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Seeing that there’s literally one story in the news right now (AN ELECTION IS HAPPENING SOON), Jonah decided to use his time on this weekend’s Ruminant to touch on some topics adjacent to the election, but also to incorporate some more evergreen topics into the mix. For example, there’s a discussion of the eternal return of the “get money out of politics” argument – and why Jonah thinks the argument is pointless in a world where the biggest benefit a candidate can get is a hysterical cycle of earned media – an unpopular defense of the slow, ungraceful politics of Mitch McConnell, equally unpopular opinions (at least in some quarters of the right) on the Biden scandal, and most importantly, why “your meatloaf is, like, 5,000 years old.”
Show Notes:
–Get tickets to The Dispatch’s post-election event, “What’s Next: Election 2020 and Beyond”
–The Chronicles of Harris Burdick by Chris Van Allsburg
–Charles Cook: Don’t expect a contested election
–The Wednesday “news”letter from this week
–McConnell’s 1998 opinion on campaign finance reform
–How Innovation Works, by Matt Ridley
–It’s a mistake for Republicans to leave cities out of their coalition
–A forum of Europeans talking about how their ghettos are in the suburbs
–Jonah’s column, inspired by Ten Global Trends
–ExpressVPN.com/Remnant to get 3 months free off a year-long plan
–Bradleyfdn.org/Liberty to listen to Andrew McCarthy on the latest episode of We the People
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The only way a Republican can win in cities is by promising to not fix a lot of the problems that will make cities worse after he/she leaves loses.
It’s foolish to spend millions on a campaign when the moment you say you’ll reform out of control pensions and de-regulate utilities, promote school choice, etc. you lose by 30 points