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Andrew Roberts, Bush’s Crackpot Historian

I saw this guy on C-SPAN a few weeks ago, and his crackpot theories of the world are exactly the sort you would expect to be championed by an intellectual midget like George W. Bush.

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2 Responses to “Andrew Roberts, Bush’s Crackpot Historian”

  1. chum says:

    Add Roberts to the list of tools that is driving our once fine reputation into the ground.

    Bush touted Sharansky’s book as the way a few years ago, and then there is Fred Kagan who is our current surge-o-matic professor.

    It’s nice to know that Roberts thinks that we got good value for our dollar. Too bad we can’t hand the tab to him and his neo-con friends because it still hasn’t been paid yet. So I suppose if you look at it from the standpoint of fighting things on the American credit card, and the bill will likely never get paid because some day we’ll have to default on the 8+ trillion in debt we have, it will likely have no real direct monetary cost.

    As far as Bush going through 60 books in less than a year I’m just wondering what the guys teeth look like after downing so many Lifesavers? Beats jelly beans I suppose.

  2. Duros62 says:

    I liked this part:

    Roberts is as sloppy as he is snobbish. I am seldom bothered by minor errors from a good writer, but Roberts’ mistakes are so extensive, foolish, and revealing of his basic ignorance about the United States in particular, that it may be worth noting a few of those I caught in a fast read. The San Francisco earthquake did considerably more than $400,000 in damage. Virginia Woolf, who drowned herself in 1941, did not write for Encounter, which began publication in 1953. The Proposition 13 Tax Revolt took place in the 1970s, not the 1980s—an important distinction because it presaged Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980. Michael Milken was not a “takeover arbitrageur,” whatever that is. Roberts cannot know that there were 500 registered lobbyists in Washington during World War II because lobbyists weren’t forced to register until 1946. Gregg Easterbrook is not the editor of the New Republic. “No man gets left behind” is a line from the film Black Hawk Down, not the motto of the U.S. Army Rangers; their actual motto is “Rangers Lead the Way.” In a breathtaking peroration, Roberts point out that “as a proportion of the total number of Americans, only 0.008 percent died bringing democracy to important parts of the Middle East in 2003-5.” Leaving aside the question of whether those deaths have brought anything like democracy to Iraq, 0.008 percent of 300 million people is 24,000—off by a factor of 10, which is typical of his arithmetic. If you looked closely enough, I expect you could find an error of one kind or another on every page of the book.

    No wonder the White House loves him.