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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Tue Aug 26, 2014, 04:08 PM Aug 2014

Paul Ryan’s List of 6 Favorite Books Has One Huge Omission

By Jonathan Chait

Paul Ryan was asked by the Week to list his six favorite books about economics and democracy. The request was a bit mischievous, as Ryan has tried (since his ascension from backbencher to his current role as chief ideologist of the Republican party) to downplay his love of Ayn Rand and her magnum opus, Atlas Shrugged. And now, the volume that Ryan once handed out to all his staffers, listed as one of his three most frequently reread books of any kind and cited as the entire reason he got into public service, no longer makes the top six list of books on politics and economics. (Follow-up question for Representative Ryan: Are there any books that you considered, sir, but that did not make the list?)

More interesting — and revealing of the direction Ryan is headed — are the final two books Ryan does name: The Way the World Works by Jude Wanniski and Wealth and Poverty by George Gilder. I have read both. Wealth and Poverty is a weird, rambly, mostly unoriginal recitation of free-market homilies whose influence largely derives from the fact that it came out just as Ronald Reagan swept to power and was thus seen as an intellectual manifesto for the new Republican Party. The Way the World Works is a novel argument that the entire history of the world can be explained by changes of tax rates. The fall of the Roman Empire, the rise of the Nazis — Wanniski attempts to explain it all as a result of taxes. It is a work of genuine derangement on the same intellectual level as the sorts of unpublishable hand-scrawled diatribes that I used to scan through when I sorted the mail as a magazine intern.

-snip-

The lunacy of Wanniski’s worldview was often hidden by the fact that his main theory centered on a technical issue area that most people don’t understand, and he had a powerful patron in Jack Kemp, whom he had converted to the supply-side cause and continued to tutor throughout his career. Eventually Wanniski started defending the likes of Louis Farrakhan and Slobodan Milosevic, denying Saddam Hussein had gassed the Kurds, and so on, which made his oddity more obvious to the lay audience. Gilder is actually even less hinged than Wanniski, and has held forth on various views from a belief that ESP is real to insisting “there is no such thing a reasonably intelligent feminist.”

So it seems the lesson Ryan has drawn from the harmful publicity surrounding his Rand fixation is not that he shouldn’t associate himself publicly with crackpot authors but merely that he should find different crackpot authors. And of course there are crucial differences. Rand loved the rich, or at least the deserving capitalist rich, and despised the poor. Gilder and (especially) Wanniski loved the rich as well, but had none of Rand’s bile. They believed that cutting taxes for the rich held the key to all human progress, that a world in which the heroes of capitalism could exert their imagination and drive free of the burden of slightly higher taxes was a world in which everything was possible, that the poor would be uplifted. Wanniski’s central message was that Republicans did not need to cut spending in order to cut taxes for the rich — that cutting taxes would actually furnish more revenue.

more
http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2014/08/ryans-6-favorite-books-list-has-huge-omission.html

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Paul Ryan’s List of 6 Favorite Books Has One Huge Omission (Original Post) DonViejo Aug 2014 OP
OMG, Nazis came to power because taxes? Sorry, didnt mean to zero in on that, but wtf. stevenleser Aug 2014 #1
You can't buy empathy for other people Johonny Aug 2014 #2
Have you considered that 6 favorite books might be his entire reading history, Half-Century Man Aug 2014 #3

Johonny

(20,833 posts)
2. You can't buy empathy for other people
Tue Aug 26, 2014, 04:59 PM
Aug 2014

Most politicians are smart enough to list a book that the average voter has A) heard of B) read C) might not be creeped out by. You'd have more respect had he listed Atlas Shrugged instead of obscure yawn feast reach arounds to the wealthy.

Half-Century Man

(5,279 posts)
3. Have you considered that 6 favorite books might be his entire reading history,
Tue Aug 26, 2014, 05:17 PM
Aug 2014

or the majority thereof?

Now, without snark; Are these in fact somethings he has read and understood, or were they selected as money related books with scholarly reputations?
He does appear to be of the "drench the rich with money and wait for the runoff from their shoes" crowd.

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