- Can Francis change the Church? Nancy Dallavalle, Commonweal
- A Catholic debate over liberalism Park MacDougald, City Journal
- Why Hari Seldon was part of the problem Nick Nielsen, Grand Strategy Annex
- How not to die (soon) Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias
Author: Brandon Christensen
Nightcap
- Surviving Modi’s undeclared war on Muslims Furquan Siddiqui, Baffler
- Do the Democrats have a foreign policy? Jessica Mathews, NYRB
- Praise for Elizabeth Warren’s student debt plan Thomas Knapp, TGC
- A cocktail: cosmopolitanism as a culture Brooke Allen, New Criterion
“A classical liberal view of the Iran crisis?”
Classical liberals will not be surprised by the repeated occurrence of violence and war in the Middle East and will understand the realities of the unstable region where Iran is an important player. Their analysis will view the regional balance of power in the context of the global balance of power. They will also take account of the history of US-Iranian relations […]
This is from fellow Notewriter Edwin, writing for the Institute for Economic Affairs in London. It was part of a nightcap a few days ago, but I thought I’d give it some more love with a post of its own.
Edwin likes to use the “balance of power” strategy to explain the classical liberal position (check out his now classic article in the Independent Review), but I don’t know how true this is. Traditionally, hasn’t the balance of power method been favored by conservatives like Metternich and Kissinger?
I know he’ll respond by telling me that I have a socially liberal view of IR because I favor more federation, but I don’t know how true this is either. Shouldn’t trade-offs and cooperation in the context of power take precedence in classical liberal theories of IR? What sounds more liberal to you, then: a strategy of balancing power between separate actors, or a strategy of finding trade-offs and binding actors together in a manner (federal) that maximizes those trade-offs?
Nightcap
- One positive to come out of Zimbabwe’s chaos Peter Carty, Spectator
- Proxy wars and blowback Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- The fate of the Kurds Janet Klein, Origins
- Before the Kochs, there were the… Darren Dochuk, Politico
Nightcap
- Liberating the precolonial history of Africa Toby Green, Aeon
- The real Gujarat Model is not about economic growth Shikha Dalmia, the Week
- The Methodist split everybody should be talking about Todd Webb, Age of Revolutions
- The economic policy of Elizabeth Warren Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution
Nightcap
- The strange death of libertarianism John Quiggan, Crooked Timber
- No sympathy for Bernie Sanders Paul Mirengoff, Powerline
- Deporting Ho Chi Minh Tom Vaizey, History Today
- The politics of American aid to the Soviets Joshua Sanborn, TLS
Nightcap
- The United States, Iran, and the 1953 coup Gregory Brew, TNSR
- Iran, Kurdistan, and reality in 2020 Iraq Amberin Zaman, Al-Monitor
- “America First” and its forgotten Senator Richard Drake, American Conservative
- “We want sound money, and lots of it” Joseph Salerno, Mises Wire
Nightcap
- Goodbye, Neal Peart Suleman Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- Great economics, bad politics (Banerjee & Duflo) Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- The Golden Age of the Federal Reserve is here Scott Sumner, MoneyIllusion
- Randolph Borne and the Progressives Nikhil Pal Singh, New Statesman
Nightcap
- A classical liberal view of the Iran crisis? Van de Haar & Kamall, IEA
- Great essay on state capacity libertarianism Geloso & Salter, AEIR
- The loneliness of the resistance protester Micah Sifry, New Republic
- The Woke primary is over and everybody lost Matt Welch, Reason
Be Our Guest: “Suing Juul Won’t Solve Anything”
NOL‘s “Be Our Guest” feature is as popular as ever this year. Here’s John Lancaster with the latest:
Peer driven rumors, videos of experimentation, forums, news, and entertainment sources provide nigh infinite opportunities for young ones to pick up on vices. The appeal of vaping would’ve caused widespread exposure through said channels anyway. The most marketing does at that point is convince the willing participants to choose a particular brand rather than take on the act itself.
Juul is a company that sells vapes, which are those cigarette replacements that have been so popular lately. Please, read the rest, and shoot us an email if you want your voice heard!
Nightcap
- Sir Roger Scruton (1944-2020) Johnathan Pearce, Samizdata
- Sir Roger Scruton and free market economics Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- Roger Scruton’s conservatism Bradley Birzer, American Conservative
- The problem of defining civilization Nick Nielsen, Grand Strategy Annex
Nightcap
- Outlaw universities (affirmative action) Michael Huemer, Fake Nous
- The case against judicial supremacy Marc DeGirolami, Law & Liberty
- Another case against executive supremacy David Cohen, Politico
- From outer space, the Earth is mostly blue Margarette Lincoln, Literary Review
Be Our Guest: “The U.S. Economy: A Fading Illusion?”
This essay, by longtime NOL reader and CPA Jack Curtis, is the first essay of 2020’s “Be Our Guest” feature. Here is a snippet:
This widespread financial vulnerability seems a natural result of government policies that minimize interest rates and support monetary inflation as the Federal Reserve and other central banks have continued to do in recent decades. There is little incentive to save money when it offers no significant return and its value is inflated away. Governments that cling to such policies are imposing dependence upon their citizens, forcing them in essence to live hand to mouth, deprived of the ability to provide for their own futures.
Jack paints a pretty gloom picture of the U.S. economy. Does this square with what economists have been telling us about the state of the world? Please, read the whole essay, and if you have been thinking about writing for the public in 2020, give us a holler. We’d be happy to put your thoughts up for the whole world to read.
Nightcap
- How the French Revolution reshaped the Catholic Church Glauco Schettini, Age of Empires
- The man who saved the Electoral College Christopher DeMuth, National Affairs
- Is the name of the country Myanmar or Burma? Mark Clifford, Asian Review of Books
- Suicide is not an act of cowardice Ken White, the Atlantic
Nightcap
- The hunt for human nature Erika Milam, Aeon
- The negative capability of a good legislator Federico Sosa Valle, NOL
- Is feminism responsible for the persistence of monarchy? Arianne Chernock, Public Books
- Poor white boys in present-day England Kenan Malik, Guardian