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Thomas Friedman, Wiki, Biography, Wife

Thomas Friedman Biography, Age, Height, Wife, Net Worth, Family

Scroll Down and find everything about the Thomas Friedman Biography, Age, Height, Wife, Net Worth, Family you need to know, latest relationships update, Family and how qualified she is. Thomas Friedman Biography, Age, Height, Wife, Net Worth, Family Estimated Net Worth, Age, Biography, Career, Social media accounts i.e. Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, Family, Wiki. Also, learn details Info regarding the Current Net worth of Thomas Friedman Biography, Age, Height, Wife, Net Worth, Family as well as ‘s earnings, Worth, Salary, Property, and Income.

Age, Biography and Wiki

Thomas Friedman (Thomas Loren Friedman) was born on 20 July, 1953 in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, United States, is an AuthorColumnist. Discover Thomas Friedman’s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 67 years old?

Popular AsThomas Loren Friedman
OccupationAuthorColumnist
Age68 years old
Zodiac SignCancer
Born20 July 1953
Birthday20 July
BirthplaceSt. Louis Park, Minnesota, United States
NationalityUnited States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 20 July.
He is a member of famous with the age 68 years old group.

Thomas Friedman Height, Weight & Measurements

At 68 years old, Thomas Friedman height not available right now. We will update Thomas Friedman’s Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
HeightNot Available
WeightNot Available
Body MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available

Who Is Thomas Friedman’s Wife?

His wife is Ann Friedman (m. 1978)

Family
ParentsNot Available
WifeAnn Friedman (m. 1978)
SiblingNot Available
ChildrenOrly and Natalie

Thomas Friedman Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2020-2021. So, how much is Thomas Friedman worth at the age of 68 years old? Thomas Friedman’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated Thomas Friedman’s net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2021$1 Million – $5 Million
Salary in 2020Under Review
Net Worth in 2019Pending
Salary in 2019Under Review
HouseNot Available
CarsNot Available
Source of Income

Thomas Friedman Social Network

Timeline

Friedman is on the board of directors for Planet Word, a Washington, D.C. based private museum dedicated to language that is anticipated to open in May, 2020.

After visiting the San Ysidro Port of Entry in San Diego, California in early April 2019, Friedman wrote, “The whole day left me more certain than ever that we have a real immigration crisis and that the solution is a high wall with a big gate — but a smart gate.”

In April 2018, Barrett Brown criticized Friedman for “his serial habit of giving the benefit of the doubt to whoever happens to hold power”, such as Friedman’s column supporting Vladimir Putin as a modernizing reformer, in which he urged Americans to “keep rootin’ for Putin”. Brown also used this phrase in the title of his 2014 book “Keep Rootin’ for Putin: Establishment Pundits and the Twilight of American Competence”.

In a column for the New York Press, Alexander Cockburn wrote: “Friedman exhibits on a weekly basis one of the severest cases known to science of Lippmann’s condition, named for the legendary journalistic hot-air salesman, Walter Lippmann, and alluding to the inherent tendency of all pundits to swell in self-importance to zeppelin-like dimensions”. Cockburn said Friedman’s hubris allowed him to pass off another war correspondent’s experience in Beirut as his own. In December, 2017, Hamid Dabashi wrote about Friedman: “Thomas Friedman is an ignorant fool – and I do not mean that as an insult. I mean it as a clinical diagnosis of an almost-illiterate man who has been cheated out of a proper undergraduate education, sold as a liberal Zionist to the highest bidder, and thus has managed to ramble and blabber his way up as a top-notch New York Times columnist.”

Friedman supported Hillary Clinton for President of the United States in the 2016 election, and supported Michael Bloomberg in the 2020 primaries.

He has also expressed concern about the United States’ lack of energy independence. He has stated, “First rule of oil—addicts never tell the truth to their pushers. We are the addicts, the oil producers are the pushers—we’ve never had an honest conversation with the Saudis.”

John Esposito criticized him in 2014 for writing twice that Muslims do not speak up against terrorism, and yet “his own newspaper has had these denunciations [by Muslims].”

In 2014, Friedman served as a correspondent for Years of Living Dangerously, a documentary show about climate change. For the show’s first season, he traveled to cover the role climate change has played in conflicts in the region. He also interviewed U.S. President Barack Obama. For the show’s second season in 2016, he traveled to Africa.

