With Reagan, deliverance seemed possible. Buchanan’s political influence reached its zenith. By this time, he had left the University of Virginia. As early as 1963, there were concerns—on the part of the dean of the faculty, for one—that Buchananism, at least as practiced at his Thomas Jefferson Center, had petrified into dogma, with no room for dissenting voices. After a battle over a promotion for his co-author, Tullock, Buchanan left in a huff. He went first to UCLA, next to Virginia Tech, and in 1983, climactically, to George Mason University, not far outside the Beltway—and much nearer to the political action. The Wall Street Journal soon labeled George Mason “the Pentagon of conservative academia.” With its “stable of economists who have become an important resource for the Reagan administration,” it was now poised to undo Great Society programs. In 1986, Buchanan won the Nobel Prize for his public-choice theory.
But triumph gave way again to disappointment. Not even Reagan could stem the collectivist tide. Public-choice ideas made a difference—for instance in the balanced-budget act sponsored by Senators Philip Gramm, Warren Rudman, and Ernest Hollings in 1985. Buchanan’s theory found another useful ally in the budget-slasher and would-be government-shrinker David Stockman, who idolized Hayek and declared that “politicians were wrecking American capitalism.” But Stockman also discovered that restoring capitalism to a purer condition would mean declaring war on “Social Security recipients, veterans, farmers, educators, state and local officials, the housing industry.” What president was going to do that? Certainly not Reagan. As Stockman reflected, “The democracy had defeated the doctrine.”
That was Buchanan’s view, too. It wasn’t enough to elect true-believing politicians. The rules of government needed to be rewritten. But this required ideal conditions—a blank slate. This had happened once, in Chile, after Augusto Pinochet’s coup against the socialist Salvador Allende in 1973. A vogue for public choice had swept Pinochet’s administration. Buchanan’s books were translated, and some of his acolytes helped restructure Chile’s economy. Labor unions were banned, and social security and health care were both privatized. On a week-long visit in 1980, Buchanan gave formal lectures to “top representatives of a governing elite that melded the military and the corporate world,” MacLean reports, and he dispensed counsel in private conversations. But Buchanan said very little about his part in assisting Chile’s reformers—and he said very little, too, when the country’s economy cratered, and Pinochet at last fired the Buchananites.
At his death in 2013, Buchanan was hardly known outside the world of economists and libertarians, but his ideology remains much in force. His view of Social Security—a “Ponzi scheme”—is shared by privatizers like Paul Ryan. More broadly, Buchananism informs the conviction on the right that because the democratic majority can’t really be trusted, empowered minorities, like the Freedom Caucus, are the true guardians of our liberty and if necessary will resort to drastic measures: shutting down the government, defaulting on the national debt, and plying the techniques of what Francis Fukuyama calls our modern “vetocracy”—refusing, for example, to bring an immigration bill to a House vote lest it pass (as happened in the Obama years) or, in the Senate, defying tradition by not granting a confirmation hearing to a Supreme Court nominee.
To see all this as simple obstructionism, perversity for its own sake, is a mistake. A cause lies behind it: upholding the sanctity of an ideology against the sins of the majority. This is what drives House Republicans to scale back social programs, or to shift the tax burden from the 1 percent onto the parasitic mob, or to come up with a health-care plan that would leave Trump’s own voters out in the cold. To many of us, it might seem heartless. But far worse, Buchanan once explained in a famous essay, is misguided Good Samaritanism, which, by helping the unlucky, cushions them against the consequences of their bad choices. This is exactly the sentiment voiced by the House Republican who voted to strip away Obamacare and then explained that the new proposal, which punishes people with preexisting medical conditions, has the advantage of “reducing the cost to those people who lead good lives.”
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/ar ... 1-UqX30Z2Q
Radical Right Architecture Explained
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kalm
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Radical Right Architecture Explained
Very interesting review. The cult of the Chicago School.....
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Well done, kalmy. You found another ism.kalm wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 6:37 am Very interesting review. The cult of the Chicago School.....
