Brendan Nyhan

Month: June 2010

  • The magical thinking of Fred Barnes

    [Updated below with more details on Clinton’s win in 1996] I take it as a given that most journalists know very little about political science. But I still assumed that almost everyone has a basic understanding of the relationship between the state of the economy and presidential election outcomes. Apparently Fred Barnes missed the memo.

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  • Twitter roundup

    From my Twitter feed: –A gruesome convergence of my interests in political misinformation and early 1990s rap –Tomorrow’s Glenn Beck chalkboard diagram today –Anecdotal claims versus data on girls and the hookup culture -Dear New York Times: Any trend that involves Dustin Diamond (aka “Screech”) is, by definition, about to stop being a trend -Howard

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  • Unsupported DNC claims on health care misinformation

    In an op-ed published in late March, I predicted that misinformation about health care reform would persist after its passage: At the White House signing ceremony for health care legislation on Tuesday, President Obama declared, “In a few moments, when I sign this bill, all of the overheated rhetoric over reform will finally confront the

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  • Twitter roundup

    From my Twitter feed: -I love that Larry Kudlow’s radio promo says he was a mid-level bureaucrat under Reagan. Don’t change the channel — he worked at OMB 25 years ago! -Elevating the discourse, Charlie Rangel refers to “terrorists” on Wall Street, Joe McGinniss compares Sarah Palin’s tactics to those of “Nazi troopers,” and Chris

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  • Newsmax bid for Newsweek is bad news

    I’m sympathetic to Ross Douthat’s argument that a center-right version of Newsweek could be a force for good, but his suggestion that Newsmax (a bidder for the newsweekly) could carry out that strategy is lunacy: If Meacham had wanted to play to what seems like Newsweek’s business strength — its large audience outside the Acela

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  • Ambinder endorses shaming dishonest elites

    In a post previewing his remarks at the Personal Democracy Forum, The Atlantic’s Marc Ambinder endorses my call (see here, here, and here) to “name and shame” elites who promote misleading information (as well as a similar argument by Robert H. Frank): I subscribe to the Brendan Nyhan/Robert Frank notion that social shaming may well

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  • Twitter roundup

    From my Twitter feed: -Robert H. Frank calls for “social sanctions” of dishonest elites — very similar to my “naming and shaming” idea -Related note to Orrin Hatch — “social sanctions” are vastly preferable to criminalizing false claims of military service -You know the Sestak scandal allegations have no legs when the WSJ editorial page

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