Nightcap

  1. Schumpeterian enigmas David Glasner, Uneasy Money
  2. Is John Roberts the new Anthony Kennedy? Damon Root, Reason
  3. Economics of Federalism” (pdf) Inman & Rubenfield
  4. Gray mists & ancient stones Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, New Criterion

Nightcap

  1. A meditation on suffering Paul Komesaroff, Hedgehog Review
  2. What art scolds have in common Aeon Skoble, RCL
  3. Coping with bullshit Richard Gunderman, Law & Liberty
  4. Paid sick leave and Schelling focal points Rick Weber, NOL

Nightcap

  1. Why have we been recycling plastic? Gonzalez & Sullivan, Planet Money
  2. The literary scene in the Great Depression Ben Terrall, CounterPunch
  3. Stealing from the Saracens Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times
  4. The long road to reaction Thomas Meaney, New Statesman

Nightcap

  1. Hypocrisy, racism, and MBA candidates Natalie Solent, Samizdata
  2. Naive realism and the pandemic Arnold Kling, askblog
  3. A brief chat on world government Evan Huus, Grand Unified Empty!
  4. Portrait of an ordinary Nazi Malcolm Forbes, American Interest

Nightcap

  1. Another Arab state has recognized Israel Mark Landler, NY Times
  2. Why can’t Seoul and Tokyo get along? Sung-Yoon Lee, Origins
  3. Is this how the American Century ends and China’s begins? Tom McTague, Atlantic
  4. Charles Murray reviews Ross Douthat Claremont Review of Books

Nightcap

  1. 9/11 + 19: Lessons Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
  2. Misinformation and foreign policy Scott Sumner, EconLog
  3. The Hayek question Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
  4. Why not anarchy? Daniel McCarthy, Modern Age

Nightcap

  1. On press freedom Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
  2. Remembering David Graeber Nicholas Haggerty, Commonweal
  3. Selling the revolution to Iran’s next generation Suzanne Maloney, WOTR
  4. How Europeans viewed the Turks Margaret Meserve, TLS

Nightcap

  1. A murder in outer space? What about the Arctic? Sam Kean, Slate
  2. Russians, racism, and international relations Lisa Gaufman, Duck of Minerva
  3. Implicit and structural witchery Bryan Caplan, EconLog
  4. An anthropology of childhood The Whole Sky

Nightcap

  1. Gold buggers Nathan Lane, Los Angeles Review of Books
  2. The fractured land hypothesis (pdf) Koyama et al, NBER
  3. Territoriality and beyond (pdf) John Gerard Ruggie, Int’l Org
  4. Revenge of the nation-state Helen Thompson, New Statesman

Nightcap

  1. Cancel Culture and the discourse of Ad Hoc-ery Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
  2. Should we admire the Vikings? Rebecca Onion, Slate
  3. A new theory of Western civilization Judith Shulevitz, Atlantic
  4. Our brave new remote work world Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias

A short note on great journalism

I recently linked to an excellent piece on colonial history the other day that I thought was worth your time. Not because it was going to blow you away with facts or knowledge, but because it represented what I think good journalism is.

Now, the fact that good journalism is difficult to find in the Anglo-American press is noteworthy. It’s not that we don’t have great public intellectuals, or even a great media ecology and access to all of the knowledge in the world. We do. It’s that our traditional media institutions have thought of themselves as truth-tellers and centrists since World War II. This conceit has allowed journalists to move steadily to the Left without having to qualm morally about doing so. The problem with Anglo-American journalists is that they think their worldview represents the center of everything.

Nightcap

  1. David Graeber, 1961–2020 New York Review of Books
  2. Eat the Buddha: China & Tibet Rana Mitter, Literary Review
  3. Understanding the path to Iraq Joseph Stieb, WOTR
  4. Against space exploration Andrew Szarejko, Law & Liberty

Nightcap

  1. Race is front and center in French elections Méheut & Onishi, NY Times
  2. Japan’s new PM is libertarianish Scott Sumner, EconLog
  3. The values of democracy, and a vote Chris Freiman, 200-Proof Liberals
  4. Objective fouls and the rule of law Tyler Cowen, MR

Nightcap

  1. How David Graeber changed the way we see money Matthew Zeitlin, New Republic
  2. What’s wrong with “cancel culture,” again? Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
  3. Why socialists should care about about American federalism Chris Maisano, Jacobin
  4. In loving memory of David Graeber Andrej Grubačić, PM Press

Nightcap

  1. The iron wall versus the villa in the jungle Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
  2. The pragmatic case for a unitary executive John McGinnis, Law & Liberty
  3. Catholic Social Teaching in the West today Bernard Prusak, Commonweal
  4. Ayn Rand’s philosophy might be questionable – but what about her prose? Sam Leith, TLS