The Democratic Party and their media enablers, such as the New York Times,  slaughter the Republicans when it comes to economic reporting. The  public discussion of social security taxes, unemployment benefits, and  stimulus takes place in the language of Keynesian multipliers and  stimulus counterfactuals.
He who controls the language of debate has  already won, no matter how inappropriate or ridiculous. (I cite as an  example of the latter the discussion of unemployment benefits as a form  of stimulus that will restore the economy to health).
The Democrats and their media enablers use a tried-and-true template to dominate the debate. I use the New York Times article, “Analysts Say Economic Recovery Might Suffer if Tax Break Is Allowed to Expire,” to illustrate how it works.
The article’s objective is to convince readers that all  right-thinking people know that the economy will go down the toilet if  there is no agreement on extending the payroll tax cut and unemployment  benefits. They claim that “economists” or “analysts” agree on this. They  then interview four economists/economic organizations that support this  conclusion and they cite one senior White House official who warns of  dire consequences. They then dismiss one skeptic, who makes a technical  point the average reader will not understand.
Voila! “Economists” agree with the Democrat position.
There is no reason why two cannot tango.
I have taken the liberty to rewrite the Times article to  prove the opposite case. I use four respected economists and one  respected media outlet and cite only one supporter of the administration  case.
Here is my version, new headline and all. I preserve as much of the original Times language as possible:
Read the rest
 
 
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