The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board remembers Robert Woodson. A slice:
Woodson never denied that racism continues to exist in America. But he believed it was a cruel tyranny if minorities used racism as an excuse for not taking the opportunities available in this country. He was a frequent contributor to these pages, and six years ago he put it this way in the Journal: “Dr. [Martin Luther] King would have refused to participate in today’s identity politics gamesmanship because it frames its grievances in opposition to the American principles of freedom and equality that he sought to redeem.”
His legacy will live on in the Woodson Center he founded in 1981 to promote self-help solutions in low-income neighborhoods. He also created the 1776 Unites campaign to counter the 1619 Project of the New York Times that claims the real American founding was when the first slaves arrived on these shores.
Woodson believed in the founding of the Declaration of Independence, as Abraham Lincoln did. As America celebrates its 250th anniversary, Bob Woodson’s life and work is a tribute to the Declaration’s promise.
Sixty percent of Harvard students are obviously among the smartest of the smart!
As an obligatory reminder, tariffs are levied on American importers who pass the costs on to American businesses and consumers. Those insisting tariffs are “paid by foreigners” must now dispute not just history but the present.
The Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome and colleagues reviewed a year of data from Trump’s tariff regime and found that “the higher costs from tariffs passed through to prices paid by Americans at a rate as high as 96 percent.”
Using daily price data from major U.S. retailers, economists from Harvard Business School found that the 2025 tariffs raised consumer prices almost immediately, with imported goods rising roughly twice as fast as domestic ones and adding nearly a full percentage point to the overall Consumer Price Index by October 2025.
This finding isn’t unique. My colleague Jack Salmon examined 56 quantitative studies produced over the last 30 years and found 19 showing tariffs raise prices and zero showing tariffs lower prices.
This reality has a real impact on Americans. The Tax Foundation put the cost of the tariffs at roughly $1,000 per American household in 2025, with another $700 coming in 2026 from the Section 232 and Section 122 levies, which were left unaffected by Supreme Court’s recent rebuke. It shows up in grocery bills, appliance prices, and clothing costs—routine purchases for working-class households.
The damage goes beyond prices. Salmon’s literature review finds 25 studies documenting negative effects of tariffs on productivity and economic output. None of those studies show positive effects. Across Chile, India, Indonesia, Brazil, Hungary, Canada, and the United States, the pattern is the same: Lower tariffs raise productivity; higher tariffs reduce it.
Here’s Roger Pielke, Jr. on the climate doomsayers’ own retreat from their doomsday predictions.
James Pethokoukis explains that “Google’s AI pivot has a lesson for anti-trust enthusiasts.” A slice:
Big changes coming to Google. The tech giant has just announced the biggest overhaul of its search box since the product launched. It’s going to swap keyword guessing for conversational queries and embed AI agents that can, say, monitor concert announcements on a user’s behalf, reports Ina Fried of Axios in “Google reinvents search before AI rivals replace it.” The company is betting that the best defense against rival AI companies is to fully become one itself. Whether or not it succeeds, it’s the latest example of how Big Tech’s supposed forever dominance—based on supposedly unassailable and unchanging core businesses—is looking rather less permanent than its critics imagined not so long ago.
Recall the “hipster antitrust” movement, progressive (and populist, in some cases) revivalists who wanted to dust off Sherman Act doctrine and apply it to digital platforms. They cast Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, and Microsoft as fat-and-happy monopolists, skimming excess profits from captive users while snuffing out potential rivals. The implicit theory was that these companies, absent regulatory intervention, would simply entrench for the long-term.
But the AI revolution is doing what Washington lawyers and wonks couldn’t: create a new competitive environment forcing Big Tech to innovate or be usurped.
Tad DeHaven reports on the latest move by the Trump administration to socialize the U.S. economy.
George Will decries Trump’s blatant self-dealing. A slice:
There is a sort of artistry, akin to the shenanigans used to cook Enron’s books, in Trump’s attempt to fleece taxpayers for a $1.776 billion (get it? this is patriotic) slush fund to be doled out by his friends to his accomplices. The doling will be done by a board appointed by the attorney general, who serves at the president’s pleasure. Trump can fire the board members for any reason. And the fund will disappear immediately after the 2028 election. Here is how this came about:
In 2017-18, a progressive working inside the IRS (he subsequently went inside a prison), was eager to dramatize “inequality.” He committed the crime of releasing the tax returns of some wealthy people, including Trump. In January, Trump sued the IRS (the head of which serves at the pleasure of the president) for $10 billion. This was a prelude to this week’s “compromise.”
Trump — essentially negotiating with himself, sitting on both sides of the table — agreed to drop this suit. In exchange, the Justice Department (its head serves at Trump’s pleasure) agreed to create the $1.776 billion fund to compensate government “lawfare” victims.


From Hayek, I learned that human well-being and progress come through a spontaneous order of cooperation and competition, guided “only by abstract rules of conduct,” and that the attempt to succeed by controlling and dominating people is a “fatal conceit” that will end in failure.
The evidence is by now overwhelming, compiled for example in works on economic history, among which my own, that liberty in equal permission has led over the past two centuries and especially over the past seventy years – speaking empirically, quantitatively, comparatively, scientifically – to equality, fairness, justice, better culture, and better ethics. Abridgments of liberty have worked the other way.
The rediscovery and reconstruction of general political standards can be carried forward only, I believe, by developing the abiding truth of the older liberalism after purging it of the defects which destroyed it. The pioneer liberals vindicated the supremacy of law over the arbitrary power of men. That is the abiding truth which we inherit from them.
