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I'm reading David Stockman's book The Triumph of Politics. Very interesting, BTW. Stockman was the architect of Reagan's supply-side economics who was horrified when he realized the Republican politicians loved the tax cut part of his theory but had no intention of making all the budget cuts necessary for it to really work. Theoretical principle gets slapped in the face by reality yet again.
Anyhoo, I came across a couple interesting passages last night that freely acknowledged how they used certain media personalities to get their message out.
1) When the Secretary of Transportation wanted to restrict Japanese auto imports--a big no-no in Stockman's absolute free market:
"Going to war" meant it was time to call Bob Novak, the Prince of Darkness. The Evans and Novak syndicated column was a kind of supply-side dartboard. You could use it to stick somebody in the forehead fast, if you had to. So after my 8:00 a.m. breafast at the Hay-Adams with Greider, I had a second (lighter) breakfast at nine with Novak.
What resulted was a column which appeared in hundreds of papers across the nation saying that the administration was going astray on a fundamentaly supply-side principle because the Secretary of Transportation's chief advisor was a leftover Carterite.
2) When Sen. Pete Domenici was not playing the game they wanted him to play:
So, I posted a message on the Bob Novak bulletin board and had a little conversation with my friend Bob Bartley, editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal. The next day there appeared on that gray, dignified page a searing editorial entitled "John Maynard Domenici."
It accused the Senate Budget Chairman of single-handedly attempting to destroy the Reagan Revolution out of a benighted affection for the failed Keynesian policies of the now medieval past. Domenici was alarmed by the jeremiad. His staff immediately produced a lengthy letter to the editor "proving" that the Senate Budget Chairman was not, in fact, a Keynesiean deviant. My missile had hit its mark.
Yeah, we've got a free press. A fully bought and paid for free press.
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