![]() |
![]() |
March 09, 2004
Our story so far
(If you've been following the site lately some of this will be redundant, but stick with me--the ending's good.) On Sunday, Thomas Friedman wrote: Yamini Narayanan is an Indian-born 35-year-old with a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Oklahoma. After graduation, she worked for a U.S. computer company in Virginia and recently moved back to Bangalore with her husband to be closer to family. When I asked her how she felt about the outsourcing of jobs from her adopted country, America, to her native country, India, she responded with a revealing story: He goes on to make his usual case: Americans needn't fear globalization, because our innate pluckiness will always overcome any obstacle. I was a little curious about that guy who made all the money off those shirts, though, and after doing a little Googling I found what I thought was a rather glaring flaw in the anecdote: the shirtmaker was neither unemployed nor American. Except I got that one wrong. Sort of. You see, Friedman responded, pointing out that there was, in fact, an American selling a similar shirt: The argument seems to be that it was a British Web site that came up with the idea of the T-shirt -- ``My job was lost India and all I got was this lousy T-shirt'' -- and therefore the whole premise of my column was wrong, that Americans are not innovative. Well, the larger point may rest on more, but the specific column is planted firmly atop that anecdotal t-shirt. And it was still an anecdote I found...questionable. So I tracked down this guy--to whom, let us remember, Friedman personally pointed as a justification for the anecdote upon which Sunday's column was predicated--and sent him an email, and asked (1) if he is or was unemployed and, (2) if he's made a bundle of money off his shirts. (Also (3), if he's an American, which he is--Friedman got that much right.) His name is Gary Young, and he was gracious enough to respond promptly: Wow! So that WAS my shirt Friedman was talking about. I had seen the article and laughed... So there you have it. At the risk of beating a dead horse, I'll say it one more time: this is the guy Friedman himself brought to my attention--and as it turns out, he is neither unemployed (though he fears the prospect) nor a fabulously successful t-shirt entrepreneur, having made about ten bucks off the idea so far. The future's not quite bright enough to necessitate sunglasses just yet, it would seem. Look, my argument is obviously not, as Friedman interprets it, that "Americans are not innovative"--it is that selling novelty t-shirts is not a replacement for a decent paying job with health benefits. As the man he holds up as an example makes perfectly clear, when given the chance to speak for himself. By the way, Gary's t-shirts are here. If enough of you buy one, he'll make several hundred dollars, which might see him through a week or two if he does, in fact, lose his job. ...just for the record, I'm aware that it's a complicated, interdependent world, and many of the products I use are, in fact, made overseas, in whole or in part. I just don't think the solution to that is to ship even more jobs offshore, on nothing more than a utopian promise that our innate ingenuity will somehow see us through. But as I am the first to point out, I am just a simple, uneducated cartoonist.
Friedman's response
Dear Tom Tomorrow, My original posts are here and here; I leave it for the reader to decide for him or herself if the point I was trying to make is that "Americans are not innovative." (Hint: pay special attention to the speculation as to whether such t-shirt sales are likely to supplant a regular income and health insurance benefits.) (...I have a Cafe Press store, and thanks to my cartoon's relative visibility and this site's traffic, I probably do about as well with these print-on-demand shirt sales as pretty much anybody--and I'll tell you, if I had to live off what I make there, I would, quite literally, be living in the street.) ...At any rate, I should acknowledge that I was at least partially wrong in the post below, since there was, in fact, an American making these shirts as well. As to whether or not the the anecdote is therefore valid--well, I tracked the guy down and sent him an email to see if he is/was unemployed and making "all kinds of money" off his shirts. I'll be sure to let Tom Friedman know if I get a response. (I intend to respect this guy's privacy, however, so if I don't hear back, I'm not going to post anything more about him. He didn't asked to be used as the anecdotal evidence for a ridiculous newspaper column.) ...this isn't about the Zazzle.com shirt, but here's an article from the Times of India about an American who printed shirts with a similar slogan: "My job went to India and all I got was a pink slip." I have no way of knowing if this is the article which Friedman's source read, of course, but the creator of this shirt, while undeniably innovative, seems less than sanguine about the whole experience: WASHINGTON: Nothing in Scott Kirwin’s resume or background suggests he’s xenophobic, much less an India-hater or -baiter. He is a widely travelled American, lived in Japan for five years, trekked through Africa, loves Indian food, and has even enjoyed some turgid Bollywood movies. (Edits, and more edits)
War President
I keep reading conservatives who say they support Bush because he's the only one who's serious about the war on terror, as if John Kerry is just some frivolous little airhead, more concerned with "American Idol" than with Osama bin Laden. Well, here's how serious Bush has been about addressing the threat of terror, since the day he took office: THE WARNINGS – BUSH ADMINISTRATION WAS TOLD: Upon coming into office, the Bush Administration inherited a government that was receiving more and more specific warnings about the threat of an Al Qaeda attack on the United States. As ABC News reported, Bush Administration "officials acknowledged that U.S. intelligence officials informed President Bush weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks that bin Laden's terrorist network might try to hijack American planes." Similarly, Newsweek reported "that as many as 10 to 12 warnings" were issued, and "more than two of the warnings specifically mentioned the possibility of hijackings." Meanwhile, George Tenet, "was issuing many warnings that bin Laden was 'the most immediate' threat to Americans." The warnings were so explicit that in the months leading up to 9/11, Attorney General John Ashcroft stopped flying commercial airlines and instead began "traveling exclusively by leased jet aircraft instead of commercial airlines" because of "what the Justice Department called a 'threat assessment.'" That "threat assessment" was not made public. There's more. ...Counterspin has more. Also, I'm bumping this post to the top so it doesn't get buried under the rather long one about Dean.
