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While framed as a book about economic development theory and the history of colonialism, William Easterly’s latest tome is actually something grander and more ambitious: a deeply researched 300-year chronicle of political and moral theory in the Western world. The questions that colonizers, settlers, natives, and revolutionaries wrestle with in Easterly’s 448-page history aren’t just about plantations and trading posts – they’re the most important questions we have about morality and justice. They’re particularly timely in an era when classical liberal values are under greater challenge than at any time since the Cold War.

We begin in the eighteenth century with a grounding in the work of Adam Smith, a justly legendary intellectual figure getting even more attention than usual this year because his most famous work, The Wealth of Nations, is celebrating its 250th anniversary alongside the United States. Smith is, for Easterly, a kind of godfather of the liberal tradition of individual rights that the rest of the figures in the book are measured against. Smith stood for trade as a civilized and civilizing force and emphasized the need for voluntary, mutually beneficial relationships. He was not in favor of the takeover of the rest of the world (or just “the Rest” in Easterly’s styling) by white men in the supposedly enlightened West. 

The first section contrasts Smith with the French aristocrat Nicolas de Condorcet, who — despite his modern reputation as a champion of free trade and individual rights — endorsed what Easterly calls the Development Right of Conquest. Under this view, a civilized nation or race may rule another’s land if it claims it can put it to a higher and more productive use.

This might mean ruling a newly discovered tribe to advance its development toward a higher civilization. If the tribe resisted — as was often the case — the more “developed” people could kill or displace the “savages” and seize the land themselves. Either way, the supposedly superior group — typically Western European — decided which path was best for both.

This is the great divide that defined the next few centuries of global territorial expansion and settlement. European thinkers who believed in peaceful coexistence and voluntary trade relations were the inheritors of Smith, and those who believed their superior wisdom entitled them to plan the moral and economic advance of foreign peoples were the intellectual descendants of Condorcet. Easterly, a professor of economics at New York University, emphasizes many times how lopsided this family tree was on the latter’s side. 

Both sides, of course, believed they were in the right. Few, if any, colonizers – no matter how rapacious in action – admit to plundering new lands and people solely for their own benefit. Even those who were literal enslavers of their fellow man created elaborate theories about how they were actually acting in the interests of the non-white people they encountered.  

The essential difference that Easterly emphasizes is that some were willing to let others decide their own interests, while most overrode foreign preferences with cultural chauvinism and civilizational theory. The classical liberals in his account were hardly “woke” by modern standards, but they replaced the question “Are these non-European people worthy of self-government?” with the more searching one: “Are we fit to rule them by force?”

The advance of liberal ideas was fitful and slow. Just like the progress toward representative democracy and constitutional government within Europe itself, the recognition that non-white people might want and be entitled to the same rights as their white counterparts faced many disappointing setbacks. Easterly does a great job, however, of setting the scene for the greatest victory of them all – the abolition of slavery in the modern world. First, peacefully, in the British Empire under the political leadership of men like William Wilberforce, and then, amid catastrophic bloodshed, in the United States.  

Many histories of the world after 1865 have treated the end of slavery (in most countries, at least) as the beginning of a new enlightened age. Whatever came later in the various colonial empires, however imperfect, was certainly vastly superior to an era in which kidnapping and intergenerational forced labor were a major commercial enterprise.  

While the line between enslavement and mere colonial paternalism might seem bright and obvious, Easterly doesn’t let the triumph of slavery ending in the nineteenth century get the West off the hook for continuing oppression and injustice around the world. The policies of Caribbean sugar planters before emancipation had more in common with, for example, twentieth-century colonial administrators in sub-Saharan Africa than most historians care to admit. Underlying both is the same, only marginally reformed, assumption that white skin and technological advancement entitle one to treat other races as children and supplicants for their supposed long-term benefit. In the post-slavery colonies, even when plans for advancement were undertaken for ostensibly beneficial purposes, the opinions of the people supposedly benefiting were neither solicited nor heeded.  

Violent Saviors tries to remedy some of that historic injustice in telling their story, but also in citing some of the rare first-person sources that were recorded from those subjected to “civilization” via musket barrels and bayonets. Many students of US history will be familiar with some of the figures Easterly quotes at length, like the formerly enslaved abolitionist who became one of the most famous people in nineteenth-century America, Frederick Douglass. Far fewer will have read anything about Mohegan Indian and Christian convert Samson Occam (1723–1792), once a student at the missionary school that eventually became Dartmouth College, or the British ex-slave Quobna Ottobah Cugoano (1757–1791), who was at first an advocate for, and later an opponent of, a quixotic eighteenth-century plan to re-settle the free black residents of London in a kind of proto-Liberia colony in Sierra Leone.    

The author also gets a historian’s revenge on multiple generations of supposedly well-intentioned military, political, religious, and philanthropic leaders whose high status contrasted embarrassingly with their inability to successfully implement any of their grand plans for the advancement of the “dusky races.”  

Easterly has famously written at length about the contradictions and failures of modern economic development policy in books like The White Man’s Burden and The Tyranny of Experts. He now reaches back multiple centuries to deliver withering takedowns of figures ranging from French aristocrats Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739–1817) and Pierre-Paul Lemercier de La Rivière (1719–1801) to Treaty of Versailles architect Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924) and Lyndon B. Johnson–era National Security Advisor Walt Whitman Rostow (1916–2003).

He offers a more inspiring, if much shorter, list of theorists and experts who pointed the way in the right direction. Beginning with Adam Smith (1723–1790), we also encounter (mostly) good actors like the anti-slavery Anglican Bishop William Warburton (1698–1779) and Swiss political theorist Benjamin Constant (1767–1830). Easterly devotes significant attention to better-known writers such as John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) and Isaiah Berlin (1909–1997), while also crediting the beloved figures of twentieth-century free-market economics: Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Milton and Rose Friedman, among others. 

In recent years, the so-called neoliberal view of economics and the rules-based international order has been significantly challenged by a resurgence of populist economic thought emphasizing national solidarity — as defined by a handful of executive policymakers — over the equality of all individuals and positive-sum economic exchange.

President Donald Trump’s use of tariff authority — for purposes ranging from explicit industrial protectionism to the attempted conquest of Greenland — has dramatically set back decades of post–World War II progress in free trade. Violent Saviors, with its inspiring narrative of mercantilist authoritarianism giving way to a world where equality and cooperation are the norm, reminds us why so many fought so hard for these ideals in the first place.

While framed as a book about economic development theory and the history of colonialism, William Easterly’s latest tome is actually something grander and more ambitious: a deeply researched 300-year chronicle of political and moral theory in the Western world. The questions that colonizers, settlers, natives, and revolutionaries wrestle with in Easterly’s 448-page history aren’t just about plantations and trading posts – they’re the most important questions we have about morality and justice. They’re particularly timely in an era when classical liberal values are under greater challenge than at any time since the Cold War.

We begin in the eighteenth century with a grounding in the work of Adam Smith, a justly legendary intellectual figure getting even more attention than usual this year because his most famous work, The Wealth of Nations, is celebrating its 250th anniversary alongside the United States. Smith is, for Easterly, a kind of godfather of the liberal tradition of individual rights that the rest of the figures in the book are measured against. Smith stood for trade as a civilized and civilizing force and emphasized the need for voluntary, mutually beneficial relationships. He was not in favor of the takeover of the rest of the world (or just “the Rest” in Easterly’s styling) by white men in the supposedly enlightened West. 

The first section contrasts Smith with the French aristocrat Nicolas de Condorcet, who — despite his modern reputation as a champion of free trade and individual rights — endorsed what Easterly calls the Development Right of Conquest. Under this view, a civilized nation or race may rule another’s land if it claims it can put it to a higher and more productive use.

