I've not had enough time to engage in blogging, so I got involved with a website called Quora, which I left after a couple of months. I advise anyone with a head on his shoulders to stay away from Quora. The conflict that precipitated my ending involvement with the site was when I responded with vigor to someone who rationalized the mass-murder history of the Chinese government. Quora's moderators told me that my response violated Quora's community standards. I closed my account. Quora is a left-only site, and I discourage involvement with it. Apparently, I am not the first to draw this conclusion. I googled "Quora sucks" and found this blog in a few seconds.
Saturday, April 1, 2017
Friday, March 31, 2017
George H. Ross Visits My Classes
H/t to Dan Kizhner for the photo. On March 27 George Ross came to Brooklyn College to speak to three of my classes. George was the executive vice president of the Trump Organization. You may recall him from The Apprentice. George gave an inspiring, insightful talk that covered negotiation, real estate, and how to succeed. A number of students stayed until after 9:00 PM. It was a great experience.
Monday, February 20, 2017
Dan Klein's "The Joys of Yiddish and Economics"
My coauthor, Daniel B. Klein, is publishing a hilarious piece ( https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers2.cfm?abstract_id=2916854 ) about the libertarian and classical liberal ideas in Leo Rosten's Joys of Yiddish. I laughed out loud about ten times. It's well worth reading.
Labels:
"joys of yiddish",
daniel b. klein,
Libertarianism
Saturday, February 18, 2017
My Letter to Secretary De Vos In Support of Gail Heriot's Nomination
PO
Box 130
West
Shokan, NY 12494
February
18, 2017
The
Honorable Betsy Devos
Secretary
of Education
US
Department of Education
400
Maryland Avenue, SW
Washington,
DC 20202
Sent
by First Class Mail and Email
Dear
Ms. Devos:
This
is a letter in support of your appointing Gail Heriot to head of the Office for
Civil Rights. As a member of the National Association of Scholars, I have
learned with dismay about abuses under Title IX. As
well, I have been concerned about overreach in a variety of
areas, including sexual assault and the current obsession with transgender
students.
I
briefly corresponded with Professor Heriot last year because I admire her
brilliance and courage. There is no better choice.
Frankly,
I prefer to see a demotion of the Department of Education to the level of an
office within another cabinet-level department and a closure of the Office for
Civil Rights. These are state-level responsibilities, which the federal
government has bungled. However, given that the Department of Education
will be with us, there is no better choice than Professor
Heriot.
Sincerely,
Professor Mitchell Langbert
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