NEWARK, NJ — The United States was plunged into a collective period of mourning to observe what historians categorized as a "dark day for democracy" after a group of insurrectionists stormed a government building.
U.S. — Democrat onlookers were baffled at the unusual sight of a group of immigrants arriving in the United States legally while waving patriotic American flags.
Stuart K. Hayashi
Many people — this is common among my fellow Japanese-Americans, though I doubt it’s exclusive to my ethnicity — implicitly subscribe to a logical fallacy that can be phrased as: “your own choices were not the main factor in shaping whom you are as an adult; rather, the personalities of all adults were ultimately shaped by their parents [and/or teachers and/or neighbors,
In this episode of The ARI Bookshelf, Onkar Ghate, Tristan de Liège, and Robertas Bakula discuss Abundance, the recent best-selling book by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson that has gained traction in liberal circles.
Klein and Thompson acknowledge the failings of past liberal policies and present what they call the “abundance agenda” as an alternative. The agenda emphasizes streamlined regulations alongside robust government involvement in production — an approach the authors claim will usher in a new political order.
The discussion covered:
* The book’s central arguments;
* How the “abundance agenda” is unphilosophical and collectivistic;
* How the book’s position on environmentalism reveals its deeper philosophical problems;
* How the book fails to distinguish between coercion and voluntary cooperation;
* How the authors fail to check their premises about government;
* Why the book’s admiration for China is troubling.