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CONSERVATIVES, ANALOGIES, AND APPOINTMENTS.

This is all getting a little silly. From Dave Weigel’s article on the efforts of pro-life Kansans to derail Kathleen Sebelius’s nomination: According to [David Gittrich, the long-serving state development director of Kansans for Life.], when Brownback turns his sights on the governor’s race he’ll gave to “reestablish his credentials as a pro-lifer” and explain […]

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THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION IS NOT ABOUT BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS.

I don’t mean to be churlish about this, because the intellectual history in Frank Foer and Noam Scheiber’s “Nudge-ocracy” is really quite good. But enough with the attempts to tie Obama to behavioral economics. The apparent influence of the nascent field on the actual policy proposals emerging from the administration is minimal. The stimulus was […]

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DEPARTMENT OF DEPRESSING SYMMETRIES.

Ben Smith has a nice catch today. Conservatives for Patient Rights — the folks founded and funded by this guy — released an ad quoting Canadian physician Brian Day on the horrors of socialized medicine. But an alert tipster sends the rest of the interview with Day. At about the four-minute mark, Days protests that […]

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SUMMERS TALKS ECON.

I’m loathe to describe Larry Summers’ in terms that suggest a shy and retiring personality, but it is the case that we’ve heard a lot less from him than from folks like, say, Tim Geithner. Last Friday, however, he gave a talk to the InterAmerican Development Bank outlining his take on the financial crisis (and […]

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WHEN CAREER AND PARENTHOOD ARE NOT A CHOICE.

One other point worth making on the marriage debate. In general, this conversation is conducted at a fairly elite level. When we talk about young couples choosing between furthering their education and careers and getting married and having children, we’re generally talking about the minority of Americans who go to college or even travel beyond. […]

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YES, BUT WHY DO THEY GET MARRIED LATER?

To say a bit more on Mark Regnerus’s brief for young marriage, these arguments have a tendency to sound like a debate Ward Cleaver thinks he’s having with Paris Hilton. That’s not as dismissive as it may sound: Cleaver and Hilton both have points. But they’re not terribly useful points. Regnerus gets at, but doesn’t […]

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THE ORSZAG-FURMAN AXIS.

Ryan Lizza’s profile of Peter Orszag begins with a long Jon Stewart anecdote and ends by making some health care news. Thus, it is, in the eyes of this blog, virtually a perfect work. Here’s the news: Orszag’s job is to defend Obama’s budget on all fronts, but he will be most deeply engaged in […]

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READY, SET, CITE!

The video above pits Henry Waxman against Newt Gingrich is straight-up, no-holds-barred, citation warfare. (There are moments when I wish this blog had music, or at least exciting sound effects). The primary point of contention is a number you’re hearing a lot these days: $3,128. That’s the supposed yearly cost that cap and trade will […]

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TIM GEITHNER’S WALL STREET DAYS.

The New York Times has a front-pager on Tim Geithner’s schedule back when he was heading the New York Federal Reserve. What we learn is that Geithner spent a lot of time hanging out with bank presidents. He was even a candidate to helm Citibank (Geithner apparently had no interest in the job). As always, […]

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YOUR WORLD IN POLLS: EVERYONE LOVES THEIR DOCTOR EDITION.

If you look at the health care policies favored by liberals and the health care policies favored by conservatives, here’s the general difference: Conservatives believe the decision-maker in health care is the consumer. Liberals believe it’s the doctor. And so conservative policies try to change consumer behavior. Liberal policies try to change doctor behavior. That’s […]

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