The Economic Illiteracy of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
It is hard to emphasize how chillingly inept this remark is, especially for someone with a degree in economics.
A collection of 485 posts
It is hard to emphasize how chillingly inept this remark is, especially for someone with a degree in economics.
Addressing Brazil’s legacy of racism is surely one of my country’s most urgent moral priorities.
For those of us engaged in showing young people how the media are supposed to work, there is no escaping the sturm und drang over fake news.
Marx was an acute social analyst whose insights have appeared in novel places. Even conservative and pro-capitalist figures—from Max Weber to Joseph Schumpeter—have at times grudgingly conceded the accuracy of his analysis on many points of importance.
The best we can do in the short-term is to return again and again to the better angels of our nature and try to keep these horrific events in perspective.
We know enough to understand that we should be taking serious action. The fact that the only groups advocating action at the moment are demanding questionable strategies doesn’t change that.
There is far more expression to be found in the Easter Island heads, than there is here.
Rand and her largely philosophical economic views have been consigned to history as an interesting relic of sorts—a compelling, well-articulated fantasy that has no basis in reality.
It is absolutely true that the SAT is the reason this scandal occurred.
Leaving gaps of understanding will not help future generations understand our time, and it will not assist students of history in getting a clean grasp of what happened or why.
Proffering individual/extreme cases like those of Manafort or Turner and weaving them into broad system-wide narratives is not only epistemologically unsound, it is also needlessly incendiary and tactically ill advised.
“What is a woman?” What should be an easy question for a movement organized around the rights of women, has instead become a real brain-buster.
Our faith in a cadre of well-trained media professionals, able to set aside their biases to report on and analyze the big stories of our age, hasn’t just eroded.
I took it as a good sign that by the time I got back to our family brunch all I could talk about was what I’d read about this kid (Palmer Luckey) and his incredible company (Oculus).