Saturday, January 23, 2016

The New York Times Trying To Pretend They Are Moral


"Beware the people who moralize about great issues; moralizing is easier than facing hard facts."
    — John Corry, former New York Times reporter, 'My Times: Adventures in the News Trade'   1993, p.131


Consider the opinion piece quoted below, from December 2015, by the editorial board of 'The New York Times'
     https://archive.is/a4PaG

As you read this, keep in mind that 'The New York Times' editorial board is staffed by senior journalists with many years of experience — when this was written, the editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal, for example, had been with 'The New York Times' for almost 30 years, since March of 1987, and the associate editor Robert B Semple, had been with the paper since 1963 --

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/05/opinion/end-the-gun-epidemic-in-america.html

End the Gun Epidemic in America
It is a moral outrage and national disgrace that civilians can
legally purchase weapons designed to kill people with brutal
speed and efficiency.
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD   DEC. 4, 2015
All decent people feel sorrow and righteous fury about the latest slaughter of innocents, in California.  Law enforcement and intelligence agencies are searching for motivations, including the vital question of how the murderers might have been connected to international terrorism.  That is right and proper.

But motives do not matter to the dead in California, nor did they in Colorado, Oregon, South Carolina, Virginia, Connecticut and far too many other places.  The attention and anger of Americans should also be directed at the elected leaders whose job is to keep us safe but who place a higher premium on the money and political power of an industry dedicated to profiting from the unfettered spread of ever more powerful firearms.

It is a moral outrage and a national disgrace that civilians can legally purchase weapons designed specifically to kill people with brutal speed and efficiency.  These are weapons of war, barely modified and deliberately marketed as tools of macho vigilantism and even insurrection.  America’s elected leaders offer prayers for gun victims and then, callously and without fear of consequence, reject the most basic restrictions on weapons of mass killing, as they did on Thursday.  They distract us with arguments about the word terrorism.  Let’s be clear: These spree killings are all, in their own ways, acts of terrorism.

Opponents of gun control are saying, as they do after every killing, that no law can unfailingly forestall a specific criminal.  That is true.  They are talking, many with sincerity, about the constitutional challenges to effective gun regulation.  Those challenges exist.  They point out that determined killers obtained weapons illegally in places like France, England and Norway that have strict gun laws.  Yes, they did.

But at least those countries are trying.  The United States is not.  Worse, politicians abet would-be killers by creating gun markets for them, and voters allow those politicians to keep their jobs.  It is past time to stop talking about halting the spread of firearms, and instead to reduce their number drastically — eliminating some large categories of weapons and ammunition.

It is not necessary to debate the peculiar wording of the Second Amendment.  No right is unlimited and immune from reasonable regulation.

Certain kinds of weapons, like the slightly modified combat rifles used in California, and certain kinds of ammunition, must be outlawed for civilian ownership.  It is possible to define those guns in a clear and effective way and, yes, it would require Americans who own those kinds of weapons to give them up for the good of their fellow citizens.

What better time than during a presidential election to show, at long last, that our nation has retained its sense of decency?



You would think (or hope) that a group of people like 'The New York Times' editorial board, with well over 100 years of combined experience reporting on world news, would be able to write more than a collection of bromides on a subject as old as gun violence.  But the opinion piece quoted above is a dramatic demonstration of the simple truth that they cannot.

Notice how absurdly nonsensical this expression of 'The New York Times' editorial board is — after explicitly stating the obvious point that no law will stop criminals from obtaining firearms illegally, the editorial board still insists we should pass more gun control laws.  The editorial board wrote it is true that "no law can unfailingly forestall a specific criminal" — well, of course, since no one willing to commit an extreme act like murder would be restrained by the threat of a much less serious penalty for violating some firearms restriction.

Even the subtitle to the opinion piece is absurd.  All firearms are "weapons designed to kill people with brutal speed and efficiency".   That is the point.   Who on earth thinks that a pistol, for example, is designed to maim people with gentle slowness and inefficiency?

And, of course, 'The New York Times' editorial board must avoid the obvious point that military assault weapons are not legally available to the public.  They were long since banned for civilian use back in 1986 by the 'Firearm Owners Protection Act'.

