HFC p. 54 Bennett wrote vicious, not viscous
Subject: HFC p. 54 Bennett wrote vicious, not viscous
From: Clark Robinson <robinsonchicago@gmail.com>
Date: 7/12/10, 17:23
To: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com>

Re:
"Bennett does not take his break for long. “Washington
at its worst can be a viscous, sick city. Nothing so captivates
the Washington mind as the anticipation of a scandal or that
a person in power is about to fall from grace.” These words, of
course, were written just before the Clinton years;"

But see page 231 of The de-valuing of America: the fight for our culture and our children: "vicious" http://books.google.com/books?id=66l2GCHyvWkC&pg=PA231&lpg=PA231&dq=william+bennett+washington+is+%22vicious+sick+city%22&source=bl&ots=tjIu_YtDs5&sig=RMAt-BA4hPGmadgYVRBWAHQYLD4&hl=en&ei=CH87TNfSE5btnQeo1_CxBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBUQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false

Sidebar: since I started reading you I have noted viscous appears in statements of your own where I would have expected vicious. I took this to be deliberate since many beliefs, especially those of social conservatives, are indeed viscous, figuratively applying a conventional definition thereof.  But I doubt you intend here to improve Bennett's diction within a quotation.

If it's too late for proofreading, let me know.  More importantly I am enjoying the book--the Friedman chapter is really deft.  I had actually never read Friedman (why would I?) until I began reading you, and I started reading some of his stuff to see if he is as bad as you were saying.  My initial reaction to him was, and I think it was unprompted by you, that within the first two paragraphs of his column I had that "spare me/what's my exit strategy?" realization that comes when someone is talking down to me. And you explain the mechanisms he employs to talk to readers as if they are overly polite children.