How out-of-touch is the D.C. pundit class with the rest country?
Look to John McLaughlin for the answer.
During part two of “The McLaughlin Group 2009 Year-End
Awards,” McLaughlin, who has hosted the program since 1982, declared the
concept of freedom, at least from a political standpoint in the United States, is
overrated.
“The most overrated is freedom,” McLaughlin said. “When
faced with economic uncertainty, people don’t want freedom. When they can’t see
their economic future, they want the nanny state.”
McLaughlin’s troubling view doesn’t necessarily square with
polling data and other anecdotal indicators. Even back at the height of economic
uncertainty, only 30 percent of Americans supported the TARP bailout to save
the financial system, according to a September 2008
Associated Press poll.
And since then, the entire bailout culture introduced by
former President George W. Bush and continued under the presidency of Barack
Obama has faced the backlash of the tea
party movement, inspired by CNBC’s Rick Santelli voicing his opposition
to a housing bailout.
Other members of “The McLaughlin
Group” pointed to other “most overrated” factors that affect the economy. For MSNBC
political analyst Pat Buchanan, it was global warming overrated. Newsweek’s
Eleanor Clift, providing the left-of-center voice on the panel, said Florida
Gov. Charlie Crist was overrated. Conservative talker Monica Crowley called the
so-called “boy genius” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner the most overrated.
But U.S. News & World Report editor-in-chief Mort Zuckerman took a shot at
the leaders in the business community.
“The leaders of most of our major financial institutions in
this country,” Zuckerman said of the “Most Overrated.”