Category Archives: Uncategorized

Adam Hochschild – To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918

Adam Hochschild – To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918

A superb history of World War I, from the generation-long buildup all the way through the aftermath. What sets this book apart from the standard WWI histories is the substantial attention it pays to the anti-war movement of the time.

The stakes were much higher back then—both in terms of the war’s casualties compared to today’s wars, but also in the treatment of dissidents. Britain in particular went well beyond arrests. Anti-war activists and conscientious objectors were hit with punishments ranging from censorship to imprisonment to, ironically, the death penalty.

Mistaken Identity

While doing antitrust-related research, I was surprised to find an old op-ed of mine cited in a 2015 paper by American University law professor Jonathan B. Baker in the Antitrust Law Journal.

I was even more surprised to learn that I am apparently a conservative! I’ve always thought my worldview and policy positions are to be influenced by the rather different liberal tradition espoused by David Hume, Voltaire, Adam Smith, and F.A. Hayek of “Why I Am Not a Conservative” fame.

Then again, Baker seems to use the word “conservative” as shorthand for “I disagree with this,” rather than to describe a coherent philosophy along the lines of Edmund Burke or Russell Kirk.

Baker even acknowledges that some of the people he cites object to being characterized as conservatives, then calls them that anyway. This not the approach of a careful or charitable arguer.

Accordingly, I will reject Baker’s semantic gymnastics and intellectual incuriousity, and continue to identify as a liberal in the original, correct sense of the term.

Thomas Hobbes – Leviathan

Thomas Hobbes – Leviathan

One of the earliest and best expositions of social contract theory. Hobbes also had a more accurate view of human nature than Locke or especially Rousseau, with whom he is often contrasted. The third and fourth parts of Leviathan are bogged down by theology and needless definitions of terms, and Hobbes’ royal absolutism is based more on arguments by assertion and authority than on reason or empiricism. Still, Leviathan has earned its place in political philosophy’s canon.

Joseph Heller – Catch-22

Joseph Heller – Catch-22

The funniest thing I’ve read in years. In the book, Catch-22 is a fictional rule that fighter pilots cannot fly combat missions if they are insane. But asking out of a mission is proof of sanity, so such pilots therefore must fly combat missions. Similar plays on logic occur throughout the book, making the Abbott and Costello-style back-and-forths even funnier. Other hijinks range from typical young male bawdiness to hilariously petty infighting among the commanding officers, to some of the pilots making some money on the side by using military aircraft to make trade runs to nearby cities, even cornering the markets in various commodities.

The rampant mirth and cynicism only magnify the poignant and tragic scenes, making the book’s anti-war message hit home on multiple fronts. The light makes the shade even darker.

Robert Heinlein – Time Enough for Love

Robert Heinlein – Time Enough for Love

Inspired by the Arabian Nights, Heinlein pieces together a number of stories starring Lazarus Long, a long-lived recurring character of Heinlein’s who is more than 2,000 years old at the time of this book. He is a bit of anti-hero, and more than a little entertaining. This is Heinlein’s longest book, but in practice it is more of a short story collection. They stories share a free, adventurous, can-do, earthy, but overly macho spirit that Heinlein readers will know well. One note of caution: the final story is disturbing, and I do not say this lightly. I do not want to know what was going through Heinlein’s head when he wrote it.

$15 Minimum Wage Bill to Be Introduced Tomorrow

CEI has a press release. My comment:

“Advocates for a $15 minimum wage should look before they leap,” said Ryan Young, a CEI fellow. “A higher minimum wage has real world tradeoffs. It is not a free benefit. A higher wage will force employers to reduce non-wage pay such as insurance, breaks and personal time off, free meals or parking, and more. A hike in the federal minimum wage would also cause an estimated two million jobs to be lost and hit small businesses the hardest.”

The whole statement, also including comment from my colleague Trey Kovacs, is here.

Robert Heinlein – Friday

Robert Heinlein – Friday

The beginning is entirely too graphic for my taste, but once it settles down Heinlein builds a compelling title character with depth and nuance. He conveys a strong anti-racism message, along with all his usual anti-authoritarianism, creative family and social arrangements, celebration of subterfuge, and mockery of factional politics.

Stephen Hawking – A Brief History of Time

Stephen Hawking – A Brief History of Time

A much easier read than its reputation suggests, though it helps to have a little background knowledge first. Hawking’s intent for this book was to make theoretical physics accessible to everyone. Few have surpassed his efforts, or his sales figures.

Stephen Hawking – Black Holes

Stephen Hawking – Black Holes

This Kindle single is based on a pair of lectures Hawking gave on the BBC in 2016. Firmly aimed at a general reader, this makes a good introduction to some of the mind-bending concepts underlying black holes, and can be read in a single sitting.

Philip Hamburger – Is Administrative Law Unlawful?

Philip Hamburger – Is Administrative Law Unlawful?

Administrative law is essentially a fancy name for regulation. This is arguably the most important regulatory studies book of the last decade. Hamburger argues that in many cases, yes, administrative law is unlawful. Regulatory agencies, not legislatures, do most of today’s legislating. Many agencies even have their own courts and judges outside of the traditional judicial system, which are immune from its checks and balances from the other branches.

A partial list of the administrative state’s systemic rights violations include “separation of powers, the grants of legislative and judicial powers, the internal divisions of these powers, the unrepresentative character of administrative lawmaking, the nonjudicial character of administrative adjudication, the obstacles to subdelegation, the problems of federalism, the due process of law, and almost all the other rights limiting the judicial power.” (pp. 499-500)

Hamburger traces the intellectual roots of modern American administrative power abuses back to absolutist royal prerogative under King James I of England and his Star Chamber in the early 1600s, and the German Historical School of the late 19th century.

While the reaction against James I eventually begat the Glorious and American Revolutions, German historicism had the opposite effect. It was a major ideological influence for early progressivism and President Woodrow Wilson, who did as much as any politician to enable the modern administrative state to grow. Then again, German historicism’s dominance also inspired a rebellious F.A. Hayek to emphasize instead a bottom-up philosophy of emergent order, which continues to be an animating principle of today’s larger market liberal movement.

This is a landmark book for regulatory scholars, though drily written. The innumerable distinctions, divisions, subdivisions, and legal parsing inherent to the subject reminded me of my distaste for legal studies.

Many people treat legal structures as unquestionably sacred and eternal. But in the end, people just made them up over time. Disturbingly few people ever ask “why,” not just “what.”

Hamburger is better than most legal scholars about this, and spends plenty of time digging into why principles such as separation of powers and due process are good ideas, or why we have separate codes and court systems for criminal law and administrative law. But the accumulated legalistic minutiae are so overwhelming that even Hamburger gets lost in all the what.