Glenn Loury on Economics, Black Conservatism, and Crack Cocaine
The Brown University economist's new memoir Late Admissions covers capitalism, addiction, race, and the academy.

"All you need, besides the cocaine, is a lighter, water, baking soda, some Q-Tips, high-proof alcohol, a ceramic mug, and a piece of cheesecloth or an old T-shirt," writes Glenn Loury in his riveting Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative. The book is surely the only memoir by an Ivy League economist that includes a recipe for crack cocaine along with technical discussions of Karl Marx, Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Albert O. Hirschman.
Born in 1948 and raised working class on Chicago's predominantly black South Side, Loury tells a story of self-invention, ambition, hard work, addiction, and redemption that channels Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography, Richard Wright's Native Son, Saul Bellow's The Adventures of Augie March, and Milton Friedman's Capitalism & Freedom. An alternative title might have been "Rise Above It!," the slogan of a pyramid-scheme cosmetics company on which he squandered his savings as a young man in Chicago.
Now a chaired professor at Brown University and the host of The Glenn Show, a wildly popular YouTube offering, Loury worked his way through community college, Northwestern, and a Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ph.D., became the first tenured black economist at Harvard, emerged as a ubiquitous commenter on race and class in the pages of The New Republic and The Atlantic, was offered a post in the Ronald Reagan administration, and was then publicly humiliated after affairs, arrests, and addiction all became public, threatening the end of his professional and personal life. With the support of his wife, Linda Datcher Loury (herself a highly regarded economist), Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.), and colleagues, Loury managed to rise above it and not just rebuild his academic reputation and relationships with his children, but also gain a unique perspective on economics, individualism, and community.
Reason: When you say you are a black conservative, what does that mean?
Glenn Loury: Well, I think of a few things. One of them is thinking that markets get it right in terms of the resource allocation problem and that the planning instinct and centralized, politically controlled interference in theeconomy is suspect. Of course, there are exceptions. The general predisposition is that I like prices. I like laissez faire. AndI think the first and second fundamental theorems of welfare economics are true, that we get efficient resource allocation when we allow the interplay of self-interest. You know, classical liberal stuff.
That makes you a libertarian, not a conservative.
Well, I was going to go the Edmund Burke route. I was going to say not discarding everything that's been handed to me from the past generations. Respect for tradition, reverence for some of these things that we've been handed down. So when people can't define who's a man and who's a woman, I hold my wallet. I'm a little bit skeptical about this nouveau thing.
But the "black conservative" comes out of I think a reflex or reaction to the dilemma that we African Americans face as the descendants of slaves, a marginal population disadvantaged in various ways and struggling for equality, dignity, inclusion, freedom.
I think there's a trap in that situation: the trap of falling into a status of victim and of looking to the other, the white man, the system to raise our children and deliver us from the challenge which everybody faces of living life in good faith, of, as Jordan Peterson puts it, standing up straight with your shoulders back. Of confronting the reality that there's some stuff that nobody can do for you. This posture of dependence, these arguments for reparations, this invocation of structural and systemic [racism], when the real questions are of responsibility and role.
In your book you cover your education in economics, but it's also a memoir that traffics a lot with addiction, both with drugs and sex. Can economics explain addictive behavior and self-destructive behavior?
Well, I think of the late Gary Becker. He has a paper on addiction. And I think of George Stigler and Becker's classic paper "De Gustibus Non Est Disputandum"—about taste there can be no dispute. They do it all in terms of intertemporal preferences, where you build up a taste for certain kinds of pleasures, and you invest in them.
Did they get it right?
No, I don't think they got it right. I thought it was reductive, closed off. [It's an] "everything's going to be optimization; we just have to find the right objective function" way of looking at the world. I much prefer [game theorist and Nobel laureate] Tom Schelling's engagement with the problems of self-command, as he called it, and addiction, which was understanding the conflict within the single individual who at one point in time would want not to smoke or to use cocaine, but at another point in time would find themselves, notwithstanding their understanding that this is not good for them, being compelled to do it nonetheless, and the strategic interaction between those two types within the same person.
