Robert Verbruggen of Manhattan Institute rejoins the program to discuss Asian discrimination in college admissions. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley and Doug McCullough.
National Review editor and Bloomberg contributor Ramesh Ponnuru visits the show again to discuss the recent SCOTUS leak, the draft Alito opinion, and the future of abortion law in the United States. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley and Doug McCullough.
Crypto in Wyoming by Urbane Cowboys
What do Charlemagne and Bismarck tell us about the future of Twitter? Samo Burja and Josiah Neeley discuss the Great Founder Theory and how it plays out across society. Produced by Doug McCullough.
Join us for a conversation with Matthew Schmitz of Compact Magazine. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of R Street Institute and Doug McCullough.
Peter Rough, Senior Fellow of the Hudson Institute, rejoins the show to discuss the Russian invasion of Ukraine, NATO's response, and the resulting changes to German security and energy policies. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of R Street Institute and Doug McCullough.
Caleb Watney of the Institute for Progress to talk about progress-oriented policy solutions. We discuss energy, environment, public health crises and more. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of R Street Institute and Doug McCullough from Committee for Justice
Eric Kauffman, adjunct professor of politics at Birkbeck, University of London and adjunct fellow of the Manhattan Institute joins us to discuss his recent research into identity and social politics. All nudity was tasteful and essential to the plot. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of R Street Institute and Doug McCullough.
Author Richard Hanania returns to the show to discuss his book Public Choice Theory and the Illusion of Grand Strategy: How Generals, Weapons Manufacturers, and Foreign Governments Shape American Foreign Policy (Routledge Studies in US Foreign Policy). Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of the R Street Institute and Doug McCullough. Order the book here: https://www.amazon.com/Public-Choice-Theory-Illusion-Strategy-ebook/dp/B09L9Y2W7S
Razib Khan returns to the show to discuss the recent controversy from that pop science magazine about the legacy of EO Wilson, the politicization of academia. He also answers impertinent questions about Celts. Cohosted by Josiah Neeley of R Street Institute (probably a Celt) and Doug McCullough (definitely a Sarmatian)