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Donald Trump

New York Times Publishes Fake News About Rick Perry and Department of Energy

Or, why media literacy is more important to free thought than ever.

Nick Gillespie | 1.19.2017 4:05 PM

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Giphy

By now you've probably already heard the news, as delivered by The New York Times: Rick Perry, the longest-serving governor in Texas history (who also put some time in before as that lieutenant governor), is an incompetent jackass who not only once wanted to shut down the very Department of Energy he will lead under President Trump, he didn't even know what it did when he accepted the job!

Here's the key paragraph from a story titled "'Learning Curve' as Rick Perry Pursues a Job He Initially Misunderstood":

"If you asked him on that first day he said yes, he would have said, 'I want to be an advocate for energy,'" said Michael McKenna, a Republican energy lobbyist who advised Mr. Perry's 2016 presidential campaign and worked on the Trump transition's Energy Department team in its early days. "If you asked him now, he'd say, 'I'm serious about the challenges facing the nuclear complex.' It's been a learning curve."

The Times' reporters, Coral Davenport and David E. Sanger, note that

Two-thirds of the agency's annual $30 billion budget is devoted to maintaining, refurbishing and keeping safe the nation's nuclear stockpile; thwarting nuclear proliferation; cleaning up and rebuilding an aging constellation of nuclear production facilities; and overseeing national laboratories that are considered the crown jewels of government science.

What's more, the current secretary and his immediate predecessor are eggheads' eggheads, the former being an MIT physicist and the latter being a Nobel Prize winner. Rick Perry? He's that Lone Star lunkhead who famously forgot in a 2011 GOP primary debate the third federal department he pledged to eliminate! Better yet, the department he forgot was Energy! He re-emerged from a stupendously awful run at the presidency the 2012 cycle with smart-guy glasses before going down the tubes again after calling eventual winner Donald Trump a "cancer" on conservatism and then appearing on Dancing With the Stars dressed like an underemployed ice cream scoop-monkey at Farrell's. Obviously, this guy is…what, exactly?

Here's three things to consider, not just about this particular New York Times story, but about legacy media in the age of Trump.

First, it should be noted that McKenna, who doesn't actually work for either the Trump transition anymore or for Perry, says the Times' mischaracterized his comments. Maybe that's just cover-your-ass stuff, right, but then again, Texas is a big state and Perry ran it pretty well (or at least competently) for a very long time.

Second, in a policy platform dating back to at least 2011 that he called "Uproot and Overhaul Washington," Perry clearly demonstrated an understanding of the core functions of the Department of Energy, which he notes, only came into being in 1977. However did the United States manage before this child of a passing energy crisis and Cold War politics evolved out of the Federal Energy Agency? Perry's message back then was pretty direct: Get rid of it and devolve its "key functions" to other departments. I kind of like the sound of that though I should point out that the former governor retracted that position at his confirmation hearings today. From his past policy paper:

The Department of Energy should be eliminated, with key functions transferred to other more appropriate departments.

…within the Department of Energy, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and other key nuclear programs must be preserved and re-located to the Department of Defense. Our nuclear technology and capability (both civilian and military) are essential to U.S. national security, and must be preserved. The Department of Defense is a natural location for our nuclear programs, protecting our vital national security interests, and preserves the structure that supports our nuclear power system.

Third, despite the Times' focus on the two most-recent secretaries of Energy, the perch has often been a landing pad for political hacks. Recent appointees have included such luminaries as Bill Richardson, Federico Pena, Spencer Abraham, and Hazel O'Leary, who resigned from the Clinton administration after a scathing Government Accountability Office review dinged her for taking lavish trips with a giant entourage. Whatever else you can say about these folks, there's not a Nobel prize winner or a nuclear physicist among them, and yet somehow we survived.

None of this is to make a positive case about Perry, who lost my vote (such as it is) when he walked back his bold and eminently sensible plan to get rid of one more useless cabinet-level department and reassign its core functions. But the treatment of Perry by the legacy press—Twitter lit up like a Christmas tree yesterday with journalists and other media types hyping and amplifying the Times' story—is an object lesson in the urgent need for media literacy during the Trump presidency.

