John McQuaid is a journalist specializing in science, environment, and various forms of government dysfunction. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, Slate, U.S. News, Wired, and Mother Jones, among other publications. He is also the co-author, with Mark Schleifstein, of Path of Destruction: The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms.

He worked as a feature writer, Latin America correspondent, and political reporter for The Times-Picayune of New Orleans before turning to investigative projects, including a 2002 series that anticipated Katrina in many ways. His work has won many national awards, including a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1997 for a series on the global fisheries crisis. He lives in Silver Spring, Maryland with his wife and two children.

For more information see www.johnmcquaid.com (warning: a work in progress).

Blog Entries by John McQuaid

The Jack Bauer Decade

3 Comments | Posted December 31, 2009 | 09:22 AM (EST)


2009-12-31-jackbauer.jpgVengeance -- experienced vicariously via movies or TV -- is one of the purest kinds of emotional satisfaction. And the revenge flick has had something of a renaissance recently, as Stanley Fish notes in this blog post, citing Liam Neeson's memorably-delivered statement...

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Michele Bachmann, Quantum Physicist

19 Comments | Posted December 14, 2009 | 02:17 PM (EST)


"WaPost Publishes Palin OpEd on Climate Science, Michele Bachmann Piece on Quantum Mechanics to Follow" - Firedoglake headline.

(With apologies to Sarah Palin and her ghostwriter. And Michele Bachmann.)

No Solace in the Quantum

By Michele Bachmann

When a piece of bread dropped by a swallow can...

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Let Us Now Give Thanks for Joe Lieberman

133 Comments | Posted November 25, 2009 | 06:45 PM (EST)


Thanksgiving is a time for taking a deep breath and appreciating the under-appreciated. So I thought I would challenge myself this year. Let's take a moment, reflect, and give thanks that Joe Lieberman is in the Senate.

Bear with me here. In the 1990s, I liked Lieberman. Most of his...

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Obama Was Never a Revolutionary

88 Comments | Posted November 4, 2009 | 02:13 PM (EST)


As Jon Stewart put it, "so when does 'hope' turn into 'change'?" As Arianna points out, we still don't know. To any outside observer it sure looks like Obama has lost his campaign mojo and gotten crushed in the whinging gears of Washington's political apparatus. But I'm not so...

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Is Obama a "Narcissist"?

135 Comments | Posted October 13, 2009 | 10:38 AM (EST)


Conservatives are still wandering stunned through the wreckage of the Bush presidency and have absented themselves from the policy debate. GOP politicians are hunkered down waiting for an anti-Obama backlash that may or may not materialize. Instead, as Rick Hertzberg wrote recently, the media personalities are running the show....

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The Era of Media Objectivity Is Over. Deal With It.

36 Comments | Posted October 9, 2009 | 01:19 PM (EST)


The ongoing debate about journalism, bias and objectivity erupted recently with the Washington Post's release of new rules for social media. The rules themselves were mostly commonsensical, but the way they were written and promulgated suggested that Washington Post journalists employ social media such as Twitter and Facebook at...

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Czarist Nonsense

152 Comments | Posted September 14, 2009 | 11:24 AM (EST)


The George W. Bush presidency brought both the Republican Party and the conservative movement low, and it's distressing to watch the GOP base get whipped into a frenzy by cynical demagogues while its politicians do the only thing they know how to do -- pander to the people making the...

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Still Fiddling While New Orleans Drowns

230 Comments | Posted August 28, 2009 | 05:31 PM (EST)


The fourth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is upon us, and New Orleans continues to slowly rebound, with a smaller footprint than before but abundant community spirit. But, alarmingly, its long-term predicament remains unchanged, and the opportunity the nation had to confront it has been mostly squandered.

I refer, of course,...

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Tea Party Madness to Sweep the Nation?

521 Comments | Posted August 12, 2009 | 11:35 AM (EST)


Aside from the issue of whether the congressional "town hall" has outlived its usefulness as a way for politicians and the public to interact, there's an important underlying question in those confrontations over health care reform now playing out. Do they represent an incipient 1994- or 1980-style backlash against Obama?...

