(Oct 23, 2008 at Princeton University, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs)
Panelists:
Christopher Hayes, Washington D.C. Editor of The Nation, and a fellow at the New America Foundation
Douglas Massey, the Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at Woodrow Wilson School
Paul Starr, the Woodrow Wilson Schools Stuart Professor of Communications and a Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs
Jacob Levy, the Tomlinson Professor of Political Theory at McGill University
Brink Lindsey, Vice President for Research at the Cato Institute
Will Wilkinson, Cato Research Fellow and Managing Editor of Cato Unbound
That's rare. They were serious when they called it a discussion, rather than a debate. Both sides agreed with each other so much, that most of the time I couldn't tell which from which. It didn't help that each side spoke of both sides in the third person.
coladict 8 months ago
@borisgoodenough1988 selfishness?
wat?
crazygeek777 8 months ago
definitely seperate agendas... the libertarians= the cult of legitimate,acceptable,and permissable selfishness
borisgoodenough1988 1 year ago
It's much easier just to be a constitutionalist.
Q: Are you in party X?
A: No - I'm in the constitution party.
Q: All the members of party X are voting for this and all the members of party Y are not, where do you stand?
A: Is it constitutional and do we really need it?
It's a beautifully unbiased look on everything.
abcinstaller 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Liberals and Libertarians can keep each other. This is what happens when you don't have a philosophy at the base of your political philosophy.
WarVideo 3 years ago