Some critics of capitalism say that drug addiction is the apotheosis of capitalism, that it creates a bunch of things that enslave people. But your story, in one way, is about learning self-command and control over self-destructive behaviors. Is there a larger lesson from your struggles with addiction and your ultimate triumph over it?
Yeah, A.A. saved my life. That therapeutic community, that halfway house I lived in for five months in 1988: They saved my life. I went to meetings faithfully for years. And I abstained. I was clean and sober for five years. But I eventually drifted away from the A.A. abstinence philosophy.
I did have a period where I was very religious. I was born again. This initiated during the period when I was struggling to recover from drug addiction but persisted long after I was out of the woods. It changed my perspective. The hope, the whole experience of going through rehab and what they did, it quieted me down. I started reading the Bible even before I was professing genuine religious conviction. I started memorizing passages after I began to confess some belief, going to meetings, living within myself, a kind of humility. I'm not in control. Let go and let God.
What is the work that you're most proud of as an economist?
I think my best technical paper was published in Econometrica in 1981. It's called "Intergenerational Transfers and the Distribution of Earnings." It applied what at the time were state-of-the-art technical methods in dynamic optimization and the behavior of dynamic stochastic systems to the problem of inequality. It formalized the idea that young people depend on the resources available to their parents, in part, to realize their productive potential as workers and economic agents. Investments made early in life by parents in children affect the productivity of children later in life. That productivity is also dependent on other factors beyond parental control that are random, but it depends on the resources that are available. There cannot be perfect markets to allow for borrowing forward against future earnings potential, so as to realize the investment possibilities. If a parent doesn't have the resources to fund the investment themselves, there's no place to go to borrow to get piano lessons for a kid who might develop into a virtuoso pianist.
As a consequence, inequality has resource allocation consequences. Some parents have a lot of resources; others have very little. But the kids all have comparable potential, and there's diminishing returns to investing in kids. The net result is that if you could move money from rich parents to poor parents and indirectly move investment in kids from rich families to poor families, the loss in the former would outweigh the gain in the latter.
Is that a rebuttal to the idea that you can rise above it on your own? Throughout your work you make a case that if we want a more equitable society, we have to do something to help kids whose parents don't have any resources.
I see them as two different realms of argument about human experience. On the one hand, I'm talking about how there can be market failures and incompleteness and informational impact. Illness and externalities and property rights are unclear, and things like that. And you can make arguments about a minimal role for government intervention to deal with public goods problems and environmental externality problems and perhaps market failures.
On the other hand, if I'm talking to an individual about how to live their life, about whether or not to delegate responsibility for their life to outside forces or to live in good faith, to take responsibility for what you do, that's existential, almost spiritual. It's how to be in the world as opposed to how the world works.
You're on college campuses now, and campuses are more fraught than they ever have been. Do you feel like that message has disappeared?
I think so, especially with the debate that's going on presently about the war in Gaza and the campus protests occupying spaces and setting up tents on the campus green and canceling graduations and seizing buildings and engaging in civil disobedience and whatnot.
But that all comes in the aftermath of the culture war that we've been fighting about critical race theory and diversity, equity, and inclusion. These arguments have been around for a while, and I've tended to be on the side of suspicion of the so-called progressive sentiment. There's too much focus on race and sex and sexuality as identities in the context of the university environment, where our main goal is to acquaint our students with the cultural inheritance of civilization. Their narrow focus on being this particular thing and chopping up the curriculum to make sure that it gets representative treatment feels stifling to me, especially if you let that spill over into what can be said.
The therapeutic sentiment. The kids have these sensibilities. We have to be mindful of them. We don't want to offend. We don't want anyone to be uncomfortable. No, the whole point is to make you uncomfortable. You came thinking something that was really a very superficial and undeveloped framework for thinking; I'm going to expose you to some ideas that run against that grain, and you're going to have to learn how to grapple with them. And in your maturity, you may well return to some of these, but you will do so with a much firmer sense of exactly what it is that you're affirming. I want to educate you. I don't want to placate you. I'm not here to make you feel better.
