December 15, 2006
Jurassic Prick
Junk science meets crybabyism, from today's Progress Report:
Best-selling novelist Michael Crichton is a vocal critic of global warming science. His 2004 novel State of Fear depicts global warming as a hoax concocted by environmentalists to raise money. In January 2005, Crichton spent an hour talking with President Bush; the two were "in near-total agreement," according to Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes. Last March, The New Republic senior editor Michael Crowley wrote a cover story called "Jurassic President: Michael Crichton's Scariest Creation." It highlighted Crichton's junk science and the danger posed by President Bush adopting it. Crichton's response was to smear Crowley in his latest novel, Next, by writing in a character named "Mick Crowley" who rapes a two-year-old boy. The following is a graphic excerpt from Crichton's novel (reader beware): "Alex Burnet was in the middle of the most difficult trial of her career, a rape case involving the sexual assault of a two-year-old boy in Malibu. The defendant, thirty-year-old Mick Crowley, was a Washington-based political columnist who was visiting his sister-in-law when he experienced an overwhelming urge to have anal sex with her young son, still in diapers. Crowley was a wealthy, spoiled Yale graduate and heir to a pharmaceutical fortune." The real-life Michael Crowley is also a Washington journalist and also graduated from Yale. In an article posted yesterday, Crowley says he is "strangely flattered" by the reference. "If someone offers substantive criticism of an author, and the author responds by hitting below the belt, as it were, then he's conceding that the critic has won."
Wow. Someone needs to get eaten by a velociraptor...
Best-selling novelist Michael Crichton is a vocal critic of global warming science. His 2004 novel State of Fear depicts global warming as a hoax concocted by environmentalists to raise money. In January 2005, Crichton spent an hour talking with President Bush; the two were "in near-total agreement," according to Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes. Last March, The New Republic senior editor Michael Crowley wrote a cover story called "Jurassic President: Michael Crichton's Scariest Creation." It highlighted Crichton's junk science and the danger posed by President Bush adopting it. Crichton's response was to smear Crowley in his latest novel, Next, by writing in a character named "Mick Crowley" who rapes a two-year-old boy. The following is a graphic excerpt from Crichton's novel (reader beware): "Alex Burnet was in the middle of the most difficult trial of her career, a rape case involving the sexual assault of a two-year-old boy in Malibu. The defendant, thirty-year-old Mick Crowley, was a Washington-based political columnist who was visiting his sister-in-law when he experienced an overwhelming urge to have anal sex with her young son, still in diapers. Crowley was a wealthy, spoiled Yale graduate and heir to a pharmaceutical fortune." The real-life Michael Crowley is also a Washington journalist and also graduated from Yale. In an article posted yesterday, Crowley says he is "strangely flattered" by the reference. "If someone offers substantive criticism of an author, and the author responds by hitting below the belt, as it were, then he's conceding that the critic has won."
Wow. Someone needs to get eaten by a velociraptor...