- Bringing natural law to international relations Samuel Gregg, Law & Liberty
- How to face down the Secret Service Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- Affirmative Action at Harvard and statistics Gelman, Goel, & Ho, Boston Review
- The right’s triumph; the Left’s complicity Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
civil liberty
Nightcap
- Mexico’s democracy is already in bad shape Noel Maurer, The Power and the Money
- Gorsuch and Sotomayor join forces in defense of Sixth Amendment rights Joe Setyon, Hit & Run
- How the Latin East contributed to a unique cultural world Jonathan Rubin, Aeon
- “…he amused himself by creating passports, certificates, permits, government memos, and identification papers.” Paul Grimstad, New Yorker
Nightcap
- The original meaning of the 14th Amendment Damon Root, Reason
- Understanding politics today Stephen Davies, Cato Unbound
- It sometimes begins with Emerson Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- RealClearHistory‘s 10 best history films of 2018
Nightcap
- American Nightmare: the story of a prime FBI suspect in 1996 Atlanta Marie Brenner, Vanity Fair
- The disappearing conservative professor Jon Shields, National Affairs
- Why the British love the oak tree Philip Marsden, Spectator
- Russia, Turkey, and the fate of Idlib Ömer Özkizilcik, Cairo Review
Nightcap
- Police tailgating as entrapment Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- The mandatory canteens of communist China Hunter Lu, Atlas Obscura
- Will Shiite militias become Iraqi Basij? Hamdi Malik, Al-Monitor
- When details matter (Brexit) Chris Dillow, Stumbling & Mumbling
Nightcap
- The return of Henry George Pierre Lemieux, EconLog
- The politics of purity and indigenous rights Grant Havers, Law & Liberty
- The Ottoman Empire’s first map of the United States Nick Danforth, the Vault
- The age that women have babies: how a gap divides America Bui & Miller, the Upshot
10 horrific ways to die (RCH)
Yes, that’s the subject of my weekend column over at RealClearHistory. An excerpt:
4. Cutting off limbs/flaying. The English version of being hanged, drawn, and quartered involved removing genitals, but did any other society in history stoop so low? Um, yes. Not only have penises and/or testicles been removed and vaginas flayed, but they have sometimes been displayed as trophies, eaten, or converted into jewelry. Genitals aren’t the only limbs to have been removed over the years. Fingers and toes, tongues, breasts, eyes, ears, lips, nipples, noses, kneecaps, fingernails, eyelids, skin, and bones have all been forcibly removed over years by governments exacting punishment. Aside from the removal of genitals, flaying is probably the worst of the bunch. That’s when you beat somebody so hard that their skin comes off.
I had a lot of fun writing this, and I suspect my ever-so-patient editor had a lot of fun reading (and editing) it. I hope you enjoy it too! Here’s the rest of it.
RCH: America’s WWII internment camps
Folks, I forgot to link to last weekend’s piece at RealClearHistory. It was about World War II internment camps in the US. An excerpt:
As a quick historical reminder, the United States government, under the direct orders of Democratic president Franklin D. Roosevelt, imprisoned hundreds of thousands of Americans and recently immigrated foreigners for the crime of being Japanese or German (the Italians got some flack, too, but less so than the other two), or for having a Japanese or German surname.
The vast majority of these imprisoned people were Japanese or Japanese-American. In fact, the total amount of interred German or German-American prisoners was roughly 11,000, and the number of Italian or Italian-Americans much smaller than that.
Please, read the rest.
Nightcap
- The man who went to the North Korean place that ‘doesn’t exist’ Megha Mohan, BBC
- Assessing Our Frayed Society with (German-Korean philosopher) Byung-Chul Han Scott Beauchamp, Law & Liberty
- Baxter Street & Jury Duty, Summer of 2016 Edward Miller, Coldnoon
- Ta-Nehisi Coates & the Afro-Pessimist Temptation Darryl Pinckney, New York Review of Books
The TSA Wins
Since 2012 I have been a semi-frequent flyer making about five cross continental round trip flights a year, plus several shorter flights within the Pacific coast. Between now and then I would make it a point to ‘opt out’ of the standard TSA procedure and receive the pat down. I did it for a variety of reasons. For one, don’t like being exposed to radiation and don’t trust the government on the issue.
