Newt Gone Wild

Via Alex Massie, I notice that New Gingrich is saying really, really crazy things (again!). Basking in the warm embrace of the National Review staff that interviewed him, the former speaker sounds positively deranged. The interview itself, portentously titled 'Our Heritage,' contains lots of goodies:

--Gingrich says he has major concerns about American culture, and “the degree to which it is becoming an anti-religious culture.”

--“The modern Left is essentially proto-totalitarian,” says Gingrich.

--Obama, Gingrich adds, “is a radical in the sense that the victory of those values would mean the end of American civilization as we know it.”

--Looking to Afghanistan, Gingrich says, “the real underlying challenge is that this is a much bigger problem than people understand...The last few weeks have been worse than Chamberlain. This is Baldwin in 1935, just willfully blind because he didn’t want to tell the British people the truth because it would offend them.” If things are so dire, then where is America’s Churchill? “I don’t know, we’ll find out,” says Gingrich. “I hope that we can find one.”

Especially charming is the clear evidence that this sort of lunacy is warmly welcomed in the offices of National Review. Gingrich's rants are more bearable than the clubby back-and-forth that NR was kind enough to record for the reader:

In a meeting with NR staff, sipping a Diet Coke, Newt Gingrich reminded us that he’s a “historian by training.” Not that we needed the hint... Asked by one editor whether he’d be a Hamiltonian or a Jeffersonian should a time machine suddenly become available, Gingrich said, “I’d be a Hamiltonian on economics, and a Jeffersonian on politics.”

“You’d be a fusionist even then,” quipped Jay Nordlinger.

Gingrich laughed. Although he and his wife, Callista, had in theory come to NR to chat about the impressive new documentary they co-host...

The whole story is here.

COMMENTS (3)

10/07/2009 - 3:58pm EDT |

Isaac Chotiner quotes and responds:

--Looking to Afghanistan, Gingrich says, “the real underlying challenge is that this is a much bigger problem than people understand...The last few weeks have been worse than Chamberlain. This is Baldwin in 1935, just willfully blind because he didn’t want to tell the British people the truth because it would offend them.” If things are so dire, then where is America’s Churchill? “I don’t know, we’ll find out,” says Gingrich. “I hope that we can find one.”

Especially charming is the clear evidence that this sort of lunacy is warmly welcomed in the offices of National Review.

Michael B. Oren writes in The New Republic today:

-- ... view full comment

10/07/2009 - 6:22pm EDT |

ndmac, to a crazy person reason would seem like lunacy. You said absolutely nothing to rebut Oren, just assert that it is lunacy. Why do you even subscribe to TNR? Go huff at the Huffingtonpost.

"Gingrich laughed. Although he and his wife, Callista"...um...which wife is this now, number 5? Doesn't Newt have grandkids older than her? The chutzpah of this guy. The only reason I think this marriage might last is because Newt is really looking for a nurse to care for him in his dotage.

I love this line "In 2008, Americans, says Gingrich, “were voting for the end of Bush." Yeah, how about the why they were. And maybe that would make more sense if Bush were running. Americans were voting for the e ... view full comment

10/07/2009 - 11:45pm EDT |

"Never in the history of human conflict, has so much been owed by so many to so few -- or putting it in financial terms, never have so many taxpayers given so much money to so few institutions who are utterly uninterested in the common good. As a Republican, I can only salute that"

Newt Winston Gingrich

get the magazine

Intellectual rigor. Honest reporting. Influential analysis. Don't miss another issue of the magazine considered "required reading" by the world's top decision-makers. Subscribe today.

Get our newsletters

Get Our Feed