Categories
Thought

Samuel Butler

The most important service rendered by the press and the magazines is that of educating people to approach printed matter with distrust.

Samuel Butler’s Notebooks (1951), p. 221.
Categories
Thought

Warren G. Harding

America’s present need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not revolution, but restoration; not agitation, but adjustment; not surgery, but serenity; not the dramatic, but the dispassionate; not experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in internationality, but sustainment in triumphant nationality.

Warren Gamaliel Harding, speech in Boston, May 24, 1920.
Categories
Thought

Jo Ann Skousen

The best Christmas movies can trace their roots to A Christmas Carol. They ask us to examine our lives, reflect on our choices, and discover changes that can lead to happier futures.

Jo Ann Skousen, “The Strange Case of the Christmas Movie” (December 9, 2021), Liberty.
Categories
Thought

Patrick Henry

Caesar had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell; and George the Third — [“Treason!” cried the Speaker] — may profit by their example. If this be treason, make the most of it.

Patrick Henry, speech on the Stamp Act, Virginia House of Burgesses (May 29, 1765), according to John Burk in The History of Virginia: From Its First Settlement to the Present Day (Dickson & Pescud, 1805), Volume 3, p. 309. Contemporary accounts vary.
Categories
Thought

Curley Effect

When politicians seeking to stay in power use distortionary policies to force out their political opponents, the more elastic response renders bad policies more, rather than less, attractive.

Edward L. Glaeser and Andrei Schleifer, “The Curley Effect: The Economics of Shaping the Electorate,” Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 21 (1): 1-19, (2005). The article’s abstract identifies the principle’s namesake: “James Michael Curley, a four-time mayor of Boston, used wasteful redistribution to his poor Irish constituents and incendiary rhetoric to encourage richer citizens to emigrate from Boston, thereby shaping the electorate in his favor. As a consequence, Boston stagnated, but Curley kept winning elections.” See David Henderson, “Curley Effect in California” (May 4, 2012).
Categories
Thought

Palki Sharma

Look at what’s happening in the U.S. It is now one of the biggest omicron hotspots. The U.S. is running out of everything: testing kits, hospital beds, health workers and now nursing home staff. There’s a shortage of everything in America. And these shortages are getting worse by the day. . . . The Biden Administration was clearly not prepared for this.

Palki Sharma, reporting for WION (The World Is One News), an Indian-based media company (Dec. 28, 2021).