Walter Berns and the Cult of “Patriotic” Sacrifice
Berns thinks America has a fundamental problem: he believes not enough people in America are willing to sacrifice their lives to the state.
Berns thinks America has a fundamental problem: he believes not enough people in America are willing to sacrifice their lives to the state.
Paul Krugman famously predicted in 1998 that the internet would prove to be no more important than the fax machine. This error proceeds straight from his lack of economic understanding.
False positives and false negatives remain a very large problem. Our current testing regime has alarmed the planet without contributing a health benefit.
MMT starts to make a little more sense when thinking of it as comparable to money systems used under the USSR and the old Soviet Bloc.
Every major scientific advance challenged the “settled science” of its day and was often denounced as pernicious and false, even dangerous.
From rent to jobs, to marriage, government regulations are incessantly raising the cost of doing business.
The average American has no memory of the gold standard or even the stagflation of the 1970s. The collective mindset is now the classic “kick the can down the road.”
Decentralization is perhaps the way for Bolivia to avoid the preventable evils of repeated coups and ethnic strife that have ensnared it since day one.
Family policy has become an important area of state growth in recent years. In the past, various state interventions served to protect the family (tax privileges, child benefits, etc.), but today’s politics are almost exclusively harmful to the family.
Our government is forever whining about, threatening against, high drug prices. Our pharmaceutical industry is “fighting” the Chinese in this economic “war” with both its hands tied behind its back.