Populism is a bundle of bad ideas motivated primarily by grievances. Once result is set of economic preferences that will only make the country poorer.
With populism on the ballot in November, I've brought on my friend and old colleague Ryan A. Bourne to talk about the errors of populist economics. Ryan is the R. Evan Scharf Chair for the Public Understanding of Economics at the Cato Institute, and author of one of the best books about the pandemic, Economics in One Virus: An Introduction to Economic Reasoning through COVID-19.
Produced by Landry Ayres. Podcast art by Sergio R. M. Duarte. Music by Kevin MacLeod.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Radicalism and Rhetoric (w/ Cory Massimino)
The Challenge of Gun Violence (w/ Trevor Burrus)
The Nature of Ideology (w/ Jason Blakely)
Misogyny and the Political Divide (w/ Cathy Reisenwitz)
The Evolving Discourse of Social Media (w/ Renée DiResta)
AI, Journalism, and the Future of News (w/ Julian Sanchez)
The Risk of Civil War 2.0 (w/ Patrick Eddington)
Actually Explaining Postmodernism (w/ Matt McManus)
Music, Meaning, and Liberalism (w/ Akiva Malamet)
The Ideological Origins of the Reactionary Right (w/ Tom G. Palmer)
Liberalism, Buddhism, and the Politics of Impermanence
Hinduism and Liberalism (w/ Kat Murti)
What is Liberalism? (w/ Chandran Kukathas)
The Future is a Conversation (w/ Jason Kuznicki)
Finding Meaning In Liberalism (w/ Akiva Malamet)
Is There a Place for Identity Politics? (w/ Akiva Malamet)
How Corporations Govern (w/ Alexei Marcoux)
When You Think Your God Wants You to Be an Authoritarian (w/ Kevin Vallier)
Who's Afraid of Cultural Marxism? (with Ian Bennett)
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
강유원의 책담화冊談話
The Art of Manliness
The Gray Area with Sean Illing
Dear Hank & John
Overthink