George Will expresses eloquently his wise objections to the new U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. Slaughter. Two slices:
On Monday, the Supreme Court enlarged presidential power far beyond its already menacing dimensions, which are beyond anything the Founders could have imagined. Self-described “originalist” justices did so in the name of assuring the president’s democratic “accountability.” The original originalists, the Constitution’s framers, would have winced.
…..
The unitary executive theory says what the Constitution nowhere says: that any governmental activity with an executive aspect must be controlled by the president. Furthermore, Kagan correctly insists that much of what the independent agencies do — making, within parameters set by Congress, rules that have the force of law — is mischaracterized as executive. Congress delegated this obviously legislative function on the assumption — true for decades, until Monday — that the agencies would not be under presidential domination.
Why, exactly, cannot Congress carve out, by laws, exceptions to the president’s removal power, exceptions that Congress thinks serve the public interest? The president should be duty-bound to take care that those laws are faithfully executed. Never until Monday has this been declared constitutionally forbidden.
The court has made the congressional power exercised over multimember independent agencies irrecoverable. Any president will veto Congress’s attempt to claw back its power. So, it will be nearly impossible for congressional supermajorities to pass legislation reestablishing the bargain it struck when, in the 19th century, it began creating independent agencies.
Most debates over artificial intelligence begin with the same question: Which jobs will AI destroy? But the first labor-market shock may not be mass job loss. It may be worker migration from traditional firms.
AI is making it easier for one worker to do tasks that once required a small team. In industries where AI can handle research, drafting, coding, editing and analysis, the result isn’t necessarily unemployment. It may be independence.
…..
The firm isn’t disappearing, but for some knowledge work, the advantages of being inside one are. Labor-market institutions have yet to adjust. Unemployment insurance assumes one employer, a clean separation, and a search for another job. Health insurance remains heavily tied to employment, and many retirement plans, leave benefits, and tax advantages are organized around the employer.
The most immediate question isn’t whether AI will eventually replace workers. It is whether AI is already making workers less dependent on the firm while policy remains anchored to it.
Ilya Somin applauds the ruling in Trump v. Barbara.
Karl Rove is rightly repulsed by the notion of “heritage Americans.” Two slices:
The historian Gordon Wood put it well. The Revolution that the Declaration announced “radically and thoroughly transformed” American society. It “destroyed aristocracy,” made “the interests and prosperity of ordinary people . . . the goal of society and government,” and released “powerful popular entrepreneurial and commercial energies.”
America wasn’t built by the rich and powerful but in large part by discards, rejects, losers and throwaways who made their way here. “Give me your tired, your poor, / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, / The wretched refuse of your teeming shore” Emma Lazarus wrote in her 1883 sonnet, later inscribed on the Statue of Liberty’s pedestal.
Inspired by the Declaration, people have come over the centuries hoping life could be better. Abide by its principles and the Constitution written to secure them, the promise went, and you and America can flourish.
We have. What began as pioneers huddled on a narrow coastal strip, an ocean away from the civilization they knew and facing an immense, unknown land is now a mighty nation that spans a continent.
America has become the most prosperous, compassionate, innovative, open society the world has known. Despite our challenges, doubts and divisions, America still demonstrates every day what a free people can achieve—for their families and the nation—if we strive to make the Declaration’s words real.
…..
One in seven American residents is an immigrant. For the other six, this Saturday should be a day for special gratitude. Through no action of our own, we were born here, and—alongside all who made their difficult way to America—enjoy the blessings of what happened in Philadelphia in the summer of 1776. Happy Fourth, to every American.
The great Bruce Yandle talks about the economy.
Scott Atlas makes a powerful case for abolishing the National Institutes of Health. Three slices:
In 1980, economist Milton Friedman said the National Institutes of Health should be abolished. Friedman said the same about another government research agency, the National Science Foundation. And when he was asked what the NSF should be replaced with, he replied: “Nothing.”
Whistleblower documents highlighted in a recent report showed what happens when private billions meet a public agency that can be influenced: Bill Gates’s foundation spent two decades steering the NIH research agenda toward its own priorities — with agency officials as willing partners. The NIH has become a government entity captured by special-interest groups — just as Friedman feared 46 years ago.
…..
This financial exploitation is compounded by political agendas, regardless of party. President Ronald Reagan’s administration delayed AIDS research funding; Reagan did not address the epidemic publicly until 1987, after more than 36,000 Americans had been diagnosed and nearly 21,000 had died. President George W. Bush restricted embryonic stem cell research on religious grounds. President Barack Obama reversed that ban by executive order. His administration created the NIH’s ideologically driven Sexual and Gender Minority Research Office in 2015.
…..
The NIH has funded valuable science. But it’s also a governmental monopoly with a roughly $48 billion budget subject to political influence, fiscal abuse and suppression of scientific dissent — one that has diverted billions from actual science to academic operations, racial set-asides and ideological mandates. It is what government agencies always become: an instrument of whoever holds power, and one that escapes accountability. Friedman asked the fundamental question: On whom should the burden of proof rest — on those who force taxpayers to fund government research, or on those who challenge its necessity? Abolishing the NIH is not a case against science. It is a case for science itself.
The video here exposes some of the destructiveness and injustice of rent control.
Thomas Massie tweets this about Trump: (HT Scott Lincicome)
Imagine if Biden or Obama had bragged about shaking down a private company for 10% public ownership.


The state of opinion which governs a decision on political issues is always the result of a slow evolution, extending over long periods and proceeding at many different levels. New ideas start among a few and gradually spread until they become the possession of a majority who know little of their origin.
The reader who has followed the voluminous economic literature which German scholarship has piled up in recent years meets not infrequently the contention in favor of Schutz der nationalen Arbeit [Protection of National Labor]. Yet often he is left in doubt just how and why national labor is to be shielded by protection, – whether for preventing sudden shifts in the historically rooted industries of a slow-moving people, or for elevating the condition of labor in the whole country. Or, to take another example, it is often set forth, in the same quarters, that the burdens which the great social legislation of Germany imposes on her employers must be offset by duties on the products of competing foreign employers, – a proposition to which the stanch [sic] protectionist would unhesitatingly assent. But, if this be a good ground for compensating duties, why is not a general higher range of wages also a good ground, or any other condition unfavorable to the employer, – e.g., high income or property taxes, or poorer natural advantages? To answer these questions, some severe reasoning is called for: plain commonsense, unsupported by sustained argument from principle, does not suffice.
Americans of my generation, and of earlier ones, will remember – not fondly – the gasoline lines of Fall 1973 and the even worse lines of Summer 1979. The gasoline shortages of the disco decade were the predictable consequence of energy price controls that, although eased somewhat by Carter, weren’t completely removed until
Price controls have been tried on every inhabited continent and for 4,000 years of recorded history. Few policies have been tried among more races or in so many different cultural settings. Yet the results have been remarkably similar.
