Andy Fitch interviews David McKean and Bart Szewczyk about an Atlantic partnership broader in scope than defense, and their book "Partners of First Resort."
Dialogue Diary > Longterms
With the 2018 midterm elections coming (but before I could start wasting countless hours catching up on the latest poll numbers in select states and districts), I paused and started talking to some of the smartest people I could find thinking through longer-term questions about how the country as a whole should move forward. By Andy Fitch.
How to Open Our Markets Back Up Again: Talking to Sally Hubbard
"When you take economic and political power and put it in the hands of just a few, how could everybody else not lose out?" asks Sally Hubbard.
We Still Have to Worry About the World: Talking to Thomas Wright
Andy Fitch interviews Thomas Wright from the Brookings Institute about titanic shifts and whiplash in US foreign policy.
Optimal Chill: Talking to Cass R. Sunstein
"Creating optimal chill doesn’t have to mean bringing in stiff new penalties."
Will Only the Rich Not Be Lonely: Talking to Noreena Hertz
What has made us come to see ourselves as “competitors rather than collaborators… consumers rather than citizens… hustlers rather than …
Language that Everybody Understands: Talking to Representative Debbie Dingell
Andy Fitch interviews Representative Debbie Dingell (MI-12) about crafting policies that bring everyone along.
Political Rhetoric and Economic Analysis: Talking to Bernard Hoekman and Ernesto Zedillo
Andy Fitch interviews scholar Bernard Hoekman and former President of Mexico Ernesto Zedillo about the global economy’s changing structure.
Reality on the Edge: Talking to Susan Liautaud
When should we think of our laws as “the lowest common denominator not the highest standard of behavior”? When might …
What Connects Us to Everyone: Talking to Marissa King
Andy Fitch talks with Marissa King about the hidden benefits and costs of social interaction.
Concentrated Control: Talking to Lina Khan
Andy Fitch talks with antitrust law, the antimonopoly tradition, and law and political economy scholar Lina Khan.