September 05, 2006
Search results for "minimum wage"
July 31, 2006
Will Chicago Mandate the “Everyday Low Price” too?
August 30, 2005
Fair trade goes bananas
May 24, 2005
‘A More Sophisticated View of Politics’
October 11, 2024
Taxing Unrealized Capital Gains Will Realize Less than Nothing
The time for sound economic thinking is now. Reading the economic policy news is a daily head-spinning experience. Price-gouging, “greedflation,” $25K government cash subsidies for new homebuyers, eliminating taxes on tips,expanded child tax credits, and taxing unrealized capital gains top the list. Continue Reading...
August 15, 2023
Tyranny, Inc. and the Future of American Labor
Tyranny, Inc. is the best book yet published by a writer associated with the “postliberal” movement. Ahmari’s argument is focused and topical, he offers spirited critiques without ranting, and gives proper credit to the academic sources on which he draws. Continue Reading...
May 11, 2023
What the Writers Strike Means for Entertainment Today
Although most people probably haven’t noticed yet, there is a currently a writers strike happening in Hollywood. For the time being, the main programs affected have been late night and daytime talk shows (apparently, there are actual writersfor The View). Continue Reading...
March 15, 2023
Conservative Compassion Fatigue
Part 3 of my series on poverty and the welfare state ended with a brief look at two community associations in South Dallas. As the Washington welfare-reform impasse in 1995 and 1996 dragged on, I traveled the country learning and speechifying. Continue Reading...
September 26, 2022
The Inflation Reduction Act Won’t Reduce Inflation
President Biden has signed the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), his attempt at delivering on his campaign promises of new investments to combat climate change, improve healthcare, and impose “fair” corporate taxes. Continue Reading...
August 26, 2021
How America’s ‘creative class’ learned to love conformity
In 2000, columnist David Brooks wrote Bobos in Paradise, hailing the dawn of a new phase in America’s longstanding story of meritocracy. The “bobos” were a peculiar breed — part bohemian, part bourgeoisie — blurring class divides in a way that would introduce a new form of enlightened, activist citizenship in a country with an otherwise ambivalent middle class. Continue Reading...