Delight Springs

Monday, February 15, 2021

Democracy in chains

We're having a rare middle Tennessee ice-and-snow day, they've closed campus and encouraged everyone to hunker down and stay off the roads. 

I'm happy to stay in today and enjoy the ample remains of all the wonderful food my family feted me with on my birthday, including my favorite Indian spread from Sitar and the luscious German Chocolate cake Younger Daughter baked. And Krispy Kremes. 

And I'll scribble my reflections on her generosity of spirit in the blank book she made from recycled paper and the husk of a bad old book called Problems of the Spirit-filled Life. 

Older Daughter's spirit is nourishing and heartwarming too, she zoomed in from LA to promise the gift, when the accursed pandemic is finally behind us, of a father-daughter roadtrip up and down the Pacific Coast Highway en route to all the MLB parks in California. That after phoning in a Friday night pizza-and-IPA growler order for us from Tailgate. 

It all took the sting out of turning the age of Paul McCartney's nightmare vision (at age 22) of a lonely senescence in an unimaginably distant future. Will you still be sending me a valentine, birthday greetings, bottle of wine? 

I'm pretty blessed, as people around here sometimes say. 

❤ 💘 💙

We're scheduled to discuss Thomas ("nasty brutish and short") Hobbes and Niccolo ("ends justify means") Machiavelli in CoPhi tomorrow. 

In Democracy in America tomorrow night we're scheduled to discuss Nancy MacLean's Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right's Steralth Plan for America.

Hobbes and Machiavelli were not friends of democracy.

Neither was the MTSU alum who is celebrated on our campus with a commemorative plaque, a reading room in the library, and an honors fellowship in his name: James M. Buchanan, born in 1919 "along the Dixie Highway" in the village of Gum, Tennessee, just 8 miles from our school.

His story, and the threat to American democracy it represents, is dramatically told in Nancy MacLean's Democracy in Chainsthe kindle version of which is currently on sale for $1.99. Everyone connected with MTSU needs to know the story, and the origins of the Political Economy Research Institute on our campus.


 

"James M. Buchanan, economist and author, received the 1986 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Grandson of a former governor, he attended Middle Tennessee State Teachers College, the University of Tennessee, and the University of Chicago. Buchanan's emphasis on applying market principles to political choice led to the founding of the subdiscipline of Public Choice, recognized throughout the world. Since 1983, Buchanan has been associated with George Mason University." Marker

In my classes at least, Professor Buchanan, you are busted.

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