This might mean ruling a newly discovered tribe to advance its development toward a higher civilization. If the tribe resisted — as was often the case — the more “developed” people could kill or displace the “savages” and seize the land themselves. Either way, the supposedly superior group — typically Western European — decided which path was best for both.

This is the great divide that defined the next few centuries of global territorial expansion and settlement. European thinkers who believed in peaceful coexistence and voluntary trade relations were the inheritors of Smith, and those who believed their superior wisdom entitled them to plan the moral and economic advance of foreign peoples were the intellectual descendants of Condorcet. Easterly, a professor of economics at New York University, emphasizes many times how lopsided this family tree was on the latter’s side. 

Both sides, of course, believed they were in the right. Few, if any, colonizers – no matter how rapacious in action – admit to plundering new lands and people solely for their own benefit. Even those who were literal enslavers of their fellow man created elaborate theories about how they were actually acting in the interests of the non-white people they encountered.  

The essential difference that Easterly emphasizes is that some were willing to let others decide their own interests, while most overrode foreign preferences with cultural chauvinism and civilizational theory. The classical liberals in his account were hardly “woke” by modern standards, but they replaced the question “Are these non-European people worthy of self-government?” with the more searching one: “Are we fit to rule them by force?”

The advance of liberal ideas was fitful and slow. Just like the progress toward representative democracy and constitutional government within Europe itself, the recognition that non-white people might want and be entitled to the same rights as their white counterparts faced many disappointing setbacks. Easterly does a great job, however, of setting the scene for the greatest victory of them all – the abolition of slavery in the modern world. First, peacefully, in the British Empire under the political leadership of men like William Wilberforce, and then, amid catastrophic bloodshed, in the United States.  

Many histories of the world after 1865 have treated the end of slavery (in most countries, at least) as the beginning of a new enlightened age. Whatever came later in the various colonial empires, however imperfect, was certainly vastly superior to an era in which kidnapping and intergenerational forced labor were a major commercial enterprise.  

While the line between enslavement and mere colonial paternalism might seem bright and obvious, Easterly doesn’t let the triumph of slavery ending in the nineteenth century get the West off the hook for continuing oppression and injustice around the world. The policies of Caribbean sugar planters before emancipation had more in common with, for example, twentieth-century colonial administrators in sub-Saharan Africa than most historians care to admit. Underlying both is the same, only marginally reformed, assumption that white skin and technological advancement entitle one to treat other races as children and supplicants for their supposed long-term benefit. In the post-slavery colonies, even when plans for advancement were undertaken for ostensibly beneficial purposes, the opinions of the people supposedly benefiting were neither solicited nor heeded.  

Violent Saviors tries to remedy some of that historic injustice in telling their story, but also in citing some of the rare first-person sources that were recorded from those subjected to “civilization” via musket barrels and bayonets. Many students of US history will be familiar with some of the figures Easterly quotes at length, like the formerly enslaved abolitionist who became one of the most famous people in nineteenth-century America, Frederick Douglass. Far fewer will have read anything about Mohegan Indian and Christian convert Samson Occam (1723–1792), once a student at the missionary school that eventually became Dartmouth College, or the British ex-slave Quobna Ottobah Cugoano (1757–1791), who was at first an advocate for, and later an opponent of, a quixotic eighteenth-century plan to re-settle the free black residents of London in a kind of proto-Liberia colony in Sierra Leone.    

The author also gets a historian’s revenge on multiple generations of supposedly well-intentioned military, political, religious, and philanthropic leaders whose high status contrasted embarrassingly with their inability to successfully implement any of their grand plans for the advancement of the “dusky races.”  

Easterly has famously written at length about the contradictions and failures of modern economic development policy in books like The White Man’s Burden and The Tyranny of Experts. He now reaches back multiple centuries to deliver withering takedowns of figures ranging from French aristocrats Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours (1739–1817) and Pierre-Paul Lemercier de La Rivière (1719–1801) to Treaty of Versailles architect Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924) and Lyndon B. Johnson–era National Security Advisor Walt Whitman Rostow (1916–2003).

He offers a more inspiring, if much shorter, list of theorists and experts who pointed the way in the right direction. Beginning with Adam Smith (1723–1790), we also encounter (mostly) good actors like the anti-slavery Anglican Bishop William Warburton (1698–1779) and Swiss political theorist Benjamin Constant (1767–1830). Easterly devotes significant attention to better-known writers such as John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) and Isaiah Berlin (1909–1997), while also crediting the beloved figures of twentieth-century free-market economics: Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and Milton and Rose Friedman, among others. 

In recent years, the so-called neoliberal view of economics and the rules-based international order has been significantly challenged by a resurgence of populist economic thought emphasizing national solidarity — as defined by a handful of executive policymakers — over the equality of all individuals and positive-sum economic exchange.

President Donald Trump’s use of tariff authority — for purposes ranging from explicit industrial protectionism to the attempted conquest of Greenland — has dramatically set back decades of post–World War II progress in free trade. Violent Saviors, with its inspiring narrative of mercantilist authoritarianism giving way to a world where equality and cooperation are the norm, reminds us why so many fought so hard for these ideals in the first place.

On July 8, 2024, a guest essay by Stephen Smith on elevator policy was published in The New York Times. Though this may seem like a rather dry topic at first glance, Smith’s essay quickly dispelled that notion. The piece immediately went viral and has sparked a considerable amount of commentary from across the political spectrum. 

In the essay, Smith summarized the findings of a lengthy report on elevators that he had authored in May of that year for a think tank, the Center for Building in North America, which he founded in 2022. Prompted by a personal struggle with a lack of elevator access, Smith conducted a comprehensive review of the global elevator industry with the goal of answering a very specific question: Why are there so few elevators in North America compared to the rest of the world? 

“Despite being the birthplace of the modern passenger elevator, the United States has fallen far behind its peers,” he writes in the report. 

While the US has more than 1.03 million elevators — one of the highest totals in the world — it has fewer elevators per capita than any other high-income country for which data can be found, and Canada’s position on a per capita basis is similar. 

“…Part of this absence is due to the dominance of freestanding single-family houses in North America,” Smith acknowledges, “but even apartments in the United States are less likely to have elevators than those in much of Europe and Asia.” He points out, for example, that while New York City and Switzerland have similar populations, and a greater percentage of New Yorkers than Swiss live in apartment buildings, New York only has half the number of passenger elevators. 

“No matter how you slice the numbers,” he says, “America has fallen behind on elevators.” 

Smith’s findings all pointed to cost as the major factor. In Canada and the US, he says, new elevator installations cost at least three times as much as in Western Europe — roughly $150,000 compared to $50,000. What is driving this cost differential? Smith spends the majority of the report outlining three main culprits: mandatory minimum cabin sizes, labor issues with elevator installers, and technical codes and standards, which are harmonized for practically the whole world except the US and Canada. 

He writes: 

The North American approach is one of extremes. American and Canadian elevators have the largest cabins, the strongest doors, the most redundant communication systems, the best paid workers, and the most diversity of codes on the one hand. And in exchange, Americans and Canadians have the highest prices, the most limited access, the most uncompetitive market for parts, and the most restricted labor markets.

‘One of the Most Powerful Construction Unions in North America’ 

Smith’s comments on the labor point have attracted particular attention, because the inefficiencies are so glaring. As he wrote in The New York Times

Architects have dreamed of modular construction for decades, where entire rooms are built in factories and then shipped on flatbed trucks to sites, for lower costs and greater precision. But we can’t even put elevators together in factories in America, because the elevator union’s contract forbids even basic forms of preassembly and prefabrication that have become standard in elevators in the rest of the world. The union and manufacturers bicker over which holes can be drilled in a factory and which must be drilled (or redrilled) on site. Manufacturers even let elevator and escalator mechanics take some components apart and put them back together on site to preserve work for union members, since it’s easier than making separate, less-assembled versions just for the US. 