Friedman sparked criticism for writing that congressional ovations for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu were “bought and paid for by the Israel lobby.” A letter from the American Jewish Committee objected that “Public opinion polls consistently show a high level of American … support for and identification with Israel. This indicates that the people’s elected representatives are fully reflecting the will of the voters.” Friedman responded to criticism by writing: “In retrospect I probably should have used a more precise term like ‘engineered’ by the Israel lobby – a term that does not suggest grand conspiracy theories that I don’t subscribe to.”

Some critics have derided Friedman’s idiosyncratic prose style, with its tendency to use mixed metaphors and analogies. Walter Russell Mead described his prose as being “an occasionally flat Midwestern demotic punctuated by gee-whiz exclamations about just how doggone irresistible globalization is – lacks the steely elegance of a Lippmann, the unobtrusive serviceability of a Scotty Reston or the restless fireworks of a Maureen Dowd and is best taken in small doses.” Similarly, journalist Matt Taibbi has said of Friedman’s writing that, “Friedman came up with lines so hilarious you couldn’t make them up even if you were trying – and when you tried to actually picture the ‘illustrative’ figures of speech he offered to explain himself, what you often ended up with was pure physical comedy of the Buster Keaton/Three Stooges school, with whole nations and peoples slipping and falling on the misplaced banana peels of his literary endeavors.”

American journalist and former civil rights litigator Glenn Greenwald, writing for Salon on July 25, 2012, commented: “His status among American elites is the single most potent fact for understanding the nation’s imperial decline.”

In May 2011, The New York Times reported that President Barack Obama “has sounded out” Friedman concerning Middle East issues.

In the 2010s, Friedman wrote several columns supporting the politics of radical centrism. In one he stated that, if the “radical center wants to be empowered, it can’t just whine. It needs its own grass-roots movement”. In another column Friedman promoted Americans Elect, an organization trying to field a radical-centrist candidate for the 2012 U.S. presidential election. That column decried “the two-party duopoly that has dominated American political life”. Friedman’s radical-centrist columns received a considerable amount of criticism, particularly from liberals.

In September 2009, Friedman wrote an article praising China’s one-party autocracy, saying that it was “led by a reasonably enlightened group of people” and that China’s leaders are “boosting gasoline prices” and “overtaking us in electric cars, solar power, energy efficiency, batteries, nuclear power and wind power.” The article was in turn subject to critical analysis: Matt Lewis who wrote, “Friedman’s apparent wish for a ‘benign’ dictator is utopian, inasmuch as it ignores Lord Acton’s warning that ‘absolute power corrupts absolutely.'” and William Easterly who quotes Friedman’s one-party autocracy assertions as part of his academic paper in which he concluded that, “Formal theory and evidence provides little or no basis on which to believe the benevolent autocrat story” and that, “economists should retain their traditional skepticism for stories that have little good theory or empirics to support them.” However, in a July 2012 article in the NYT, he also wrote that the current Chinese leadership has not used its surging economic growth to also introduce gradual political reform and that, “Corruption is as bad as ever, institutionalized transparency and rule of law remain weak and consensual politics nonexistent.” When asked if he had “China envy” during a Fresh Dialogues interview, Friedman replied, “You detect the envy of someone who wants his own government to act democratically with the same effectiveness that China can do autocratically.” Likewise, in a 2011 interview with the BBC Friedman says that he wants his children to live in a world where “there’s a strong America counterbalancing a strong and thriving China, and not one where you have a strong and rising China and an America that is uncertain, weak and unable to project power economically and militarily it historically did.”

In 2007, Friedman viewed American immigration laws as too restrictive and damaging to U.S. economic output: “It is pure idiocy that Congress will not open our borders—as wide as possible—to attract and keep the world’s first-round intellectual draft choices in an age when everyone increasingly has the same innovation tools and the key differentiator is human talent.”

In Green: The New Red, White and Blue (2007), Friedman elaborates on the green technologies and efforts touched on in Addicted to Oil and in doing so, attempts to redefine green energy as geostrategic, geoeconomic, capitalistic and patriotic. He explores efforts by companies and individuals to reduce their carbon footprint and save money with conservation, efficiency, and technologies such as solar, wind, biomass, nuclear, and clean coal.

Critics of Friedman’s position on the Iraq War have noted his recurrent assertion that “the next six months” will prove critical in determining the outcome of the conflict. A May 2006 study by Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting cited 14 examples of Friedman’s declaring the next “few months” or “six months” as a decisive or critical period, dating from in November 2003, describing it as “a long series of similar do-or-die dates that never seem to get any closer”.

