Saved by Keely Adler
Doing Too Little
Over the course of the twentieth century, America developed a right that fought the government and a left that hobbled it. Debates over the size of government obscured the diminishing capacity of government. An abundance of consumer goods distracted us from a scarcity of homes and energy and infrastructure and scientific breakthroughs.
Ezra Klein • Abundance
Precisely because technology is now moving so fast, and parliaments and dictators alike are overwhelmed by data they cannot process quickly enough, present-day politicians are thinking on a far smaller scale than their predecessors a century ago. Consequently, in the early twenty-first century politics is bereft of grand visions. Government has bec
... See moreYuval Noah Harari • Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow
A Capitalism for the People: Recapturing the Lost Genius of American Prosperity
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“Men are not free,” he wrote, “if dependent industrially on the arbitrary will of another.” Economic security was a foundation on which one could really be free in a meaningful sense—hence the importance of steady but not oppressive work, of education, time and space for leisure, parks, libraries, and other institutions.
Tim Wu • The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age
I think most people are bad at politics and politics is bad for most of us, yet I am not arguing that therefore we should have government do less (or more).
Jason Brennan • Against Democracy: New Preface
Liberation and social justice have been bureaucratized.