National Review economics editor Dominic Pino has noted, along with City Journal contributor Connor Harris, that this is a textbook example of what’s known as featherbedding, a practice in labor relations where unions obtain “make work” rules so that more union workers can be employed. 

The main elevator union in Canada and the US is the International Union of Elevator Constructors (IUEC), which Smith points out is “one of the most powerful construction unions in North America.” A 2011 comment from its General President, Dana Brigham, is revealing. 

“We can’t afford to sit back and see our trade dumbed down through factory prefabrication and preassembly to a point where all our members will have to do on the job is simply uncrate the elevator, set it, and plug it in,” Brigham said. Responding to this quote, Pino quips: “Heaven forbid elevators be easy to install.” 

It’s no wonder that featherbedding has a bad reputation. As Leonard Read observed in 1960, these practices are “as obviously absurd to the layman as they are disgusting to the economist.” 

In modern jargon, the economist’s disgust is often expressed by characterizing these practices as a kind of rent-seeking. Indeed, Alec Stapp, co-founder of the Institute for Progress, recently cited the elevator union rules that Smith uncovered as a good example of this concept. 

The notion of rent-seeking comes from the public choice school of economics, specifically the work of economists Gordon Tullock and Anne Krueger. Developed in the ‘60s and ‘70s, rent-seeking refers to any practice where you are trying to increase your wealth by changing the rules of the game, as compared to profit-seeking, which is trying to increase your wealth by being more productive. 

Common examples of rent-seeking include lobbying for tariffs or subsidies — or, in this case, union featherbedding. Profit-seeking, on the other hand, would include activities such as research and development aimed at creating new products to sell to customers. 

The word “rent” in this context refers to the old economic definition of rent, which is about the excess returns yielded by a factor of production, and not the colloquial definition of a payment made for the use of property.

Elevators Are Just the Tip of the Iceberg 

The other two factors that Smith discusses — minimum cabin sizes and technical codes and standards — are a classic case of government regulations making things considerably more expensive than they need to be (and regulation, particularly licensing, no doubt contributes to the labor issues as well). 

Now, if the mandated wastefulness that we find in the elevator industry were unique, it would still be cause for alarm, but the absurd truth is that regulations like this are everywhere. 

“When most people go through their daily lives, they don’t think about the ways in which government regulations are making their lives more difficult,” writes economist Scott Sumner, reflecting on Smith’s elevator story. “In almost every case I come across with systematic inefficiency, the root cause is counterproductive regulations.” 

It feels like every few months, a story like this comes along that grips the public’s attention. Calls for reform are heard, a public outcry fills the airwaves, maybe legislation is introduced. But it rarely occurs to people that these stories form a pattern. As such, we’ve fallen into this routine where our news feeds periodically become dominated with the latest absurd regulation story, and then at best we play whack-a-mole with legislation designed to address the Current Thing

Perhaps, if we can focus on the bigger picture, we should consider trying a different approach. Maybe there will come a point where we realize that news-driven piecemeal deregulation isn’t particularly effective, and more fundamental changes, such as blanket limits on government intervention in the economy, must be considered.

On February 11, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) published its annual Budget and Economic Outlook report, covering 2026 to 2036. Among the projections, the report found that Social Security’s Old-Age and Survivors Insurance will be unable to pay full benefits in 2032 (a year earlier than projected in last year’s report). This is due to the higher projected cost-of-living adjustments and lower projected revenues. To put that in perspective, Social Security will be unable to pay full benefits before the program turns 100. 

Social Security is in desperate need of reform, but doing so is easier said than done. Perhaps the worst cultural consequence of Social Security is that this unsustainable program is pitting generations of Americans against one another. The young support benefit cuts while the old support higher payroll taxes. Successful reform means balancing the interests between these generational divides to prevent political backlashes, which may jeopardize future reforms. 

What Social Security Is and Is Not 

In 2007, AIER published “What You Need to Know About Social Security.” This Economic Education Bulletin outlines Social Security’s history, some myths and realities about the program, as well as options for reform and what individuals planning for retirement could do in the meantime. Many of the bulletin’s lessons are still applicable. 

Chief among them is the nature of the program. Social Security is not a system of individual retirement accounts. Nor is it a defined benefit pension program. It is a pay-as-you-go structure, where payroll taxes collected from working Americans go to fund benefit payments for the elderly. Despite being sold to Americans as an earned benefit, the true nature of the program is much closer to a Ponzi scheme than many care to admit. 

This means that the program relies upon working Americans to pay into the system outnumbering retirees. That number has dwindled, and it currently sits at 2.7 workers per Social Security recipient, an unsustainable ratio. Minor adjustments are not a feasible solution. The program needs structural reform. 

Possible Reforms  

Properly reforming Social Security requires a structural transition to a system based on ownership, savings, and investment. Universal Savings Accounts (USAs) can help anchor the transition if they are paired with policies that address the generational divide over the program. 

One such proposal made by the AIER Bulletin, as well as others, is a transition to a flat benefit. While this would drastically improve the program’s solvency, it risks immense political backlash. Current retirees and those near-retirement are planning on specific levels of benefits. Changing those overnight will likely result in voters 50 and over (one of the largest and fastest-growing voting blocs) punishing politicians who supported reforms by supporting challengers in primary and general elections. Furthermore, that punishment at the polls will make incumbents reluctant to offer other reforms in the future.  

To mitigate this political risk, policymakers can consider cohort differentiation. This would mean that current retirees and near-retirees receive all accrued benefits, financed transparently through general revenues, while the youngest cohorts transition out of the traditional program entirely and have access to USAs, which provide them with control over their finances and the portability to take those savings with them regardless of career or location changes. 

Additionally, Social Security’s Old Age Insurance could be separate from Disability Insurance and Survivors’ Insurance. The combined OASDI framework encourages benefit creep, especially as old-age insurance costs increase. Stand-alone programs can help prevent the re-expansion of the old-age system through cross-subsidization. 

The AIER Bulletin also notes that, while total privatization of retirement savings would be ideal, offering a smaller, flat benefit could encourage people to save more. Furthermore, the bulletin recommends encouraging saving through tax policies that incentivize savings over consumption (such as a decrease in reliance on income taxes). Additionally, policymakers can make it easier for Americans to save by replacing the myriad savings vehicles in the tax code with a broader universal savings account system without restrictions on how that money is used. 

There is also the possibility of devolving the program to state governments and having states manage these funds like defined benefit pensions. This would enable benefits to be connected to earnings. One such drawback, however, is state management of defined benefit pension plans is mixed at best. A defined benefit system at the federal level may exacerbate the knowledge and incentive problems that occur at the state level. 

Finally, long-term success will be determined by the institutional constraints in place. These include hard cohort cutoffs and a supermajority requirement for benefit expansions. Without such constraints, we will likely see a reversion to what we have now, with the same empty promises that the system would be fully self-funded, only to saddle Americans with massive tax obligations. 

Institutional Reform — or Generational Reckoning

Social Security reform is no longer a choice; it is the only way to avoid a very unfortunate future. Ignoring that reality will mean higher taxes on working Americans and benefit cuts to retirees. Enacting sustainable policy solutions can help avoid disaster without leaving Americans, young and old, destitute. The best hedge against the failures of the status quo, however, is to take control of one’s plans for the future instead of expecting the government to manage the future for us.

What US industry is the most subsidized and regulated by the federal government? If you answered nuclear power, you are correct. 

As a result, the 70-year “Atoms for Peace” program represents the most expensive failure (malinvestment) in US business with a history of uncompleted projects and massive cost overruns, as well as future decommissioning liabilities.  

Still, President Trump is all-in with nuclear, setting a goal of ten new reactors in construction by 2030 and a quadrupling of total US capacity by 2050. Biden was bullish too, and George W. Bush had his turn at a “nuclear renaissance.” Each failed, but in the nuclear space, hope springs eternal. 

