I know the quality’s been down a bit over the last week. The posts are shorter, there are fewer of them, and I’ve increased the spelling errors. Apologies all around. Like a good liberal, I’m going to blame it on something, mainly my decision to graduate early. I’m swamped with job applications, course work, and […]
Ezra Klein
Ezra Klein is a former Prospect writer and current editor-in-chief at Vox. His work has appeared in the LA Times, The Guardian, The Washington Monthly, The New Republic, Slate, and The Columbia Journalism Review. He’s been a commentator on MSNBC, CNN, NPR, and more.
iLife
Mark Schmitt’s got an excellent, thought-provoking post on the changing face of membership. Contra the Dean campaign and NARAL, he believes the era of dues-paying, weekly-meeting organization has passed, and we should start asking what’s next. He’s right. I was as enthused as everyone else about the Dean for America MeetUps, but they survived only […]
Great Minds, Etc…
Brad Plumer jumps on a hobbyhorse of mine, namely, the need to build more medical schools. There are a mere 125 in the nation, and the competition is so intense that a B here and there disqualifies you. Fast forward a few years and doctors are so overloaded that they make patients wait hours but […]
I Want A Reality-Based Electorate
Via Kevin Drum, this is really the most amazing graphic I’ve ever seen: At any given time, significantly more than half of Americans think the government’s primary outlays are coming from food stamps and foreign aid. Meanwhile, back in reality-land, Americans spend $32 billion on food stamps and $7.4 billion on foreign aid, all this […]
Knowledge Will Set You Free
From the WaPo’s recent poll: We’ve done an excellent job explaining that private accounts aren’t a solution to Social Security’s economic problems, now we need to broadcast how they’d worsen them. But while we have a task, Bush has a dilemma. His whole spiel on private accounts rests on convincing Americans of a crisis. But […]
Bush Gets it Right
I know this question is becoming trite, but what the hell is Friedman talking about? There will be a lot of trial and error in the months ahead. But this is a hugely important horizontal dialogue because if Iraqis can’t forge a social contract, it would suggest that no other Arab country can – since […]
Dem-On-Dem Violence, and Why I Love It
Well this is nice to hear: Rep. Paul Ryan (R.-Wis.) was asked at a CATO conference in Washington yesterday whether he had persuaded any Democrats to back his plan to rescue Social Security from its financial troubles…A questioner from the audience, stressing his own Democratic credentials, said he believed Ryan’s plan should attract members of […]
Laws and the Liars Who Write Them
It got basically no coverage yesterday (North Korea has nukes! Charles marrying Camilla! Not necessarily in that order!), but the Senate passed a significant class-action lawsuit bill. The legislation forces many class-action suits out of states and into federal courts, where judges (many, many, many of them appointed by Republicans, simply because they’ve held the […]
Finish Him!
I am all about Kriston’s proposal for Pundit Kombat. Suggest appropriate match-ups in the comments.
To Fight or Not to Fight?
I’ve not been particularly interested in the Cole/Goldberg slapfest (the only surprising thing was Cole wasting time on him, which seemed to me a defeat at the outset), but the argument over advocating war without fighting it is certainly worth engaging. Unfogged started it (read the comments too) and Yglesias picked it up, and now […]