I do think there's too much reliance on system-based accounts and much less of an embrace of responsibilities that we as individuals have in our education, our politics, our social and economic lives.
What is the case against affirmative action?
The case against affirmative action: It's unfair to people who are disfavored. They didn't do anything to be in the group that you decided you wanted to put your thumb on the scale for. It has concerning incentive problems. If you belong to the favorite group, it's OK to have a B average and be in the 70th percentile of test takers. And you can get into UCLA or Stanford or Yale if you're black. But if you're white, you better have an A-minus average. And you'd better be at the 90th percentile of the test takers.
The systematic implementation of affirmative action amplifies the concerns that one might have about stigmatizing African Americans who would be presumed to be beneficiaries. This is the classic complaint of [Supreme Court Justice] Clarence Thomas, that his Yale law degree isn't worth anything because it's got an asterisk on it because of affirmative action.
There's something undignified about not being held to the same standard as other people and everybody assuming that because of the sufferings of your ancestors you're somehow in need of a special dispensation.I don't regard that as equality. You're not standing on equal ground when you're dependent upon such a dispensation. In the case of affirmative action, it's a Band-Aid. You're treating a symptom and not the underlying cause. The underlying reality is there are population differences in the express[ed] productivity of the agents in question. The African Americans, on average, are producing fewer people in relative numbers who are exhibiting these kinds of skills that your instruments of assessment are intended to measure. And if you don't remedy that problem, you're never going to get truly to equality.
Where are these population differences coming from? Is it primarily an effect of cultural change? Is it inherited differences in economic status and opportunity? Is it genetic?
I don't think it's genetic, though I can't rule out that genetics could have an effect. I'm just not persuaded by the evidence of the early childhood developmental stuff. I don't underestimate the differences in the effectiveness of primary and secondary education. This is not just race. This is race and class and geography and whatnot. I think we'd do ourselves as a society a lot of good if we were to follow the sort of wholesale reform movement in K-12, including charter schools and more competition to the union-dominated public provision sector of that part of our social economy.
But culture is a tough one. I give a lot of evidence indirectly in my memoir about the effects of culture on life experience. The culture that nurtured me coming up in Chicago had its positives. It also had its norms, values, ideals, what a community affirms as being a life well lived, how people spend their time, about parenting, things of this kind.
I read this book by two Asian sociologists, Min Zhou and Jennifer Lee, called The Asian American Achievement Paradox, and it attempts to explain, based on interview data from a couple hundred families in Southern California, how it is that these Asian communities are able to send their youngsters to places like Harvard and Stanford in such large numbers. And it basically makes a cultural argument. One of the chapters is entitled "The Asian F." It turns out that the Asian F is an A-minus, according to some of their respondents. I don't think you can discount the importance of that kind of cultural reinforcement, because at the end of the day what matters is how people spend their time.
You're a critic of race-based policies, but you also get kind of pissed when people dismiss the black experience. You say being a black American is a part of your identity. Is there a way for us to bring our individual cultural and ethnic heritage to the conversation that doesn't divide us or put us in one group or another?
We all have a story. We all have a narrative and a cultural inheritance. And yet underneath we are kind of all the same. Our struggles are comprehensible to each other, and our triumphs and our failures are things that we can relate to as human beings. And that's how we should be relating to each other.
I'm in my 70s now, and I've just written a book about my life. So who am I? What does it amount to? I'm the kid that really did grow up immersed in an almost exclusively black community on the South Side of Chicago. The music that I listened to, the food that I ate, the stories that I was told and that I told to my own children in turn. These things are related to the history, the struggles and triumphs, the dreams and hopes of African-American people. That's a part of who I am. And it annoys me when people attempt to say "get over it" to me. They're not respecting me when they tell me that race is not a deep thing about people.
