- How to pay for the Green New Deal Simon Wren-Lewis, mainlymacro
- Racism in an elevator Alison Bowles, Policy of Truth
- The fitful march of religious liberty Johnson & Koyama, Cato Unbound
- The why of religious freedom Ethan Blevins, NOL
Links
Nightcap
- Franklin D. Roosevelt Jackson Lears, London Review of Books
- Memoir of captivity in Iran John Tamny, RealClearMarkets
- Towards decentralization Andy Smarick, National Affairs
- Did humans tame themselves? Melvin Konnor, the Atlantic
Nightcap
- Ottoman nostalgia (back to the Balkans) Alev Scott, History Today
- Did post-Marxist theories destroy Communist regimes? Branko Milanovic, globalinequality
- Islam in Eastern Europe (a silver thread) Jacob Mikanowski, Los Angeles Review of Books
- Against Imperial Nostalgia: Or why Empires are Kaka Barry Stocker, NOL
Nightcap
- Tensions between liberalism and democracy from a Tocquevillean perspective Ewa Atanassow (interview), JHIBlog
- High theory and low seriousness Gustav Jönsson, Quillette
- Another misuse of Eastern ideas Amy Olberding, Aeon
- The real reason Netflix is cancelling their Marvel shows Mark Hughes, Forbes
Nightcap
- Is there an actual China-Japan thaw happening? Wijaya & Osaki, Diplomat
- The occupation of France after Napoleon Christine Haynes, Age of Revolutions
- Ilhan Omar and the power of clarity Michael Koplow, Ottomans & Zionists
- Blackmail! (Libertarian red meat!) Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution
Nightcap
- Caught between the Devil and the deep blue sea (Nigeria) Fisayo Soyombo, Al-Jazeera
- Jared Kushner and the art of humiliation (Palestine) Hirsh & Lynch, Foreign Policy
- “The Blob” and the Hell of good intentions (Washington) Christopher Preble, American Conservative
- How Africa is converting China (to Christianity) Christopher Rhodes, UnHerd
Nightcap
- Trump’s wall and the legal perils of “emergency powers” Ilya Somin, Volokh Conspiracy
- Can Trump spin a wall from nothing? Michael Kruse, Politico
- In defence of conservative Marxism Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
- We must stand strong against the men who would be kings Charles Cooke, National Review
RCH: Calvin Coolidge
I took on Calvin Coolidge this week. My Tuesday column dealt with Coolidge and his use of the radio, while this weekend’s column argues why you should love him:
2. Immigration. At odds with the rest of his anti-racist administration, Coolidge’s immigration policy was his weakest link. Although he was not opposed to immigration personally, and although he used the bully pulpit to speak out in favor of treating immigrants with respect and dignity, Coolidge was a party man, and the GOP was the party of immigration quotas in the 1920s. Reluctantly, and with public reservations, Coolidge signed the Immigration Act of 1924, which significantly limited immigration into the United States up until the mid-1960s, when new legislation overturned the law.
Please, read the rest.
Nightcap
- The St. Valentine’s Day massacre Evan Bleier, RealClearLife
- The Sons of Mars and the ancient Mediterranean Erich Anderson, History Today
- The two trilemmas today Branko Milanovic, globalinequality
- How the United States reinvented empire Patrick Iber, New Republic
Nightcap
- A clash of the sacred and the secular Nader Hashemi, Liberty Forum
- The perks and perils of having a state-run church James Robinson, Cato Unbound
- Dutch pasts and the American archive Derek Kane O’Leary, JHIBlog
- Liberalism, democracy, and polarization Edwin van de Haar, NOL
Nightcap
- Islam, blasphemy, and the East-West divide Mustafa Akyol, Liberty Forum
- Religious freedom and the modern state Koyama & Johnson, Cato Unbound
- Did Kongolese Catholicism lead to slave revolutions? Mohammed Elnaiem, JSTOR Daily
- Ottoman autocracy, Turkish liberty Barry Stocker, NOL
Nightcap
- Intellectuals and a century of political hero worship William Anthony Hay, Modern Age
- John Stuart Mill: a not so secular saint James Smith, Los Angeles Review of Books
- Irving Babbitt’s history of ideas Simon Brown, JHIBlog
- Classical knowledge, lost & found: a history in seven cities David Abulafia, Literary Review
Nightcap
- UCLA and its new ideological litmus tests Erik Gilbert, Quillette
- Sovereignty and the Latin American experience Greg Grandin, London Review of Books
- How good is television as a medium of history? Castor, et al, History Today
- SETI’s charismatic megafauna Nick Nielsen, Centauri Dreams
Nightcap
- Pontius Pilate: the first Christian? Branko Milanovic, globalinequality
- Politics and forgiveness – a leftist proposal John Holbo, Crooked Timber
- Bumps on the road to pot legalization Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- America’s bewildering imperialism Damon Linker, the Week
Nightcap
- The battle for truth in Soviet science Michael Gordin, Aeon
- Governing least: a New England libertarianism Dan Moller, Bleeding Heart Libertarians
- A tale of two paths Michael Koplow, Ottomans and Zionists
- 10 walls that have actually been built – My latest at RealClearHistory