

This is my 1,000th essay on this blog – for whatever that’s worth. So I'm feeling the urge to look back a little at it's synthesis and progress. Please forgive me if I ramble a little more than usual.
I had lunch last week with a few friends, one of which does pretty much the same thing I do, and he said he was amazed at the amount of written output I generate. When I told him that it only takes me about 10% more time to write these things than it takes for him to read them, and that I generally publish them replete with spelling and grammatical errors he seemed to understand a little better.
I make no claims to be a great writer. I have friends who write for a living, so I know the difference. And while my prose may be halting, most people will grant me that I know what I know. I’m an expert in my field – even if that field is just a tiny fraction of the world. I usually restrict my writing to those subjects where I feel my expertise matters. For the most part that’s the economy and guns – my work and my hobby. And in both those cases you’re hearing from a guy who has had something to lose if he’s wrong. I personally think that makes all the difference in the world.
Paul Krugman writes about the economy – or at least he used to. But even at his best, Paul Krugman never had any “skin in the game” so he never learned the costs of being wrong. And because that’s so, he’s gone from being wrong about just a few things, to wrong about virtually everything. Barbara Streisand writes about the economy, and so does Jane Fonda. Whoopie Goldberg does as well. All of them have as much stake in the results of their thinking as Paul Krugman does, and it’s had the same effect on them all. On that topic, as my mother would say, not one of them can find their hat with both hands.
Whereas, if my ideas are wrong then 90 days from now I’ll be unemployed. In fact, I’ve been a maximum of 90 days from unemployment for a good chunk of my career. That isn’t an indictment of me, it’s a recognition of the realities of a job where risk is a constant. There is no stability in your life when you do what I do – it simply goes with the territory. But the upside of that is that you can bet that I know tons more about how the economy really works than Whoopie Goldberg or Paul Krugman. I can’t carry a tune (actually I couldn’t even carry it in a bucket) and I don't look good on camera – but I can tell you how to increase GDP or lower unemployment. And the reason for that is that I can tell the difference between different kinds of knowledge and ideas.
As he gets older, Tom Sowell looks more and more like Yoda to me. I hope he takes no offense at that – I certainly mean none. He never struck me as a particularly vain man where his appearance was concerned, but I can’t imagine anyone enjoying the physical comparison. But the similarity is really more internal than external. Like Yoda, I view him as the ancient master of the mind whose every utterance includes some irreplaceable gem of wisdom. He’s one of the last guardians of the Jedi school of Chicago – which seems to be cranking out more Sith than Jedi these last few years.
Dr. Sowell’s masterwork ‘Knowledge and Decisions’ continues to be the most under appreciated economic text ever written in my opinion. And the reason you can tell I’ve read the book is because I know the difference between a ‘fact’ and something that is an opinion. Everyone has all kinds of opinions about all kinds of topics – but facts are harder to come by. Opinions may or may not withstand the test of external verification – Krugman’s almost never do. But that is one of the requirements for an idea to be described as a ‘fact’.
The advocates of the leftist world view would have that be different. To them, opinions may be just as important as ‘facts’ – it really depends on whose opinion we’re talking about. If it’s the opinion of someone with a great deal of political power, then their ‘opinion’ may be even more important than a ‘fact’ which contradicts it. To them the ‘wrong kind’ of facts can be (and morally should be) ignored, but the opinions of ‘the right people’ should be elevated to the level of scripture. And as you can probably guess, I don’t think that’s any way to run a country. I’ve heard Dr. Sowell say the same thing.
Someone once asked him why more Economists don’t support central planning, when that central planning would mean a great deal more power for economists. As you can imagine he didn’t take to the idea. He rightly said that the reason central planning fails is not because the people who do the planning aren’t smart enough, but because it’s impossible for any one person however smart, to know enough to do it correctly. If Dr. Sowell were to have a ‘use the force Luke’ tag line, that would probably be it.
But if he had embraced the idea of central planning for his own sake as one of the planners, he’d have ended up sounding just like Paul Krugman. Krugman’s ‘rent seeking’ behavior is obvious to us who have the training to understand the choices he’s making. And because of that, no one in my world takes Krugman serious as a thinker anymore. His view on economics, markets and tax policy have become just as self deluded as his view on the “rightwing” media. And for those of us with skin in the game, they hold as much weight as the views of Whoopie Goldberg or Barbara Streisand.
Dr. Sowell on the other hand continues to produce work which has the objectively verifiable ring of truth. He’s out there in the ‘back of beyond’ intellectual swamps of northern California showing people how you can levitate the GDP with nothing but your mind if you just focus on what really counts. And the way he says to do that is the same way he always has – by focusing on the mysterious force created when you grant individuals their economic liberty.
OK – I’ve stretched that analogy a little further than I probably should have – I’m sure you get the point. Like most things, economics can be used both to illuminate and to blind. Sowell does the former, while Krugman does the latter. And the easiest way to tell the difference is to ask a simple question. “Who gets to decide?” If the policy being advocated is implemented, then who makes the decisions? Who gets the choice?
If the people empowered to choose are bureaucrats and politicians, then it won’t lead to greater economic growth but the growth of government. If the person who gets to choose is some economist somewhere then it will lead to greater central planning and the inefficiency that comes with it. But if the people who will be making the decisions are individual people, and they are empowered only to make decisions about their individual lives – then that will be better for everyone, and the economy will grow in the process.
And if all anyone ever learned about modern economics from reading this blog was that – then even master Yoda would probably tell me that I’ve done well.