It's a superficial thing, I grant you that. I grant you the melanin in the skin, the genetic markers that are manifest in my physical presentation, don't add up to very much. But the dreams of my fathers and others, the lore, the narrative about who "we" are, that's not arbitrary and it's not trivial. And it seems to me sociologically naive in the extreme to just want to move past that. That's a part of who people actually are.
But I struggle with this, because I also want to tell my students not to wear that too heavily, not to let it blinker them and prevent them from being able to engage with, for example, the inheritance of European civilization in which we are embedded. That's also your inheritance. Tolstoy is mine. Einstein is mine. And yours. I want to say to youngsters of whatever persuasion: Don't be blinkered. Don't be so parochial that you miss out on the best of what's been written and thought and said in human culture.

This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "'Don't Be Blinkered'."
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OT Post: “Hang Mike Pence” may very soon be supplemented by “Hang Governor Kemp” of Georgia… Hang ALL of those who do NOT pervfectly, precisely toady up to Trump ass Trump demands!
Governor Kemp (R) of Georgia is latest target of Trump Wrath… https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2024/08/03/donald-trump-brian-kemp-rally-atlanta/ (paywalled) and https://apnews.com/article/trump-vance-atlanta-georgia-harris-rally-b21c25bbbfafdd0343c8812f6c3d7c9e
Trump again tears into Georgia’s Republican governor on the same day he campaigns in the state
Kemp, that unkempt, uncouth infidel, stole The Donald’s Sacred Erection!!!
Fuck off, Sqrlsy.
Another excellent black conserva-tarian.
Skin color is the most importantly thing.
Donnie says a light shade disqualifies your blackness.
Pedos say single digits ages are the most important thing.
A few years back you posted kiddy porn to this site, and your initial handle was banned. The link below details all the evidence surrounding that ban. A decent person would honor that ban and stay away from Reason. Instead you keep showing up, acting as if all people should just be ok with a kiddy-porn-posting asshole hanging around. Since I cannot get you to stay away, the only thing I can do is post this boilerplate.
https://reason.com/2022/08/06/biden-comforts-the-comfortable/?comments=true#comment-9635836
Jealous of the house slaves, are you?
Donnie and the progressives agree
The Guardian:
Is Obama black enough?
Democratic hopeful Barack Obama could become the US’s first black president. Yet, with his mixed-race background, Ivy League education and midwestern accent, one of his greatest challenges has been convincing African-Americans that he is ‘one of us’.
He’s just using their own race grift and prior rules against them.
Leftist Twitter was also having a meltdown about Andrew Tate using the N-word, claiming he doesn’t have the right as he is only half black.
This game of how many drops of X makes you a Y is a game almost exclusively played by democrat segregationists, same as it ever was
Democrats, managing black people since 1827.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Blacks have more impact, imo.
When you say you are a black conservative, what does that mean?
Not a black job, Peanuts.
Still not embarassed from RMac giving you over a dozen cites of your favorite media and dem politicians using the same terms. Or your democrats literally tying fed contracts to black businesses.
Just amazing how you idiots latch onto retarded narratives.
But you’re full of shit.
I reject 99.9% of all statements by Democrats. Progs, in particular, are stupid.
Over the many years here I have supported exactly two statements by Democrats that I recall.
Edit to add – also liked Obama’s foreign policy slogan “Don’t Do Stupid Shit”.
1- When Obama promised to cut the Bushpigs $1 trillion deficit in half.
2- when Fetterman told the Squad to shove their pro-Palestine language up their asses
Two GOOD ONES!
Dude, doesn’t matter. Tribal retards equate criticism of Trump with support for Democrats. Can’t fix stupid.
You two are so blind to your own biases. It is the fact you both defend the DNC constantly. Even on threads here critical of a Democrat you both rush to switch the attacks to Trump.
You two are amazingly stupid.
Shrike has spent years here defending Bidens economy for fucks sake. Are you truly this dumb sarc?
