Articles 2025
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					Unions ForeverA new vision for America's workers.Reason, May 1998 After a brief boost following the United Parcel Service strike, American labor unions continue to struggle. With individual workers increasingly able to strike good deals for themselves, and flexibility valued highly by both employees and employers, traditional union solidarity and detailed rules are neither as popular nor as successful as they once were  
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					A Net of PlentyMaking room for the worst and the bestForbes ASAP, April 04, 1998 CRITICS HAVE FOUND plenty to fear on the Internet: too many weird political beliefs, too much sex, too many strange religions, too much untamed communication.  
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					License to GrillHow the Clintons invited Ken Starr into their personal lives.Reason, April 1998 Like just about everyone else in America, I believe Bill Clinton had a sexual affair--if not dictionary-definition "sexual relations"--with intern Monica Lewinsky. I think it's likely, though by no means a sure thing, that he lied about that affair in a sworn deposition. And I wouldn't put it past him to suborn perjury or obstruct justice, though the evidence at this writing is very murky on those serious charges  
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					Let's PretendThe "pageant" masquerading as environmental debate.Reason, March 1998 There is something weirdly appropriate about beginning the Unabomber trial a few weeks after the Kyoto summit to craft a global-warming treaty.  
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					Pride and PrejudiceCompetition and feedback are the solutions to a gatekeeper's blind spot.Forbes ASAP, February 22, 1998 A FEW YEARS AGO, three Canadian scientists wrote an article in New Scientist magazine criticizing peer review. The article did a good job of revealing the limits of gatekeepers -- but not in the way it intended.  
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					Test CaseHow relying on "the experts" failed public education.Reason, February 1998 "The Important Thing Is Education." A slogan from my childhood, it put everyone on notice that in our town court-ordered desegregation would proceed in an orderly and peaceful fashion. Regardless of racial politics, the primacy of education was something everyone could agree on  
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					Creative InsecurityThe complicated truth behind the rise of Microsoft.Reason, January 1998 Back in 1983, Forbes ran an article called "If they're so smart, why aren't they rich?" It was about how inventors rarely reap big financial rewards from their creations, and it started like this  
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					The Croly GhostExorcising the specter haunting American politics.Reason, December 1997 Herbert Croly is not exactly a household name, but he should be. Seven decades after his death, we are still living in the political world his ideas built--and struggling to escape it  
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					Fighting WordsHonest discussions of changing sex roles prove too hot for pundits to handle.Reason, November 1997 Ridley Scott makes movies about the frailties of human flesh and the capacities of human will. His heroes are not especially introspective. They cope in hostile environments. Sometimes, as in Thelma and Louise, they are heroic only in the tragic, Aristotelian sense--done in by fatal flaws. They are not the stuff of romanticism but of earlier, less subjective and emotion-centered art. Indeed, Thelma and Louise die because they cannot master their impulses  
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					The Lessons Of Email DeceitForbes ASAP, October 05, 1997 A weird thing happened to me in July. The Weekly Standard, a prominent conservative magazine with which I clash frequently, published a letter to the editor signed by Virginia Postrel. The letter defended high-tech entrepreneurs, stigmatized in a Standard article as "cosmic capitalists" recapitulating all the errors of modernism and the French Revolution. It was a fine letter--tight, eloquent, and witty.