Hoover Daily Report

Hoover Daily Report

Subscribe to receive the Hoover Daily Report. Subscribe »

Featured
Featured

Omicron Sounds The Death Knell For Globalization 2.0

by Niall Fergusonvia Bloomberg
Sunday, December 5, 2021

On top of an intensifying cold war between the U.S. and China and other seismic changes, the rapid spread of Covid-19’s newest variant could finish off our most recent phase of global integration.

Featured

Misremembering Pearl Harbor

by Victor Davis Hansonvia American Greatness
Sunday, December 5, 2021

The tactically brilliant but strategically crazy attack on Pearl Harbor unleashed incalculable furor against a once sophisticated Japanese empire, which foolishly attacked the United States at peace.

Featured

Freedom, Conservatism, And The Common Good

by Peter Berkowitzvia Real Clear Politics
Monday, December 6, 2021

Because of their national spirit, Edmund Burke cautioned Parliament in his 1775 “Speech on Conciliation,” the Americans’ opposition to taxation without representation required “an unusual degree of care and calmness.” The growth of the population and the colonies’ outsized commercial contribution to the British empire by themselves counseled every reasonable effort to compromise.

Featured

In Depth With Victor Davis Hanson

interview with Victor Davis Hansonvia C-SPAN
Monday, December 6, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson talks about war, politics, and citizenship in the United States.

Featured

Mafia-Like Business Systems In China: Xi’s Crackdown In Context

Tuesday, December 7, 2021
Hoover Institution, Stanford University

The Hoover Institution hosts Mafia-Like Business Systems in China: Xi’s Crackdown in Context on Tuesday, December 7 from 10:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. PST.

Event
Analysis and Commentary
Analysis and Commentary

Hoover Book Club: Stephen Haber On "The Battle Over Patents: History And Politics Of Innovation"

Monday, December 6, 2021
Hoover Institution, Stanford University

A discussion with Stephen Haber on his latest book, The Battle over Patents: History and Politics of Innovation moderated by Bill Whalen on Monday, December 6 at 10AM PT/1:00PM ET.

Event
Analysis and Commentary

Slave Prices In New York And New Jersey

via Hoover Podcasts
Friday, December 3, 2021

A History Working Group seminar with Michael Douma.

Analysis and Commentary

Michael Faye And Paul Niehaus On GiveDirectly

interview with Russ Robertsvia EconTalk
Monday, December 6, 2021

Economic theory teaches that people make choices that provide them with the greatest benefit. So why not extend this idea to the realm of charity? Economists and social entrepreneurs Michael Faye and Paul Niehaus of GiveDirectly argue that giving people cash with no strings attached is the most cost-effective means of helping the poorest people in the world and their communities.

Analysis and Commentary

The Education Exchange: Black Children Denied Equal Access To Foster Care, Adoption

interview with Paul E. Petersonvia The Education Exchange
Monday, December 6, 2021

A senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Naomi Schaefer Riley, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss Schaefer Riley’s new book, No Way to Treat a Child: How the Foster Care System, Family Courts, and Racial Activists Are Wrecking Young Lives.

Interviews
Interviews

Niall Ferguson On The Gods Of History (Part 1)

interview with Niall Fergusonvia The Pull Request
Friday, December 3, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses why we're always preparing for the wrong catastrophe, the difference between Jews and the Scots, and what's his deal with Fukuyama.

Interviews

Michael McFaul: Biden Should Lay Out ‘Credible’ Commitments To Ukraine

interview with Michael McFaulvia MSNBC
Friday, December 3, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Michael McFaul discusses comments made by President Biden concerning his intent to take action if Russia invades Ukraine. Presidents Biden and Putin are expected to talk early next week, and McFaul suggests Biden should “be more specific about what those measures are,” lay out “credible” commitments, and hold Putin accountable for his argument that Ukraine is a threat to Russian security. “We need to underscore that this narrative is not acceptable.”

Interviews

John Cochrane On The Larry Kudlow Show

interview with John H. Cochranevia Larry Kudlow Show
Saturday, December 4, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow John Cochrane discusses inflation and the economy.

Interviews

The Victor Davis Hanson Show: The Agrarian

interview with Victor Davis Hansonvia The Victor Davis Hanson Show
Saturday, December 4, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson reminisces about life on the farm and the state of modern agriculture.

Interviews

The American College Crack-Up – With Niall Ferguson

interview with Niall Fergusonvia Call Me Back
Saturday, December 4, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Niall Ferguson discusses higher education and what he is doing to bring freedom including freedom of speech, freedom to be curious, and freedom to question everything back to the college experience with University of Austin.

