[go: nahoru, domu]

Reihan Salam

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tommyboy1215 (talk | contribs) at 06:23, 15 September 2011 (added book info). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Reihan Morshed Salam (pronounced /ˈraɪhɑːn səˈlɑːm/; born December 29, 1979)[1] is an American non-fiction writer and policy analyst. He is a columnist for The Daily and lead writer of National Review's "The Agenda" blog, as well as a policy adviser at e21 and a contributing editor at National Affairs. He has also appeared on a number radio and television shows, including NPR's Morning Edition, Talk of the Nation, All Things Considered, and Tell Me More, HBO's Real Time with Bill Maher, NBC Universal's The Chris Matthews Show, WNYC's The Brian Lehrer Show, BBC's Newsnight, ABC's This Week, CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS, and American Public Media's Marketplace.

Reihan Salam
File:Reihan.jpg
Born (1979-12-29) 29 December 1979 (age 44)
Occupation(s)Author, Journalist

Early life

Salam was born in Brooklyn. His parents are Bangladeshi-born immigrants who arrived in New York in 1976; his father is an accountant and his mother is a dietician. Salam attended Stuyvesant High School and Cornell University (where he was a TASPer) before transferring to Harvard, where he was a member of the Signet Society. He graduated from Harvard in 2001 with a degree in Social Studies.[2]

Salam is a Muslim. He has also remarked that "I am not an expert on Islam" and "I wouldn’t say I’m a very religiously observant person".[3]

Salam's parents worked in the World Trade Center in the 1980s. Salam has written, "Some of my fondest memories of growing up involve visiting them at work, and watching the 4th of July fireworks display from my dad’s office window." Those memories later fed into his personal horror at the September 11th attacks.[3]

Like many New Yorkers, Salam does not drive.[4]

Professional life

Salam worked as a reporter-researcher at The New Republic and as an editor and researcher at The New York Times, first with columnist David Brooks and then on the paper's Op-Ed page. He was a producer for NBC's The Chris Matthews Show, an associate editor at The Atlantic, and wrote a regular column for The Daily Beast and Forbes.com. With Ross Douthat and Steve Menashi, he co-founded the conservative blog The American Scene, which he continues to edit.

From TK to TK, Salam was a Schwartz fellow at [[The New America Foundation]], where he researched "how radical technological advances are changing the way we live and think, and in particular how the advent of machine intelligence and the ongoing genomics revolution will shape our understanding of democracy and equality."

Grand New Party

In TK, he co-authored Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream[3] with Ross Douthat. The book grew from an influential cover story for The Weekly Standard, which called for a reinvention of Republican domestic policy.

The Republican party, Salam and Douthat argued, had become "out of touch with its own base," and its Bush-era, big-government policies were "an evolutionary dead end." Salam and Douthat instead advocated "tak[ing] the 'big-government conservatism' vision" of Bush and giving it "coherence and sustainability" by vigorously serving the interests of the less affluent voters who had become the party's base. The platform would include "an economic policy that places the two-parent family--the institution best capable of providing cultural stability and economic security--at the heart of the GOP agenda."

Political views

Salam is a conservative. He has stated that he believes in a 'Pax Americana' foreign policy with deference to people such as Aaron Friedberg, Peter Feaver, and Fred Kagan, although that "doesn't mean that I agree with PNAC on every issue". He believes that family structure drives social welfare in the United States and that entrepreneurial growth comes from a more free market-driven "open" economy.[5] Elsewhere Salam has described himself as "a fairly conventional neocon, though more in the vein of Jeff Gedmin than that of my more combative friend Mike Goldfarb."[6]

He opposes what he deems as common conservative "shibboleths". His personal goal is to "pump ideas into the bloodstream" of American conservatism.[5]

References

  1. ^ http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/16598
  2. ^ "New Star Rising", Razib Khan profiles Reihan Salam at The Daily Star (Bangladesh)
  3. ^ a b Brief Note Re: the Cordoba House Controversy
  4. ^ http://zocalopublicsquare.org/thepublicsquare/2008/10/30/reihan-salam-plan-gop/politics/
  5. ^ a b What's on your mind? BloggingHeads.tv {Reihan Salam and Eric Alterman}. Recorded March 13, 2009. Posted March 16, 2009.
  6. ^ Salam, Reihan (24 June 2009). "Inner Neocons". The American Scene. Retrieved 9 January 2010.

Template:Persondata