The civilian replicas of military assault rifles that are currently legal to purchase do not have the critical feature of an assault rifle — that is, the civilian replicas are not machine guns.  Military rifles can be automatic, and civilian look-a-likes cannot — which means the civilian versions require a separate trigger pull for each shot.

In short, the statement from 'The New York Times' editorial board, that civilians can purchase "weapons of war, barely modified", will only seem valid to those who are ignorant about the difference between a semi-automatic weapon and a machine gun.   Here is a short video demonstrating that difference, and also the absurdity of writing laws to restrict magazine sizes (which accomplishes absolutely nothing, other than forcing people to purchase more magazines) --



And recall, as just one obvious example that helps to demonstrate the irrelevance of the debate over particular gun features, that Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated former President John F. Kennedy with a single shot, bolt action rifle.   But it is often the case that recommendations from advocates of gun control have no relevance to any particular murder — just as 'The New York Times' editorial quoted above falsely assumes from ignorance that some imagined military assault weapon feature facilitated a murder.

And notice this revealing statement in 'The New York Times' editorial —
"It is not necessary to debate the peculiar wording of the Second Amendment."
Well, what on earth is so "peculiar" about the wording of the Second Amendment?   Here's the wording, in case you have forgotten —
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state,
  the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.
Is it really so hard to understand why a group of people, who just fought a revolution against a government that they viewed as tyrannical and contemptuous of individual rights, would write a law prohibiting the government they were forming from disarming its citizens, precisely so the people would always be able to defend themselves, just as the founders had done during the Revolutionary War?

Both the intent and need of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution seems painfully obvious to me — pity it is so difficult for such an obvious and desperately needed check on government power to be understood by others.

So, what is the goal of those who insist on futile, self-defeating measures?
What is the goal of someone who insists on taking an action that they openly acknowledge will not help?

'The New York Times' editorial board adamantly insists that we take a course of action which they simultaneously acknowledge does not work.   What do they hope to gain with their strident cries for more gun control, when they simultaneously and explicitly state that murderers are not thwarted by such laws — that murderers can always obtain firearms illegally?

How can this be anything other than pretentious moral preening?   That is, posturing that you care more than others.

'The New York Times' editorial board makes the absurd claim that "at least those countries are trying", in response to the passage of gun control laws in other countries that we know with certainty did not prevent murders (which the editorial board at least had the honesty to openly acknowledge).   So how can any even barely reasonable person describe pursuing a course of action known to be futile as "trying", or as displaying a "sense of decency", as the 'The New York Times' editorial board put it?

A reasonable person with many years of experience as an honest observer of human life, would fully expect such empty emotional demands to do something, to do anything, to be repeated, even when we know the recommended actions will accomplish nothing — other than to make more individuals susceptible to becoming a victim.   But no reasonable person would be satisfied by such lazy, knee-jerk, emotional reactions.   Recommending actions that you acknowledge are ineffective, so you can grasp at creating the appearance of "trying" or of "retaining a sense of decency", is a profound expression of abject moral cowardice.

The problem of human violence is rooted deep in human nature, and simplistic recommendations for governments to pass restrictions regarding how men kill one another does absolutely nothing to address the fundamental problem — it only makes it easier to victimize those who would obey the restrictions.   Of course, repeating this obvious point will never stop people from making pointless recommendations that ignore the fundamental issue — as 'The New York Times' editorial board clearly demonstrates in their opinion piece quoted above, even with an open acknowledgment that what is being suggested has been tried and did not work, the temptation to engage in moral preening is overwhelming.

As an important aside, regarding the general deterioration of 'The New York Times', quoted below is part of an interview Brian Lamb conducted with John Corry, a former reporter of the 'The New York Times' — the same reporter who wrote the quote that heads this blog post.  If you take the time to read this interview, you will notice that it contains a significant indictment of the standards of news media in general.  John Corry states that "I've never considered myself a Republican", but he believes that "when I applied, in my view, journalistic standards to television news, I began to sound like a conservative."