Interviews

Matt Pottinger: The Rollback Of Free Market Policies In China

interview with Matt Pottingervia CBS News
Sunday, December 5, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Matt Pottinger discusses China and its undoing of key free market policies of the last 40 years as well as how the crackdowns against capitalism, strict controls on booming sectors including private companies and wealthy individuals, smack of Maoist repression.

Agriculture
Interviews

Richard Epstein On The John Batchelor Show: The New Deal And The Takings Clause.

interview with Richard A. Epsteinvia The John Batchelor Show
Sunday, December 5, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Richard Epstein discusses his Defining Ideas article "Labor Law And “Takings” Clause Collide." Part 2 of the interview is available here.

Interviews

Tyler Goodspeed On Full Measure

interview with Tyler Goodspeedvia Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson
Monday, December 6, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Tyler Goodspeed discusses the economy, inflation, and how the Biden administration's policies are impacting the economy.

Interviews

The Victor Davis Hanson Show: Courts And Cases

interview with Victor Davis Hansonvia The Victor Davis Hanson Show
Saturday, December 4, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Victor Davis Hanson talks about Miranda Devine’s new book The Laptop from Hell, how court cases are used for political advantage, and Kamala Harris’ vice presidency.

Interviews

Anger, Shame, Sadness, And Race In America (Glenn Loury And John McWhorter)

interview with Glenn Louryvia The Glenn Show
Friday, December 3, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Glenn Loury examines whether he is wasting his time talking about racism; how his family shaped his attitude toward race; his past views on radicalism; as well as whether his anger is necessary.

Interviews

Richard Epstein On The John Batchelor Show: Filibuster Watch.

interview with Richard A. Epsteinvia The John Batchelor Show
Saturday, December 4, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Richard Epstein discusses his Defining Ideas article "Voting Act Doesn’t Deliver “For The People.” Part 2 of the interview is available here.

Interviews

Federal Reserve Rate Hikes In 2022 May Not Stall Inflation: Tyler Goodspeed

interview with Tyler Goodspeedvia Fox Business
Monday, December 6, 2021

Hoover Institution fellow Tyler Goodspeed says that two potential rate hikes in 2022 may not be enough to combat rising consumer prices.

In the News
In the News

The Historian’s Approach To Understanding Terrorism

featuring H. R. McMastervia Lawfare
Sunday, December 5, 2021

H.R. McMaster’s 2020 book, “Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World,” argues very powerfully for the centrality of historical understanding for addressing the world’s greatest challenges.

In the News

Ardeshir Zahedi And The Zahedi Archives At Hoover

Friday, December 10, 2021
Hoover Institution, Stanford University

The Hoover Institution Library & Archives hosts "Ardeshir Zahedi and the Zahedi Archives at Hoover" on Friday, December 10, 2021 at 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM PT.

Event
In the News

The Legacy Of George P. Shultz

mentioning George P. Shultzvia Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs
Tuesday, December 7, 2021

On February 6, 2021, George P. Shultz, one of this country’s most distinguished public servants, passed away at age 100. Shultz had served in three U.S. administrations as secretary of labor, director of the Office of Management and Budget, secretary of the Treasury, and secretary of state. After the 1986 Reykjavik Summit, he led negotiations with the Soviet Union that led in December 1987 to the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty.

E.g., 12 / 7 / 2021
E.g., 12 / 7 / 2021

No issues were found in that date range. Please expand your range and try again.

Pages

Explore Research

Filter By:

Topic

Type

Author

Section

Enter comma-separated IDs of authors
Enter comma-separated IDs of contributors

Support the Hoover Institution

Join the Hoover Institution's community of supporters in advancing ideas defining a free society.

Support Hoover

In the News

Don’t Underestimate Trump’s Foreign Policy And Other Commentary

quoting Niall Fergusonvia New York Post
Monday, June 24, 2019

“The Trump administration’s foreign policy is too frequently underestimated,” Niall Ferguson avers at The Boston Globe. Take Mideast diplomacy: “No journalist I know takes seriously Jared Kushner’s Middle East peace initiative,” but the effort is deeply attuned to new realities in the region, since “previous peace initiatives put the big constitutional and territorial questions first” — issues that are “big, but insoluble. Kushner’s goal is to begin with the small matter of money, which in reality is not so small.” Team Trump is putting its hopes in pragmatic Arabs who are sick of terrorists and “corrupt governments.” Linking their desires to Israeli-Palestinian peace, Ferguson argues, is a positively Kissingerian stroke.