Simply put: Don't believe everything you read, especially if you basically agree with the outfit reporting it and want to believe whatever moral lesson is being imparted (this goes for Reason loyalists, too, of course). I write this not as a Trump supporter or even as a Trump apologist. I would rather that he not be president of the United States. But he is and much of the media despises him while a solid chunk will also explain all of his bullshit moves. In either case, caveat lector, friends: Let the reader beware. We are entering one of the least-expected and weirdest episodes in American history and I remain optimistic that what we are witnessing are the death throes of a post-war Leviathan that is ideologically exhausted, financially unsustainable, and wildly unpopular. Almost a year ago, as the GOP presidential debates got underway, the need for a new political and cultural operating system, one based one mass personalization, de-politicization of everyday life, and self-regulating systems was plain as day.

Does anyone doubt we need a new operating system for politics? Even amidst a bad-to-awful economy (caused in no small part to government action), the quality of lives are improving. We are able to live more like we choose, and we are more able to choose who we want to be. The world is never short of problems, but we have never been so rich with solutions and the ability to figure our ways out of the boxes we've built in our personal lives, our cultural lives, our work lives. As Edward Snowden recently told Reason, "The individual is more powerful today than they have ever been in the past." No wonder that Republican and Democratic candidates are so nervous, so jumpy, so mired in a past when politics controlled more of our lives and mattered more to us.

Donald Trump's presidency starts tomorrow, and the 21st century—and the Libertarian Moment that will define it—will start in earnest the minute we, the majority of Americans, anxious over Barack Obama's power grabs and now Trump's, assert our rights to get on with our lives on our own terms. Reading through the Vaseline-covered lens that is the legacy media is an essential element in blazing a path to the future.

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NEXT: Obama Squeezes in One More Round of Commutations, Granting Mercy to 330 Federal Prisoners

Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.

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  1. R C Dean   8 years ago

    Don't believe everything you read, especially if you basically agree with the outfit reporting it and want to believe whatever moral lesson is being imparted (this goes for Reason loyalists, too, of course).

    I wouldn't worry about that.

    1. bacon-magic   8 years ago

      Lol.

    2. Volren   8 years ago

      Is there a Reason writer the commentariat will not mock?

      1. True Scottsman   8 years ago

        Nope.

      2. Crusty Juggler   8 years ago

        Of course not.

      3. bacon-magic   8 years ago

        That should be in the job description. The good thing is most of us like most of them.

      4. Chipwooder   8 years ago

        2Chili seems pretty widely respected

      5. ant1sthenes   8 years ago

        2 chilly. You don't want to know what happened to the last guy that tried.

    3. Jimbo   8 years ago

      Boom!

    4. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

      Trump will surprise us. I don't know if those are good or bad surprises, but Jeff Sessions suggests that they will be negative effects.

  2. JayU   8 years ago

    I think it's safe to say based on the GIF that Rick Perry clearly won Dancing With The Stars.

    The question is, what does the winner actually, you know, win?

    1. Ted S.   8 years ago

      I think it's safe to say based on the GIF that Nick has no consideration for his readers.

    2. The Fusionist   8 years ago

      "The question is, what does the winner actually, you know, win?"

      A shiny fiddle made of gold?

      ALTERNATE JOKE: They give him back his dignity?

      1. Dog Star   8 years ago

        Or your soul. It's all a matter of perspective.

    3. Brett L   8 years ago

      Another week spent embracing a smoking hot professional dancer for hours on end?

      1. Jimbo   8 years ago

        Ding, ding, ding!

  3. Citizen X   8 years ago

    So did Perry get the Energy appointment because he won his pull-up challenge against Trump or because he lost it?

  4. Crusty Juggler   8 years ago

    Reading through the Vaseline-covered lense that is the legacy media

    Nick, the Reason readership's preferred lubrication is Passion Lube. Vaseline is so 1970s.

    1. Citizen X   8 years ago

      +55 gallons

      1. bacon-magic   8 years ago

        Paging Jesse...

        1. Citizen X   8 years ago

          He's trying to comment but his hands keep slipping off the mouse.

        2. Crusty Juggler   8 years ago

          It's okay for other commenters to carry Jesse's greasy torch when he isn't around.

          1. Citizen X   8 years ago

            That is barely even a euphemism.

    2. Jimbo   8 years ago

      I knew that line would not get by you!

    3. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

      Try Vapo Rub instead.

  5. Marty Feldman's Eyes   8 years ago

    Does anyone doubt we need a new operating system for politics?

    Sadly, the libertarian offering is about as popular as BeOS.