The obvious indictment contained in Corry's interview is that prominent news organizations do not have basic journalistic standards.  This comment will not be controversial to any critical reader who even occasionally follows the news --

http://www.booknotes.org/Watch/55567-1/John-Corry.aspx
http://www.nytimes.com/1994/01/30/books/eyeshades-and-objectivity.html
...
LAMB: How about yourself?  Politics.  Do you consider yourself a Republican?

CORRY: Oh, no.  I've never considered myself a Republican in that sense, but what I found -- and it really goes back to Harper's.  You know, I'm a conservative and there's no question about that, and -- look, when I became the television critic of The Times and Abe Rosenthal, then the executive editor, my only marching orders were, apply journalistic standards to television news, television documentaries.  That was all -- apply journalistic standards.  And I did that, and I found that when I applied, in my view, journalistic standards to television news, I began to sound like a conservative.  Now I am a conservative, no question about that, but it seems to me that -- oh, it's almost painful -- it's just cliche that American journalism exists left of center.  The media exists left of center.  And Abe Rosenthal, who had been executive editor of The Times, always knew this, and it was his lifelong task -- he was dedicated -- he was sworn to holding The New York Times in the center, in the political center.

And Abe said -- and I believe this -- that unless you keep hold of The Times, it will drift to the left because reporters and editors will simply follow their natural impulses, predilections.  They will go off to the left.  And so I began as writing television criticism and what was on NBC or CBS or PBS and applying journalistic standards -- what I thought were journalistic standards, I began to sound increasingly like a conservative and increasingly was labeled as a conservative.  Now I didn't mind this.  In fact, it was sort of fun, and I was a conservative in a media culture dominated by liberals and, oh, I confess that towards the end of my time as television critic, increasingly I enjoyed sticking my thumb in the liberal eye, and you can do it fairly.  You can do it.  You don't have to be sneaky about it, but I was increasingly -- I was reviewing documentaries about the Sandinistas, and if I never see another documentary about the Nicaraguan Sandinistas in which they're shown as agrarian reformers or if I never see another documentary -- another report on Fidel Castro where all that we hear is about the wonderful job that Fidel is doing in education and health and welfare in Havana, well, I'll be awfully happy.  But when you apply history, apply journalistic standards to those documentaries and, by golly, you will come across as a conservative.  And I enjoyed it.

LAMB: You suggest that a lot of people in the business live on the West Side of New York between what streets and what streets on the Upper West Side?

CORRY: Yeah.  One of the interesting things that -- look, everyone in the media in New York knows everyone else.  If they don't know everyone else, they know all about them.  And actually, it would be on the East Side where the people who run our publications live, and they live between 59th Street and 86th Street on the East Side and/or along West End Avenue or Central Park West on the West Side and a few selected suburbs.  And views are spread -- I mean, there is not a media conspiracy.  I'm a little bored with conservatives who run around talking about the dark conspiracy in the media and the media's going to subvert all our values or the media may, indeed, subvert all our values, but it's not a conspiracy.  It's that views are shared.  They're spread by osmosis, and they're enforced by moral persuasion, I suppose.  The problem is that people think alike.  People think alike, so, yes, if I was in The New York Times newsroom in 1980 and everyone has voted for Ronald Reagan, except Hilton Cramer, I mean, it tells you something about where the media is looking or are looking.

LAMB: How did they treat you?

CORRY: Well, remember, I'd been around for a long time, and I had a lot of friends in the business, and I still have a lot of friends with The New York Times, but increasingly in the '80s, I had the feeling that I was, oh, almost the token conservative, and sure, I was treated just fine.  I mean, I knew all kinds of people there.  I had been nominated for Pulitzer Prizes in different categories, not as a reporter, so I was treated just fine.  But I think when I left in 1988, and I left for a variety of reasons.  One reason was that -- oh, I had grown up at The New York Times, and I didn't want to grow old at The New York Times.  I had just known too many old reporters who were sitting in the back of the room and gotten sour and grumpy and were taking assignments from 25-year-old editors, and it seems to me that I didn't ever want to be in that position.  And it seemed to me that my time was running out at The New York Times.