In a live television interview aired June 11, 2006, on CNN, Howard Kurtz asked Friedman about the concept: “Now, I want to understand how a columnist’s mind works when you take positions, because you were chided recently for writing several times in different occasions ‘the next six months are crucial in Iraq.'” Friedman responded, “The fact is that the outcome there is unclear, and I reflected that in my column. And I will continue to reflect.” Responding to prodding from Stephen Colbert, Friedman said in 2007, “We’ve run out of six months. It’s really time to set a deadline.”

Addicted to Oil (2006) premiered at the Silverdocs Documentary Festival at 5:30 PM on June 16, 2006, and aired on June 24, 2006, on the Discovery Times Channel. In it he examined the geopolitical, economic, and environmental consequences of petroleum use and ways that green technologies such as alternative fuels and energy efficiency and conservation can reduce oil dependence.

In his September 29, 2005, column in The New York Times, Friedman entertained the idea of supporting the Kurds and Shias in a civil war against the Sunnis: “If they the Sunnis won’t come around, we should arm the Shiites and Kurds and leave the Sunnis of Iraq to reap the wind.”

In Does Europe Hate Us? (2005), Friedman travelled through Britain, France and Germany, talking with academics, journalists, Marshall and Rhodes scholars, young Muslims and others about the nature of the strained relationship between Europe and the United States.

Additionally, in 2005 he was elected as a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board.

Friedman received the 2004 Overseas Press Club Award for lifetime achievement and the same year was named to the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.

In The Other Side of Outsourcing (2004), he visited a call centre in Bangalore, interviewing the young Indians working there, and then travelled to an impoverished rural part of India, where he debated the pros and cons of globalization with locals (this trip spawned his later book The World is Flat).

Friedman supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq, writing that the establishment of a democratic state in the Middle East would force other countries in the region to liberalize and modernize. In his February 9, 2003, column for The Wall Street Journal, Friedman also pointed to the lack of compliance with the United Nations Security Council Resolution regarding Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction: “The French position is utterly incoherent. The inspections have not worked yet, says Mr. de Villepin, because Saddam has not fully cooperated, and, therefore, we should triple the number of inspectors. But the inspections have failed not because of a shortage of inspectors. They have failed because of a shortage of compliance on Saddam’s part, as the French know. The way you get that compliance out of a thug like Saddam is not by tripling the inspectors, but by tripling the threat that if he does not comply he will be faced with a U.N.-approved war.” Since the invasion, Friedman has expressed alarm over the post-invasion conduct of the war by the George W. Bush administration. Nevertheless, until his piece dated August 4, 2006 (see below), his columns remained hopeful to the possibility of a positive conclusion to the Iraq conflict (although his optimism appeared to steadily diminish as the conflict continued). Friedman chided George W. Bush and Tony Blair for “hyping” the evidence, and stated plainly that converting Iraq to democracy “would be a huge undertaking, though, and maybe impossible, given Iraq’s fractious history”. In January 2004, he participated in a forum on Slate called “Liberal Hawks Reconsider the Iraq War”, in which he dismisses the justification for war based on Iraq’s lack of compliance with the U.N. Resolutions: “The right reason for this war.. was to oust Saddam’s regime and partner with the Iraqi people to try to implement the Arab Human Development report’s prescriptions in the heart of the Arab world. That report said the Arab world is falling off the globe because of a lack of freedom, women’s empowerment, and modern education. The right reason for this war was to partner with Arab moderates in a long-term strategy of dehumiliation and redignification.

Friedman has hosted several documentaries for the Discovery Channel from several locations around the world. In Straddling the Fence (2003), he visited the West Bank and spoke to Israelis and Palestinians about the Israeli West Bank barrier and its impact on their lives. Also in 2003, Thomas L. Friedman Reporting: Searching for the Roots of 9/11 aired on the Discovery Times Channel. This program investigated how the Sept. 11th attacks in New York, Pennsylvania, and the Pentagon were viewed in the Muslim world.

In February 2002, Friedman met Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah and encouraged him to make a comprehensive attempt to end the Arab–Israeli conflict by normalizing Arab relations with Israel in exchange for the return of refugees alongside an end to the Israel territorial occupations. Abdullah proposed the Arab Peace Initiative at the Beirut Summit that March, which Friedman has since strongly supported.