More than that though, I wanted to resist and encourage my fellow citizens to resist, however small, the security theater the government has us go through in exchange for our freedom to travel. I would not encourage people to resist the police or any armed agent of the state, but by opting out I was taking a stand against government and hoped others would join me.
In five plus years, no one did. The only people I ever had join me in the opt out process was ‘randomly selected’ individals, often Muslims or mis-identified Sikhs. I never saw someone else voluntarily opt out. In retrospect, I suspect noone else saw my actions as a form of protest.
When I took a flight earlier today I went through the standard procedure.* My will to resist, at least in this form, has gone away. In the coming year the TSA rules will become stricter as real ID is finally implemented. I like to think this will lead to popular opposition, but I wouldn’t wager on it. As a nation we’ve given up on asserting our freedom to travel with minimal intrusion.
When I arrived at my final destination I found the below containers blocking me from the entrance. To leave the airport I had to get checked one last time. They don’t seem to be scanners, but when you enter them you are held up for ten or so seconds before being let free. Are they just trying to see what we will put up with before unveiling the next wave of security theater antics?
Thoughts? Have a story about your flying experience(s) to share? Post in the comments below.
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*Funnily enough I ended up being “randomly” choosen to have my luggage physically inspected anyway.

Lunchtime Links
- 25 years after Waco | Freedom of Conscience and the Rule of Law
- The US-Japan Alliance and Soviet competition | Some thoughts on “Thinking About Libertarian Foreign Policy”
- Japan’s rent-a-family industry | In Search of Firmer Cosmopolitan Solidarity
- The story of the skull of a victim of the Indian Uprising of 1857 | Myths of Sovereignty and British Isolation, III
- Reviving India’s classical liberal party | Classical Liberalism and the Nation State
- The decline of regional American art | A History of Regional Governments
- Michelle Pfeiffer keeps getting better and better | On the paradox of poverty and good health in Cuba
- “It was the most devastating loss in the history of the Library.” | No, natural disasters are not good for the economy
“Top 10 Things That Tipped Off Revolutionary War”
That’s the title of my weekend column over at RealClearHistory. Check it out:
5. The continued quartering of British soldiers. Imagine, for a moment, an Iraqi household being forced to give room and board to an American or a Polish soldier in 2005. That’s not quite what happened in the North American colonies but it’s not a far cry, either. The colonists of North America considered themselves to be British subjects of the Crown, and most were proud to be. (In fact, a little further down the list, you’ll see why the Americans, as rebels, were so adamant about liberalizing citizenship laws.) A much better analogy would be to imagine the LAPD or the Texas National Guard forcing households to give quarter to soldiers. The analogy is better, but the picture is still a frightening one.
Please, read the rest. The other 9 are also good. Heck, you might even learn something new…
Nightcap
- What the FBI’s Cohen raid means Ken White, NY Times
- Documenting a police detention in New Jersey Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- Why do we have prisons in the United States? Livia Gershon, JSTOR Daily
- Erdogan refreshed after talks with Putin, Rouhani Amberin Zaman, Al-Monitor
Nightcap
- How Men In The Middle Ages Dealt With Gossiping Wives Katie Serena, ATI
- King’s Men & Bum’s-bailiffs Jonathan Healy, Social Historian
- Trump Shouldn’t Talk to Feds. And Neither Should You Ken White, Reason
- Frankenstein in Baghdad Robin Yassin-Kassab, New Statesman
Nightcap
- Scenes from a Police Detention Irfan Khawaja, Policy of Truth
- The Weight of Words Jacob T Levy, Niskanen
- Trump’s Making the Liberal World Order Stronger Christopher Preble, National Interest
- Brexiters’ blind spot Chris Dillow, Stumbling and Mumbling