- How inequality makes us poorer Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- The ancient Persians had epics, too Soni Wadhwa, Asian Review of Books
- Showdown in Berkeley Rick Brownell, Medium
- Three suicides and a funeral (the Soviets) Jarrod Hayes, Duck of Minerva
Author: Brandon Christensen
Nightcap
- Populism and American political institutions Michael Zuckert, National Affairs
- The Fed’s shifting goalposts George Selgin, Alt-M
- Tariffs can be deflationary Scott Sumner, MoneyIllusion
- Rashida Tlaib and the allure of shiny objects Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
Nightcap
- Plato and teaching foreign policy Luke Perez, Duck of Minerva
- Suicidal elites Joel Kotkin, Quillette
- Debating the far right Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- Buddhist Hell park Laetitia Barbier, Atlas Obscura
Nightcap
- Who lost Czechoslovakia? Benn Steil, History Today
- How the Black Death changed Europe’s cities Jedwab, Johnson, and Koyama, Voxeu
- Victorian England and the Japanese Peter Gordon, Asian Review of Books
- Solzhenitsyn and the human spirit Daniel Mahoney, Modern Age
Nightcap
- The Second Earl of Liverpool SJD Green, Law & Liberty
- Multilateralism is cooperative, not imperial Ankit Panda, Diplomat
- Should we worry about deplatforming? Arnold Kling, askblog
- Eating someone Lori Marino, Aeon
Nightcap
- Ayn Rand and international politics Edwin van de Haar, NOL
- Seeing the Gothic in Notre Dame blaze Cynthia Houng, JHIBlog
- So let it be unwritten Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- The persistence of poverty Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias
“People perish for cold metal”
The interrogators did not write up charge sheets because no one needed their papers. And whether or not a [prison] sentence would be pasted on was of very little interest. Only one thing was important: Give up your gold, viper! The state needs gold and you don’t.
This is all from Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago. There’s more:
If you in fact had no gold, then your situation was hopeless. You would be beaten, burned, tortured, and steamed to the point of death or until they finally came to believe you. But if you had gold, you could determine the extent of your torture, the limits of your endurance, and your own fate.
It’s a good book, so far, but trying to compare the Soviet Union after World War I and a brief civil war to the present-day United States is a bridge too far. The only Americans today who might share the Gulag experience are the black ones, and even then their situation is less of a gulag archipelago and more of a traditional oppressed ethnic minority.
Nightcap
- The stoic grief of the Gold Star Mothers John McKay, American Conservative
- “My body, my choice” Ilya Somin, Volokh Conspiracy
- “Frontier” history has gotten much better, no thanks to David McCullough Rebecca Onion, Slate
- The loss of a symbol of civilization Nick Nielsen, The View from Oregon
Nightcap
- Winning over the Upper Silesians Stefanie Woodard, H-Borderlands
- The Holy Roman Union Dalibor Rohac, American Interest
- Talking about the Jews Simcha Gross, Marginalia
- Herbert Spencer and Social Darwinism Alberto Mingardi, Law & Liberty
Nightcap
- The communist who explained history Corey Robin, New Yorker
- On China’s new naval base in Cambodia Charles Edel, War on the Rocks
- Why Trumpist populism is so popular Emmanuel Todd, City Journal
- How the Soviets learned to think freely Jennifer Wilson, New Republic
RCH: The strangest riot in American history
Thus the Astor Place, like every other theater in the United States, was unable to make itself too exclusive. Its founders, like those who founded the republic itself, had to find a way to live with an equality that was democratic in nature. Democratic equality was, and is, a different monster than the equality Europeans had been grappling with since Late Antiquity (the tail end of the Roman Empire). The old equality was based on Christianity and on the feudalistic property rights regimes that undergirded Europe. Democratic equality, on the other hand, is based on notions of self-rule and on capitalistic property rights. Basically, in Western culture, free men and money replaced piety and honor when it came to mutual understandings of equality.
Please, read the rest.
Nightcap
- Let us now turn to the criticisms of Rothbard’s anarchism David Gordon, Power & Market
- Why Sri Lanka? Vishal Arora, the Diplomat
- Sincere religious belief can still be plain old bigotry John Holbo, Crooked Timber
- The real “trap” created by two-earner culture Ross Douthat, New York Times
Nightcap
- How Java’s eccentric saints challenge Islamism Tim Hannigan, Asian Review of Books
- Advice from medieval monks Jamie Kreiner, Aeon
- The Jews in China Noah Lachs, Times Literary Supplement
- Conservativism is about reform, not stasis Timothy Goeglein, Modern Age
Nightcap
- Freedom isn’t free Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias
- The embarrassment of riches Brian Doherty, Reason
- American hegemony and imperial control Emma Ashford, War on the Rocks
- On prison nurseries Naomi Schaefer Riley, National Affairs