Time for Terrorists

Time for Terrorists

Most who believe the end is nigh are mere curiosities, disappointment their shared reward. In contrast, Islamic terrorists know precisely when their world will end and they murder on their way out. Empathy doesn’t help me understand these terrorists. Economics and ethnology do. The explanation has less to do with money than with culture and […]

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 A Guide for Holiday Giving

A Guide for Holiday Giving

America is the most successful and prosperous nation in history. Personal tragedies aside, our afflictions are trivial. But not all good things go together. With wealth well distributed among our friends, we face the problem of finding gifts for those who want for little. The parents of my generation suffered through the Great Depression and […]

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 Growth, Open Space, and Tradeoffs

Growth, Open Space, and Tradeoffs

Rapidly growing small towns like Bozeman face choices with long-term consequences for their communities. Next month, Gallatin County residents will be asked to consider its second open space bond initiative. While I tend to favor preserving open space, I also recognize there are tradeoffs. Alas, not all cherished values are free. To get some things […]

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 Volney Steele, Role Model

Volney Steele, Role Model

Many of us who love our region consider Wallace Stegner our most perceptive and insightful observer and constructive critic. He chastised a political economy and culture that fostered “boomers,” folks who high-graded, exploited, then bailed out. He admonished us to create a society worthy of our scenery and urged us to foster “nesters,” individuals who […]

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 The Merits of Medical Marijuana

The Merits of Medical Marijuana

Two years ago my cousin Antonio Glassberg lost a battle to cancer. He was 21. Although my uncle lost his only child at an unbearably young age, the most horrific part of his passing was not his youth, but the circumstances surrounding his death. Antonio’s intensive chemotherapy treatment caused endless pain. He often couldn’t sleep […]

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 Life 2.0 in Bozeman

Life 2.0 in Bozeman

We recently returned from the 2004 general meeting of the Mont Pèlerin Society (MPS). This organization was founded in 1947 by intellectuals committed to resisting tyranny of the left and the right. They built the intellectual analogues to bullets and bombs. Their vision was realized on November 10, 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell. Three […]

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 Putting Nature’s Capital to Work

Putting Nature’s Capital to Work

I live in the Sourdough Creek watershed, just south of Bozeman. This mix of federal, state, and private lands is highly valued — as a recreation spot for city residents, for its wildlife habitat, and as one of Bozeman’s primary sources of drinking water. The watershed’s forests and soils are a natural filter for the […]

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 Why Big Skies Require Smaller Paychecks

Why Big Skies Require Smaller Paychecks

In the 1970s I created an institution at MSU, the Center for Political Economy and Natural Resources. Among its programs was one to introduce nationally prominent journalists and editors to environmental economics. We attracted top talents from top publications (e.g. Forbes, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post). When I […]

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 The Economics of Affordable Housing

The Economics of Affordable Housing

I like open space and affordable housing. How can we have more of both in the fastest growing county in Montana? The good news is we don’t make all or nothing choices. However, we should remember two rules of public policy: not all good things go together and there are no cost-free solutions. Bozeman’s high […]

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 Roadless Plan Wrong, Shortsighted Reform

Roadless Plan Wrong, Shortsighted Reform

The Bush administration has authored a proposal that will, for the first time, give Western governors authority to formally propose development in our wildest public lands. This overturns President Clinton’s decision to set aside 40 million acres of National Forest as roadless areas. Although the initiative was criticized as part of the Clinton administration’s “War […]

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