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Martin Gurri

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Martin Gurri


Born
in Cuba
April 17, 1949

Twitter

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Martin Gurri is a former CIA analyst who writes about the relationship between politics and media. He is a visiting fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University in Virginia.

Martin Gurri isn't a ŷ Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

The mirror of Narcissus and the labyrinth of the Minotaur

The fugitive thoughts captured below came to me while I was reading about, then visiting, the city of Vienna, Austria, a place much more famous for its composers and artists than its politicians.  Vienna arose as the Baroque wedding-cake setting for a single imperial dynasty, the Hapsburgs, who were known mainly for their ability to persist.  Emperor after emperor staggered into disaster, but

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Published on October 26, 2021 06:08
Average rating: 4.22 · 1,799 ratings · 263 reviews · 2 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Revolt of the Public an...

4.22 avg rating — 1,786 ratings — published 2014 — 9 editions
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La rebelión del público: La...

4.46 avg rating — 13 ratings
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Quotes by Martin Gurri  (?)
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“Following the horrors of 9/11, Fukuyama and his ideas were derided as triumphalist nonsense. But he was only half wrong. Fukuyama, a Hegelian, argued that Western democracy had run out of “contradictions�: that is, of ideological alternatives. That was true in 1989 and remains true today. Fukuyama’s mistake was to infer that the absence of contradictions meant the end of history. There was another possibility he failed to consider. History could well be driven by negation rather than contradiction. It could ride on the nihilistic rejection of the established order, regardless of alternatives or consequences. That would not be without precedent. The Roman Empire wasn’t overthrown by something called “feudalism”—it collapsed of its own dead weight, to the astonishment of friend and foe alike. The centuries after the calamity lacked ideological form. Similarly, a history built on negation would be formless and nameless: a shadowy moment, however long, between one true age and another.”
Martin Gurri, The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium

“From start to finish, the 2016 presidential race can best be understood as the political assertion of an unhappy and highly mobilized public. In the end, Trump was chosen precisely because of, not despite, his apparent shortcomings. He is the visible effect, not the cause, of the public’s surly and mutinous mood. Trump has been for this public what the objet trouvé was for the modern artist: a found instrument, a club near to hand with which to smash at the established order. To compare him to Ronald Reagan, as some of his admirers have done, or to the great dictators, as his opponents constantly do, would be to warp reality as in a funhouse mirror.”
Martin Gurri, The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium

“Uncertainty is an acid, corrosive to authority. Once the monopoly on information is lost, so too is our trust. Every presidential statement, every CIA assessment, every investigative report by a great newspaper, suddenly acquired an arbitrary aspect, and seemed grounded in moral predilection rather than intellectual rigor. When proof for and against approaches infinity, a cloud of suspicion about cherry-picking data will hang over every authoritative judgment.”
Martin Gurri, The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium



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