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David Holzman's avatar

I was driving with NPR on when you came on the air. I very much enjoyed hearing what you had to say, as well as getting to hear you with Brooke Gladstone.

As far as industrial policy, I think we should start with more humanistic policies in the mould of the Scandinavians: a solid social safety net, so that people don't face the huge stresses that come with a major car repair or a major medical bill--that according to something I heard a handful of years ago, around half of Americans can't afford. There was a wonderful article in Harvard magazine maybe a decade ago about the difficulties the impoverished have with coping with stuff when it takes every neuron they have to figure out how to get themselves to work, and how to get food, when faced with major expenses. We need to finance elementary and secondary education nationally, hiring only good teachers, so that every kid whether they live in Cambridge or Timbuktu, Alabama, can love learning as I did, and everyone who wants to should be able to go to college without mortgaging the next several decades. The justice system should concentrate on rehabilitation rather than punishment, as it does in Norway.

In a country like that, I suspect industrial policy would naturally move in better directions than it often has in the US.

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Deanna J Marquart's avatar

You and Heather Cox Richardson keep me in fighting form with your perspectives on the past, present, and future. Without your respective abilities to recognize trouble -- how what we are experiencing now is like but also unlike the American character landscape of the past, for example, while not giving up on the ideals and intentions that brought us here -- I would surely despair of loving life in 2023. But I don't WANT to despair. By loving what you do, you help me love what I do, too. Thank you!

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