You reject them the same way Stormy rejected Trumps nuts: not at all.
turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Still upset with uppity niggers, are you?
I’m humored by Donnie’s ham-headed comments about “the blacks”.
Yup, Trump’s mostly true if crass statements are much worse than DNC pandering to (anti)racists, and exploitation of fake Racism! on every issue.
Democrats did it first so it’s ok.
No, Democrats do it ALL THE TIME, and play the racist card to the point where only progressives pay any attention. So calling them out on it is not just OK, but necessary.
And calling out Trump is bad because Democrats did it first.
I knew that the second I saw a black conservative on the top of the Latest, Buttplug would show up to be horribly racist. And I also knew Sarcasmic would be rushing right in to save him when he caught shit for it.
This is what Sarcasmic is proudly defending, folks:
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 3 mins ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Uncle Clarence has had his hand out for over 20 years.
GIMME DAT WHITIE MONEY!
That fucking cop lover.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 2 hours ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Taking on Katanji Brown Jackson for lowest IQ affirmative action hire
Uncle Clarence a candidate.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 19 mins ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Sandy, I had a genuine fear that a Senator Walker would be shucking and jiving us good liberty-loving Georgians every day.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Many have asked for an update to the Buttplug Horse Race:
Tim Scott 400-1 Whuffo Bro? Whuffo is you in dis race fo, bro?
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 2 hours ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Dude, I am from the South. You can’t troll me on race.
Do you remember Spermin’ Herman Cain? He sounded like a slave extra from Song of the South.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
Flag Comment Mute User
No, you’re a fucking snowflake who only gets offended when one of your Lawn Jockeys is criticized.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 28 mins ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Groveling like a shoe-shine boy, Tim Scott humiliates himself for Fatass Donnie.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 38 mins ago
Flag Comment Mute User
SE Cupp is a conservative commentator who is ashamed of Tim Scott’s groveling ‘Happy slave” act concerning Donnie.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 3 hours ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Tim Scott’s Vice Presidential Debasement Is Almost Complete
Debasement? Are you for real? This smacks of racism.
Tim Scott’s twerking and jiving is just him feeling that ole-timey religion.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 7 hours ago
Flag Comment Mute User
Fact checking Tim Scott – Trump’s black friend/shine boy:
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
Flag Comment Mute User
How many little lawn jockeys are in your yard? I bet it looks like a scene from a Tarzan movie out there.
Get a life.
Get out of the bottle.
Amazinglu you can croticoze someone from your team. Your attacks are in a singular direction. But youre truly unbiased lol.
I don’t have a team, jackass.
Yet, Sarckles, you do. Your team just includes people like Pluggo and Jeffy.
You do realize you’re just proving yourself a hypocrite as you ignore the thousands of times dems do it to focus on the one time your opponent does right? Who am I kidding. Youre a DNC defending hypocrite lol
Stop justifying bad behavior by childishly saying they did it first, and I’ll stop pointing it out.
Take the high road. Stop behaving like the people you hate.
There’s no high road in politics…
“Take the high road.”
This is what sarc actually believes he’s been doing for years.
It’s been acceptable to say for decades. Trump says it and you leftists lose your minds.
Sarc: bOaF SIdeS!
I dont know how many times you need to hear this, but no one gives a fuck about this accusation.
And its not as you put it. Its:
“Democrats keep fucking doing it and insisting people play by their rules, so its ok”
Two wrongs make a right winger.
It’s like your drunken mind can’t even comprehend the topic being discussed.
Two wrongs make a Sarcasmic.
We’ll put you down as a fan of racist pandering.
turd, the ass-wipe of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Ya, he should have taken inspiration from you and responded “I hear they make great lawn jockeys”
As always, the racist folks were always the people who are completely obsessed with race.
Hey, dickhead, what was that comment you made about Tim Scott and his sexual orientation? Oh yes, you said he’s gay because he’s a bachelor. Guess what Scott did, dumbass, he got married. To a woman, no less, you fucking asshole pederast.
