Leaders of the University of California Free Speech Movement in a courtroom in Berkeley, California in 1965. © Universal History Archive/Getty

The Gospel of Liberalism

August 22, 2024

Liberalism has been under fire these last years. And John Rawls, liberalism’s personification, has become a bête noire for many. Post-liberalism is winning converts by the minute. Out of this liberal malaise arrives the Australia-based philosopher, Alexandre Lefebvre, who argues, contrary to all, that liberalism is in the air we breathe, the commonsense in which we live. We are all indeed liberals now. The legendary political theorist (of liberalism, anti-liberalism, and so much else) Stephen Holmes has a lot to say about Lefebvre’s optimism.

From liberalism to democracy, Linsey McGoey takes us into the heartland of the U.S., following the travails and spirit of Alexis de Tocqueville, to get purchase on those who haven’t made up their minds about the U.S. election. What she uncovers is both suggestive and surprising.

For our curated content, we lead with an exceptional personal essay from the Brown historian, Omer Bartov, on the dark and disturbing street today in Israel. This is followed by a different kind of darkness, Evgeny Morozov’s slash and burn of neoliberal approaches to AI. From the guy that wrote the book on the perversions of Silicon Valley and its claims for a new form of democratic participation via the intertubes, Morozov calls out a similar wishful thinking as it pertains to AI.

We then feature a tour de force essay from Phenomenal World on Haiti that digs deep into the historical antecedents of today’s colossal crisis. We conclude with a piece from The Dial (subscribe subscribe!) on the traumatic travails of migration as seen through the experimental ingenuity of culture workers.

Our musical selection this week is a chestnut from the late lamented singer songwriter John Prine. His “Angel of Montgomery” is an American classic. Here is the original version from 1971, and as an Ideas Letter bonus, here is Bonnie Raitt’s cover of it from 1974

As Prine writes: “Just give me one thing that I can hold on to. To believe in this livin’ Is just a hard way to go…”

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations