From the December 2011 issue
In “China’s Black Market City”
(page 24) business reporter Bradley Gardner, 28, offers a guided
tour of Wenzhou, a Chinese city where there are lots of laws but
few people following them. A California native, Gardner first
visited China in 2003. Back then, he says, Beijing “rock shows took
place in brothels, fights broke out on the street, and no one stood
in line for anything.” Things have since calmed down. “Beijing
still features a lot of small, poorly regulated shops and
restaurants,” he says. But much of the real story of unfettered
Chinese capitalism is now happening in places like the market city
of Wenzhou.
Clarke Cooper, a Brooklyn-based
writer, can recall few days spent “unoutraged since
mid-September of 2001.” In “Terror Fairy Tales” (page 65), Cooper,
47, reviews Taking Liberties, Susan N. Herman’s litany of
trespasses produced by the War on Terror. Cooper, who served time
as an “AOL cubicle inmate,” has written his own, “as-yet unsold”
book on civil liberties. The rise of the surveillance state is “a
snowballing situation,” he says, one that will prove very difficult
to stop.
Contributing Editor John
McClaughry, 73, takes a look at a “mainstream” history of the
housing bubble and 2008 financial crash in his review of
Reckless Endangerment by Gretchen Morgenson and Joshua
Rosner (page 60). After a stint in Washington as a senior policy
adviser in the early Reagan White House, McClaughry returned home
to his native Vermont to found a free market think tank in a state
where there’s “almost no pro-liberty movement.” Hence he is
accustomed to ignorance of the “malign role of government” in
matters of lending and everything else. McClaughry, now retired,
served two terms in the Vermont state Senate, which during his
tenure there “voted 23 to 6 to hire a bulb inspector and send him
out among the people to root out insufficiently efficient
fluorescent bulbs.”
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