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Charles Pick's avatar

I disagree with Weiss: many state legislative roles are surprisingly cheap, but with the caveat that they have no real power other than to steer state budgets that are largely concerned with administering federal programs or otherwise maintaining programs that are greatly shaped by federal frameworks (like roads, education, welfare, and utilities). Federal house seats are also surprisingly cheap to the point to which many people who COULD easily raise the funds to buy them do not bother. Senate seats are also inexpensive in many states relative to how much many potential candidates could muster. However, as Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio wrote in his recent book, no one who is sane wants those offices because of the corrosive impact on reputation among other things.

There are lots of issues with the US, but I think the best way to analyze it is through the lens of Bageshot, who wrote about the decay of the House of Lords and the emergence of Parliament in "The English Constitution" around the time of the end of the Civil War here in the US. Both houses of Congress have basically retired themselves from actual importance, and most of the debate that once happened in Congress instead happens in opaque realms of corporate, regulatory and legal debate or direct conflict.

So if you want to have an impact on foreign policy, you go to work for a think tank -- you do not write your congressman, who just takes orders from the think tank. If you want to have an impact on environmental regulation, you join a lobbying firm, you go to work for a powerful law firm, and you do rotations in federal agencies. The kinds of recondite and learned debates that once happened in the legislature do not happen anymore and the public does not have a seat at the discussions that do occur. The moment the masses get the right to vote is also the moment when the power of that vote dissipates into nothing.

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Brian Smith's avatar

>"If I were an Ivy-Plus college president, I would strongly consider announcing a phased-in 10 percent expansion of class size, and I would pledge to allocate the newly created spots to low- and middle-income students."

This is a charming statement, and explains why David Deming is not the president of an elite university. Most of the value of the elite university is its prestige. Its prestige comes directly from its exclusivity. It might be good for society to allow more students into elite universities, but it wouldn't be good for the people running these universities.

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