Articles

  • 3 weeks ago | thespectator.com | Ross Clark |Dave Seminara |Alex Castellanos |Jonathan Miller

    What did Donald Trump tell us outside the White House? According to the President, tariffs will lead to a boom in the economy, bringing in almost $8 trillion of investment as overseas firms rush to establish factories in the US to feed the market without incurring tariffs. On that, he is likely to be disappointed.

  • 3 weeks ago | thespectator.com | John Carney |Will Prescott |Alex Castellanos |Jonathan Miller

    The classical defense of free trade, the one found in Econ 101 textbooks and Ricardo’s comparative advantage model, goes something like this: countries should specialize in what they can produce most efficiently, export the surplus and import the rest. Trade allows global output to increase, everyone gets richer, and any government interference – like tariffs or subsidies –just gums up the works. But that’s not the world we live in.

  • 3 weeks ago | thespectator.com | John Carney |Will Prescott |Alex Castellanos |Jonathan Miller

    The classical defense of free trade, the one found in Econ 101 textbooks and Ricardo’s comparative advantage model, goes something like this: countries should specialize in what they can produce most efficiently, export the surplus and import the rest. Trade allows global output to increase, everyone gets richer and any government interference – like tariffs or subsidies – just gums up the works. But that’s not the world we live in.

  • Oct 18, 2024 | nsjonline.com | Alex Castellanos

    The United States is not yet a banana republic, despite liberal efforts to the contrary. The successors to the long-haired, tie-dyed lefty protestors of the ’60s have finally done it: They’ve taken over. Yesterday’s counterculture has become today’s establishment. They’ve traded their beads and sandals for Zoom meetings and climbed to office cubicles from the streets. Inconveniently for our woke ruling class, it appears their hold on power will be short-lived.

  • Aug 2, 2024 | nsjonline.com | Alex Castellanos

    Today, many cigars, many thoughts…And I’ll start with this: These may be Kamala Harris’s “salad days,” a phrase coined long ago in a star-crossed, Shakespearean tragedy. These are her moments of innocence, idealism and possibility. I suspect they are the best days her campaign will know. To her credit, Harris is not only riding a wave of relief that the Democratic nominee is not Joe Biden; she is surprising doubters.

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