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The Gary L. McDowell Institute at the Jepson School of Leadership Studies presents Barton Swaim, editorial page writer at The Wall Street Journal, for a discussion on "The Zero-Risk Society." November 13, 2024
Paul Gigot talks to Barton Swaim and Faith Bottum, who have been covering the contests in Wisconsin and Montana, where voters may decide if Republicans can win back a Senate majority in November. Can the GOP topple Democratic incumbents in the two states? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A confrontation at the Israeli consulate leads to arrests of pro-Palestinian demonstrators Tuesday night, a day after thousands of protesters filled the city's Union Park. Collin Levy and Barton Swaim, who were there, describe what they saw and heard. Plus, Barack and Michelle Obama take the DNC stage to endorse Kamala Harris and urge the country to reject Donald Trump. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carlos Lozada is currently an Opinion columnist at The New York Times, after spending nearly 20 years at The Washington Post - where he earned the Pulitzer Prize in 2019 for criticism as The Post's nonfiction book critic. He's also an author, with his second book - The Washington Book - recently published: a collection of essays exploring what books by and about D.C. power players reveal about the people and political conflicts that define Washington. In this conversation, Carlos talks his path from Peru to South Bend to D.C., his accidental route to working in the press, some of his favorite Washington books and stories, and deeply mining his own insights into our current political moment.IN THIS EPISODECarlos' personal journey from Lima, Peru to Washington D.C...Carlos "gateway drug" books into the genre of Washington books...How Carlos defines what exactly is a "Washington Book"...Carlos weighs in on what he considers some of the earliest Washington Books...Carlos' rave review of the U.S. Grant memoir...The place of All The President's Men in the pantheon of Washington Books...Carlos' favorite cliches from presidential campaign memoirs...The D.C. corridors of power that are undercovered in Washington Books...The Washington Books that are purely exercises in settling scores...Carlos compares the Donald Trump of 2016 to the Donald Trump of 2024...The Washington Books that never were that Carlos would love to read...What reading Vladimir Putin revealed to Carlos about the Russian leader...Carlos' 101 on sharp essay-writing...Carlos waxes nostalgic about the late Washinton Post Outlook Section...AND The 1619 Project, Alexis de Tocqueville, all sorts of minutia, Jody Allen, the American Enterprise Institute, Carol Anderson, animating impulses, The Appalachian Trail, Appomattox, asymmetric polarization, Peter Baker, Steve Bannon, Bob Barnett, beleaguered officials, Joe Biden, Joan Biskupic, Kate Boo, George H.W. Bush, Robert Caro, Jimmy Carter, Jesus Christ, Julie Davis, drop-down menus, enabling environments, farm foremen, The Federal Reserve, Craig Fehrman, Foreign Policy magazine, full absorption, Susan Glasser, Garret Graff, Lindsay Graham, Alan Greenspan, Stephanie Grisham, Maggie Haberman, Susan Hennessey, Fiona Hill, Dustin Hoffman, holy crap anecdotes, David Ignatius, joining-ness, Jurassic Park, Bob Kaiser, Ibram X. Kendi, the Kerner Commission, Adam Kushner, Robert E. Lee, Joe Lieberman, Steve Luxenberg, Thomas Mann, David Maraniss, Mark Meadows, mid-level authoritarian regimes, military duds, Mark Milley, Robert Moses, Robert Mueller, murdered darlings, murky institutions, The New York Review of Books, Kirstjen Nielsen, Notre Dame, Barack Obama, obligatory campaign memoirs, obscene crescendos, Norm Ornstein, parallel histories, the paralysis of power, George Pataki, Tim Pawlenty, policy wonks, John Pomfret, Robert Redford, Marco Rubio, Mark Sanford, Michael Schaffer, Brent Scowcroft, Michael Shear, silent Moscow, John Sununu, Barton Swaim, targeted excerpts, Mark Twain, Mario Vargas Llosa, velociraptors, Scott Walker, Ben Wittes, Michael Wolff, Bob Woodward...& more!
