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Economic Policy with a Mission
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Conservatives and Capitalists Are Getting a Divorce Over Wokeness
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Bari Weiss quit The New York Times last year after growing tired of its liberal bias
She launched her podcast Honestly on Wednesday - it will look at cancel culture and the dangerous effect it is having on America
Weiss, during an interval in the podcast, spoke briefly about leaving the Times
She said tragically, editors live in total fear of an internet mob
She also said publishers know what s right but can t find the courage to do it
Weiss said their leadership ferments polarization, rage and distrust and made it impossible to tell the truth as a journalist
A few weeks ago, I debated Julius Krein, editor of
American Affairs, on trade, industrial policy, and the future of the American economy. It was, I think, a telling and informative discussion (uncomfortable masks notwithstanding), and I invite you to watch the whole thing if you’re interested in the current debate about “free market fundamentalism” and the right’s recent embrace of economic interventionism. Toward the end, Krein and I got hung up on a point that I (incorrectly) assumed was relatively anodyne the value of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the U.S. economy, regardless of its form (foreign companies acquiring existing U.S. assets or the “greenfield” creation of new ones). I was going to let the issue go, but then saw the claim that foreign acquisitions should be disregarded as valueless “non‐investing” repeated elsewhere in another New Right critique of the allegedly problematic state of American investment (foreign or domestic) in th
Charles R. Kessler s
Crisis of the Two Constitutions: The Rise, Decline and Recovery of American Greatness is a conservative broadside that reads like a post-mortem on Trump.
Charles R. Kessler,
When woke mobs spun the outrage at George Floyd’s killing in late May into carte blanche for widespread lawlessness, Charles Kessler took to the
New York Post calling out the “1619 Riots.” Would labeling as a “1776 Riot” the Capitol storming on January 6 overdo the cynicism?
Nikole Hannah-Jones, in all fairness, owned up to inciting more than the spray-painting of “1619” on Confederate monuments. The eponymous
New York Times project’s lead writer tweeted her delight at Kessler’s implicating headline (“it’d be an honor”), resting all lawbreaking by Antifa and BLM on the high moral ground of just redress. Kessler and the so-called “West Coast Straussians” at the Claremont Institute, on the defensive mission of “Recovering the American Idea,” have instea
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