Two Economists Drink Their Way Through the Unfree World
(paid link)
A fun book which (somewhat surprisingly) was purchased by the Portsmouth
Public Library.
Author Robert A. Lawson is one of the co-authors of
the
Economic
Freedom of the World (EFotW) report put out annually by the Fraser
Institute. Benjamin Powell is an econ prof at Texas Tech.
They are no fans of socialism. But they are fans of drinking and strip
clubs.
So they got the bright idea
to (or near) various socialist utopias, and try to have some
alcohol-fueled fun.
It turns out that's hard to do. The fun part, that is.
First, they dismiss Sweden, and the similar countries Bernie et.
al. like to use as examples. They aren't free-market heaven, to be
sure, but they regularly rank pretty high on the EFotW measurements.
(Sweden is #35 out of the 162 countries scored.)
Countries considered:
Venezuela, dead last (#162) in EFotW. Worried about kidnappers, Bob and
Ben don't get into the country itself, but visit a Columbian
border town, where Venezuelans try to get goods that are impossible to
buy in their own land.
Cuba (unranked at EFotW because of lack of data).
North Korea (also unranked at EFotW). Again (unsurprisingly) Bob and Ben
just look across the border (from both China and South Korea).
China (#113) is cited as "fake socialism". Sorta-capitalism is
combined with ruthless suppression of anything the rulers consider to be
dangerous to their system.
Russia (#85) and Ukraine (#135): "hungover socialism". Two countries
that can't seem to make the transition to freedom.
Georgia (#12) is a success story, however. Adopting some heavy
market reforms helped, and even though it's still kind of poor, it's on
a pretty decent growth path.
And finally, the good old USA (#5), or is that the USSA? Bob and
Ben visit the July 2018 "Socialism Conference" held at the Chicago
People's Collective Hotel of the Revolution Hyatt Regency. They
are taken with how little socialism is discussed or defended;
instead it's the usual left-wing array of issues: white privilege,
immigration, feminism, gender, … All topics worthy of discussion, of
course, but where's the socialism?
All in all, not a lot of surprises here, but the authors do a good job
of reporting.
To the folks who gripe: that's not real socialism. Well, sorry,
it is.
An excellent, readable book from Reason associate editor, Robby
Soave. His goal is analysis of Young People Today (Robby is only barely
older than many of the kiddos he reports on) and what the heck is their
deal anyway?
To a rough first approximation, the youngsters on the left wing have
fallen prey to the ideology of intersectionality. Everything is viewed
on an oppressor vs. oppressed axis; but you get extra points for each
checkbox you tick off: African-American, female, gay, transgender,
disabled, Muslim, … About the only folks who don't score here are… well, folks
like me: cis, white, male, Christian, etc. (I think people of Asian
descent are considered "white" for oppressive purposes; Jews get lumped
in with Christians, because Jehovah.)
Robby's is a less nuanced analysis than I saw in the Haidt/Lukianoff
book
The
Coddling of the American Mind. But Robby goes out and actually
talks to the people he's reporting on, and (like Haidt/Lukianoff) he's a
bend-over-backwards guy, listening and trying to understand why the kids
have suddenly gone nuts.
He visits various factions: the anti-Trump "resistance", including
AntiFa, Black Lives Matter, the radical feminists, the LGBTQ activists.
A common thread is intolerance, sometimes edging over into violence,
toward the people on the other side.
Robby also visits with some less radical groups. The Democratic
Socialists of America, for example; the Greens; the gun-grabbers. But
also Turning Point USA (about whom Robby has some deserved criticism).
And finally, the alt-Right. Robby considers it to be a more wretched
hive of scum and villainy than Mos Eisley. It's hard to disagree,
especially when their victim body count (Heather Heyer in
Charlottesville) is probably higher than their lefty
counterparts. But
(again) the book lets them have their say.
Rand Paul is one of my two favorite current US Senators (the other being Ben
Sasse). And I'm somewhat interested in the (usually dreadful) activism
on American college campuses, especially at the University Near Here,
where I used to study (long ago) and work (not so long ago). So I took
the
opportunity to attend the event hosted by the local chapter of Turning
Point USA, featuring Charlie Kirk and Senator Paul.
One thing to get out of the way first: although the TPUSA event
held
last
year
at UNH was obstructed and disrupted by local social
justice warriors, this event went extremely smoothly. One attendee
shouted something (I didn't catch what) during the presentation, and
that was it. There
were no venue blockades, no shoutdown attempts, and even the negative
questions (see below) were poised civilly.
Security was tight, though. You needed a ticket, IDs were checked, the
UNH cops were in attendance. I ran into an ex-co-worker in line, a
thorough progressive; she told me she was there as a "peacekeeper". I
don't know how many others there were, or if the peacekeeper force was
mustered by the University. Still, whatever measures were taken were
effective.
The event was held in the Granite State Room of the Memorial Union
Building (MUB); it's the largest meeting room in the building, and it was
close to capacity, I would estimate about 600-700 attendees. Eyeballing
the crowd, I estimated about 75% were students (or at least
student-aged). And maybe 85% male.
A brief warmup: "Culture War" t-shirts were thrown to the crowd. A cheer
was led: "When I say 'socialism', you say 'sucks'! Ready? Socialism
SUCKS! Socialism SUCKS!…" And nearly all of the crowd seemed to join in.
(I'm too old for such activities, even though I do think socialism sucks.)
The president of the UNH chapter of TPUSA started the presentation,
welcoming us, pointing out the exits,
thanking everyone involved in bringing off the event, and (most notably)
reminding us that UNH was committed to civil discourse, and that
people attempting to interfere with the event would be, um,
asked/assisted to
leave.
Then, after a razzle-dazzle video intro, the founder and Executive
Director of TPUSA, Charlie Kirk, took the stage. He is a slick speaker,
and he and TPUSA are in favor of good things: American exceptionalism, the
Constitution, and free-market capitalism. Hey, me too. And (judging by applause and cheers)
nearly all the crowd, too.
Charlie made reference to the Unfortunate Incident from earlier in the
week reported by
Breitbart
where an earnest young lady destroyed a TPUSA display at the MUB and,
when approached by TPUSA members, said “I hate you and I hope you die”.
Apparently, she was in the front row, and made her presence known.
Charlie took it in stride, telling her: "Thanks for coming, and I hope you live."
(paid link)
Then Senator Paul was brought on. His main theme was socialism, and he's
against it. (He even has a new book on the topic, Amazon link at right.)
He and Charlie had a Q&A session, Charlie pitching softball (and, I
suspect, rehearsed) questions to the Senator, the Senator hitting them
out of the park. Venezuela, Medicare for All, eat-the-rich taxation
schemes, Syria, impeachment. (On Syria, Senator Paul gave about the best
possible
defense of Trump's Kurd sellout; I'm still convinced that however worthy
Trump's goal, his implementation was a stupid bungle that made things worse.)
The floor was then opened to audience questioners, and they were mostly
softballs too.
Senator Paul's reaction to Hillary's slander of Tulsi
Gabbard? "Despicable."
He was also against Beto's proposal to yank tax-exempt status from
religious institutions that don't bend the knee on gay marriage.
He was (maybe) open to allowing newspapers to band together to negotiate
tougher terms with Google/Facebook et. al. when their content is
scraped.
A few questions were not softballs, and they seemed to be directed mostly at
Charlie. There was something about West Point. Some guy wanted to make a
(maybe) white-nationalist "blood and soil" point about immigration.
Somebody else wanted to make an anti-Israel point about the USS Liberty.
(Which happened, I'm pretty sure, before Charlie was born.) Charlie's
replies to such questions were curt, polite, and dismissive.
Bottom line: Coming in, I thought the "Culture War" title on this event was needlessly
provocative. I'm trying to be more of an Arthur C. Brooks/Ben Sasse
love-your-enemies civil-discourse kind of guy.
And, despite the title, that's pretty much what this event was. Good.
But they should have come up with a better title.
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