With Reagan, deliverance seemed possible. Buchanan’s political influence reached its zenith. By this time, he had left the University of Virginia. As early as 1963, there were concerns—on the part of the dean of the faculty, for one—that Buchananism, at least as practiced at his Thomas Jefferson Center, had petrified into dogma, with no room for dissenting voices. After a battle over a promotion for his co-author, Tullock, Buchanan left in a huff. He went first to UCLA, next to Virginia Tech, and in 1983, climactically, to George Mason University, not far outside the Beltway—and much nearer to the political action. The Wall Street Journal soon labeled George Mason “the Pentagon of conservative academia.” With its “stable of economists who have become an important resource for the Reagan administration,” it was now poised to undo Great Society programs. In 1986, Buchanan won the Nobel Prize for his public-choice theory.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Klammy, I commend your resourcefulness in finding a 2017 book review by a flaming progressive that praises the work of another flaming progressive whose “scholarship” has been debunked by half the academic community. Google Nancy MacLean and see for yourself.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
If AOC wasn’t a complete millennial Myna bird she would have Twittered this article by now
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
And the other half loved it. I’d ask for a ruling from one of our resident centrists but I have a concern the article might hurt thinly veiled radical right wing economic feelings.Ivytalk wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 7:09 am Klammy, I commend your resourcefulness in finding a 2017 book review by a flaming progressive that praises the work of another flaming progressive whose “scholarship” has been debunked by half the academic community. Google Nancy MacLean and see for yourself.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
I haven't googled Nancy McLean but there is some truth to the article. Of course, that truth also applies to the opposite approach proposed by Bernie, Lizzie and Trip.kalm wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 7:27 amAnd the other half loved it. I’d ask for a ruling from one of our resident centrists but I have a concern the article might hurt thinly veiled radical right wing economic feelings.Ivytalk wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 7:09 am Klammy, I commend your resourcefulness in finding a 2017 book review by a flaming progressive that praises the work of another flaming progressive whose “scholarship” has been debunked by half the academic community. Google Nancy MacLean and see for yourself.
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Being wrong about a topic is called post partisanism - kalm
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Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
MAQA - putting the Q into qrazy qanon qult qonspiracy theories since 2015.
It will probably be difficult for MAQA yahoos to overcome the Qult programming but they should give being rational & reasonable a try.
Thank you for your attention to this matter - UNI88
Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
A radical leftist "progsplaining" for us.
This gave me a good chuckle, than you.
This gave me a good chuckle, than you.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Of course there’s some truth (objectivity appreciated) and yes there are flaws on the left as well.
Any reasonable person can take an article like this and appreciate that.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Well half of the population is below average.kalm wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 7:27 amAnd the other half loved it. I’d ask for a ruling from one of our resident centrists but I have a concern the article might hurt thinly veiled radical right wing economic feelings.Ivytalk wrote: ↑Sun Mar 01, 2020 7:09 am Klammy, I commend your resourcefulness in finding a 2017 book review by a flaming progressive that praises the work of another flaming progressive whose “scholarship” has been debunked by half the academic community. Google Nancy MacLean and see for yourself.
![]()
“The best of all things is to learn. Money can be lost or stolen, health and strength may fail, but what you have committed to your mind is yours forever.” – Louis L’Amour
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Half the population is below the median.
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.
“The best of all things is to learn. Money can be lost or stolen, health and strength may fail, but what you have committed to your mind is yours forever.” – Louis L’Amour
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
JSO paging madly through statistics textbook....Winterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:05 pm
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.![]()
“I’m tired and done.” — 89Hen 3/27/22.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
I would expect for him to know this stuff off the top of his head.Ivytalk wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:26 pmJSO paging madly through statistics textbook....Winterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:05 pm
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.![]()
![]()
“The best of all things is to learn. Money can be lost or stolen, health and strength may fail, but what you have committed to your mind is yours forever.” – Louis L’Amour
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
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Ivytalk
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
I can say with 95% confidence that he doesn’t.Winterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:27 pmI would expect for him to know this stuff off the top of his head.![]()
“I’m tired and done.” — 89Hen 3/27/22.
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
you underestimate these guysWinterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:05 pm
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.![]()
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
We are talking about Kalm here.houndawg wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 8:25 pmyou underestimate these guysWinterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:05 pm
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.![]()
“The best of all things is to learn. Money can be lost or stolen, health and strength may fail, but what you have committed to your mind is yours forever.” – Louis L’Amour
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” - G. Michael Hopf
"I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I am only very, very curious.” – Albert Einstein
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
He seems to have you playing catch up...
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
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Re: Radical Right Architecture Explained
Winterborn wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:05 pm
Just trying to use language my audience would understand.
And in a normal distribution (world population is greater than 30) median and mean are the same.![]()
yes, and the Pythagorean Theorem is just a special case of the Law of Cosines.
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine




