Discovery Institute | Page 120 | Public policy think tank advancing a culture of purpose, creativity, and innovation.

two-school-aged-girls-are-standing-in-front-of-their-closed-school-with-facemasks-on-during-the-outbreak-of-covid-19-stockpack-adobe-stock
Two school aged girls are standing in front of their closed school with facemasks on during the outbreak of covid-19.
Image Credit: falonkoontz - Adobe Stock

The Covid Blame Game Lives On

It always was a mistake for Washington policymakers to target one dangerous and potentially fatal disease without factoring in the unintended consequences of draconian isolation, even if policymakers meant well. Read More ›
obdachloser-junger-mann-stockpack-adobe-stock
obdachloser junger mann
Image Credit: epiximages - Adobe Stock

To Fix Homelessness, Stop Fixating On Housing

Homelessness affects cities across the country, but it’s not just a local issue, though media cover it that way. Nor is homelessness mainly about housing; rather, it’s largely about untreated mental illness and drug addiction. Read More ›
manhattan-new-york-usa-stockpack-adobe-stock
Manhattan, New York. USA
Image Credit: Daniel Avram - Adobe Stock

Book Review: George Gilder’s Brilliant ‘Life After Capitalism’

It was probably fifteen years ago that I was at lunch with Banknote Capital’s Jim Fitzgerald. We were finishing up when the conversation shifted to tax rates, at which point Fitzgerald dismissed the notion that lower rates stimulate more work.

To be clear, Fitzgerald was not saying that he opposed lower tax rates. He was and is very much for them. But he was expressing his disdain for the theory that lower rates cause people to work more. In his case, Fitzgerald would work a great deal precisely because there was joy in it.

Still, what he said at the time was jarring. It called into question so much that was accepted wisdom. Gradually it made lots of sense. Tax rates should be low simply because they should be low. After that, it’s perhaps unrealistic to suggest that Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and FedEx founder Fred Smith began to build their remarkable businesses only after consulting the tax code. Work for them was and is similarly joy.

The conversation with Fitzgerald, along with my own evolution on matters economic, came to mind while reading George Gilder’s essential new book, Life After Capitalism. Though Gilder penned what many view as the underlying philosophy of supply-side economics with the brilliant Wealth and Poverty in 1981, in his spectacular 2013 book Knowledge and Power Gilder began to question the “incentive” economics that at least on the surface informs supply-side.

Read More ›
usa-va-arlington-gravestones-at-arlington-national-cemetary-stockpack-adobe-stock.jpg
USA, VA, Arlington. Gravestones at Arlington National Cemetary.

This Memorial Day, Remember The Courage And Forgiveness That Made America Great

If the last few generations of Americans understood the origin and meaning of Memorial Day, we might have avoided the trauma of division and corruption that now threatens the United States as never before.   Read More ›
boys-doing-homework-with-parents-working-from-home-stockpack-adobe-stock
Boys doing homework with parents working from home
Image Credit: Southworks - Adobe Stock

K-12 Hybrid Learning Is the New Parent Preference

According to a recent poll, if given the option, 48% of parents prefer a hybrid approach to learning for their children, combining on-campus and at-home learning days each week. Read More ›
homeless-person-tent-city-on-chicagos-near-west-side-stockpack-adobe-stock
Homeless person tent city on Chicago's Near West Side
Image Credit: John - Adobe Stock

Biden Takes on Homelessness With Bromides

There is no way to measure whether Biden's new plan has worked or failed. Doing something about homelessness is not the point. Speaking as if you really want to do something about homelessness is paramount.  Read More ›