Tom Cotton’s Op-Ed and the Ensuing Gnashing of Teeth
Sen. Tom Cotton, a combat veteran and a leader for sober, law-oriented criminal justice, wrote an op-ed for the NYT arguing that, if civilian police were unable or unwilling to restore order to cities ravaged by riots, arson and looting, the military should be called in. Immediately there ensued an uproar inside the Times, which then apologized for running the piece. The Times said the op-ed did not, on reflection, meet its “standards,” never explaining, however, what those standards consist of. It has since become obvious that they consist, not of honest debate — which used to be the standard for the discussion of public issues among opinion leaders — but of abject obedience to the new, “woke” party line of the extreme Left.
We are left to wonder whether the Times’ apology is the beginning of the end of journalism as we have known it and, even more ominously, of classical liberalism itself, now to be replaced by an updated version of the Cultural Revolution and enforced conformity of thought. Ross Douthat, a committed NeverTrumper, explains why he’s worried.
