THE UNPARALLELED SQUARENESS OF PETE BUTTIGIEG
WIRED|July - August 2023
Sure, the US secretary of transportation has thoughts on building bridges. But infrastructure occupies just a sliver of his voluminous mind
VIRGINIA HEFFERNAN
THE UNPARALLELED SQUARENESS OF PETE BUTTIGIEG

THE CURIOUS MIND of Pete Buttigieg holds much of its functionality in reserve. Even as he discusses railroads and airlines, down to the pointillist data that is his current stock-in-trade, the US secretary of transportation comes off like a Mensa black card holder who might have a secret Go habit or a three-second Rubik's Cube solution or a knack for supplying, off the top of his head, the day of the week for a random date in 1404, along with an uncondescending history of the Julian and Gregorian calendars.

As Secretary Buttigieg and I talked in his underfurnished corner office one afternoon in early spring, I slowly became aware that his cabinet job requires only a modest portion of his cognitive powers. Other mental facilities, no kidding, are apportioned to the Iliad, Puritan historiography, and Knausgaard's Spring-though not in the original Norwegian (slacker). Fortunately, he was willing to devote yet another apse in his cathedral mind to making his ideas about three mighty themes-neoliberalism, masculinity, and Christianity-intelligible to me.

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