    1. Citizen X   8 years ago

      Need Linux, have Windows Vista.

      1. Jimbo   8 years ago

        Try restarting your computer. I've heard that works well!
        (I remember an SNL skit on the Obamacare website snafu when it first rolled out - she used that line)

      2. Longtobefree   8 years ago

        Windows ME

  6. Volren   8 years ago

    I just watched a Youtube clip on Perry doing DWTS. I'm not particularly fond of him on any front, but I will admit respect that he is willing to make a fool of himself on national TV.

  7. Kurmudgeonly Kristen   8 years ago

    OT: I decided to see what the political appointee in charge of the bureau I used to work at was up to. Surely he would be long gone from the State Dept. Nope. Still there, on the eve of Trump. What a loser. I'm pointing & laughing.

    1. Kurmudgeonly Kristen   8 years ago

      Also, one of the other Obama fuckfaces that ruined the last couple years at State Dept is now an adjunct prof at my alma mater. They've been bad enough with free speech, then they go and hire this penis head? No alumni $$ from me, ever.

    2. R C Dean   8 years ago

      If he's not one of the appointees Obama moved into a tenured civil service position, he is a loser.

    3. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

      I'm a Trump Comedy fan. Is there a club for that?

  8. Zunalter   8 years ago

    I write this not as a Trump supporter or even as a Trump apologist.

    Completely irrelevant to the facts of the story. Don't pander to the retards who decide that anyone saying something true and possibly positive about a political figure on "the other side" is a complete shill for that side.

    1. Citizen X   8 years ago

      Way to other most of the commentariat, guy.

      1. Crusty Juggler   8 years ago

        Zunalter isn't even a cosmo or a yokel, he is just a very mean person.

        1. Citizen X   8 years ago

          He's a rudatarian, is what.

        2. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

          He doesn't even know how to tow the lion!

      2. Jimbo   8 years ago

        Who are you calling Guy, Buddy?

        1. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

          Who are you calling buddy, friend?

          1. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

            Oh! Buddy Guy.

            1. Radioactive   8 years ago

              ok for you pal...

    2. R C Dean   8 years ago

      Yeah, the urge to virtue signal is apparently irresistible.

      1. Radioactive   8 years ago

        we're going with the smoke signal as part of the NEW paradigm...

  9. Fuck You - Cut Spending   8 years ago

    In fairness, nobody really knows what the Department Of Energy does. It certainly doesn't ensure energy is produced and delivered. If anything it ensures that whatever energy IS produced and delivered costs more to produce and more to deliver.

    Here's hoping Perry is tasked with dismantling the department and firing everybody.

    1. I am the 0.000000013%   8 years ago

      It employs those who are otherwise unemployable. As in, those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach get some other government job.

  10. Fuck You - Cut Spending   8 years ago

    we are witnessing are the death throes of a post-war Leviathan

    Death throes like this usually last centuries. Pardon me if I don't get excited about witnessing a fraction of them.

    1. R C Dean   8 years ago

      Bullshit we are.

      If we're really lucky, the federal workforce might shrink by as much 10% over four years. That's a very long way from a dismantling.

      And I will be shocked if anything is done to restrain the power of Congress or the administrative state. Meaning, we're one BigGov President away from it all coming back.

      The only thing that could dismantle the current leviathan is a revolution - hopefully peaceful.

      1. Austrian Anarchy   8 years ago

        If we're really lucky, the federal workforce might shrink by as much 10% over four years.

        I admire your wild optimism.

      2. Dog Star   8 years ago

        "Meaning, we're one BigGov President away from it all coming back."

        It hasn't gone anywhere just yet. You really expect it to?

  11. BigT   8 years ago

    Nobel Prize winner! Haha! and just how did that qualify that asshole to be Energy Secretary? Oh right, Solyndra was a great idea...The dumbest of the dumbasses.

    1. kbolino   8 years ago

      Look, we need to put more PhDs in charge of cabinet departments. Because management and academia are one and the same.

      1. Dog Star   8 years ago

        The toppermost of the poppermost!

        1. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

          Karlpoppermost?

  12. Jerryskids   8 years ago

    I happened to catch Death Throes of a Post-War Leviathan back in the 90's when they were opening for Alice Cooper - did not realize until they were halfway through their set that they were a Bruce Hornsby cover band.

