
The Tyranny of Homo Economicus
How “thinking like an economist” has thwarted progress in America.
Tanner Howard is a freelance journalist and In These Times editorial intern. They’re also a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.
How “thinking like an economist” has thwarted progress in America.
Moderates claim that Biden’s BBB failed because it simply “went too far.” The truth is that even if it had passed, it would have excluded scores of working families.
What’s sitting on the nightstand of the legendary Greek economist?
El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, had a mandate for change. He used it to build a police state and buy coin.
Taiwan leads the world in the production of semiconductor material, the basis of the microchips found in everything from cell phones to medical equipment. Washington and Beijing aren’t happy about it.
For decades, American governments that were far from socialist embraced extensive use of price controls during times of inflation.
The paper of record has had some amazing headline edits in recent years. Here’s a selection.
Foodways dependent on factory farming and global monocultural agriculture might be cheap in the short term, but we could pay heavily in the future.
How America got high on the crypto bubble — and lost it all.
The collapse of the Soviet bloc led to a flowering of utopian thinking among our best and brightest.
Misery has inspired some great art.
Many of the fantastical elements of The Wizard of Oz were drawn directly from the monetary debates of the 1890s.
Barbara Ehrenreich was driven by both her undying anger at the profound injustices of life under capitalism and a fervent hope that the world doesn’t have to be this way.
The radioactive mutants have taken the highways, and the microchips have been implanted in us, but there are still bills to pay.
After World War I began and the imperial German government withdrew coins from circulation, local municipalities and businesses printed their own “emergency money” featuring striking imagery from German history, culture, and politics.
Act now for a limited time.
Three Thousand Years of Longing, director George Miller’s whimsical follow-up to Mad Max: Fury Road, finds him returning to the gentle storytelling he perfected in the Babe films. Too bad this one’s a slog.