Thomas Sowell

Thomas Sowell has published a large volume of writing. His dozen books, as well as numerous articles and essays, cover a wide range of topics, from classic economic theory to judicial activism, from civil rights to choosing the right college. Please contact your local newspaper editor if you want to read the THOMAS SOWELL column in your hometown paper.

Will Cease-Fires Never Cease?

Will Cease-Fires Never Cease?

How many cease-fires have there been in the Middle East — or is the number too large to remember? Over the past half century, there must have been more cease-fires in the Middle East than in the rest of the world combined. What will this latest cease-fire do? It...

Studies Prove: Part II

Studies Prove: Part II

My late mentor, Nobel Prize-winning economist George Stigler, used to say that it could be very instructive to spend a few hours in a library checking up on studies that had been cited. When I began doing that, I found it not only instructive but disillusioning. A...

Studies Prove: Part I

Studies Prove: Part I

Whenever I hear the phrase “studies prove” this or that, it makes me think back to the beginning of my career as an economist at the Labor Department in Washington. Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg was scheduled to appear before Congress to argue in...

A Glimmer of Hope: The Unusual Backlash Against Minimum Wage

A Glimmer of Hope: The Unusual Backlash Against Minimum Wage

It was a common political move when Chicago’s city council voted recently to impose a $10 an hour minimum wage on big-box retailers. There is nothing that politicians like better than handing out benefits to be paid for by someone else. What was uncommon was the...

Then and Now

Then and Now

Those of us old enough to remember World War II face many painful reminders of how things have changed in Americans’ behavior during a war. Back then, the president’s defeated opponent in the 1940 election — Wendell Wilkie — not only supported...

Pacifists versus Peace

Pacifists versus Peace

One of the many failings of our educational system is that it sends out into the world people who cannot tell rhetoric from reality. They have learned no systematic way to analyze ideas, derive their implications and test those implications against hard facts....

A “Cycle” of Nonsense

A “Cycle” of Nonsense

Now that Israel has responded to rocket attacks and the abduction of its soldiers by terrorists by making military strikes into areas controlled by those terrorists, much of our media are deploring another “cycle of violence” in the Middle East. For...

“Saving” What From Whom?

“Saving” What From Whom?

When conservationists talk about “saving” this and “protecting” that, a logical question might be: Saving it from whom? Protecting it from whom? And why should the government force what you want on someone else who obviously wants something...

Presumed Guilty: How Biased Reporters “Honor Our Troops”

Presumed Guilty: How Biased Reporters “Honor Our Troops”

The same newspapers and television news programs that are constantly reminding us that some people under indictment “are innocent until proven guilty” are nevertheless hyping the story of American troops accused of rape in Iraq, day in and day out, even...

Back From Vacation

Back From Vacation

There is nothing like returning home to recover from a vacation. They say traveling is broadening and that has certainly been my experience. My waistline broadens by about an inch a week when I am traveling. The most dangerous mode of travel is the automobile. Every...

Bully Boy Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt

Bully Boy Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt

A special issue of Time magazine celebrates the historic career of Theodore Roosevelt and the implications of his presidency for the development of American society. In the phony familiarity of our times, where you call people by their first names when you have never...

Is Patriotism Obsolete?

Is Patriotism Obsolete?

On the eve of a holiday that used to stir patriotic emotions — the Fourth of July — it has been painful to see examples of how little remains of that glue that holds a society together. Perhaps the worst of these signs of national disintegration was the...

Random Thoughts: June 2006

Random Thoughts: June 2006

Random thoughts on the passing scene: When you have 90 percent of what you want, think twice before insisting on the other 10 percent. I have never understood stuttering. Once I heard a well-known economist who stuttered spend 45 minutes singing humorous,...

Preserving a Vision–at the Expense of the Facts

Preserving a Vision–at the Expense of the Facts

Despite the warm glow of self-satisfaction that the liberal vision confers on liberals, ugly facts keep intruding to undermine that vision. Some liberals eventually jump ship and defect to conservatism when the facts keep piling up too high to ignore.* This takes...

The “Trickle Down” Left: Preserving a Vision

The “Trickle Down” Left: Preserving a Vision

The New York Times of May 21 featured estimates of how much revenue the federal government is losing as a result of tax cuts, more than $50 billion over a five-year period. Meanwhile, a front-page story in the Wall Street Journal reported the government as receiving...

The “Progressive Era”: Preserving a Vision

The “Progressive Era”: Preserving a Vision

In Shelby Steele’s new book, “White Guilt,” he mentions an encounter with a white liberal who fiercely defended the welfare state programs and policies of the 1960s. “Damn it, we saved this country!” he all but shouted. “This...

“Gloom and Doom” Media Hype: Preserving a Vision

“Gloom and Doom” Media Hype: Preserving a Vision

Conservatives who point out the declining audience for the big television network newscasts, and declining public trust of the media in general, often under-estimate how much clout the liberal media still have. For example, while the economy has had near-record highs...

The Biggest Scandal in the Duke University Rape Case

The Biggest Scandal in the Duke University Rape Case

The worst thing said in the case involving rape charges against Duke University students was not said by either the prosecutor or the defense attorneys, or even by any of the accusers or the accused. It was said by a student at North Carolina Central University, a...

Thinking About Gas Prices

Thinking About Gas Prices

Amid all the hysteria among politicians and in the media over rising gasoline prices, and all the outraged indignation about oil company profits and their executives’ high pay and lavish perks, has anybody bothered to even estimate how much effect any of this...

Tabloid TV “Justice”

Tabloid TV “Justice”

Whether Zacarias Moussaoui received the death penalty or life imprisonment was never a big issue for me. What was appalling, however, was the way the penalty phase of his trial was conducted. First, there was the parade of witnesses, including former New York Mayor...

The Supreme Court Opinions of Justice Clarence Thomas

The Supreme Court Opinions of Justice Clarence Thomas

Anyone who takes the trouble to read the Supreme Court opinions of Justice Clarence Thomas will see a very different, and much more intellectually formidable, mind at work than what they might expect from reading media attempts to denigrate Justice Thomas. A very...

Random Thoughts: May 2006

Random Thoughts: May 2006

Random thoughts on the passing scene: Some people think they have bad luck when the real problem is that they took bad chances. Parents who are both conscientious and realistic discover sooner or later that they cannot do the job to their own complete satisfaction,...

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