The Conservative Cave
Current Events => General Discussion => Topic started by: Chris_ on March 22, 2011, 11:37:03 AM
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[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7butJGdUmK0[/youtube]
In 1981, Secretary of Health Education and Welfare Patricia Harris wrote in the Washington Post that libertarian economists Walter Williams and Thomas Sowell are "middle class" so they "don't know what it is to be poor."
In fact, Williams grew up in a single-parent household in a poor section of Philadelphia. He was raised by his mother, who was a high school dropout. The family spent time on welfare, and eventually moved into the Richard Allen public housing project. (Sowell, whose father died before he was born, was the son of a maid.)
Drafted into the peacetime Army, Williams eventually earned a PhD from UCLA in the late 1960s and quickly became a sought-after researcher and public intellectual. His best known book, 1982's The State Against Blacks, argues that a major cause of black unemployment is government intervention in the labor market.
His new book, Up from the Projects: An Autobiography, is a fascinating look at his childhood, his half-century-long marriage to his recently departed wife, his unusual career path, and the genesis of his views on race, economics, and politics.
reason.tv (http://reason.tv/video/show/interview-walter-williams)
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Love old Walter...but the people that need to read his book won't.
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Love old Walter...but the people that need to read his book won't.
Of course not, cause he's an Uncle Tom and all. (DU mode)
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I like Walter Williams. I like it when he subs for Rush.