
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column. “Ideas Lying Around,” about archivillain Milton Friedman’s surprisingly good theory of change, and how to apply it to progressive politics.
Enter Friedman: to people reeling in crisis, Friedman insisted that the missing oil was somehow the product of unionization, pollution controls, women’s lib, and the civil rights movement. Though this was transparent nonsense, akin to blaming witches for a crop failure, the crisis was so dislocating, and Friedman’s ideas had been lying around for so long, that they moved swiftly to the center.
(Image: btwashburn, CC BY 2.0)
By Cory Doctorow4.8
8989 ratings
This week on my podcast, I read a recent Medium column. “Ideas Lying Around,” about archivillain Milton Friedman’s surprisingly good theory of change, and how to apply it to progressive politics.
Enter Friedman: to people reeling in crisis, Friedman insisted that the missing oil was somehow the product of unionization, pollution controls, women’s lib, and the civil rights movement. Though this was transparent nonsense, akin to blaming witches for a crop failure, the crisis was so dislocating, and Friedman’s ideas had been lying around for so long, that they moved swiftly to the center.
(Image: btwashburn, CC BY 2.0)

26,240 Listeners

9,254 Listeners

10,705 Listeners

1,859 Listeners

512 Listeners

2,064 Listeners

216 Listeners

5,537 Listeners

124 Listeners

16,421 Listeners

4,569 Listeners

265 Listeners

598 Listeners

314 Listeners

36 Listeners