Commercial fission began in the 1950s amid government and scientific fanfare. The promise was virtually limitless, emission-free, affordable electricity compared to coal-fired generation. But the technology was experimental and encumbered by a fear of radioactive contamination. Electric utilities and municipalities resisted. It would take open-ended (federal) research and development, insurance subsidies, and free enriched uranium, and rate-base returns under state regulation, to birth nuclear power.  

Scale economies and learning-by-doing were expected by vendors General Electric, Westinghouse, and others. Their turnkey projects guaranteeing cost and delivery, which produced a “bandwagon effect” of new orders in the 1960s, backfired. Almost half of the plant cost had to be absorbed by vendor stockholders. Cost-plus contracts would ensue with captive ratepayers in tow. 

In the 1970s, cost overruns, completion delays, and cancellations marked the end of the nuclear boom. With the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, a regulatory ratchet accelerated. “Federal regulations used to take up two volumes on our shelves,” one participant told Congress. “We now have 20 volumes to explain how to use the first two volumes.” Legalistic, overly prescriptive, retroactive rules now came from adversarial hearings and “the way of the institutions of government.” 

At the same time, turbine engines fueled by oil and natural gas took off. Cogeneration and combined cycle plants set a new competitive standard for nuclear, not only coal. Such technology used far fewer parts and was much more serviceable than a fission plant. 

Today, 94 active reactors produce dependable power to reinforce a grid weakened by intermittent wind and solar. With high up-front capital expense sunk, marginal-cost economics supports their continued operation. But for new capacity, large necessary government subsidies confirm an enduring reality: nuclear fission is the most complicated, fraught, expensive way to boil water to produce steam to drive electrical turbines

Hyperbole abounds about new reactor design. Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) are newsworthy, but is a turnkey project being offered to ensure timeliness and performance? Or does the fine print of the contracts offer the buyer “outs”? This question should be asked of those promising to buy or develop gigawatts of new nuclear capacity in the next decade. 

What now for nuclear policy to enable affordability and reliability? In a nutshell, the twin evils of overregulation and oversubsidization should give way to a real free market. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission should yield its civilian responsibilities to the best practices established by the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations, an industry collaborative created after Three Mile Island. Federal insurance via the Price-Anderson Act of 1957 (extended seven times to date) should be replaced by private insurance per each “safe” reactor.  

Federal grants, loans, and tax preferences for nuclear should end. Antitrust constraints on industry collaboration should cease, and waste storage and decommissioning should be the responsibility of owners. 

Nuclear fission today is an essential component of a reliable electric grid. But economics and incentives matter, and U.S. taxpayers and ratepayers should not bear the costs of an uncompetitive technology. Neutral government is best for all competing energy sources, after all, in contrast to the energy designs of both Republicans and Democrats. 

Read more from this author:  Nuclear Power: A Free Market Approach

January saw Americans grow markedly more pessimistic about the economy. The Conference Board reported that its Consumer Confidence Index fell almost ten points in one month, reaching its lowest level since 2014. Consumers reported worsening views of current market conditions, as well as a sharp reduction in expectations regarding job prospects and income for the upcoming months. 

Upon initial review, this pessimism appears hard to square with recent headlines. Employers seem to be adding jobs; measured output has not fallen; consumers in the aggregate are still spending more in nominal terms than they were last year. This has led commentators to label this drop in confidence merely a perception problem. 

Market participants, however, do not react to abstract aggregates. They are responding to what they are directly experiencing: rising prices, tighter budgets, and uncertainty about future opportunities and job prospects. This is not the result of some vague uneasiness. Rather, it captures concrete concerns that broad economic averages often smooth over. 

Yes, the index regarding current conditions fell, and fell sharply. According to the Conference Board, the share of respondents who said jobs are “plentiful” fell to 23.9 percent, while the share saying jobs are “hard to get” rose to 20.8 percent. These data do not come from individuals attempting to judge macroeconomic trends. Rather, they were evaluations of lived labor-market constraints. Even if employment totals remain positive in the aggregate, such a tallying cannot capture changes in perceived difficulty in finding or changing jobs. People do not consult nationwide aggregates when considering whether it is easy or difficult to find jobs. Almost no one searches for “a US job,” but for specific jobs in specific locations requiring specific skill sets.

A teacher searches for openings in a particular district. A laid-off marketing analyst seeks firms hiring in his specialty. The welder wants fabrication work within driving distance. No individual experiences the labor market in aggregates, but through concrete localized opportunities. An economy can add jobs on paper while many struggle to find positions suited to their skills and geography. This reality does not make their pessimism purely emotional. 

Perhaps the more striking deterioration was in expectations. Consumers’ outlook for income, business conditions, and employment over the coming six months deteriorated to levels typically associated with an impending recession. More specifically, the Expectations Index dropped to 65.1, well below the 80 that often signals an upcoming downturn. Only about 15 percent of respondents expect business conditions to improve. These expectations will obviously shape household decisions about major purchases, savings, and career moves. 

Moreover, the decline was not contained to certain socio-economic demographics. Reuters reports that sentiments fell across income and age groups, including higher-income households that typically are a little more optimistic than other groups during moderate economic stress. This hints that the collapse is not merely the result of lower-income hardship but a more generalized perception that economic conditions are less favorable. 

This is further illustrated by the qualitative responses in the survey. Consumers cited high prices — namely, necessities like groceries and gasoline — as persistent concerns. As noted by Peter Earle, consumer goods like coffee, eggs, and chicken are still priced well above pre-COVID levels. Even a three-percent reduction in gasoline prices in the last year is outweighed by the 21 percent increase since 2019. 

Mentions in survey responses of trade policy, tariffs, and political uncertainty rose as well, as did labor-market insecurity and health-related costs. Manufacturing employment continues to fall in this tariff era, shedding roughly 70,000 jobs after tariffs were raised from about 2.4 percent to around 10 percent. Even if these jobs are offset by job gains in some other sector elsewhere, displaced workers still have reason to be less confident about their own prospects. 

These concerns reflect specific and notable pressures on households’ budgets and long-term planning. 

Here enters one of the major issues of the aggregates. Measures like GDP, average wages, and employment totals merely summarize overall activity, obviously. What they fail to capture are economic realities like distribution and sustainability — and whether growth positively impacts a household’s ability to plan for the future. Nominal consumption can rise as real purchasing power stagnates; employment can grow as job mobility declines. Aggregate output can increase while economic freedom and flexibility decrease. When we understand this, then divergences between consumer confidence and aggregate economic indicators become more intelligible. 

Even assuming aggregate statistics are well-suited to measure motion in an economy (a point not necessarily granted, but simply set aside for the sake of this article), they cannot measure coordination or economic viability. They tell us how much supposed economic activity is occurring, but not whether such activity reflects consumer preferences, actual economic realities, or even economic resilience. Consumer confidence, while also an aggregate of sorts, seeks to provide a general judgment about opportunity, security, and constraint. When assessments of conditions and expectations simultaneously deteriorate, that hints at a more fundamental issue than mood swings by consumers. 

To be clear, consumer confidence is not a comprehensive measure of economic health. Survey responses reflect personal experience and expectations, which can be incomplete or mistaken, but still have relevant impact because individuals act upon those attitudes. But the primary trap here is the treatment of low confidence as simply irrational pessimism. When consumers consistently report anxiety about the job market, income, and future conditions, they are not necessarily misunderstanding the economy. Instead, they may be pointing to specific structural pressures aggregates cannot detect. Rising costs, reduced labor mobility, and policy uncertainty all weigh heavily on confidence while remaining somewhat invisible to headline economic data. 