No, I wasn't fighting with anyone.  I got along very well with my colleagues, but when Abe left -- Abe Rosenthal -- and Max Frankel came in as executive editor, it was a different vision of the news.  It was a different way of putting out a newspaper, and in the beginning of that book, I speak about the people who've long since retired from The Times or otherwise separated from The Times who still refer to The Times as “we.”  Now I still think of The Times as “we,” and even today [March 27, 1994], five years after leaving The Times -- and I go back to The Times for lunch, whatever, to see old friends.  But you pick up the paper and you say, “What the hell are we doing with that front page?” or “What are we doing?” You are still part of the family.  But the paper has changed so enormously, and I don't think I would fit in to The New York Times today.  I have a different vision of news.  I have a different vision of what a great newspaper should be.

The other day, on a Sunday, what was it? -- a week ago Sunday, I think [from March 27, 1994], and I picked up The New York Times, and there, page one, there were seven stories on page one.  I counted them.  And now in the old days -- old only being 10 or 15 years ago [1979 to 1984] -- the news journalistic philosophy was that you would give a snapshot of the world in the previous 24 hours: What happened yesterday all over the world?  But the other Sunday, I picked up the paper and I looked at the seven page-one stories and not one story had a yesterday or a last night in the lead.  All seven stories were about something that will happen or might happen or conceivably could happen some time in the future.  Well, it's a different kind of journalism, and it, what was it? -- the same Sunday or was it just last Sunday? -- I'm not sure.  And I picked up the magazine and I just happened to open the last page first and there was an essay on the last page of a Sunday magazine, and it's about penises, and, well, that's not The New York Times that I grew up in.  It's a different kind of paper.
...


Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Paul Krugman And His Cadre Of Idiot Sycophants

Paul Krugman has written blog posts and opinion pieces ad nauseam which urge increased government spending, as well as commenting on the positive or negative economic effects of a particular U.S. President's policies.  Despite his glaring public record of equating various economic outcomes with a sitting U.S. President, Paul Krugman has now claimed that only conservatives believe that presidents have a large effect on economic performance.

Yes, really.   Now according to Krugman, in direct contradiction to much of his past writing, the widespread belief that the President of the United States has a significant effect on the U.S. economy, is really a belief that only conservatives hold.

Here is one example opinion piece from Krugman in December of 2014, about what he calls 'Obamanomics', and its supposed positive effects on the U.S. economy --

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/29/opinion/paul-krugman-the-obama-recovery.html

The Obama Recovery
Paul Krugman   DEC. 28, 2014
...
What’s the important lesson from this late Obama bounce?  Mainly, I’d suggest, that everything you’ve heard about President Obama’s economic policies is wrong.
...

This story line never made much sense.  The truth is that the private sector has done surprisingly well under Mr. Obama, adding 6.7 million jobs since he took office, compared with just 3.1 million at this point under President George W. Bush. Corporate profits have soared, as have stock prices.  What held us back was unprecedented public-sector austerity: At this point in the Bush years, government employment was up by 1.2 million, but under Mr. Obama it’s down by 600,000. Sure enough, now that this de facto austerity is easing, the economy is perking up.

And what this bounce tells you is that the alleged faults of Obamanomics had nothing to do with the pain we were feeling.  We weren’t hurting because we were sick; we were hurting because we kept hitting ourselves with that baseball bat, and we’re feeling a lot better now that we’ve stopped.
...

So I’m fairly optimistic about 2015, and probably beyond, as long as we avoid any more self-inflicted damage.  Let’s just leave that baseball bat lying on the ground, O.K.?
...


As an aside, this is also another example of Krugman's own behavior providing a perfect example of the criticism he is making — in his hypocrisy, he often demonstrates his own accusation.  In the opinion piece quoted above, he describes bad economic consequences as self-inflicted damage.  That is, like 'hitting yourself in the head, repeatedly, with a baseball bat.'   He writes that we should avoid self-inflicted damage, while at the same he is an ardent defender of the absurd notion that there is an upside to the death and destruction of the ultimate 'baseball bat to the head', a World War —
      http://maxautonomy.blogspot.com/2014/09/oh-what-ugly-paul-krugman.html

But notice that it is completely nonsensical to name a supposed economic recovery after a sitting U.S. President, as Krugman did in the opinion piece quoted above, if you do not believe that President had an important responsibility in creating that economic event.

