pro-Dean/anti-Clark media whore.
Anyone remember this article from four weeks ago?
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/13/opinion/13BROO.html?ex=1066622400&en=b7b0d5ed2a15179f&ei=5070Bred for Power
By DAVID BROOKS
If you were to pick a presidential candidate on the basis of social standing — and really, darling, who doesn't — you'd have to pick Howard Brush Dean III over George Walker Bush...Both seemed to have sensed early on that their class, the Protestant Establishment, was dissolving. While Dean was at St. George's, the school admitted its first black student, Conrad Young, who, the official school history says, left after two years. By the time Bush and Dean got to Yale, a new class of striving meritocrats was starting to dominate the place.
Both, impressively, adapted to the new society... And for both, those decades of WASP breeding were not in vain. If you look at Bush and Dean, even more than prep school boys like John Kerry (St. Paul's and Harvard), Al Gore (St. Alban's and Harvard) and Bill Frist (Montgomery Bell Academy and Princeton),
you detect certain common traits.
The first is self-assurance. Both
Bush and Dean have amazing faith in their gut instincts. Both
have self-esteem that is impregnable because it derives not from what they are accomplishing but from who they ineffably are. ...Both are
bold. Bush is an
ambitious war leader, and
Dean has set himself off from all the cautious, poll-molded campaigns of his rivals. Both were inculcated with something else,
a sense of chivalry. Unlike today's top schools, which are often factories for producing Résumé Gods, the
WASP prep schools were built to take the sons of privilege and toughen them into paragons of manly virtue. Rich boys were sent away from their families and shoved into a harsh environment that put tremendous emphasis on athletic competition, social competition and character building.
... those who thrived...believed that life was a knightly quest to perform service and achieve greatness, through virility, courage, self-discipline and toughness..
that culture, which George Bush and Howard Dean were born into, did have a formula for producing leaders. Our culture, which is freer and fairer, does not.