Having just finished an exhaustive account of corruption in the Tammany Hall era called "Rothstein: The Life, Times, and Murder of the Criminal Genius who Fixed the 1919 World Series" (by David Pietrusza), I am finally persuaded that my own naiveté in such matters is owing to the era in which I grew up. Postwar America was an innocent place.
After the Depression and "the good war," Americans were in a self-congratulatory mood. With the U.S. in the driver's seat, it was just a matter of time before the rest of the world would be converted to fairness, equality, freedom and, above all, righteousness.
Alas, people are people. Even Americans. It took me years to figure out that I wasn't any better than some poor kid in Beijing. I was just lucky. There was always food on the table at my house (and if we didn't clean our plates, pagan babies would starve). After church, my dad read aloud to us over waffles from the glossy supplements to the Sunday paper, all about how American breakthroughs in science were poised to eradicate disease and make the whole planet look like Disneyland.
It isn't 1960 any more.
The latest affront to my inner Candide is what recently happened to New Balance, the shoe company. If you don't know about the scandal to which I'm referring, it's because such goings-on no longer raise eyebrows or even merit a headline — unless a partisan outlet can find a way to spin it to make the other side look bad.
There wasn't a word in the New York Times (the story broke in New Balance's hometown newspaper, the Boston Globe — just another regional story, the Times editors no doubt sniffed), whereas the Weekly Standard and the Washington Times (vastly more conservative than the "left-wing" Post) found plenty to say.
What reportedly happened to New Balance, a company I'm partial to because it makes the only shoe that fits my long, skinny foot, is this:
Like the other major brands in its category, New Balance makes most of its shoes in Asia. Vietnam is the most important beneficiary of its outsourced jobs and one of the countries involved in the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a trade deal whose main objective, it seems to me, is not to improve trade relations with Asian nations so much as to isolate China.