In the News

The Framers Never Intended For Impeachment To Be A Political Weapon, Former Federal Judge Tells Levin

quoting Michael McConnellvia Conservative Review
Monday, June 24, 2019

On Sunday night’s episode of Life, Liberty & Levin on Fox News, LevinTV host Mark Levin was joined by constitutional expert and former federal Judge Michael McConnell to discuss how the framers constitution really intended for impeachment to work.

In the News

International Honors For “Women Of The Gulag” – And An Exclusive Podcast From The Stanford Screening!

quoting Paul R. Gregory, George P. Shultz, Eric Wakinvia The Book Haven
Monday, June 24, 2019

It premiered in Hollywood and New York – but on June 11, Women of the Gulag, a documentary film based on Paul Gregory‘s book of the same name, came home to Stanford. It got a big audience at Hoover’s Hauck Auditorium, in the new David & Joan Traitel Building, with a splendid reception afterwards. (We’ve written about the film here and here and here and here.)

Featured

Don’t Underestimate Trump’s Foreign Policy

by Niall Ferguson quoting Henry A. Kissingervia Boston Globe
Monday, June 24, 2019

‘Linkage” was a term introduced to American diplomacy by Henry Kissinger at the outset of the Nixon administration. Linkage, Kissinger wrote in his memoir, “White House Years,” could be an explicit gambit — for example, making “progress in settling the Vietnam War . . . a condition for advance in areas of interest to the Soviets, such as the Middle East, trade, or arms limitation.” But linkage was also an implicit reality in an increasingly interdependent world.

In the News

The Framers Never Intended For Impeachment To Be A Political Weapon, Former Federal Judge Tells Levin

quoting Michael McConnellvia Conservative Review
Monday, June 24, 2019

On Sunday night’s episode of Life, Liberty & Levin on Fox News, LevinTV host Mark Levin was joined by constitutional expert and former federal Judge Michael McConnell to discuss how the framers constitution really intended for impeachment to work. During the discussion, McConnell — who is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and director of Stanford University’s constitutional law program — explained that impeachment is far more than just a political issue, or at least that’s what the framers intended for it to be.

Analysis and Commentary

California Must Close Gap In Law On Reporting Sex Abuse

by Zachary D. Kaufmanvia SLS Blogs
Monday, June 24, 2019

The #MeToo movement has emphasized not only how rampant sexual abuse is, but also how frequently third parties disregard — or even enable — it. California is an epicenter of this movement with many of the highest-profile instances of both assault and bystanderism occurring here, particularly in Hollywood. In perhaps the most notorious case, at least 16 people admitted witnessing or knowing of Harvey Weinstein’s sexual misconduct but remaining silent; his behavior was infamous within both Miramax and the Weinstein Co., giants in the entertainment industry.

Interviews

Talking Election Security In The Nation’s Capital

interview with Alex Stamosvia Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
Monday, June 24, 2019

Hoover Institution fellow Alex Stamos discusses securing US elections.

Featured

How Innovation Drives Economic Growth

featuring Stephen Haber, Edward Paul Lazear, Amit Seruvia Stanford Business
Monday, June 24, 2019

Three Stanford scholars explore how we measure innovation, how innovation drives productivity, and how productivity affects inequality.

In the News

What To Make Of US Cyber Activities In Iran

quoting Jamil Jaffervia Fifth Domain
Monday, June 24, 2019

After the Islamic Republic of Iran shot down an RQ-4 Global Hawk drone June 20, President Donald Trump opted against physical military strikes as retaliation. Instead, multiple news organizations reported the U.S. military quietly conducted cyber operations that targeted computer systems that control Iranian missiles launches and an intelligence organization associated with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.

In the News

Ask Questions That Will Reveal What Kind Of Leaders They Would Be

quoting Morris P. Fiorinavia Miami Herald
Monday, June 24, 2019

In a political environment of stark partisanship, the understandable tendency in presidential campaigns is to focus on the conflict between candidates. Sometimes these conflicts are around ideas, often they are of a more personal nature. The rapid-fire, continuous loop of digital media amplifies this approach, and obviously voters find it important as well to inform their decisions. But there is another metric for choosing our leaders that can be more predictive of success in the White House, particularly in times of historic challenges that transcend party differences. And that is the combination of leadership skills that make up the alchemy of a transformational presidency.

Pages

Stay Up To Date!

Subscribe to receive the Hoover Daily Report.

Subscriptions »

The Hoover Daily Report is a compendium of links to commentary and analysis by Hoover's fellows and affiliated scholars in newspapers, journals, blogs, and broadcast media. The HDR highlights the breadth and depth of Hoover’s scholarship and its impact on policy formation.

Subscribe here to receive a free copy in your email inbox every weekday morning.

 

The opinions expressed in the Hoover Daily Report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.