Today’s Wall Street Journal features this lovely essay by Robert Woodson, who died a few days ago. A slice:
America was founded on ideals intentionally left unfinished. Its true greatness lies not in claims of perfection, but in its constitutional capacity for self-correction. The painful struggle to live up to those ideals takes courage, self-discipline and, above all, grace. Not the cheap, performative grace of political rhetoric that rationalizes wrongdoing or denies injustice. The costly kind that demands something of you: discipline, sacrifice, responsibility and moral courage. The kind that chooses restoration over revenge even when revenge feels justified.
Radical grace doesn’t excuse evil but refuses to let evil define the future. This virtue has always been one of black America’s greatest contributions to the nation. Slavery didn’t build black resilience. It revealed the strength, faith, ingenuity and perseverance already present in people who refused to let oppression define the limits of their humanity. Out of bondage emerged some of the greatest examples of entrepreneurship, family formation, innovation, moral strength and excellence this country has ever produced.
Even during Jim Crow, flowers grew through the cracks. Radical grace, not victimhood, is the defining thread of black America’s story, and it is the model all Americans must recover.
Here’s the abstract of a new paper by U.C.-Berkeley economist Lucas Davis:
It may seem like a distant memory now, but as of the mid-2000s, U.S. natural gas production had been flat for a decade, and the U.S. was importing liquefied natural gas (LNG), with plans to import much more. Then shale gas happened. Advances in hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling caused U.S. natural gas production to increase significantly, and the U.S. went from being a net importer of natural gas to being the world’s largest exporter. This paper calculates how much shale gas has saved U.S. natural gas consumers. Using price differences between the United States, Europe and Japan, we calculate that U.S. natural gas consumers have saved $3.1-$4.3 trillion between 2007 and 2025, equivalent to $164-$227 billion annually. Access to low-price U.S. natural gas has been particularly valuable during major supply shocks such as the war in Ukraine, and the benefits of shale gas have been experienced broadly across sectors and states.
The scramble for as much as $166 billion in refunds — plus interest — comes with the risk of political and legal jeopardy. Trump often says it’s foreign firms that pay his import taxes — though studies show otherwise — and he’s now painting refund backers as unpatriotic after the Supreme Court struck down his IEEPA authority.
“You’re talking about the people in many cases that hate our country, giving them back money,” the president told reporters at the White House on Thursday. “It was a terrible decision.”
“CEO has ‘had enough’ of Trump’s big scheme to save the US economy.”
One of the ways inflation can damage the economy is by prompting politicians to buy into economic delusions in response.
Case in point: The Financial Times and BBC reported that the British Treasury has been pressuring grocery chains to adopt “voluntary” price caps on staples such as bread, eggs and milk as part of the government’s response to price increases worsened by the ongoing conflict in Iran. The government has reportedly threatened to move forward with additional regulatory interventions — acknowledging they will be financially damaging to grocers — if retailers refuse to cap prices.
On Wednesday seven House Republicans also crossed the aisle to hand unions the 218 votes they needed in a discharge petition to bypass a committee and send the Faster Labor Contracts Act (FLCA) to the House floor. The GOP Members who confuse the priorities of union bosses with the needs of union workers are West Virginia Rep. Riley Moore, New Yorkers Nick LaLota and Mike Lawler, Nebraska Rep. Don Bacon, Ohio Rep. Max Miller and Pennsylvania’s Rob Bresnahan and Brian Fitzpatrick.
The law gives unions a bludgeon against business by mandating government arbitration if companies don’t reach agreements on an approved timeline of when unions are first certified. If the employers and the union can’t agree on a contract within 90 days, government would step in for mediation followed by binding arbitration. Individual workers are cut out of the process.
This is an invitation for unions to refuse to compromise on their demands because an employer can oppose a deal and still may have to accept it. Arbitrators often have minimal operating knowledge of a particular company, its constraints or its priorities for growth. Rulings can be based on industry trends and generalities. An arbitration panel decision would be binding on the parties for two years unless amended “by written consent of the parties.”


Drugs are inherently a problem for the individual who takes them, but they are a much bigger problem for society – precisely because they are illegal. It is their illegality that makes them costly and drives people to desperation to get the money by any means, at anybody else’s expense.
The only way Congress can send checks to Social Security and Medicare recipients is to take the earnings of a person currently in the workforce. The way Congress conceals its Ponzi scheme is to dupe Social Security and Medicare recipients into thinking that it’s their money that is put away and invested. Therefore, Social Security recipients want their monthly check and are oblivious about who has to pay and the pending economic calamity that awaits future generations because of the federal government’s $100 trillion-plus unfunded liability, of which Social Security and Medicare are the major parts.
Liberalism permitted the trying out of new ideas to become astoundingly commonplace and astoundingly productive, because it let (almost) everyone try out novelties. New ideas arose therefore from ordinary people, not merely from the heights, as to the contrary the Enlightenment assuredly did in person or in patronage. The new ideas, whether material or institutional or ideational, and at length science itself, came largely from poor people liberated by equality of permission to have a go.
To say that it costs $100 to produce a particular bushel of wheat is to say that $100 worth of resources – land, labor, pesticides, fuel, and more – are exhausted in the process. In the long run, societies prosper by husbanding their resources. That is, societies prosper by minimizing production costs.
