Media, Politics & Corporate Ethics
42 essays
Sharp commentary on the intersection of journalism, political power, and corporate accountability. McCarthy draws on his years as a Washington Post columnist to examine the narrowing of public discourse — why op-ed pages are predictable, why third-party candidates are shut out of debates, why the press failed to challenge the march to war in Iraq. He profiles Ralph Nader, Ron Paul, and other dissenters, critiques the Catholic Church's institutional failures, and makes the case for non-voting as a form of political conscience.
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America by the Numbers
The numbers the Pentagon doesn't want you to do: $900 million a day for defense, which is four times the Peace Corps budget for an entire year.753 words · 3 min read
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Anarchism and the Limits of Political Power
Prince Peter Kropotkin drew crowds of 2,000 in Boston a century ago — anarchism, properly understood, is not chaos but the most ambitious form of self-governance.2,661 words · 10 min read
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Are Professors Really Too Liberal?
McCarthy wonders which student is the spy — the one taping him, or the one taking notes — as the right wing hunts for liberal professors to expose.757 words · 3 min read
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Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Conversion to Public Service
Arnold’s leap from trashy film violence to the governor’s mansion, examined with the skepticism his egomaniacal ambitions deserve.557 words · 2 min read
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Burger King and the Price of a Penny
The champion for corporate greed: Burger King refusing to pay Florida tomato pickers an extra penny per pound while clearing billions in profit.731 words · 2 min read
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Cutting Peace -- A Jesuit University’s Contradiction
A Jesuit university drops its peace and justice course — the contradiction between what the order preaches and what the institution practices.456 words · 1 min read
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Despite Everything, Life Goes On
Despite the Army disinviting Joan Baez, despite Gonzales dragging the Constitution through the mud — despite everything, life goes on.691 words · 2 min read
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Here Comes Everybody - Benedict and American Catholics
James Joyce defined Catholicism as 'here comes everybody' — but what Benedict sees when he looks at American Catholics is another matter.800 words · 3 min read
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Hurricane Katrina and America’s Blame Culture
When Katrina turned the Big Easy into the Big Queasy, politicians couldn’t find enough fingers to point — but the blame was decades older than the storm.565 words · 2 min read
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In Defense of Hugo Chávez’s Outburst
Bless Hugo Chávez for calling Bush a devil at the United Nations — McCarthy mounts an unlikely defense of an outburst everyone else condemned.566 words · 2 min read
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In Defense of Malpractice Lawyers
George W. Bush turned malpractice lawyers into dirty words — McCarthy argues the real malpractice is the medical system that makes them necessary.694 words · 2 min read
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John Paul II and the Politics of Obedience
The secretly elected leader of a male-run, hierarchic, dogmatically unyielding organization — and the politics of obedience that kept it intact.855 words · 3 min read
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Judith Miller and the Media’s War Cheerleading
On top of declining circulation and fabrication scandals, now the New York Times has Judith Miller — and the war she helped sell.556 words · 2 min read
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Manning, Snowden, and the Courage to Expose Power
Shaming the United States government is not yet a federal crime — but Bradley Manning and Edward Snowden are being punished as though it were.751 words · 3 min read
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Notre Dame and the Politics of Alcohol
Students return from spring break in El Salvador to find their classmates protesting not poverty but the school's new alcohol policy.719 words · 2 min read
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Outrage Overload
Thanks to Mark Foley and the congressional page scandal, another outrage to be steamed about — in a country already suffering outrage overload.563 words · 2 min read
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Politics as Theater -- The Republican Debate Circus
Twenty televised debates, hundreds of interviews, saturation advertising — and the country needs bed rest and antidepressants.647 words · 2 min read
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Ralph Nader and the Politics of Conscience
Norman Thomas ran for president six times on the Socialist ticket; Ralph Nader inherited the tradition of running on conscience rather than cash.2,410 words · 9 min read
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Robert Novak and the CIA Leak
Before the din of the CIA leak case fades, it's worth remembering that it was Robert Novak who started it — and walked away clean.547 words · 2 min read
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Roger Clemens and the Politics of Steroids
The congressional showdown over Roger Clemens and steroids — more theater than oversight, more show than substance.738 words · 2 min read
