Link: Jay Nordlinger on Impromptus on National Review Online.
Since Bill Buckley died a few weeks ago, I've read numerous tributes, and a few have mentioned Buckley's abiding interest in the ideas of Henry George. The newest reference comes from the opening paragraphs of a National Review article today:
Friends, a week ago I put some notes on WFB in Impromptus. (That column is here.) Want a few more notes? Just a few more?
You know that he loved peanut butter. Ate it every morning of his life. Took it everywhere he went (because sometimes you couldn’t get it). But did you also know he had a thing for coffee ice cream? Yes — a real jones for it. I introduced him to Ben & Jerry’s Coffee Heath Bar Crunch — one of the best things on the planet.
(Yes, I know that they are communists or whatever. Just eat the ice cream.)
Note 2: Years ago, I had a spot of trouble finding housing in Manhattan. And he said to me, “Do you know I’m a closet George-ite?” He meant the 19th-century American economist and social thinker Henry George (author of Progress and Poverty).
How I wish that Bill Buckley, and others whose education was good enough to include exposure to the ideas of Henry George, had left/would leave their closets. (Perhaps the reason has something to do with something related to pluralistic ignorance; perhaps it is something more nefarious.)
Bill Buckley did mention Henry George repeatedly in his writings and on the air, but in passing, as if to run it up the flag pole, rather than as a confident advocate of an idea that might not be popular with his constituency.
Continue reading "Closet Georgists and Georgites: Bill Buckley, and others" »