White CNN host tries calling black guys at barber shop low information voters because they don’t support Kamala. Jeff like beliefs are prevalent in media.
https://x.com/tomselliott/status/1819800951114637772
Please give progressives and their media shills a break. In their doctrine, black people not only automatically hold all the proper political views but also follow orders from the big house. And a professed black conservative is such a heretical unicorn, they don’t know what to do–except reflexively declare that “he ain’t black”.
I dont even have to wonder how long before white progressives in the media excuse these lowly blacks for having the incorrect political opinion as a direct result of white supremacy and them adopting a system of viewpoints that are hostile toward black americans, rooted in whiteness.
Itll likely print by tomorrow afternoon.
It’s the right problem, but the wrong solution.
One of the worst things governments do to children is isolate them from adulthood, from reality, by mandating education up until 18, and then dumping them into the adult world with no transition. Sure, they get drivers licenses and hold part time jobs, but that’s just a tiny part of being an adult. Extending this isolation with four more years of coddling college just compounds the felony.
The right way is not just getting government out of the education business, including the funding, but also getting them out of the mandating. Who remembers anything they learned in primary school, other than arithmetic?
Grammar we pick up from each other, because we, the people, define grammar, not government; witness all the success of the French Academy in making up words for “le weekend”. We read books, magazines, newspapers, web sites, social media posts — that is where we learn grammar.
Literature? Yeah, right. “See Spot run.”
High school isn’t much better. Analyze some poet you don’t like, and if it doesn’t match your teacher’s tastes, get an F. All that teaches is to hate the teacher, that poet, poetry in general, and literature in general.
History as taught is useless pablum designed to parrot the government propaganda line.
The proper way to handle education is start with the three Rs — readin’, writin’, and ‘rithmetic. Give them access to as many books as possible. If they have any interest in music, they’ll know before anyone else, and will either learn from friends or tell their parents. Same with art — paper and a pencil is all it takes.
Let them set their own pace, and let them take jobs around the neighborhood, mowing lawns or shoveling snow, or going to work with their parents or friends’ parents, to see what they do, to help out around the office or shop, and make a few bucks stocking shelves, washing dishes, rounding people up for meetings, handing over tools. Expose them to the real world, learn how to get along with people they don’t like.
And at some point, they’ll shift from all student and playing, to some small work, to more work and less study, and eventually be ready to join the real world as real adults, not coddled college kids shocked into having to work for a living with people they don’t like in less-than-ideal jobs.
As I understand it, school used to be kind of like that. But during the Progressive Movement the country adopted the Prussian Model of education. That means compulsory schooling of the sort designed teach compliance and respect for authority, and then the three r’s. It also assumes everyone should have common cultural knowledge, hence history, poetry and literature. It was intended to breed out the American spirit and replace liberty lovers with docile citizens. It succeed beyond all expectations.
Loury is a very smart guy. I don’t always agree with his conclusions but his arguments are seductive.
Is it to be pronounced more like “Loory” or “Lowry”? Probably too hard to make up a rhyme for it as Aleister Crowley did, so instead some way of saying either like talk show host Noory or restaurateur Lowry.
its “Lowry”
Thanks.
COMPLETELY off topic —
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wof0xPUmW38
A Finnish instructional video on how to open a door, from 1979. You have to turn on the captions unless you understand Finnish.
The comments are epic.
It’s a gem. Whoever thought it up deserves a Nobel prize, or an Oscar. The actor managed it all with a straight face.
When I first watched Spinal Tap, I did not know anything about it, did not know it was a farce, and although my suspicions began soon, it wasn’t until the mixup between their wireless guitar transmitters and ATC that I knew I’d been had.
But that was a full length movie; this is a stinking little thing and its only prop is a door. Well, maybe a fine mustache and shiny shoes. And a brown suit. It is absolutely perfectly done.
You didn’t recognize Meat Head?
Naw, I listen to music, I don’t watch it.
Thing is, I just thought at first it was some real rock band goofing around. “Goes to 11” and all that. I didn’t realize it was completely fake until that ATC scene. I like being fooled like that.