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, Friedman’s writing focused more on the threat of terrorism and the Middle East. He was awarded the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary “for his clarity of vision, based on extensive reporting, in commenting on the worldwide impact of the terrorist threat”. These columns were collected and published in the book Longitudes and Attitudes. For a while, his reporting on post-9/11 topics led him to diverge from his prior interests in technological advances and globalization, until he began to research The World Is Flat.

Friedman first discussed his views on globalization in the book The Lexus and the Olive Tree (1999). In 2004, visits to Bangalore, India, and Dalian, China, led Friedman to write a follow-up analysis, The World Is Flat (2005). The book was on the New York Times Best Seller list from its April 2005 publication until May 2007.

During the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Friedman wrote the following in The New York Times on April 23, 1999: “Like it or not, we are at war with the Serbian nation (the Serbs certainly think so), and the stakes have to be very clear: Every week you ravage Kosovo is another decade we will set your country back by pulverizing you. You want 1950? We can do 1950. You want 1389? We can do 1389 too.” Friedman urged the US to destroy “in Belgrade: every power grid, water pipe, bridge [and] road”, annex Albania and Macedonia as “U.S. protectorates”, “occupy the Balkans for years,” and “[g]ive war a chance.”

Friedman covered Secretary of State James Baker during the administration of President George H. W. Bush. Following the election of Bill Clinton in 1992, Friedman became the White House correspondent for the New York Times. In 1994, he began to write more about foreign policy and economics, and moved to the op-ed page of The New York Times the following year as a foreign affairs columnist. In 2002, Friedman won the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for his “clarity of vision, based on extensive reporting, in commenting on the worldwide impact of the terrorist threat.”

In June 1984, Friedman was transferred to Jerusalem, where he served as the New York Times Jerusalem Bureau Chief until February 1988. That year he received a second Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting, which cited his coverage of the First Palestinian Intifada. He wrote a book, From Beirut to Jerusalem, describing his experiences in the Middle East, which won the 1989 U.S. National Book Award for Nonfiction.

Friedman joined the London bureau of United Press International after completing his master’s degree. He was dispatched a year later to Beirut, where he lived from June 1979 to May 1981 while covering the Lebanon Civil War. He was hired by The New York Times as a reporter in 1981 and re-dispatched to Beirut at the start of the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon. His coverage of the war, particularly the Sabra and Shatila massacre, won him the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting (shared with Loren Jenkins of The Washington Post). Alongside David K. Shipler he also won the George Polk Award for foreign reporting.

Friedman’s wife, Ann (née Bucksbaum), a native of Marshalltown, Iowa, is a graduate of Stanford University and the London School of Economics. She is the daughter of real estate developer Matthew Bucksbaum, whom Friedman describes as his “best friend”. They were married in London on Thanksgiving Day 1978 and live in an 11,400-square-foot mansion in Bethesda, Maryland. The couple has two daughters, Orly (b. 1985) and Natalie (b. 1988).

Friedman studied at the University of Minnesota for two years, but later transferred to Brandeis University and graduated summa cum laude in 1975 with a degree in Mediterranean studies. Friedman did also pursue Arabic studies at The American University in Cairo, where he graduated in 1974 from its Arabic language unit (ALU). Friedman later taught a class in economics at Brandeis in 2006, and was a commencement speaker there in 2007.

From an early age, Friedman, whose father often took him to the golf course for a round after work, wanted to be a professional golfer. He played a lot of sports, and became serious about tennis and golf. He caddied at a local country club and in 1970 caddied for professional golfer Chi Chi Rodriguez when the US Open came to town.

Friedman is Jewish. He attended Hebrew school five days a week until his Bar Mitzvah, then St. Louis Park High School, where he wrote articles for his school’s newspaper. He became enamored with Israel after a visit there in December 1968, and he spent all three of his high school summers living on Kibbutz HaHotrim, near Haifa. He has characterized his high school years as “one big celebration of Israel’s victory in the Six-Day War.”

Friedman has also come under criticism from supporters of Israel. In an op-ed, Yitzhak Benhorin criticized Friedman’s alleged suggestion that Israel relinquish territory it had occupied in the 1967 Middle Eastern War.

Thomas Loren Friedman (/ˈ f r iː d m ən / ; born July 20, 1953) is an American political commentator and author. He is a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner who is a weekly columnist for The New York Times. He has written extensively on foreign affairs, global trade, the Middle East, globalization, and environmental issues.

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