As a demonstration of the widespread belief beyond Krugman, that U.S. Presidents have a significant effect on the U.S. economy (whether right or wrong), consider this quote from the Wikipedia page on 'Jobs created during U.S. presidential terms', describing the many references made to a sitting President's supposed ability to 'create jobs' --

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jobs_created_during_U.S._presidential_terms
Politicians and pundits frequently refer to the ability of the President of the United States to "create jobs" in the U.S. during his or her term in office. [1]
...


Or consider the expression 'Hooverville', which was the name used for the many shantytowns built during the Great Depression of the 1930's.  This name was deliberately chosen to mock the 31st President of the United States, Herbert Hoover, since so many people viewed Hoover as responsible for the Depression.  And do not forget that Hoover was a Republican, which means that Democrats (i.e. non-conservatives) believed the President's policies were critical

Homeless shantytown known as Hoovervile, Seattle, Washington, June 10, 1937
Homeless shantytown known as Hooverville, near the Skinner and Eddy Shipyards, Seattle, Washington, June 10, 1937
Anti-Hoover Campaign Poster Worn By Roosevelt Supporters in the 1930's
Anti-Hoover Campaign Poster Worn By Roosevelt Supporters in the 1930's

And for good measure, here is another blog post by Krugman, equating private employment changes with the sitting U.S. President's economic policies — this one-line post is fascinating in its deception (more about that later) --

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/27/obama-the-job-killer

Obama The Job-Killer
Paul Krugman   DECEMBER 27, 2015 2:43 PM
Cumulative change in private employment under Bush and Obama

Given the GOP field’s collective decision to go for Bushonomics squared, it seemed like a good time to update this chart.



Now notice that Krugman wrote the post quoted below, where he insists that only conservatives believe that presidents have a large effect on economic performance, only 3 days after the blog post above where he equated changes in private employment with the two presidents in office during those two time periods.

And even more, notice that Krugman claims that since 2010, the White House has had 'little influence' on the economy, because 'fiscal policy has been paralyzed by GOP obstruction'.  So the U.S. President can have a large effect on the economy, but only when a majority of Congress do not disagree and block the President's proposed actions.

Ponder that for a moment — if that damn GOP would stop pretending that the President has an effect on economic performance, and just let him do what he wants, then the President would have an effect on economic performance.

Brilliant Dr. Krugman! --

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/30/presidents-and-the-economy/#permid=17088120

Presidents and the Economy
Paul Krugman   DECEMBER 30, 2015 9:49 AM
Average Federal Tax Rates, by Before-Tax Income Group, 1979 to 2011
Congressional Budget Office

After I put up my post comparing private-sector jobs under Obama and Bush, a number of people asked me whether I believe that presidents have a large effect on economic performance.  My answer is no — but conservatives believe that they do, which is why this kind of comparison is useful.

To expand on my own views, in normal times the economy’s macroeconomic performance mainly depends on monetary policy, which isn’t under White House control.  Now, we’ve been in a liquidity trap for the whole Obama administration so far, giving fiscal policy a much more central role — and the initial stimulus did help quite a lot.  Since 2010, however, fiscal policy has been paralyzed by GOP obstruction, so we’re back to a situation where the WH has little influence.

The point, however, is that the right has insisted non-stop that Obama was doing terrible things to the economy — that health reform was a job-killer (one of the dozens of House votes repealing Obamacare was called the Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act.)  The tax hike on the top 1 percent in 2013 was also supposed to destroy the economy (much as the same people predicted disaster from the Clinton hike 20 years earlier.)  Financial reform was similarly supposed to be hugely destructive.  And there was constant invocation of the “Ma, he’s looking at me funny” doctrine — the claim that Obama, by not praising businessmen sufficiently, was scaring away the confidence fairy.

