It’s not a matter of “guts” or “nerve.” It’s a matter of understanding the justification of foreign aid. This comes from a reader who doesn’t seem to get that the United States derives a great amount of benefit from foreign …
It’s not a matter of “guts” or “nerve.” It’s a matter of understanding the justification of foreign aid. This comes from a reader who doesn’t seem to get that the United States derives a great amount of benefit from foreign …
Maybe you’re wondering why “no one wants to work anymore,” or how it’s possible that 60% of Americans are living paycheck-to-paycheck. I hope this helps.
I was chatting with an old friend yesterday, a retired internal medicine physician, who brought up the subject of the extremely large and ever-growing gulf between rich and poor, how it’s ruining American society. As we see at left, this …
Perhaps environmentalists are cheering over the news presented here. But why use the power of government to accomplish something that the market itself would have implemented? Are there people in France whose TGV trains run at 220 mph who want …
Conservatives like this metaphor, because they don’t have a problem ignoring U.S. history and the unprecedentedly high standard of living that Americans had after World War II, when the tax rates for corporations and wealthy individuals were 90%. Until Reagan …
Lots of gratifying and actually amusing things in the news, none the least of which is the utter mess Elon Musk is making of Twitter. I have to say that essentially everything I’ve predicted about Musk has been wrong. Make …
I’m amazed to find legitimate, intelligent environmental activists support Elon Musk because of the role he’s playing in forwarding the cause of electric transportation. Let’s imagine a world where both the energy and the transportation sectors have made great progress …
Record corporate profits, inflation, sub-living wages, COVID, declining educational standards, jobs moving overseas, virtually no unemployment, and the rise in automation replacing human labor. These are some of the macro-economic factors that make life so tough for us today. Then …
Here’s what a professor of theology at Georgetown University told me when I was young, when I happened to have asked him about his career, and his life more generally: Most people work 50 weeks of the year doing something …
Since my college days almost 50 years ago, I’ve believed that the United States is experiencing the unsustainable end game of unbridled capitalism, i.e., that we were seeing winners win and the losers lose. I graduated in 1977, just before …
The Challenge in Closing the Gap Between Rich and Poor Read More »