Christopher Freiman celebrates “the warmth of cooperation.”
I came to the U.S. as an immigrant, seeking freedom, opportunity and a better life. It was the late 1940s, and I had $60 in my pocket. Immigrants weren’t suspect in those days. Americans welcomed me and wished me luck. Five years later, I became a proud U.S. citizen.
I got an education (California’s community colleges were free and the university’s fees were nominal) and started a family. With work and luck, I became a contributing taxpayer, and good things came my way. I even had the privilege to serve in three presidential administrations, including as Treasury secretary.
Things look very different for immigrants today.
America faces major geopolitical challenges, as always. But we are being pulled apart domestically by incessant turbulence. Our major institutions are under attack, immigrants and ethnic minorities are demonized, and there has been an uptick in political violence. Congress has gone AWOL, public trust is near historic lows and, increasingly, voters listen to demagogues and conspiracy theorists.
…..
These are fraught times for our cherished democracy. The White House attempts to govern by executive fiat as a polarized Congress fails to supply checks and balances, creating a dangerous situation. Some people fear more of the same over the next three years and beyond. Citing Europe in the 1930s, they think we will lose our democratic freedoms.
I have reached a different conclusion. Perhaps it is my long life, beginning in Europe, that helps me recognize the similarities but also the differences. Some of what’s happened has a familiar ring—raucous rallies, nationalistic rhetoric of grievance, ignoring legal constraints, attacks on minorities, judges, media and cultural institutions, threats against political opponents, flexibility with the truth, and extravagant promises mostly unmet. Not least are the opportunists and enablers who scramble for power and profit while those who know better let it happen by not fighting back.
But the U.S. today isn’t Europe 100 years ago. I have faith in our democratic institutions and the common sense of the American voter.
Americans aren’t ideologues, they are pragmatists. Politically they cluster around the middle and dislike extremism and overreach. They dislike the rhetoric of violence, the military on their streets, and the arrests of working people in stores, churches and schools. Nor are they on principle opposed to immigrants.
First and foremost, they expect elected officials to address urgent problems like rising prices and runaway healthcare costs, the lack of affordable housing, poverty and need. When politicians fail to deliver, the people make their views known at the ballot box, as happened recently in Virginia, New Jersey and elsewhere. With midterm elections coming this year, Congress is beginning to listen. Gradually and gingerly, party lines are being crossed in the House and Senate.
Tarnell Brown writes with insight about “the deportation labor shock.” Here’s his conclusion:
Mass deportation does not elevate American workers. It impoverishes them—quietly, broadly, and predictably. An economy grounded in voluntary exchange and secure property rights requires labor mobility, not forced scarcity. If the objective is abundance—more homes, lower prices, and rising real wages—the evidence points decisively away from deportation and toward legal, market‑driven labor flows.
How does a Republican lose by 14 points in a safe conservative Texas state Senate seat that President Trump carried by 17 points in 2024? Answer: When there’s a voter backlash against the Trump Administration, notably its mass deportation debacles.
That’s what happened Saturday in a special election to fill a GOP seat in Tarrant County in the Fort Worth area. Democrat Taylor Rehmet, a labor union leader and veteran, romped over Republican Leigh Wambsganss, who had a Truth Social endorsement from Mr. Trump and vastly outspent Mr. Rehmet.
The election timing was awful for Republicans in the wake of the two killings by immigration agents in Minneapolis. Ms. Wambsganss has been a leader in the parental-rights movement in school boards and wasn’t a bad candidate. But state politics is often national these days, and the 31-point vote swing in a little more than 14 months can only be explained as part of a rising tide of opposition to Mr. Trump’s first year and a sour public mood.
…..
Mr. Miller ordered the immigration bureaucracy to fill a quota of 3,000 migrant arrests a day. This was bound to result in agent intrusions into homes and businesses, since there aren’t that many criminal migrants to fill such a quota each day.
Immigration has overall been a winning issue for Republicans, but it works better as a reaction to Democratic border enforcement failures. Mr. Trump has already largely closed the border. But immigration enforcement that turns ugly in the streets is turning off the swing voters who will determine who wins the race for Congress this year.
