Hendrik (Rick) Hertzberg is one of the giants of the mainstream media. A two-time editor of the New Republic and an off and on contributor for nearly 40 years to the New Yorker, his Comment essays at the front of the magazine are required reading for every literate liberal in America. Along with Frank Rich and the late Molly Ivins, Hertzberg has also provided one of the fiercest and most intelligent critiques of the Bush administration available in print. Back in the 1970s, he did stints as a speechwriterfor New York governor Hugh Carey in Albany and for Jimmy Carter in the White House. After graduating from Harvard in 1965, where he was managing editor of the Crimson, Hertzberg got a job in the San Francisco bureau of Newsweek, just as the '60s began to explode. In 1966, he wrote a magnificent file about Bill Graham's Fillmore West, Jefferson Airplane, Janis Joplin, and the Grateful Dead. Almost none of it made it into the magazine, but Hertzberg held on to it, and nearly four decades later the essay became the opening piece in "Politics," the superb collection of his journalism published in 2004 by Penguin.
The Washington Post's editorial page has been pathetic. Really pathetic. There are still a few twitches left in itevery once in a while it takes on some egregious violation of civil libertiesbut for the most part it's just pitiful
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