So, we return to the central question: when consumer confidence collapses amid positive economic aggregates, which one is lying? Perhaps neither, but they are both needed if we wish to understand the state of the economy. Aggregate statistics are intended to measure total activity. So be it. But total activity is not the end-all, be-all of economic health. Consumer confidence seeks to reveal whether such activity is translating into security, flexibility, and confidence about the future. 

If economic growth increasingly takes the form of superficial statistical expansion rather than authentic improvements in economic coordination, then falling confidence is not a puzzle, nor something to ignore. It is, instead, a warning that the economy is possibly wasting resources in the name of increasing numbers. This, of course, completely inverts the entire purpose of the economy — the proper coordination of scarce resources in accordance with people’s needs.

Free-market capitalism still delivers the goods. But its political coalition is fracturing — and that should worry anyone who cares about prosperity and freedom.

Recent Gallup polling on Americans’ views of capitalism and socialism shows that just 54 percent now view capitalism favorably, the lowest Gallup has recorded. Views of socialism remain much lower at 39 percent, but the direction matters. Support for capitalism has fallen notably over time, especially among independents and younger Americans.

The partisan breakdown is even more revealing. Republicans remain strongly pro-capitalist, though support has softened slightly. Independents now only narrowly favor capitalism. And among Democrats, fewer than half view capitalism positively, while nearly two-thirds view socialism favorably. As earlier Gallup polling on capitalism and socialism shows, this pattern has been developing for years.

Here’s the hard truth: those of us who defend free-market capitalism are unlikely to persuade most Democrats anytime soon. The data confirm it. Democrats often like the outcomes of capitalism — jobs, innovation, higher living standards — but reject the label, associating it with inequality or corporate power.

That alone wouldn’t be alarming. Political disagreement is normal. What is alarming is where capitalism is losing ground next.

A System of Liberty, Not Privilege

True capitalism is grounded in private property, competitive markets, voluntary exchange, and the rule of law. It treats individuals as decision-makers in their own lives — not subjects of top-down control. It decentralizes power, rewards value creation, and invites experimentation, allowing people to say “yes” to opportunity without asking permission from bureaucrats or politicians.

This idea is old — and proven. Adam Smith’s explanation of voluntary exchange captured it 250 years ago in The Wealth of Nations: “it is not from the benevolence of the butcher, brewer, or baker that we get our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest.” In a system of voluntary exchange, people seeking to serve themselves must first serve others. Prices convey information, profits signal value creation, and losses expose waste — the core of the price mechanism in a free-market economy.

The process isn’t perfect, but it’s far superior to the alternatives. As Milton Friedman argued in his critique of big government, markets work because they respect people’s ability to decide, adapt, and improve through cooperation — not central command.

The Real Warning in the Gallup Data

The most troubling signal in the Gallup polling isn’t Democratic skepticism. It’s the erosion among independents and younger Americans — groups that historically decide elections and shape long-term political trends.

Independents still lean pro-capitalist, but their support has fallen. Younger Americans overwhelmingly support small business and free enterprise, yet are increasingly ambivalent toward “capitalism” as a system. That suggests confusion, not rejection.

Even more concerning is what’s happening on the right.

A growing faction of Republicans — often labeled “national conservatives” or “populists” — is openly abandoning free-market principles in favor of state-directed outcomes. They argue for industrial policy, trade protectionism, expanded subsidies, and heavier regulation, all justified as necessary to achieve cultural, national, or political goals.

This matters because it breaks the traditional coalition that defended markets across parties.

When Both Sides Drift Toward Bigger Government

Gallup’s data show Americans are overwhelmingly positive toward small business (95 percent) and free enterprise (81 percent), while holding deeply negative views of big business. That gap tells us people still believe in markets — but not in a system that feels rigged and political.

The left responds by calling for more government control. Some on the right now respond by calling for different forms of government control. The mechanism is the same.

Whether it’s progressive redistribution or nationalist industrial policy, the solution offered is top-down power — politicians picking outcomes, overriding prices, and directing capital. History shows this doesn’t fix capitalism’s problems; it replaces markets with politics.

As the fallacy of corporate subsidies makes clear, once the government starts steering the economy, competition weakens, insiders win, and ordinary people lose. Bigger government doesn’t become more precise — it becomes more entrenched — regardless of which party is in charge.

Capitalism’s Problem Is Not About Performance

The Gallup results don’t show a rejection of capitalism’s benefits. They show a rejection of cronyism mislabeled as capitalism. Americans like choice, competition, small businesses, innovation, and opportunity — all products of free-market capitalism.

What they don’t like are bailouts, favoritism, barriers to entry, and rules that protect the powerful — outcomes caused by policy distortions, not markets. Policies such as occupational licensing that create barriers to opportunity or housing restrictions raise costs and block entry, especially for younger Americans. When those failures are blamed on “capitalism,” skepticism grows.

This is why the fight matters most outside the Democratic base. If independents, young people, and market-friendly conservatives drift toward bigger government — just with different slogans — the long-run prospects for freedom dim.

The Moral Case — and the Evidence

Beyond efficiency, capitalism rests on a moral foundation. Markets respect individuals’ dignity to pursue their own conception of the good life. They reward service, not status. They generate progress through experimentation and feedback. And they decentralize power, protecting against tyranny.

The evidence is overwhelming. In 1820, more than 90 percent of the world lived in extreme poverty. Today, that figure is under 10 percent, as shown by data on extreme poverty over time. Life expectancy has doubled. Child mortality has collapsed. Access to goods and services, once considered luxuries, has become common.

What drove this transformation? Not redistribution or industrial planning. It was the spread of market institutions: open trade, secure property rights, sound money, and the freedom to invest and innovate. The comparisons are instructive — East v. West Germany, North v. South Korea, Venezuela v. Chile. Where markets are embraced, prosperity follows. Where they’re suppressed, poverty and repression prevail.

Reclaiming Capitalism

The polling tells us the challenge ahead is not convincing Democrats who already favor more government. It is rebuilding confidence among the persuadable middle and preventing the right from abandoning markets in favor of control.

The path forward isn’t to redefine capitalism, but to reclaim it: restore sound money, limit government favoritism, secure property rights, open competition, and remove barriers that trap workers and families. And we must explain — not just defend — why free-market capitalism remains the best path to prosperity.

Public skepticism is rising, yet the moral and empirical case for capitalism has never been stronger.

Note: As of January 31, 2025, data for four of the 24 components of the Business Conditions Monthly indicators have not yet been published. While the remaining suspended economic data are expected to be released prior to the next Business Conditions Monthly report, the resulting estimates should be regarded as preliminary. Interpretations will remain tentative until several months of subsequent releases and revisions have accumulated, allowing for a more stable and reliable assessment of both data quality and overarching trends.

The two most recent inflation data releases offer a mixed but gradually improving signal, with broad disinflationary trends emerging alongside persistent pockets of price strength. January’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) report from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics came in notably cooler than a typical start to the year, when firms often reset prices. Headline inflation rose a mere 0.17 percent month-over-month and the year-over-year rate eased to 2.4 percent, supported by softer energy and food prices, flat core goods, and modest slowing in rents. At the same time, discretionary services such as airfares, recreation, and transportation remained firm, and the share of categories posting faster price increases broadened, underscoring that progress toward lower inflation remains uneven. The Fed’s preferred core Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) gauge told a somewhat firmer late-year story, rising 0.36 percent in December and 3.0 percent year-over-year, driven largely by recreation services, financial services, and tariff-sensitive goods, while consumers continued rotating spending away from goods toward services even as income growth lagged and the saving rate slipped to a three-year low. Together the CPI and PCE data suggest inflation is gradually stabilizing but still shaped by sector-specific pressures and evolving consumer behavior, leaving the outlook balanced between continued disinflation and lingering strains on household budgets.

