Mark “Economist’s View” Thoma was appalled by my statement in this post that, “Some tax cuts do raise revenues, of course.” So much so that he took back a bunch of nice things he’d just said about my column on Arthur Laffer.
Chastened at having so disappointed the alarmingly prolific man from Eugene, I briefly contemplated changing my …
My commute blows.
Okay, a lot of people fare far worse. I once had an editor who commuted from Philadelphia to New York City—that’s 95 miles. And for this story I wrote on commuter couples, I interviewed folks who on Monday mornings head not for the train station but for the airport.
Me, I live just about as close to the city where I …
My column this week is about the persistence of the Republican canard that tax cuts raise revenues. Some tax cuts do raise revenues, of course, and many others deliver economic benefits that offset some of their cost. But it has apparently become required of Republican politicians at the national level that they speak as if tax cuts …
Never mind the precious peanut. Where my damn diamonds? (BTW, this is us in 2004; I didn’t just go have a baby and blog the same day.)
I so did not get a push present. And believe me, my pregnancy and delivery bit.
Gifts for new mothers are all the rage these days, say propoganda sites like BabyCenter.com. Said The New York Times …
That’s him, the environmental offender, at right
So the hate mail from animal lovers responding to my essay this summer about my dog is finally dying down. Believe it or not, I still get comments on this follow-up post and this one. The haters far outnumber the sympathizers, but this doesn’t bother me; working moms who profess to feel …
My new column is in the issue of Time with an empty-pocketed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the cover and online here. It begins:
If there’s one thing that Republican politicians agree on, it’s that slashing taxes brings the government more money. “You cut taxes, and the tax revenues increase,” President Bush said in a speech last year. Keeping
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Blah, blah, blabbedy blah / Courtesy of NBC
I got evaluated this year for the first time in my nearly seven years at TIME. It was pretty painless; my immediate supervisor is a laid-back kinda guy, and he basically gave me a thumbs up and that was that. It was over so quickly that I found myself trying to use the time to ask about how …
You may have heard the argument that YouTube is totally over, meaning either that Google was stupid to spend $1.65 billion on it last year or at that being subsumed by giant Google has doused the raucous YouTube magic. I was first struck by the idea when I read Jeffrey O’Brien’s great piece in Fortune a few weeks ago about the “Paypal …
Figures; I finally get an illo of me in the mag, and I’m holding a roll of TP.
Okay, so I’m a little eco-anxious. As I put it in an essay in last week’s TIME:
I am not particularly eco-conscious. But I am increasingly eco-anxious. Every day, it seems, I hear of some new way the world around me is going aggressively green. Workers in
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Ben Stein wasn’t all wrong about Goldman Sachs. Yeah, the “humble hypothesis” in his NYT column on Sunday that Goldman economist Jan Hatzius’s bearish stance on the housing market “was a device to help along the goal of success at bearish trades in this sector and in the market generally” was typical half-baked Steinian nonsense. (If …
Weighing in (at great length) on the debate between the Edwards and Obama campaigns over whether health insurance should be mandatory, Maggie Mahar makes a nice clear case for why if you want affordable health insurance to be available to everybody then you have to require that everybody buys it:
If we want community rating, Edwards and
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There’s a major business battle brewing in Congress that’s been getting hardly any mainstream press coverage (well, here’s something, but it took me a while to find it). On one side are the nation’s four big railroads, which have been operating at close to capacity and making a lot of money lately. On the other side are their big …