On the Newsstand:Giving

Max Novendstern / April 11, 2010 3:18 pm

Weighing In: The Great Tax Debate

The Great Tax Debate begins every year in the blogosphere around April 15th. On the line are normative claims, like whether and to what extent we should be distributing resources communally. But the facts are easy to get wrong too. So today I thought I’d lay out some factual correctives to Peyton’s exemplar of the Great Tax Debate form, “Robin ... Read More

Sam Barr / April 9, 2010 7:10 am

Weighing In: Are Interns Slaves?

In dueling editorials, two sets of Crimson editors opined today on the federal crack-down on unpaid internships. I’m with the pro-payment crowd, but I think that both the sides made the same conceptual error by assuming that this is a straightforward case of equality versus opportunity. The majority view was that, even though stricter regulation “might result in fewer internship ... Read More

Isabelle Glimcher and Tim Lambert / March 31, 2010 4:24 pm

Cycle of Corruption

Corruption in Africa will not end until civil society repairs itself

Will Rafey / March 15, 2010 6:18 pm

A Reflection on Ourselves

Media narratives about backwards Africa say more about us than them.

Max Novendstern / February 28, 2010 7:14 pm

Online Privacy, Google and Facebook

Google’s court case in Italy is a big deal. As everyone is saying, if Google can be held accountable for the content it syndicates on its site, that would change the way that information flows through the internet forever. It could close the whole thing down. I thought I’d take this opportunity to throw out some loosely connected ideas on ... Read More

Alex Sherbany / February 26, 2010 12:51 am

The Economist: Blame Obama, Not the System

Didn’t want to let this go by without comment. From the Feb. 18 edition (“What’s Wrong With Washington?”): Washington has its faults, some of which could easily be fixed. But much of the current fuss forgets the purpose of American government; and it lets current politicians (Mr Obama in particular) off the hook. America’s political structure was designed to make ... Read More

Jonathan Yip / February 15, 2010 1:27 pm

HarvardGOP.org Wages War

Perhaps inspired by the beauty that is our new blog, the Harvard GOP relaunched their website yesterday, giving harvardgop.org a patriotic, deeply American makeover. The new site makes heavy use of the “Ken Burns effect” with dynamic and engaging photos of Newt Gingrich standing at the front of a table. I learned from a quick browse of the site that ... Read More

Alex Sherbany / February 13, 2010 3:20 pm

Has ‘Engagement’ with Iran Failed?

Ahmadinejad’s recent announcement that Iran will proceed to weapons-grade enrichment of uranium has brought much of the Western world to its senses about talking the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism into giving up its nuclear quest. On Obama’s recent call for sanctions, the BBC reports (emphasis mine): The president sounded not unlike his predecessor George W Bush, who worked ... Read More

Max Novendstern / February 9, 2010 2:05 am

One Summit At A Time

Will Leiter gives us an overview of Obama’s “bipartisan summit” strategy and asks, in effect, will it work? Some smart people whom I respect say that this is capitulation and error (see Yglesias’ “doomed strategy” post). That viewpoint conforms nicely with the basic stance on the left since Scott Brown’s election, which has been that either (a) healthcare reform is ... Read More

Alex Copulsky / February 2, 2010 9:48 am

The Dim Prospects for Meaningful Financial Reform

Well, the Senate just spent a year trying and failing to pass a moderate, compromised-to-hell health reform plan.  Which, incidentally, if that is comprehensive reform I’m not really sure I’d like to see their “tinkering around the edges”.  However, the important thing is that they managed to defuse special interest anger by buying them off with legislative goodies.  Wait, that’s ... Read More

Max Novendstern / January 22, 2010 1:27 am

Scott Brown Endorses Health Care Reform

Coakley’s loss was a lot of things — but a repudiation of Obama’s health care reform it was not. Massachusetts is an odd state to be signing the death sentence for Obama’s health care reform because Massachusetts actually enjoys a universal health care program that’s very similar to the one in congress today. And Scott Brown’s an odd angel of ... Read More

Sam Barr / January 14, 2010 2:29 pm

Obama’s Shrewd Bank Tax

The tea-party movement has always contained potentially contradictory strains of populism and libertarianism. Back when we were bailing out the big banks, these strands coincided: conservatives could say, look, Obama is giving your money away to Wall Street fat cats and he’s interfering in the free market. But now that Obama is proposing to recoup the bailouts with a tax ... Read More

Max Novendstern / January 9, 2010 12:12 pm

When will white people stop writing articles like this?

If you’ve seen Avatar and haven’t yet read Annalee Newitz’s article “When will white people stop making movies like this?” then you’re missing out. Avatar — putatively anti-racist, seemingly simple and beautiful and extraordinarily entertaining — is in fact, she argues, mired with subtle racial biases and white ethnocentrism. She writes: These are movies about white guilt. Our main white ... Read More

Jeffrey Kalmus / December 20, 2009 11:09 pm

The Mathematical Prophet

Should we heed his word?

Anthony Dedousis / December 20, 2009 8:14 pm

Shareholders to the Rescue

Congress's plan for giving investors a voice

custom writing