Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
At the Freedom School, Charles became particularly enamored of the work of two laissez-faire economists, the Austrian theorist Ludwig von Mises and his star pupil, Friedrich Hayek, an Austrian exile, who visited the Freedom School. Hayek’s book The Road to Serfdom had become an improbable best seller in 1944, after Reader’s Digest published a
... See moreJane Mayer • Dark Money
Alex Lyman
@sidematter
Paul Steckler
@bricin
That mutual friend—Ed Luce—is remarkably good humored about introducing me to Marne. They both worked for Larry Summers at the Treasury Department.
Sarah Wynn-Williams • Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism
Eric Franklin
@pw_eric
And while traditionalists, taking their cues from Aristotle, Aquinas, and Burke, believed that man was naturally sociable and tended toward consensus, so long as there was the faithful transmission of an ethical tradition, Burnham saw only conflict. This bedrock belief in the “irrational” and violent core of man and the primacy of conflict over
... See moreJohn Ganz • When the Clock Broke
Ava Kofman • Curtis Yarvin’s Plot Against America
Howard Fineman
@howdef
Lester Feder
@outlander