Given all that, the fact that the private sector has added more than twice as many jobs under that job-killing Obama as it did under pre-crisis Bush is important, not because Obama did it, but because it shows that there is no hint that the important things he did do had any negative effect at all, let alone the terrible effects right-wingers predicted.  You can, it turns out, tax the rich, regulate the banks, and expand health insurance coverage without punishment by the invisible hand.



A number of Krugman's readers commented on the post quoted above, to point out that Krugman's statements in the post are obviously false, but other readers normally responded to those critical comments in disagreement.   I was especially amused by the two responses below, where after one reader pointed out the absurdity of Krugman's statements, another responded in perfect Krugman fashion, by attempting to dissemble the obvious contradictions in Krugman's statements.

Notice that 'C' in the second comment below, seems to believe that it is meaningful to compare economic outcomes under different presidents, when you are convinced those presidents do not have a large effect on the economy.   So, why would anyone compare any outcomes under two different presidents, for which those presidents were not responsible? --

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/30/presidents-and-the-economy/#permid=17088120

Comment to Krugman's 'Presidents and the Economy', December 2015


Of course, the comment above by 'C' in response to 'Maitland' is absurd on its face.  It makes absolutely no sense to discuss economic events under any presidential term, if you really are convinced that sitting presidents are not important to the country's economic performance.  This is why you will not find articles, say, regarding the head of the Secret Service and economic performance — that is, everyone really does believe that the Secret Service has nothing to do with economic performance.

And notice this blatantly dishonest language quoted from 'C's' comment above regarding tax reductions for the rich (emphasis added) —
You can be against policies that give money to the rich ...
This is a typical propaganda technique — conflating the reduction of a tax payment from individuals (the Bush tax cuts he mentioned), with a gift from others to those individuals.   Obviously, this is not what is happening when tax rates are reduced.

And 'C's' closing line is absolutely comical.   In a comment denying that U.S. Presidents are important to the U.S. economy, 'C' closes by saying that a larger stimulus would have likely been helpful.   As if the sitting U.S. President has no effect on a government stimulus.

And in true Krugman fashion (demonstrating your own accusation), 'C', like many other comment posters on Krugman's blog, begins with an accusation regarding 'not doing your homework', and then proceeds to make a number of nonsensical and false statements, indicating that he needs to do a lot more homework.   Now that is a Krugman sycophant.

Here is another small sample of the same kind of nonsense from another Krugman lackey, 'Skeptic' --

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/12/30/presidents-and-the-economy/#permid=17086922

Comment to Krugman's 'Presidents and the Economy', December 2015


'Skeptic' might try following his own recommendation, by reading about where the expression 'Hooverville' came from, for just one example from history that directly contradicts his view, before he admonishes others to 'try reading history'.

And notice what The New York Times public editor had to say about Krugman back in 2005 — how dishonest do you think Krugman had to be before the paper's own ombudsman decided to call him on it publicly (in this polite way) ? --

http://www.nytimes.com/ref/weekinreview/okrent-bio.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/22/weekinreview/13-things-i-meant-to-write-about-but-never-did.html

13 Things I Meant to Write About but Never Did
DANIEL OKRENT   MAY 22, 2005
...
2. Op-Ed columnist Paul Krugman has the disturbing habit of shaping, slicing and selectively citing numbers in a fashion that pleases his acolytes but leaves him open to substantive assaults.  Maureen Dowd was still writing that Alberto R. Gonzales "called the Geneva Conventions 'quaint' " nearly two months after a correction in the news pages noted that Gonzales had specifically applied the term to Geneva provisions about commissary privileges, athletic uniforms and scientific instruments.  Before his retirement in January, William Safire vexed me with his chronic assertion of clear links between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, based on evidence only he seemed to possess.

No one deserves the personal vituperation that regularly comes Dowd's way, and some of Krugman's enemies are every bit as ideological (and consequently unfair) as he is.  But that doesn't mean that their boss, publisher Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr., shouldn't hold his columnists to higher standards.

I didn't give Krugman, Dowd or Safire the chance to respond before writing the last two paragraphs.  I decided to impersonate an opinion columnist.
...



The deception regarding the chart that Krugman presented in his blog post 'Obama The Job-Killer', is a perfect demonstration of what Daniel Okrent complained about in the quote above back in 2005.

Krugman's chart comparing job creation under Obama and Bush II seems to put Obama in a positive light, but in truth the chart proves the opposite of the praise that Krugman has given Obama.  It is true that during the Obama administration more jobs were added than were added during the Bush II administration, just as Krugman's chart shows — but job creation while Bush II was in office was the worst when compared with all of the presidential terms going back to Lyndon Johnson.   So there is no reason for Obama supporters to be praising 'The Obama Recovery', as Krugman has done, since job creation under the Obama administration only slightly edged out one of the worst periods on record, up until the economy collapsed at the end of the housing bubble at the end of the Bush II administration.

That is, job creation under the Obama administration has now, finally, significantly passed that of the Bush II administration, but only because the economy was collapsing at the end of the Bush II administration due to the housing bubble.   Faint praise for Obama.

Now, are you surprised that in Krugman's chart showing the change in private employment under Obama, that Krugma also included only the single U.S. Presidential term with the lowest growth in private employment going back to Lyndon Johnson, that is, of Bush II — rather than some other Presidential term that would indicate Krugman's past praise of 'Obamanomics' was false?   If you claim surprise at Krugman's obviously misleading comparison, then either you do not regularly read Krugman's writings (good for you!), or you are lying.   Krugman proudly and routinely displays his ignorant bias, so it is impossible to enjoy his writing without possessing the same ignorant bias.   A critical reader would immediately be suspect of a chart comparing only two U.S. Presidents regarding something as general as changes in private employment, especially when the data for many U.S. Presidents is typically presented together, indicating that it probably took extra effort to compare two U.S. Presidents in isolation, as Krugman did in his previous blog post comparing Obama with Bush II.   But certainly no honest reader familiar with Krugman's style, would expect him to create any content that would seriously critique a big government politician like Obama (except perhaps to say that he were not big government enough).

But all of this misses the obvious point that government as a whole has a massive effect on the economy — it is silly to say that a U.S. President is largely responsible for economic performance (as Krugman has often done, his dishonest claim to the contrary notwithstanding), just as it would be silly to say the same of a single U.S. Senator — obviously, the actual laws that are enforced are what matters, and individuals can be crucial to the passage of a certain law, but some kind of consensus is always necessary.

Here is a more honest account of 'The Obama Recovery', and the partial control that U.S. Presidents have over the economy.  Of course, Krugman and his sycophants will never acknowledge any of this --

http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2014/12/05/in-ranking-presidents-by-job-creation-obama-still-lags/

In Ranking Presidents by Job Creation, Obama Still Lags
JOSH ZUMBRUN   Dec 5, 2014

President Barack Obama welcomed today’s jobs report, noting that the economy has now created 10.9 million jobs over the past 57 months.  This streak of growth is improving the net job creation over which Mr. Obama has presided, though among the last 10 presidents, Mr. Obama still ranks sixth in terms of job creation.
The economy has 5.7 million more jobs today than when Mr. Obama took office in January of 2009.  That puts his total job creation ahead of presidents John Kennedy, Gerald Ford, and George H.W. Bush, who each served one term or less.  It also puts him well ahead of President George W. Bush, whose final year in office also comprised the beginning to the longest and deepest recession since the Great Depression.

As we have noted before, evaluating the job creation during Mr. Obama’s presidency is skewed by the recession that was already underway when he took office.  The same challenge arises in looking at the presidency of Ronald Reagan, who took office just as the economy plunged into a deep recession. President Bill Clinton, by contrast, benefited from taking office as the economy had just begun to snap back from a recession.
...

A range of caveats apply. The president has, at best, only partial control over the course of the economy, especially during his early months in office. The timing of when recessions strike has a key influence on how presidents rank, and economists don’t really believe that presidential policies are the primary cause of sharp economic downturns. Congress can thwart good legislation or pass bad legislation. The Federal Reserve, many members of which were appointed by the previous guy, may make policy errors or set great policy. Demographics and international economic conditions drive much of the economy too.
...