‘I do think there’s too much reliance on system-based accounts and much less of an embrace of responsibilities that we as individuals have in our education, our politics, our social and economic lives.’
Why does Loury hate democracy?
That makes you a libertarian, not a conservative.
Somebody had mentioned awhile back that Gillispie has this habit of telling all his guests they’re not what they think of themselves as.
Most people, including at least half of the commentariat, don’t know what libertarian means. The right thinks they’re hardcore leftists and the left thinks they’re ultra conservative. So I think it’s fair for The Jacket to let people know that there’s a word for people who don’t fit into either political tribe due to supporting both social and economic liberty.
“Well, I think of a few things. One of them is thinking that markets get it right in terms of the resource allocation problem and that the planning instinct and centralized, politically controlled interference in theeconomy is suspect. Of course, there are exceptions. The general predisposition is that I like prices. I like laissez faire. AndI think the first and second fundamental theorems of welfare economics are true, that we get efficient resource allocation when we allow the interplay of self-interest. You know, classical liberal stuff.”
Where in that answer does he cover drag queen story hour or abortion?
Why don’t you sit the next few hundred out
OMG he didn’t blurt out something completely unrelated and that means… nothing.
“Most people, including at least half of the commentariat, don’t know what libertarian means.”
Just think about it for a second, you’re claiming that the vast majority of people who post here on a ostensibly libertarian website aren’t actually libertarian because they disagree with you.
Occam’s razor says that despite your lazy attempt at a smear YOU are the one who doesn’t know what libertarian means.
That’s meaningless coming from an idiot who shouts “Leftist!” at anyone who criticizes Trump or the GOP. You’re a prime example of a mental midget who lacks the capacity to understand not being on either side.
We get it, everybody hates you. But you do seem to spend most of your time bitching about only one group.
Bitching about one group doesn’t equal support for another. That’s pure projection from tribalists attack dogs that can’t imagine criticizing based upon principles, because their only principle is tribal loyalty. They literally cannot comprehend not being on a side. Their brains can’t do it.
Funny thing is, when Obama was president the Obamabots did same thing. They were convinced I was an ultra conservative because they were similarly handicapped.
Two sides of the same retarded coin. It’s people like you and the Obamabots who perpetuate the duopoly by being unable to step back and see that the problem isn’t which side of the coin you choose, it’s the coin itself.
Poor sarc. Another loss.
Is this like how you accuse others here of only disliking chase because he is gay? Or how your hypocrisy and tired TDS even in unrelated threads is tired?
You defended covid acts by the state.
You defended censorship.
You currently even support more taxes.
You were for the Ukraine war.
You aren’t libertarian. Youre a moron who saw a few quotes on a website but has yet to read a single book or essay on the subject.
Oh and you took a test where even it’s creator admitted most of the questions were subjective.
You have a vivid imagination.
Why do I never defend the things you say I defend?
Why don’t I promote the things you say I promote?
Because you’re wrong.
“Most people, including at least half of the commentariat, don’t know what libertarian means. ”
I’ve learned from sarc that it means copy/pasting a few sentences from bastiat.com once in a while. No actual reading required.
Has Biden verified his Blackness?
“…we get efficient resource allocation when we allow the interplay of self-interest. You know, classical liberal stuff.”
I may need to read his book to find out if he thinks Wall Street and other too-big-to-fail bailouts, and corporate socialism in general, are classical, liberal ideas. How about the interplay of self-interest and efficient allocation during major recessions and Depressions? Would he support the complete dismantling of the New Deal so that government cannot intervene to shore up working class families when they’re hurting? Or perhaps it’s that the self-interest of bank chairs and CEOs count more than yours or mine? I’m just asking; I want to read his book. He didn’t get where he is by being doctrinaire and closed-minded, and I used to read his magazine articles all the time in years past.
RFK Jr driving around NYC with bear in TRUNK. A true DEMOCRAT hero.