't do that - well, then they do."
--snip--
Still, there's an important sense in which his views remain essentially moderate: unlike the growing numbers of America- bashers in Europe, Krugman doesn't make the nebulous argument that there is something inherently objectionable about the US and its role in the world. He claims only that a fundamentally benign system has been taken over by a bunch of extremists - and so his alarming analysis leaves room for optimism, because they can be removed. "One of the Democratic candidates - who I'm not endorsing, because I'm not allowed to endorse - has as his slogan, 'I want my country back'," Krugman says, referring to the campaigning motto of Howard Dean. "I think that's about right."