“Zacchaeus Was
a Wee Little Man” is a children’s song that those of us who grew up going to
Sunday School sang and taught our children to sing. This blog post is about
Robert Reich, who is a contemporary “wee little man” and also one of the most
articulate political pundits in the U.S. today. (Note that he pronounces his
name Rike, rhyming with bike and like.) 
Reich with Clinton in the 1990s
Robert Bernard Reich is a political economist, professor, author, and commentator who served as U.S. Secretary of Labor under President Bill Clinton (1993~97) and also served in the Ford and Carter administrations. He was named by Time magazine as one of the ten most effective cabinet members of the 20th century. Next week (on June 24), he will celebrate his 80th birthday.
Reich was born with
multiple epiphyseal dysplasia, also known as Fairbank’s disease. That is a rare
genetic disorder that affects bone growth and results in short stature. Reich
stands 4 feet 11 inches tall, so he is 9 or 10 inches shorter than the average White
U.S. male of the same age.
As Reich
himself explained to NPR in 2023, his shortness is a kind of deformity in which
the cartilage at the end of one’s bones that normally adds additional bone
during growth simply doesn’t do its job. But that deformity didn’t keep him
from doing his job as a professor at Harvard (1981~92), Brandeis (1997~2005), and the University of
California, Berkeley, from 2006 to 2023.
Last year Reich
published Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, referring both to his
stature and to a country that he thinks has fallen short of its ideals.
Every day, I
read four political pundits,
the posts by Heather Cox Richardson, Reich, Joyce Vance, and Paul Krugman. Richardson
usually posts after midnight, so I read her early every morning. Reich usually posts
at least once every day, and I generally read one of his articles daily before
noon also.
I don’t know
why it is, but so many public intellectuals, such as the ones just mentioned
except for Richardson, are Jewish by heritage and identity but not by religious
observance. This is clearly the case with Reich. His essays often echo the Hebrew
Bible’s twin imperatives of justice and righteousness, such as those found in
Isaiah 1:17 and Amos 5:24.
I find the
posts by the scholars/commentators just mentioned are more beneficial than the
curated articles in The New York Times and/or The Washington
Post, of which I have cancelled my subscription as I no longer want to read
a newspaper with a billionaire determining its editorial content.
In addition to
reading Richardson’s daily newsletters, I also encourage you to read Reich’s
Substack posts, which are also available at no charge. As one who is no longer
receiving a paycheck from some institution, Reich can (and does) say what he
thinks is most important, letting the chips fall where they may. Even though he
is a “wee little man,” he certainly stands tall.
Reich’s June
16 Substack post is especially noteworthy. It is titled “Friendly
advice I refuse to take.”
(I encourage you to click on the link and read the entire article.) Next Wednesday
will be Reich’s 80th birthday, and the “friendly advice” was from an
old friend of about the same age. Reich said he “lost it” when his friend told
him, “You’ve got to slow down.”
The “wee little
man” retorted, “We’re in a national emergency!” So, “That’s exactly
why I’m not slowing down!” He goes on to say, “I’m doing what I do
because—and as long as—I’m still able to.”
I am about
eight years older than Reich, and to be honest, I am thinking about “retiring”
in two years when I turn 90. But that is not definite at this point. Maybe I
will keep on doing what I am doing, which is mainly writing three blog articles
each month, as long as I’m still able to do so.
Gordon Cosby (1918~2013), the co-founder of the Church of the Saviour in
Washington, D.C., was widely regarded as one of the most influential pastors of
the 20th century. He is quoted as saying that “a minister never
retires; we are simply reassigned to new forms of service.”
For Cosby, vocation
was never a job description but a lifelong posture of availability—an openness
to whatever work love requires next. Even in his nineties, long after most
clergy had stepped away from public ministry, Cosby kept showing up in small,
quiet ways: listening, blessing, encouraging, and standing with those on the
margins.
So, like Cosby
did and Reich is seeking to do, I want to keep on seeking to do good and trying
to write well for as long as I am able.
[Note: Research and writing assistance was provided by Claude (Anthropic) A.I.]

To this point, comments have been few today. The first came from Thinking Friend Eric Dollard in Chicago. He wrote, "Thanks, Leroy, for bringing up Robert Reich. I read his articles whenever they show up on MSN or in 'The Guardian.' I almost always agree 100 percent with what he writes. I very rarely see articles by Richardson, but I read ones by Krugman, whose articles appear less often on MSN than those of Reich. I do not recall ever reading any articles by Joyce Vance. She is more of a legal analyst for MS NOW, which I do not watch as I watch very little TV.
ReplyDelete"One of my favorite columnists is Arwa Mahdawi, who writes for 'The Guardian.' Her primary focus is women’s rights. She is very witty and entertaining and once wrote, 'If you have nothing intelligent to say, go on Fox News and demonize immigrants.'
"I also enjoy reading articles by writers at 'The Atlantic'."
Thanks, Eric, for your comments. Your reading habits are quite different from mine, as you regularly read "The Guardian" and "The Atlantic," and I don't read either. Thanks also for introducing me to Arwa Mahdawi, about whom I knew nothing. She seems like a very perceptive and important journalist.
DeleteAs I did in today's post (again) I highly recommend subscribing to Heather Cox Richardson's daily newsletter. You can get it for no charge, and she is both a historian and a first-class political pundit, and I "never" miss reading her early every morning.
Your reading is much broader than mine, but at my current level of energy and stamina, I have decided to focus on reading what I think is most important. That is the reason I choose to read both Richardson and Reich every day without fail.
Joyce Vance is a legal analyst, indeed, but she is also an important political pundit. Her Substack account is called "Civil Discourse with Joyce Vance," which she started four years ago. You may be interested in reading what she posted on June 13 at this link: https://joycevance.substack.com/p/autocracy-democracy-and-kleptocracy.
Here are brief comments from a local Thinking Friend who retired a year ago:
ReplyDelete"I enjoyed your blog today. I especially liked Cosby’s availability definition: 'availability—an openness to whatever work love requires next.' That is what I have enjoyed about retirement the most, having more time to be available for people."