Joe Biden and the Democratic Party love labeling Donald Trump and his MAGA followers as the greatest threat to American democracy. So why are Democratic-aligned Super PACs funding self-declared MAGA candidates in GOP primaries? In a recent article for the Wall Street Journal, Barton Swaim explains that there are two reasons: The strategy has (so […]
Joe Biden and the Democratic Party love labeling Donald Trump and his MAGA followers as the greatest threat to American democracy. So why are Democratic-aligned Super PACs funding self-declared MAGA candidates in GOP primaries? In a recent article for the Wall Street Journal, Barton Swaim explains that there are two reasons: The strategy has (so far) helped Democrats win in general elections; more importantly, Democrats long for a time when they were part of the heroic resistance against Trump. But this strategy could backfire: Democratic lawfare against Trump is helping him win over voters who think “the system” is rigged against them. And the moment a Democrat-funded MAGA candidate wins a general election, their warnings about MAGA's threat to democracy will fall flat on its face.Barton Swaim joined the Wall Street Journal as an editorial page writer in 2018. He writes a regular column on political books. Before joining the Journal, he was an opinion editor at the Weekly Standard. He is the author of The Speechwriter: A Brief Education in Politics (Simon and Schuster, 2016).Read the transcript here. Read Barton's article Why Democrats Can't Quit Trump here.
Hour 2 of A&G includes... Biden's grand plan to eliminate more college debt... Islam's biggest shortcomings... Joe brings us a column by WSJ's Barton Swaim on the emotionalism of the left. Stupid Should Hurt: https://www.armstrongandgetty.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 2 of A&G includes... Biden's grand plan to eliminate more college debt... Islam's biggest shortcomings... Joe brings us a column by WSJ's Barton Swaim on the emotionalism of the left. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hour 2 of A&G includes... Biden's grand plan to eliminate more college debt... Islam's biggest shortcomings... Joe brings us a column by WSJ's Barton Swaim on the emotionalism of the left. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
As world troubles grow, Nikki Haley has been gaining support in the GOP presidential polls. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is fighting back, but Barton Swaim says he is clearly more comfortable on domestic issues. Plus, Kim Strassel talks about the latest candidates for Speaker of the House. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As Buffalo Bills player Damar Hamlin recovers from his near-death experience, our culture witnessed an outpouring of prayer in a public forum. As WSJ columnist Barton Swaim wrote, “Suddenly prayer was back on the list of things anybody could talk about or do on camera.” Our collective, instinctive response to pray when confronting a crisis we cannot solve with human resources reveals something important about us. Author: Jim Denison, PhD Narrator: Chris Elkins Denison Ministries' morning devotion, First15 Janet Denison's new resource, Wisdom Matters Dr. Jim Denison's latest blog, “How to live victoriously in Christ”). Subscribe: http://www.denisonforum.org/subscribe Read The Daily Article: https://www.denisonforum.org/daily-article/the-latest-on-damar-hamlin-why-i-agree-with-religious-skeptics/
Swaim talked with Len and Michael about ultra-liberals believing that all conservatives are white power folks.
A conversation about the misunderstandings and nuances on the notion of worldview. Mark A. Noll, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind (Eerdmans, 1995); Abraham Kuyper, "Our instinctive life" in James Bratt (ed.), Abraham Kuyper: A Centennial Reader (Eerdmans, 1998) Herman Bavinck, Christian Worldview (Crossway, 2019) Gray Sutanto and Cory Brock (eds.) T&T Clark Handbook of Neo-Calvinism (T&T Clark, forthcoming) Barton Swaim, "The Expertocracy" in Washington Examiner (May 12, 2017) Jason Ananda Josephson Storm, Metamodernism: The Future of Theory (2021) Johan H. Bavinck, Persoonlijkheid en wereldbeschouwing (1924) The English translation, Personality and Worldview is forthcoming with Crossway. Tom Holland, Dominion: The Making of the Western Mind (2019) Todd Weir, Secularism and Religion in Nineteenth-Century Germany: The Rise of the Fourth Confession (Cambridge UP, 2014 ) Toshihiko Izutsu, Ethico-Religious Concepts in the Qur'an (2002) Jean Marie Rouart, Ce pays des hommes sans Dieu (Bouquins, 2021) Herman Bavinck, Christian Scholarship (forthcoming)
Singer Macy Gray is calling for the American flag to be replaced & claims it is divisive. Also, Mike reads a great Wall Street Journal article called “Why Shutdowns and Masks Suit the Elite” by Barton Swaim. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Barton Swaim, an Editorial Page Writer for the Wall Street Journal and author of The Speechwriter: A Brief Education in Politics,” joins Hillsdale’s Isabella Redjai.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 10, 2021 is: fatuous FATCH-oo-us adjective : complacently or inanely foolish : silly Examples: "You would have to be an inattentive person never to have noticed the incongruity between the well-informed but fatuous opinions of your forward-thinking peers on the one hand, and the simple but wise judgments of your parents or grandparents on the other." — Barton Swaim, Commentary, November 2020 "Jules Feiffer's cartoons in the Village Voice, which started appearing in 1956, made fun of the kind of people who read the Village Voice.... It's not that people like to laugh at themselves. They like to laugh at people who are just a little more fatuous and self-absorbed than themselves." — Louis Menand, The New Yorker, 1 Feb. 2021 Did you know? "I am two fools, I know, / For loving, and for saying so / In whining Poetry," wrote John Donne, simultaneously confessing to both infatuation and fatuousness. As any love-struck fool can attest, infatuation can make buffoons of the best of us. So it should come as no surprise that the words fatuous and infatuation derive from the same Latin root, fatuus, which means "foolish." Both terms have been part of English since the 17th century. Infatuation followed the earlier verb infatuate, a fatuus descendant that once meant "to make foolish" but that now usually means "to inspire with a foolish love or admiration."
