Sure, You Could Go There . . . But Why Would You?
Steve, first, can you be a little bit less obvious — too frequently your analysis just washes over me like so much CNN — but more importantly can you also maybe just leave us a fucking teensy-weensy sliver of hope that Mayor Iceberg can possibly be stopped? Because stuff like this just makes me want to stare directly into the sun and pry off my own fingernails with a spoon:
Posted: June 2nd, 2009 | Filed under: PoliticalCertainly, the roots of Mr. Clinton’s press contempt differ from Mr. Bloomberg’s. The former president, who launched his first campaign at the age of 26, was hardly a stranger to unfriendly questions by the time he became president. His resentment, it seemed, stemmed more from his desire to be seen by Americans as a policy wonk and not a political animal. (In reality, he was both.) So he’d angrily lash out at any suggestion of political motive, an effort to convince the public, and maybe himself, that there was nothing to the charge.
Until he ran for mayor at the age of 59, Mr. Bloomberg’s only relationship to the press came as the owner of a media company. He may actually see himself as being above politics, but what seems to exercise him when the press broaches the subject isn’t really fear that they might be on to something; it’s the idea that anyone would have the audacity to challenge his version of things, least of all a bunch of lowly reporters who would surely be off making real salaries if they were capable of it.
It’s not clear he really has to change that attitude, either. Mr. Clinton always won in the end. The overwhelming likelihood is that, despite himself, the mayor will, too.