Associate Professor @NYULaw (but views are not my employer’s) | Legal History, Administrative State, New York State Courts | “agenda-driven naysayer whose head instantiates academic ethers”
Noah Rosenblum
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I've just posted a new (fairly short!) paper on unitary executive theory's impoverished theory of democratic accountability. Give it a read -- I'd love to hear any thoughts! papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
I am prepared to believe there was more waste and complacency in the federal government than big state liberals like me liked to acknowledge. But I would appreciate it if some of the DOGE-apologists would recognize that the government was also more effective and critical than they understood
This is a fun but bad take, and confuses the critique neoliberalism with neoliberalism itself. Was Star Trek a product of neoliberalism? Yes, the way that Marx was a product of industrialization. In context, Ratatouille is about the unruliness, even transcendence of the real, despite neoliberalism.
Nothing like learning about the early history of the Republican Party to bring hope in these dark times
My mom is such a nice lady. Until Hertz screws up the rental car.
I am prepared to believe there was more waste and complacency in the federal government than big state liberals like me liked to acknowledge. But I would appreciate it if some of the DOGE-apologists would recognize that the government was also more effective and critical than they understood
'The real surprise from the OECD’s subsidy numbers is that it cost China less than $18bn in sectoral support over 15 years to build an industry that can now provide more clean power than the world can readily absorb.'
@adamtooze.bsky.social @financialtimes.com
www.ft.com/content/b6ca...
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Unitary executive theory has, since <i>Myers v. United States</i>, been premised on a conception of democratic accountability. On this view, the presiden