US labor market conditions reflect a delicate transition from prolonged cooling toward a tentative, uneven recovery, with recent benchmark revisions reshaping the underlying narrative. Annual revisions to the January jobs report reduced the level of end-2025 payrolls by roughly one million jobs and showed that hiring momentum had been far weaker than previously understood, with average monthly job growth revised down to just 15,000 last year and several months of outright contraction. Despite this backward-looking downgrade, January’s headline payroll gain of 130,000 and a drop in the unemployment rate to 4.28 percent, alongside rising labor force participation and a modest increase in weekly earnings, suggest the labor market may be stabilizing after nearly two years of stall-speed hiring that began in mid-2024 and intensified during 2025. Job creation remains highly concentrated, however, in government-proximate fields, with health care and social assistance accounting for the majority of gains, while federal employment and financial activities continue to contract and manufacturing only recently returned to modest growth. Forward-looking indicators reinforce the picture of a labor market that is no longer tightening but not collapsing either: ADP data showed private payrolls rising just 22,000 in January, reflecting stagnant hiring at both large firms and small businesses even as layoffs remain relatively contained, and wage growth for job changers slowed to about 6.4 percent, signaling cooling bargaining power. Meanwhile, the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) report points to weakening labor demand, with job openings falling to 6.54 million and the openings-to-unemployed ratio dropping to 0.87: the lowest since early 2021, while quits and layoffs hold at subdued levels, indicating low churn rather than widespread job losses. Taken together, revisions, payroll gains, and vacancy data suggest the labor market has shifted from tight to balanced, with employment growth hovering near breakeven and inflation pressures from wages easing, leaving a recovery path that appears real but still sensitive to broader economic and policy conditions.

Activity across the goods-producing side of the economy presents a mixed but strategically driven expansion, with traditional consumer-oriented manufacturing still lagging while investment-heavy sectors show clearer momentum. The ISM manufacturing new-orders index surged into expansionary territory in January — its strongest reading in nearly four years — signaling a pickup in factory demand, supported by depleted inventories and increased capital spending in areas such as aircraft, electronics, primary metals, and energy products. Domestic durable goods production has risen about 1.5 percent since last spring, led by gains of roughly 6.8 percent in aircraft and 5.4 percent in electronics, while output tied more closely to consumer demand (vehicles, furniture, and textiles) remains subdued or declining. Inventory dynamics are playing a key role: retail inventories relative to sales remain about 12 percent below pre-pandemic norms, wholesale and manufacturer stocks have been drawn down, and imports of real consumer goods have fallen roughly 14 percent compared with 2024 averages, implying future production must rise or supply gaps widen. At the same time, forward-looking surveys show growth losing some momentum — the S&P Global manufacturing PMI eased to 51.2 in February, output slipped, and employment fell close to neutral — suggesting that while strategic capital investment and factory construction in semiconductors, chemicals, and transportation equipment point to stronger capacity ahead, the near-term manufacturing rebound remains uneven and concentrated in policy-favored or high-value sectors rather than broad-based consumer goods.

The services economy continues to expand but is showing signs of cooling demand, softer hiring, and renewed cost pressures that could complicate the inflation outlook. The ISM Services PMI held steady at 53.8 in January, indicating ongoing growth, yet underlying components weakened: new orders slowed to 53.1, export demand faded, and the employment subindex slipped toward neutral at 50.3, all pointing to a slower pace of hiring even as production accelerated temporarily. Survey respondents increasingly view inventories as excessive and expect activity to soften in coming months, a view reinforced by S&P Global’s flash services PMI easing to 52.3 in February (its lowest level since April 2025) alongside declines in new orders and employment. Despite cooling demand, price pressures remain a concern, with input costs rising more broadly in January and prices charged jumping to 58.3 in February, the highest since mid-2025, highlighting ongoing cost pass-through in discretionary areas such as travel, recreation, and transportation. The broader composite PMI has also drifted lower to 52.3, signaling slower overall growth and subdued hiring momentum across the economy. The service sector appears to be transitioning from strong post-pandemic expansion toward a slower, more cost-sensitive phase, where demand growth is moderating, employment gains are flattening, and price dynamics, rather than output, are becoming the central issue for policymakers.

Recent readings on consumer and business sentiment suggest stabilization rather than a full rebound, with confidence improving modestly even as uncertainty and labor-market concerns linger beneath the surface. The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index rose to 91.2 in February, supported by a notable improvement in forward-looking expectations around income, employment, and business conditions, while the University of Michigan’s sentiment gauge climbed to a six-month high of 57.3 as short-term inflation fears eased and year-ahead inflation expectations fell to 3.5 percent. American households appear more willing to plan big-ticket purchases and maintain spending on services, yet the picture remains cautious: assessments of current conditions weakened slightly, job security concerns remain elevated, and the perceived probability of losing one’s job is still near post-pandemic highs. Small business sentiment tells a similar story of guarded resilience: the National Federation of Independent Business optimism index slipped marginally to 99.3 as rising uncertainty and softer hiring plans weighed on confidence, even as expected real sales improved, credit conditions eased, and capital spending stayed firm, with 60 percent of owners reporting recent outlays. Hiring intentions have cooled and fewer firms report difficulty finding workers, reflecting a labor market that is no longer overheated, while price-setting behavior shows mixed signals, with fewer businesses raising prices currently but more planning increases ahead. Combined, the sentiment data across households and firms point to an economy that is steady but cautious: inflation fears are easing and spending expectations remain intact, yet persistent uncertainty about growth and employment continues to limit enthusiasm and keep confidence fragile rather than robust.

Recent consumption data point to a resilient but uneven consumer environment, where underlying demand remains intact despite softer headline readings and short-term volatility. December retail sales were flat month over month, likely reflecting a pull-forward of holiday spending into November promotions rather than a collapse in demand, with year-over-year growth easing to 2.4 percent but discretionary services — such as food service and drinking places – still expanding at a solid 4.7 percent pace, signaling continued willingness to spend on experiences. Monthly gains were limited to five of thirteen retail categories, led by building materials and sporting goods, while traditional holiday segments like apparel and electronics declined, suggesting the effect of discount-driven demand shifts rather than broad retrenchment. 

The core control group of retail sales slipped 0.1 percent, and overall real consumption growth appears to have moderated to roughly 2.8 percent in the fourth quarter, a slower but still positive pace supported by wealth effects and expectations for larger tax refunds early in 2026. Meanwhile, the auto sector illustrates the tension between steady demand and mounting affordability pressures: January light-vehicle sales dropped to a 14.85 million annualized rate following strong year-end incentives, with car sales down 3.6 percent year over year even as light-truck purchases held up modestly. Elevated auto-loan delinquencies and extended financing terms of up to seven years highlight the strain high rates are placing on household budgets, yet total vehicle sales in 2025 reached their strongest level since 2019, underscoring that consumption remains active but increasingly sensitive to pricing, financing conditions, and seasonal factors such as unusually cold weather.

Industrial production data point to a solid start for the goods-producing side of the economy in 2026, with January output rising 0.7 percent — the strongest monthly gain in nearly a year — driven largely by manufacturing and a weather-related surge in utility production. Factory output increased 0.6 percent, supported by gains in machinery, computers and electronics, motor vehicles, and construction-related materials such as concrete, suggesting capital expenditures and onshoring-related investment are becoming key drivers of growth. Durable goods production climbed 0.8 percent, and business equipment output rose 0.9 percent, reinforcing signs that firms are advancing capex plans as trade policy uncertainty eases and tax incentives encourage domestic investment. Capacity utilization moved higher into the mid-76 percent range, while stronger orders for core capital goods late in 2025 signal continued momentum ahead. Although some of the upside reflects downward revisions to prior months, the breadth of gains across strategic industries and business equipment indicates manufacturing may be entering a modest recovery phase after a prolonged period of softness.