    1. Dog Star   8 years ago

      Well... that's just the way it is.

      1. Jimbo   8 years ago

        Some things will never change...

        1. Dog Star   8 years ago

          Believe that!

  13. Chipwooder   8 years ago

    The shitty hatchet job from the NYT isn't even the best part. The best part is the avalanche of I-can't-even tweets from other alleged journalists.

  14. fedenicov   8 years ago

    before I saw the check saying $8075 , I did not believe ...that...my mother in law woz like they say actualie receiving money in their spare time at there labtop. . there sisters roommate has been doing this less than 14 months and as of now repayed the mortgage on there villa and bourt a gorgeous Subaru Impreza .
    =============== http://www.homejobs7.com

    1. Dog Star   8 years ago

      Eye didunt noe cheks cud tawk. Most imprezzive, azzwype!

      1. gaoxiaen   8 years ago

        I really want a Ford Fiesta!

        1. Radioactive   8 years ago

          a Mexican siesta?

  15. John   8 years ago

    Donald Trump's presidency starts tomorrow, and the 21st century?and the Libertarian Moment that will define it

  16. buybuydandavis   8 years ago

    The Left always has the conceit that they are the smarty smart pantses, while they are in fact IYI - Intellectual Yet Idiots.

    1. Longtobefree   8 years ago

      you are half right.

  17. Austrian Anarchy   8 years ago

    And he folded into full prog as soon as he was questioned. I told you people, Trump and his crew are just Democrats with an R behind their names.

    1. Dog Star   8 years ago

      Of course. The DOE is now suddenly mission critical now that it represents his place at the public trough.

      And the band played on... as the deck chairs were rearranged.

    2. Bubba Jones   8 years ago

      Or he was smart enough not to waste time arguing with senators.

      1. KerryW   8 years ago

        ^ Hopefully this

      2. Radioactive   8 years ago

        is that like wrestling with a pig? everyone gets dirty but the pig likes it...

    3. MikeP2   8 years ago

      You think Perry, of all people, folded into full prog?

      The man is pragmatic. Why tell people like Al freakin Franken that you plan to do exactly what they fear. Al's sole purpose during the hearing is to generate sound bites that the media sychophants can put into a continuous loop on MSNBC and the like. Hell, there is a word for that....it's called "borking".

      1. Radioactive   8 years ago

        and horking after you're done...

  18. Sanjuro Tsubaki   8 years ago

    Yes, politics is scripted.

  19. crufus   8 years ago

    So, no cabinet departments will be eliminated, they will continue to expand the number of regulations, federal employment in these departments will continue to rise, and pretty much everything will continue as it has for the last century?

    Making America the Same Again!

    1. Longtobefree   8 years ago

      I contest your conclusion; your major premise, and you minor premise.

      1. Agammamon   8 years ago

        I'm sure you thought that was clever.

  20. milly52352   8 years ago

    up to I saw the paycheck which had said $8845 , I have faith that my friends brother woz like actualy erning money part-time on their apple labtop. . there aunt had bean doing this 4 only 7 months and resently took care of the morgage on there mini mansion and bought themselves a Lancia . view it now....

    ========http://www.joinpay40.com

  21. Agammamon   8 years ago

    . . . the need for a new political and cultural operating system, one based one mass personalization, de-politicization of everyday life, and self-regulating systems was plain as day.

    And unfortunately not a single candidate was offering that. Not even the weird ones from the fringe parties.

  22. SF Pete   8 years ago

    Gillespie might have some of that right.

  23. tiyepusodo   8 years ago

    Facebook gives you a great opportunity to earn 98652$ at your home.If you are some intelligent you makemany more Dollars.I am also earning many more, my relatives wondered to see how i settle my Life in few days thank GOD to you for this...You can also make cash i never tell alie you should check this I am sure you shocked to see this amazing offer...I'm Loving it!!!!
    ????????> http://www.homejobs7.com

  24. kenzy9   8 years ago

    "If you asked him on that first day he said yes, he would have said, 'I want to be an advocate for energy,'" said Michael McKenna, a Republican energy lobbyist who advised ????? ????? ???
    ????? ???? 2018
    Mr. Perry's 2016 presidential campaign and worked on the Trump transition's Energy Department team in its early days. "If you asked him now, he'd say, 'I'm serious about the challenges facing the nuclear complex.' It's been a learning curve."

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