Freakonomic Friday

I wasn’t able to do a post on Freakonomics yesterday because of time and because one of the stories I’m researching on it took an unexpected (and very interesting!) turn and I haven’t been able to pin down all the details yet, so it’ll probably have to wait until at least next week.

But here’s a Freakonomics post that originally appeared over on the Freakonomics blog (CHT to the reader who e-mailed!) under the intriguing headline "Pat Robertson For President?":

Author Steven Levitt writes:

I appeared on the 700 Club this morning with Pat Robertson, in an interview that a blogger anticipated would be the "must-Tivo event of the summer." Conventional wisdom suggested this would be a bloodbath – that the Freakonomics perspective on the abortion question would enrage Robertson and a shouting match would ensue. (Indeed, my publicist was planning on turning down the 700 Club’s invitation to appear without even asking me, but decided she should at least ask.)

As so often is the case, conventional wisdom turned out to be wrong. The folks from the 700 Club could not have been kinder or more gracious, believe it or not. Pat Robertson knew the book quite well, asked all the right questions, and heaped enough praise on me to make me blush. We even talked about the abortion issue without incident. And the time and effort that the crew had taken in assembling footage and clips for a lead-in surpassed any other TV show I’ve done.

After I went on the Daily Show, I plugged Jon Stewart, suggesting he would make a great president. So what about Pat Robertson? I didn’t actually get to meet Robertson in person or interact with him off-air (like I did with Jon Stewart) since I wasn’t in studio for the 700 Club interview, but rather shot remotely in a TV studio in Chicago. So, honestly, I don’t have any special insights on Robertson (making the title of this blog post a bit misleading, sorry). I will say this, though. The large segment of our society that wants to demonize Robertson will get no fodder from my interview with him, and the large segment of folks who like him won’t find anything in the interview to change their mind, either.

We’ll post a transcript of the full interview segment when it comes available so you can see for yourself [SOURCE].

Kudos to Levitt!–And Robertson!

Like I said, pro-lifers and non-pro-lifers can discuss the abortion-crime issue in a reasonable way. Levitt sought to do so in his book, and I’m glad that Robertson did on his show!

If you’ve missed what all this is about, SEE MY PRIOR POST or

READ THE BOOK.

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."