The monetary policy backdrop reflects a Federal Reserve that is increasingly cautious about easing, even as growth moderates and labor-market risks linger. Minutes from the January FOMC meeting show broad agreement to hold rates steady, with only a small minority favoring cuts and a growing share of policymakers emphasizing both credibility and the possibility of keeping policy restrictive for longer — or even tightening again, if disinflation stalls. This more balanced, “two-sided” policy framing comes as economic growth slowed to a 1.4 percent annualized pace in the fourth quarter, partly due to a prolonged government shutdown that reduced federal services and weighed on consumption and trade. While business investment — particularly in information processing equipment tied to artificial-intelligence spending — remains a bright spot, softer consumer momentum and persistent core PCE inflation near three percent leave the Fed navigating a delicate trade-off between supporting a fragile expansion and ensuring inflation expectations remain anchored.

Fiscal and trade policy, meanwhile, are introducing significant uncertainty that interacts directly with monetary conditions. The Supreme Court’s invalidation of key tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act on February 20 has complicated the administration’s fiscal arithmetic by threatening hundreds of billions in expected revenue and raising the prospect of large refunds, potentially widening already substantial budget deficits tied to recent tax legislation. At the same time, the administration’s attempt to replace those tariffs with new global levies has unsettled trading partners and could strain existing agreements with the EU, India, China, and key Asian allies, increasing the risk of renewed trade frictions even as most countries are likely to maintain negotiated frameworks for now. Together, those developments suggest a policy mix in which tighter fiscal constraints, evolving trade rules, and a more cautious Federal Reserve are interacting in ways that could dampen near-term growth volatility while keeping inflation, investment decisions, and global supply chains highly sensitive to political and legal developments.

The US economy continues to push forward, though increasingly under the influence of policy stimulus, financial conditions, and structural shifts rather than broad-based organic momentum. Consumer spending and services activity remain relatively firm (supported by tax relief, easing credit conditions, and gradually-moderating inflation) even as goods production, hiring, and capital investment advance more unevenly. Price pressures are cooling but remain sectorally uneven, leaving elevated living costs and tariff pass-through weighing on real purchasing power and business margins. Labor markets appear balanced yet fragile following sizable downward revisions to prior hiring data, while growth is increasingly driven by investment-heavy manufacturing and resilient experience-based consumption rather than widespread wage gains or strong employment expansion. 

At the same time, monetary policy remains cautious amid credibility concerns, fiscal arithmetic has grown more uncertain after tariff-related legal challenges, and evolving trade policies continue to inject volatility into supply chains and corporate planning. Overlaying that backdrop is the accelerating influence of artificial intelligence: rising expectations of productivity gains and capital deepening coexist with anxieties that automation may expand opportunities for highly skilled workers while compressing prospects for marginal or routine labor, complicating wage dynamics and longer-term consumption trends. Market behavior, including strong rallies in gold and silver (both of which have fallen from their highs, but remain highly elevated) reflects the broader unease, signaling skepticism not about imminent recession, but about the durability and tradeoffs embedded in the current policy mix. Taken together, the economy appears to be navigating a late-cycle phase marked by slower but still positive growth, easing inflation, and technological transition, leaving the near-term outlook cautiously constructive but highly sensitive to policy decisions and structural changes in productivity.

The Atlantic recently ran a story headlined “He Was Homeschooled for Years, and Fell So Far Behind.” It profiles Stefan Merrill Block, who was homeschooled in his early years and later struggled to catch up once he entered traditional schooling. But one rough experience doesn’t invalidate an entire movement that is delivering superior results for millions of families across the country.

Homeschool students are outperforming kids in government schools by a wide margin. Brian Ray’s peer-reviewed systematic review in the Journal of School Choice examined dozens of studies on the topic. Seventy-eight percent of those studies found homeschoolers scoring significantly higher academically than their public school peers. They beat traditional school kids by 15 to 25 percentile points on standardized tests. These solid results hold up regardless of family background, income level, and whether the parents ever held a teaching certificate. 

Image Credit: Meta-analysis by National Home Education Research Institute

Government schools deliver exactly the opposite outcome. In Chicago alone, there are 55 public schools where not a single kid tests proficient in math. They spend about $30,000 per student each year and still fail to produce basic proficiency. The Nation’s Report Card shows nearly 80 percent of US kids aren’t proficient in math. That’s the real crisis staring us in the face, and it demands accountability from the system that claims to serve our children. 

The critics who demand tighter rules on homeschooling never mention these disasters in public education. They won’t even consider shutting down the failing public schools that waste billions of taxpayer dollars and fail thousands of kids every year. But when families opt out and choose something better for their kids? Suddenly it’s time for government oversight and heavy-handed regulations. This double standard exposes the true agenda at play. 

Teachers’ unions watch the collapse of academic achievement and never push for less funding. Every bad score just becomes another excuse for more cash grabs from the public. If they really thought homeschool was underperforming, they’d be calling for gobs of taxpayer money to fix it.  

This logical inconsistency gives away the game: these groups are laser-focused on defending the government school monopoly at all costs. They want to keep other people’s kids locked in their failure factories so they can siphon as much money as possible away from families and into the system. 

Census Bureau numbers confirm just how much the tide is turning. Homeschooling enrollment has at least doubled since 2019, and the growth shows no signs of slowing. COVID laid bare the dysfunction in government schools, from useless remote learning to radical ideologies in the classroom, and parents decided they had seen enough.

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, even wants to take things a step further by officially partnering her union with the World Economic Forum to shape a national curriculum. That’s the future they envision — handing control of education to elites in Davos instead of trusting parents. 

Even if the evidence showed homeschooling only matching the factory-model school system on average, the state would still have no legitimate authority to interfere. Kids don’t belong to the government. The Supreme Court made that crystal clear back in 1925 with Pierce v. Society of Sisters, ruling that “the child is not the mere creature of the State.” Oregon had tried to force every child into public schools, but the justices struck it down and affirmed parents’ fundamental right to direct their children’s education. 

The Court reinforced this principle in Meyer v. Nebraska in 1923, protecting parents’ liberty to direct their children’s education, including striking down laws that banned foreign language instruction in private schools. Then, in Wisconsin v. Yoder in 1972, the justices sided with Amish parents who wanted to pull their children from high school to preserve their faith and community way of life. These landmark decisions enshrine parental rights as bedrock constitutional protections that no bureaucrat can simply override. 

The state has the burden of proof when it comes to intervening in family life. Parents shouldn’t be forced to prove their innocence upfront just to educate their own children at home. Government should only step in with clear evidence of real abuse, and even then, the intervention must be narrow and targeted.  

Envision government officials sitting at every family’s dinner table each week, inspecting meals “just in case” some parents aren’t feeding their kids right. That scenario would represent an obvious violation of our Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches, and no one would stand for it. Yet that’s the invasive logic behind calls to regulate homeschooling as if every parent is a suspect. 

History shows exactly where this path of centralized control leads. The Nazi regime banned homeschooling in 1938 with criminal penalties attached, all to create a monopoly on thought and ensure their authoritarian ideology took root in every young mind. America’s own compulsory government school system didn’t emerge from some noble tradition of freedom — it was imported from Prussia, modern-day Germany, and aggressively promoted here in Massachusetts by Horace Mann. The whole model was engineered to produce obedient soldiers and compliant factory workers, not independent thinkers who question authority. 

Homeschoolers sidestep the school system’s ugliest realities altogether. They avoid the gangs, the drugs, the mindless conformity, the left-wing indoctrination, the social promotion, and the constant threat of violence that plague too many government institutions. An FBI report from 2025 documented 1.3 million crimes committed in schools over just a few recent years.  