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On Newspapers and Paywalls

28 Comments | Posted June 4, 2009 | 03:28 PM (EST)


It may be a cliche to write in the Huffington Post that newspaper content should remain free, and I may tick off my friends at newspapers by doing so. But even as an ex-inkstained wretch myself, I couldn't avoid the contradictions contained in this week's report by the American...

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The Cheney Campaign

113 Comments | Posted May 22, 2009 | 02:44 PM (EST)


Dick Cheney's campaign of retroactive self-justification, culminating in his AEI speech, is bizarre, and not just for its historical footnote-worthiness, its political thuggery, or its graceless, hectoring tone. What's strangest is that long after the policies he champions were cast aside by his own administration, and the Republican Party...

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Say It Ain't So, MoDo

56 Comments | Posted May 18, 2009 | 11:30 AM (EST)


Did Maureen Dowd commit a firing offense by, she says, inadvertently lifting a paragraph from Talking Points Memo? I don't think so, but what happens hardly reflects well on Dowd or her column.

To recap: Dowd's Sunday column on the debate over torture contained a paragraph taken nearly word-for-word...

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The Philadelphia Inquirer and John Yoo

63 Comments | Posted May 13, 2009 | 10:06 AM (EST)


The Philadelphia Inquirer's decision to give a monthly column to John Yoo -- author of several "torture memos" offering legal rationales for the Bush administration's abusive interrogations -- is (pick your term): Tone-deaf? Crazy? Morally dubious? Newspapers have made a lot of questionable decisions in recent years, some...

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100 News Cycles Later

3 Comments | Posted April 29, 2009 | 02:57 PM (EST)


During the presidential campaign, Barack Obama made clear his distaste of the news cycle and its trivial obsessions. Skeptics said this would hurt his chances: that to win, a candidate must dominate the news day-by-day, minute-by-minute, with attacks that keep the opposition off-balance. Yet the Obama campaign managed to win...

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Karl Rove Tweets on Torture

Posted April 24, 2009 | 11:14 AM (EST)


Why is the notion of Karl Rove tweeting in defense of Bush administration torture policies so disturbing?

Precautions taken 2 guarantee compliance w/ federal prohibition on torture. U might characterize diligence as overcautious.#TCOT #SGP #HHRS

Yes, I suppose U might be impatient with the amount of legal and...

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A Pre-Owned "New Foundation"

Posted April 14, 2009 | 02:42 PM (EST)


President Obama's speech outlining his long-term plans for economic recovery is called "A New Foundation," and that metaphor pops up multiple times:

We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity - a foundation that will move us from an era of borrow and spend to one where...
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The GOP News Cycle Strategy

Posted February 13, 2009 | 04:19 PM (EST)


I agree with Yglesias that the Republican strategy of the moment, such as it is, is very much a short-term, win-the-news cycle approach: oppose Obama, make a lot of noise, and hope something sticks with the public and sparks a comeback. In fact, it's very much like the John...

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Democratic Tax Goof Follies

Posted February 3, 2009 | 02:59 PM (EST)


It can't be pure coincidence that several of Barack Obama's top nominees have had embarrassing tax problems. The latest offender, Nancy Killefer, Obama's choice for the new job of chief performance officer, withdrew today because she hadn't paid DC unemployment taxes for domestic help. And now Daschle's out...

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Obama vs. the Media

Posted January 22, 2009 | 01:46 PM (EST)


Barack Obama deserves kudos for his newly-announced policies on the Freedom of Information Act and other transparency-related issues. Of course, it will take some time for presidential directives to work their way down through the vast government bureaucracy, where they will encounter resistance due to habit, laziness, and limited...

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Farewell, O Decider

Posted January 16, 2009 | 07:14 PM (EST)


It's hard to say anything new or interesting about George W. Bush's farewell address Thursday night. But one thing is worth noting about Bush's self-presentation: several times he refers to "tough decisions" that proved unpopular:

Like all who have held this office before me, I have experienced setbacks. There...
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