Party unity
From Charles Lewis, director of the Center for Public Integrity and author of The Buying of the President 2004. On November 7, 2003, a strange new group no one had ever heard of called "Americans for Jobs & Healthcare" was quietly formed and soon thereafter began running a million dollar operation including political ads against then-frontrunner Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean. The commercials ripped Dean over his positions or past record on gun rights, trade and Medicare growth. But the most inflammatory ad used the visual image of Osama bin Laden as a way to raise questions about Dean's foreign policy credibility. While the spots ran, Americans for Jobs-through its then- spokesman, Robert Gibbs, a former Kerry campaign employee-refused to disclose its donors.
Just a question or two
Why are Republicans so filled with rage these days? Why do they hate John Kerry so much? Could John Kerry ever do anything right in their eyes, or are they just so filled with hate and bitterness and rage that they've lost all perspective?
I know you are but what am I?
"My opponent clearly has strong beliefs -- they just don't last very long." George W. Bush Oh, yes. Well. Here's a post from one of Kos's readers to knock that softball right out of the park: Bush is against campaign finance reform; then he's for it. * Bush is against a Homeland Security Department; then he's for it. * Bush is against a 9/11 commission; then he's for it. * Bush is against an Iraq WMD investigation; then he's for it. * Bush is against nation building; then he's for it. * Bush is against deficits; then he's for them. * Bush is for free trade; then he's for tariffs on steel; then he's against them again. * Bush is against the U.S. taking a role in the Israeli Palestinian conflict; then he pushes for a "road map" and a Palestinian State. * Bush is for states right to decide on gay marriage, then he is for changing the constitution. * Bush first says he'll provide money for first responders (fire, police, emergency), then he doesn't. * Bush first says that 'help is on the way' to the military ... then he cuts benefits * Bush-"The most important thing is for us to find Osama bin Laden. Bush-"I don't know where he is. I have no idea and I really don't care. * Bush claims to be in favor of the environment and then secretly starts drilling on Padre Island. * Bush talks about helping education and increases mandates while cutting funding. * Bush first says the U.S. won't negotiate with North Korea. Now he will * Bush goes to Bob Jones University. Then say's he shouldn't have. * Bush said he would demand a U.N. Security Council vote on whether to sanction military action against Iraq. Later Bush announced he would not call for a vote * Bush said the "mission accomplished" banner was put up by the sailors. Bush later admits it was his advance team. * Bush was for fingerprinting and photographing Mexicans who enter the US. Bush after meeting with Pres. Fox, he's against it. (Hat tip to Billmon for the reminder on the Bush quote.)
A federal grand jury has subpoenaed White House records on administration contacts with more than two dozen journalists and news media outlets in a special investigation into the improper leak of a covert CIA official's identity to columnist Robert Novak last July. They include: Novak knows who the leaker is, obviously--I just wonder who else on this list does also? (Via Ailes.) ...of course, Novak thinks it's all a big joke. --------------------
March 08, 2004
Those t-shirts
As discussed below, Tom Friedman claims anecdotally in his column yesterday that some victim of outsourcing proceeded to make a bundle selling "I lost my job to India and all I got was this lousy..." t-shirts, so it didn't really matter that he lost his job after all: Only in America, she said, shaking her head, would someone figure out how to profit from his own unemployment. And that, she insisted, was the reason America need not fear outsourcing to India: America is so much more innovative a place than any other country. So I got to thinking: let's find this guy! So we can, you know, celebrate his success! Googling the phrase as it appeared in Friedman's column turned up nothing, but it occurred to me that the shirt was far more likely to have read "My job went to India...", playing off the usual "Grandma went to Florida and all I got..." motif. Well, here's the shirt. As you will see if you follow the link, it's not made by a plucky American entrepreneur at all--it's being offered by a British website which provides snarky commentary on information technology issues such as outsourcing. In other words, that guy, who made the bundle of money selling the shirts, whose triumph over adversity provides the anecdote upon which Friedman bases his entire column? He, in all probability, does not exist. The shirt is not an example of American ingenuity, turning lemons into lemonade. It's rueful humor--British, at that--satirizing exactly that which Friedman champions. And it took a bleary, sleep-deprived cartoonist working on his first cup of coffee about thirty seconds to determine that fact. UPDATE: I'm wrong about the above, partially--it turns out there's also an American who also made similar shirts, though it's extremely questionable that he "made a bundle." More here.
(Minor edits.) Update from British reader Richard Martin: Having read your article I thought I'd add my own side of the story, such as it is. ...and a followup in the Register.
--------------------
March 07, 2004
Thunk, thunk, thunk
That is the sound of my head hitting the kitchen table as I read the latest from Tom Friedman: Yamini Narayanan is an Indian-born 35-year-old with a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Oklahoma. After graduation, she worked for a U.S. computer company in Virginia and recently moved back to Bangalore with her husband to be closer to family. When I asked her how she felt about the outsourcing of jobs from her adopted country, America, to her native country, India, she responded with a revealing story: Do I even need to bother commenting? Actually, I'm tired, it's late Sunday night, so I'm going to let reader Erich H. provide the obligatory snarky comment: "I'm sure those t-shirts earn a steady $75,000 a year and provide family health insurance and retirement bennys..." Thanks, Erich. Meanwhile, in the same section in which Tom Friedman shares this latest exciting installment in his ongoing journey deep into the heart of mediocrity, another article points out that the future looks bright--if you're a waiter. But some economists point to those same federal forecasts to poke holes in the argument that the key to job creation is more sophisticated education and knowledge. Yes, the greatest increase is expected to be for registered nurses (an increase of 623,000 jobs) and college and university teachers (an increase of 603,000).
--------------------
|
![]() |