Jason Willick ponders the unexpected tardiness of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in the case challenging Trump’s tariffs punitive and arbitrary taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. Here’s his conclusion:
It’s always perilous to make predictions about a case based on the deciders’ timeline, but some are possible. Criminal defense lawyers tend to be happy when the jury is out for a long time without convicting their client. And the longer a status quo stays in place, all else being equal, the less likely the Supreme Court is to disturb it. In a recent case on National Guard deployments, the Supreme Court sat on Trump’s appeal for a curiously long time before affirming the status quo — no National Guard in Chicago — that the lower courts had established.
Eric Boehm isn’t buying Trump’s claim that inflation is no more.
If the press formerly accosted White House press secretaries, in recent days this has reversed, with the press secretary now on the attack. An all-too-vivid example of this occurred this month, when 28-year-old Karoline Leavitt attacked Niall Stanage, a White House columnist for the Hill, after he revealed that he thought that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who shot Renee Good acted recklessly and unjustifiably.
Ms. Leavitt unloaded: “You’re a left-wing hack. You’re not a reporter. You’re posing in this room as a journalist. . . . And shame on people like you in the media who have a crooked view and have a biased view, and pretend like you’re a real honest journalist.”
She has taken the job to new heights (or is it new depths?). Ms. Leavitt seems more certain than President Trump of the efficacy of President Trump’s policies. She is also often more mean-spirited than he and is without his sense of humor. What was once a job that called for a voice of seemingly poised neutrality has, under Ms. Leavitt, become one of sullen partisanship. Hers is henchman-like behavior.
Matt Yglesias tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)
Part of the affordability crisis is pretty clearly people just refusing to be thrifty — you should not be spending a quarter of your salary on DoorDash.
People get angry at this point but aggregate American spending on eating/drinking out or having that food delivered is at a record high, and the proportion spent on store-bought food is at a joint-record low with the peak housing bubble era.
Richard Brookhiser tells what he learned from America’s founders. A slice:
Yet when we look past the tumult and the shouting, we find that Jefferson deeply believed two things. First, that people have rights. They have them not because Jefferson, or the Continental Congress, said so, but because of what people are. This is why Jefferson, philosophic Unitarian though he was, called rights the endowment of a Creator. This is why he recognized them, even through the gritted teeth of habit and personal dependence, in the people he owned.
The second thing Jefferson deeply believed was that the people would most often be right. He believed this in part as a Virginia gentleman playing at being a yeoman; in part because of the moral philosophy of his day. For Jefferson, the five senses on which empiricist thinkers of the previous generation had lavished so much attention were supplemented by a sixth, a moral sense, which all men had. “The moral sense,” he wrote one of his nephews in 1787, “is as much a part of man as his leg or arm.” He went on: “State a moral case to a ploughman and a professor. The former will decide it as well, and often better than the latter, because he has not been led astray by artificial rules.”
Jefferson’s two convictions don’t obviously agree. You could believe in rights yet fear people as a potential mob; alternatively, you could support popular rule even when it tramples on rights. Jefferson the politician experienced periods when the American people, ploughmen included, were led astray by panics and lies (he memorably called one such phase, during the administration of his sometime friend John Adams, the “reign of witches”). Yet, over the long haul, he believed in both rights and the people. Among those rights was self-rule. And the people, Jefferson believed, mostly exercised it wisely. We might carp at his analyses of specific political moments, or fuss over his intellectual justifications. But if either of his convictions is wrong, then America is wrong.


International trade, especially, tends to expose cultures to new ways of doing things and breaks down the perception that only one way is possible, even in non-economic areas like politics, art and religion.
Because ideology and political movements develop reciprocally, the pervasive reactions to the rise of big business around the turn of the twentieth century gave rise not simply to a proliferation of newly organized interest groups seeking government protection of threatened positions; it also prompted intellectuals, both independents and “hired guns,” to develop new rationales for more active government. Thus Progressivism as ideology developed concurrently with Progressivism as politico-economic practice, each aspect reflecting the changing socioeconomic opportunities and hazards created by the rise of big business and its repercussions throughout the economy.
Every doctrine to become popular, must be made superficial, exaggerated, untrue. We must always distinguish the real essence from the conveyance, especially in political economy.
It used to be said that taxes are the price we pay to live in a civilized society. Today, taxes are the price we pay so that politicians can buy the votes of those who are feeding at the public trough.
