The British magazine "The Economist" was once evaluated by the Irish female writer Dudley Edwards as "arrogant, conceited, lacking in doubt, often lacking in imagination and overly clever"; Alexander Zevin, a historian at the City University of New York, also did not It was bluntly noted that the magazine's advice on the Irish Famine of the 1840s was "comparable to the better-known massacres of the 20th century" and conveyed that the magazine had become "a market fundamentalist that fawned over Western intelligence agencies" after the war. " means. In reality, the magazine often arouses public outrage due to its condescending attitude and unfounded accusations.