And let’s not forget the subject of The Atlantic’s own story. They concede that Stefan Merrill Block grew up to become a successful and educated author, complete with New York Times bestsellers to his name. Their highlighted “failure” case actually produced someone thriving in the real world. That undercuts the panic they’re trying to stoke. 

Regulations have failed to fix the problems in public schools — they have often entrenched mediocrity and waste. Importing the same model into homeschooling would risk spreading those shortcomings rather than solving them. Many on the left are uncomfortable with the fact that they lack the same direct control over parents that they exercise over most school districts. That gap in authority has led some to push for sidelining families in favor of greater state oversight.

Parents know their children better than any distant bureaucrat ever could. Homeschooling delivers measurable results, saves taxpayers money, and upholds the core American value of freedom.

The Atlantic can publish as many cautionary stories as it likes, but the data, the Supreme Court precedents, and basic common sense remain firmly on the side of parental authority. It’s time to end the double standards and attack narratives and let families lead the way in educating the next generation.

It used to be said that the sun never set on the British Empire, so far-flung were its possessions. Britain has long since retreated from most of those territories, most recently, and controversially, in its attempt to relinquish control of the Chagos Islands. Yet even as it sheds physical dominion, Britain appears increasingly eager to export something else: its laws and regulations. 

In that project, it is joined enthusiastically by its former partners in the European Union. If the Old World has one major export left, it is bureaucracy.

The most obvious current target is X, Elon Musk’s platform, and its Grok AI tool. Some users of questionable taste quickly discovered that Grok could be used to generate deepfake images of celebrities in revealing attire. More seriously, it was alleged that the technology had been used to generate sexualized images of children. In response, last month the UK’s communications regulator, Ofcom, opened a formal investigation under the Online Safety Act, citing potential failures to prevent illegal content. The possible penalties are severe, ranging from multi-million-pound fines, based on the company’s global revenue, to a complete ban on the platform in the UK.

Senior British officials were quick to escalate the rhetoric. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Technology Secretary Liz Kendall publicly condemned X and emphasized that all options, including nationwide blocking, were on the table. The message was unmistakable; compliance would be enforced, one way or another.

Two days later, X announced new restrictions to prevent Grok from editing images of real people into revealing scenarios and to introduce geoblocking in jurisdictions where such content is illegal. Ofcom described these changes as “welcome” but insufficient, insisting its investigation would continue. Meanwhile, pressure spread outward. Other governments announced restrictions, and the European Commission expanded its own probes under the Digital Services Act. What began as a British enforcement action quickly morphed into coordinated global pressure, effectively pushing X toward worldwide policy changes.

This is the crucial point. British regulators were not merely seeking compliance for British users. They were pressing for changes to X’s global policies and technical architecture to govern speech and expression far beyond the UK’s borders. What might initially have been framed as a failure to impose sensible safeguards on a powerful new tool has become a test case for whether regulators in one jurisdiction can dictate technological limits everywhere else.

This pattern is not new. Ofcom has already attempted to extend its reach directly into the United States, brushing aside the constitutional protections afforded to Americans. Since the Online Safety Act came into force in 2025, Ofcom has adopted an aggressively expansive interpretation of its authority, asserting that any online service “with links to the UK,” meaning merely accessible to UK users and deemed to pose “risks” to them, must comply with detailed duties to assess, mitigate, and report on illegal harms. Services provided entirely from abroad are explicitly deemed “in scope” if they meet these criteria.

The flashpoints have been 4chan and Kiwi Farms, two US-based forums notorious for unmoderated speech and even harassment campaigns. In mid-2025, Ofcom initiated investigations into both for failing to respond to statutory information requests and for failing to complete the required risk assessments. It ultimately issued a confirmation decision against 4chan, imposing a £20,000 fine plus daily penalties for continued non-compliance, despite the site having no physical presence, staff, or infrastructure in the UK.

Rather than comply, the operators of both sites filed suit in US federal court, arguing that Ofcom’s actions violate the First Amendment and that the regulator lacks jurisdiction to enforce British law against American companies. The litigation frames the dispute starkly: whether a foreign regulator may, through regulatory pressure, compel changes to lawful American speech.

That question has now spilled into US politics. Senior American officials have criticized Ofcom’s posture as an extraterritorial threat to free speech, and at least one member of Congress has threatened retaliatory legislation. What Britain views as online safety increasingly appears, from across the Atlantic, to be regulatory imperialism.

Speech is merely the most visible example. Europe has long sought to impose its environmental priorities on both developed and developing countries alike, a phenomenon I once labeled “eco-imperialism.” The latest iteration is the EU’s deforestation regulation, scheduled to take effect later this year. Exporters of products such as timber and beef must now prove, to the EU’s satisfaction, that their supply chains have not contributed to deforestation.

For American producers, this is less about forests than paperwork. As the Farm Bureau has noted, the rule functions as a non-tariff barrier, particularly for producers without vertically integrated supply chains. Native American tribes reliant on timber exports have gone further, accusing Brussels of a renewed form of colonialism.

Financial regulation provides another illustration. Through a patchwork of directives and equivalence determinations, the EU increasingly conditions market access on conformity with its regulatory preferences. Non-EU jurisdictions are pressured to align their rules not through treaties, but through the sheer leverage of access to Europe’s markets, the so-called Brussels Effect.

Even Europe’s revived Blocking Statute, originally intended to counter US extraterritorial sanctions, underscores the contradiction. Europe insists on defending its own regulatory autonomy while simultaneously seeking to universalize its rules abroad.

None of this should be surprising. Administrative overreach is not generally a moral failure but an institutional one. Regulators operate under mandates that are deliberately broad, politically insulated, and difficult to measure. Their incentives are asymmetric; visible failure is punished, while over-caution and expansion rarely are (indeed, they are often rewarded). In such an environment, discretion naturally displaces rules. This, in turn, empowers the production of bulletins, circulars, and even blog posts that have the effect of law, something my colleague Wayne Crews calls “regulatory dark matter.”

When regulators move beyond enforcing clear, predictable rules and instead attempt to manage outcomes like “safety,” “harm,” and “fairness,” they substitute their own judgment for dispersed social knowledge. The claim that complex systems can be centrally overseen within a nation, let alone across borders, rests on an exaggerated confidence in regulatory omniscience and a systematic undervaluation of unintended consequences.

As this tendency is reinforced rather than checked, agencies gravitate toward peer approval rather than public accountability, and therefore toward international coordination rather than domestic consent. Jurisdiction follows the reach of the system instead of democratic legitimacy. Borders become inconveniences, and constitutional limits become parochial relics. Trial by jury, the crown jewel of common law? An inconvenience.

These developments also reflect a deeper shift in governance. In Britain, Parliament has not merely delegated power to regulators; it has largely abandoned meaningful oversight of them. Ministers disclaim responsibility in the name of independence, while courts typically review only whether regulators followed proper procedure, not whether their decisions were wise or proportionate. In the EU, this technocratic design was largely intentional from the start, with the Commission enjoying extraordinary agenda-setting power and steadily expanding its reach since Maastricht.

The result is an administrative order increasingly detached from democratic constraint. As Britain and Europe struggle economically, particularly in comparison to the United States, the temptation is not to reform inward, but to regulate outward. If growth cannot be revived at home, regulation can at least be exported abroad.

Yet Europe’s recent clash with America over Greenland has exposed much of the continent’s weakness. While the Commission may seek to demand subservience from American tech companies, those companies have the capability to turn off the lights — literally. The smothering of Europe’s technological innovation under its regulatory blanket means it has nothing with which to replace American know-how. Britain’s failure to break fully from the European regulatory mindset after Brexit means it is stuck in the mid-Atlantic, regulating Americans while still attempting to stay on America’s good side. That game may soon be up.

The British Empire once projected power by force. Today, the Old World tries to extend its reach not with arms, but compliance. But bureaucracy, like the empire, cannot resist the setting sun.