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Ron Paul and the Politics of Dissent
Eight million dollars pours into Ron Paul's campaign in a single day — the question isn't why, but why the rest of the field has nothing to say about war.787 words · 3 min read
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Scooter Libby and the CIA Leak Scandal
Scooter Libby strides into court on five felony counts, and the rest of Washington carries on — the scandal of indifference to the scandal.619 words · 2 min read
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The Church and the Wealth Problem
Religious orders write asking for donations to do the Lord's work — but which Lord, exactly, requires million-dollar monasteries and private jets?612 words · 2 min read
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The Conscience of a Non-Voter
Citizens who believe conflicts should be solved with military violence should vote — those who believe otherwise may find that not voting is the more honest act.1,036 words · 4 min read
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The Nobel Peace Prize and the Problem of Respectability
Only occasionally does the Nobel Committee award its peace prize to genuine risk-taking rebels — and this year was not an occasion.549 words · 2 min read
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The Politics of Obesity
America's 78 million tubbies and chubbies are under siege — but banning trans fats won't solve what a food industry built on salt, sugar, and corn syrup created.718 words · 2 min read
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The Pope’s Missed Opportunity
Pope Benedict’s pastoral visit to Washington brimmed with pageantry — on substance, opportunities for daring were repeatedly missed.602 words · 2 min read
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The Real Problem With Health Care Reform
The real problem with health care reform isn't insurance — it's salt, sugar, fat, and corn syrup entering the mouths of Americans by the truckload.654 words · 2 min read
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The Scandal of College Presidents’ Pay
Want a cushy job that will make you rich? Become a college president — even at second-tier schools, presidential enrichment programs thrive.789 words · 3 min read
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The Tea Party and the Politics of Amnesia
Nothing personal, the Tea Partier told his congressman — you're an incumbent and it's time for the whole bunch to go, as if history started this morning.676 words · 2 min read
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The Trouble With God’s Politics
Jim Wallis has a solid record of progressive deeds — and is in intellectual lockstep with George W. Bush on the one point that matters most.620 words · 2 min read
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The Trouble With the Nobel Peace Prize
The Nobel Peace Prize's recurring problem: honoring respectability when the real peacemakers are in prison or in the streets.584 words · 2 min read
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Two Cows - A Political Fable
A political fable told through two cows — every ideology from democracy to fascism explained in terms even an economist could understand.599 words · 2 min read
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When Billionaires Try to Save the World
America's boardrooms embrace an old Ralph Nader idea — sharing wealth — and McCarthy examines what happens when billionaires try philanthropy.743 words · 2 min read
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When Bush Quoted Dorothy Day
George W. Bush quoting pacifist-anarchist-jailbird Dorothy Day at Notre Dame — the irony writes itself, but McCarthy writes it better.688 words · 2 min read
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When Winning Becomes the Only Virtue -- Notre Dame and Football Culture
Notre Dame's head football coach describes himself as a jerk — McCarthy examines what it means when winning is the only virtue a university celebrates.545 words · 2 min read
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Why I Don’t Sing the National Anthem
Nationalists insist the anthem must be sung in English — McCarthy doesn’t sing it at all, and here is why.631 words · 2 min read
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Why I Left the Catholic Church
If you've been scouting reasons to leave the Roman Catholic Church, the current pickings are good — and McCarthy has collected them all.582 words · 2 min read
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Why I’m Leaving the Catholic Church
A church 200 years out of date, in need of radical transformation, with big empty buildings — McCarthy joins the exodus and explains the reasons.784 words · 3 min read
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Why I’m Not Angry at the Bishops
Everyone’s mad at the bishops — McCarthy takes the contrarian position, not out of loyalty but out of a deeper critique of institutional power.667 words · 2 min read
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Why the Washington Post Op-Ed Page Is So Dull
Op-ed pages are read by people who believe other people are reading them — and in Washington, what they find is predictability dressed as expertise.2,315 words · 9 min read
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William F. Buckley and the Limits of Conservatism
William F. Buckley was a one-man show who relished one-upping the Left for six decades — McCarthy measures what the performance actually cost.646 words · 2 min read