In Arizona:
- Justyn Dillingham gives Irving Kristol the obituary he deserves,
- Evan Lisull discusses the implications of the state universities' effective "we admit all" policy on retention,
- The growth of video on the Web is obnoxious--I don't want to spend time watching someone put on a show for me--but Terry Bressi is adding plenty of text annotation to his fourteen-part series on the Gabrielle Giffords border checkpoint "town hall" meeting,
- Polling data pertaining to the 2010 Republican gubernatorial nomination is reported on Sonoran Alliance,
- "Tedski"--anonyblogging is silly--at Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion has a nice short one on the Arizona delegation and the Joe Wilson censure vote, and
- CLS just hit the big time, and also had a worthwhile if incomplete post on what isn't wrong with U.S. healthcare.
Farther afield:
- Mark Thoma links almost the entire Krugman-precipitated discussion of the state of macroeconomics,
- The DeSmogBlog crew's book about the climate change hoax has hit the shelves,
- Greg Mankiw is doing well in the newspapers, offering an excellent guest opinion about health care egalitarianism in the New York Times and a no-punches-pulled
review of a new book on Keynesianism in the Wall Street Journal, - Tyler Cowen uses the word "agnostic" to mean "reserved" but is not a dullard on the subject integration of expertise and private life,
- Tom Palmer gives a link to a libertarian website from a country with a highly collectivist culture (I can see the old-timers' brains melting...),
- "Eric" at Classical Values sees a pattern of behavior in President Obama's relations with fringe groups,
- Megan McArdle reminds us that the victim-villain narrative is not a good explanation of recessions,
- and this month's Cato Unbound contributors are searching for a good explanation.
- Tyler Cowen uses the word "agnostic" to mean "reserved" but is not a dullard on the subject integration of expertise and private life,
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