It is beyond the power of philosophy to destroy the political myths. A myth is in a sense invulnerable. It is impervious to rational arguments; it cannot be refuted by syllogisms. But philosophy can do us another important service. It can make us understand the adversary. In order to fight an enemy you must know him. That is one of the first principles of a sound strategy. To know him means not only to know his defects and weaknesses; it means to know his strength. All of us have been liable to underrate this strength. When we first heard of the political myths we found them so absurd and incongruous, so fantastic and ludicrous that we could hardly be prevailed upon to take them seriously. By now it has become clear to all of us that this was a great mistake. We should not commit the same error a second time. We should carefully study the origins, the structure, the methods, and the technique of the political myths. We should see the adversary face to face in order to know how to combat him.
-- Ernst Cassirer
HORNBERGER'S BLOG
November 11, 2020 Trump Should Now Pardon Snowden and Assange
Since even before Donald Trump won the 2016 election, it’s been clear that the American deep state has opposed his presidency. And while Trump has deferred to the Pentagon and the CIA by maintaining their forever wars, foreign military empire, foreign interventionism, coups, and assassinations, it’s also been clear that Trump hasn’t been as obsequious to the national-security establishment as presidents are ...
Free Trade, Liberalism, and Peace
by Richard M. Ebeling
The classical liberals of the nineteenth century were certain that the end of the older mercantilist system — with its government control of trade ...
Gridlock Is Good—Except In The Jaws Of Massive Public Debts
by David Stockman
James Madison is surely smiling from his grave. Pursuant to his constitutional design, last night a badly divided electorate got an utterly gridlocked government—with the ...
Of Course They Are Unconstitutional
by Laurence M. Vance
Amy Coney Barrett, a circuit judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Chicago, became the ...
Where Do We Go from Here?
by Jacob G. Hornberger and Richard M. Ebeling
Regardless of whether it is Donald Trump or Joe Biden who is ultimately elected President, the question ...
Lockdowns as a Political Tragedy of the Commons
by Richard M. Ebeling
Several of the leading European countries are now in the process of implementing a second wave of social and economic lockdowns in the face ...