A rash of presidential candidates also means a rash of candidates’ books – some biographical, some more policy-oriented, and very few all that notable. Barton Swaim, who pens a politics-books column for the Wall Street Journal, explains why campaigning and quality literature don’t necessarily go hand-in-hand. Did you like the show? You can rate, review, subscribe, and download the podcast on the following platforms:Podbean | Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | RadioPublic | Overcast | Google Play | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS
How do we account for Richard Nixon's stubborn unpopularity? Sure, he was a liar and a crook, but that has not stopped the rehabilitation of many a politician – as a new biography appears Barton Swaim joins us to discuss; why is it that certain ailments suffered by women are so scarcely discussed or resolved? Leonore Tiefer considers endometriosis and a "legacy of disinterest"; “The world is far more complicated than what we see”, says the theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli, putting it mildly. Reality “is mind-blowing” – here, he discusses the structure of time with the TLS's Samuel GraydonBooksRichard Nixon: The Life by John A. FarrellThe Order of Time by Carlo Rovelli Ask Me About My Uterus: A quest to make doctors believe in women's pain by Abby Norman See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, a Minnesotan's view on Franken and Keillor, we get handsy with our old pal David Limbaugh (would he vote for Roy Moore — tune it to find out), and a chat with an actual southerner about the south (that's Weekly Standard writer Barton Swaim). Also, a bit about Flynn, and some turkey and tax talk. Music from this week's episode: Stars Fell On Alabama by Ella Fitzgerald & Source
The post Lessons from a Speechwriter: A Conversation with Barton Swaim appeared first on AlbertMohler.com.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
The European Speechwriter Network had its 13th conference at The Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh from 20 - 21 October 2016. The speakers included Alex Marklew, Leonoor Russell, Blair McDougall, Vincent Stuer, Charles Ward, Mariusz Zagórski, Peter Scally, Patricia Lane and Barton Swaim.
Barton Swaim joins the Steve Fast Show to discuss his work as a speechwriter for scandal-ridden South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford. #MarkSanford
In the summer of 2009, South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford was a darling of the Tea Party and a leading contender for the GOP nomination in 2012 until it all came crashing down in a bizarre sex scandal and an even more bizarre attempt at "damage control." His speechwriter Barton Swaim had a front row seat for the fiasco and he writes about it in his new book THE SPEECHWRITER: A BRIEF POLITICAL EDUCATION. He'll discuss the scandal as a case study in how NOT to do damage control. He'll also talk about the former Governor's legendary cheapness, his obsession with Rosa Parks, and what it's like to be a speechwriter for a politician who loves bad writing. Plus Barton will talk about what it's like to work in the political spin room and his observations about politicians in general. For more information, visit www.KickAssPolitics.com, and if you enjoyed the show and would like to help keep us on the air, then please show your support at www.gofundme.com/kickasspolitics.
Today on The Gist, Barton Swaim gives us a glimpse inside the world of a certain former governor of South Carolina. Swain’s new book is called The Speechwriter. Plus, Dr. Jeffrey Lewis responds to lingering criticisms of the Iran nuclear deal. Lewis hosts Mike’s favorite arms podcast, Arms Control Wonk. For the Spiel, advice for the last Republican on stage at Thursday night’s Fox News presidential primary debates. Join Slate Plus! Members get bonus segments, exclusive member-only podcasts, and more. Sign up for a free trial today at slate.com/gistplus. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices