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Saturday, April 29, 2006The Week's Excellent ReadingsDavid Gelernter, Charles R. Kesler, Charles Krauthammer, Mark Joseph, Jonah Goldberg, and Dick Meyer lead the list. Favorites David Gelernter says "No More Vietnams" -- but he doesn't mean what you think he means. This essay is superb.
Charles R. Kesler looks at the Republican Party's struggles in the aftermath of great success and points to some critical issues. (At least I think they're critical.) It's a bit of a surprise that Charles Krauthammer edges out Thomas Sowell for a "Favorites" slot here on the subject of gasoline prices, but so be it. Sowell is excellent as usual; he's brilliant at explaining economics to non-specialists. You can catch him below. But Krauthammer, who has his own well-proven gifts, wins this skirmish by showing very clearly how it's not the oil companies who are driving up the price of gasoline so much as it is our own politicians. According to Mark Joseph, there are hecklers, and then there are hecklers. It probably won't happen, but Jonah Goldberg wonders, what if the American presence in Iraq were put to an Iraqi vote? (By the way, isn't there a resemblance between Iraq now and West Germany in the 1980s, where people felt free to criticize the American presence because they knew we would stay anyway?) Dick Meyer's piece on positive and negative liberty might to too philosophical for your taste, but I thought it quite insightful. There's something intrinsically American about resisting when other people think they know what is best for you and feel entitled to do something about it. Gas Prices (Economics 101, Folks!) Thomas Sowell explains yet again how supply, demand, and prices work, as he criticizes bipartisan demagoguery on gasoline prices. The following excerpt is not the whole point of the essay, but it is a good point in itself. It's not news, either, but it bears remembering.
Thomas Sowell's sequel on oil prices is as insightful as usual. Debra Saunders takes a more political view of gasoline prices. Bill Murchison discusses gasoline prices and the growing supply of hot air. Rich Lowry has tongue firmly in cheek as he deconstructs the vast oil price conspiracy. Nick Schulz has an interesting take on rising energy costs and their lack of effect on consumption. Wesley Pruden on oil, politics, and economics. Political Miscellany Stanley Renshon takes aim at the "Bush bubble myth." My favorite phrase is "a mental detour around the need to consider facts" -- but he's not talking about the President just then. You'll have to overlook a few typos in this one. Richard Samuelson thoughtfully wonders if federalism (states taking their own, different approaches to issues) would heat up the culture war or cool it down. Here we go again. The Democratic minority in the Senate is blocking judicial nominations again. Robert Novak reports. Maggie Gallagher isn't playing fair. She's comparing liberal predictions about the effects of the 1996 welfare reform with actual outcomes. It's not sporting to use facts, is it? (I don't necessarily share her enthusiasm for the government meddling with marriage, but I'm definitely pro-fact.) Adam Reilly pens an interesting and amusing piece on Mitt Romney's Mormonism and his presidential campaign. (Thanks to Swen Swenson for sending me the article.) How about this for a Romney line -- which you'll understand after reading the article: "Polygamy is something real Mormons joke about not, not something we do." Pete du Pont has a stern prescription for spendthrift Washington Republicans. Jonah Goldberg notes that radical Islam itself is a form of globalization. Michael Barone surveys the political landscape of Latin America. Mark Steyn goes on a gentle rant about the endless and endlessly flexible hubbub about climate change. Economics Professor Walter Williams discourses briefly on the minimum wage. Whom will you believe? Him or Oprah? Peter A. Brown offers a quick lesson in Economics 101, a look at human nature, inequality, and so forth. Education Jeff Jacoby adds a few more anecdotes to the growing mountain of cases where public school values clash with some families' values. The real issue here may not be the clash, but the public schools' disdain for the parents. (At least here in the Alpine School District, we're fighting over math more than gay marriage, but the official disdain, and one might say arrogance, is the same.) Lynn Vincent writes a good piece on academic freedom in higher education -- students' academic freedom, for a change. Jennifer Roback Morse discusses male/female differences in math and science, the possible use of Title IX to meddle with universities, and the myth of equality. The Regular Miscellany Have you ever heard of Bernie Siegan? Paul Jacob remembers a quiet but influential thinker. George Will remembers Carl Hayden, another influential fellow of whom you may not have heard. The subject is water. Greg Crosby is enjoyable on the columns he didn't write. Copyright 2006 by David Rodeback. |