We have adjusted to the curtailment of our liberties and discrimination in various forms—social, racial, ethnic, immigrant and so on.
Since Margaret Thatcher, we have had that problem in spades in the UK; blame for failure is bounced around between ministries and private contractors, between policy ideas and those responsible for implementation.
It is always good to seek peace rather than war, but the question is always, at what price and in whose interests?
How one develop can enough economic knowledge to understand political choices.
We have adjusted to the curtailment of our liberties and discrimination in various forms—social, racial, ethnic, immigrant and so on.
Since Margaret Thatcher, we have had that problem in spades in the UK; blame for failure is bounced around between ministries and private contractors, between policy ideas and those responsible for implementation.
It is always good to seek peace rather than war, but the question is always, at what price and in whose interests?
How one develop can enough economic knowledge to understand political choices.