Quin,
I have to agree with you that this was an amazing example of about
as bad a judgment as someone can have. And this looks downright
mean. I like what my former John Locke Foundation boss John Hood,
whom you linked, said at The Corner:
This CNN episode ought to convince all conservatives that not
only should O’Keefe’s behavior be condemned, but conservative
leaders and organizations need to do a better job of assessing the
maturity level and character of the people they hire, support, or
praise. Building an alternative media network of conservative and
libertarian periodicals, news portals,
broadcasters, blogs, and video
sites is a great idea.
Hood is talking about the nationwide effort by the Franklin Center for Government
and Public Integrity and others to add state capital
and investigative reporting components to conservative/libertarian
think tanks (which James O’Keefe was not part of). But he is right
that after O’Keefe’s ACORN “pimp” expose’ — which I thought was
great (but I don’t consider journalism) — too much support (and I
assume money, considering he’s got his own investigative
organization now, Project Veritas), were
thrown at him too soon without really making him prove himself.
There’s of course the potential for something like this to
happen (although I never thought to this extreme) when
work like O’Keefe’s is so far out on the edge. You can get big
scores like the ACORN scandal; but you also run the risk of big
blunders like this.
I’ve met James O’Keefe and emailed with him a little bit, and he
was very pleasant and gracious — even humble. Unfortunately it
appears he got a wave of incredible publicity, some money, and got
surrounded by some other young folks who either were enablers or at
least unwilling to do any kind of intervention. The exception to
that was Izzy Santa (she’s in the CNN
story), who blew the whistle on the scheme right before it was
to happen. Good for her.
I don’t rescind my enthusiasm for how O’Keefe and Hannah Giles
exposed ACORN or for the Census Bureau waste he uncovered. I do
regret that everything that came his way in a hurry may have made
him feel invincible. I don’t have a problem with him getting his
own enterprise to run his projects through, but it should have a
strong accountability mechanism in place so something like this
would not have happened. And if people wanted to financially
support that they could, and if not, they wouldn’t have to.
I do think we need to hear something from O’Keefe and Andrew
Breitbart pretty soon about this. Undoubtedly lawyers are debating
what should and should not be said.