Economist Dodges Draft
Jesse Walker | February 9, 2007, 11:55am
Mallard Fillmore has been on a quixotic crusade to
draft the free-market economist Walter Williams to run for president. Here's a sample:

First: No, I don't get it either. Second, and more important: Yes, that is Williams' email address on the right-hand side of the first panel. It has appeared in several recent editions of the strip, and readers seem to have noticed it. "I've been inundated," Williams told Robert Stacy McCain of
The Washington Times. But he says he
still won't run:
The biggest obstacle to his own candidacy, Mr. Williams said, is his wife of 47 years, Conchetta.
"She said that if I ever thought about it seriously, she'd assassinate me," he said.
So who's he rooting for instead?
Mr. Williams' own '08 favorite is Rep. Ron Paul, Texas Republican and a 1988 Libertarian Party presidential nominee, who last month announced the formation of an exploratory committee.
"If the framers of the Constitution were somehow to come back, Ron Paul is one of possibly only three people in Congress that they'd even talk to," said Mr. Williams, adding that most politicians have a "generalized contempt" for the values of the Constitution.
Meanwhile, Mallard Fillmore creator Bruce Tinsley says he might back Newt Gingrich for the nomination. Gingrich or Paul...it should go without saying, but I think Williams has the better idea.
Update: Apparently it's an abortion joke. Très risqué!
Mad Max | February 9, 2007, 3:15pm | #
"2. The strip makes a heavy-handed, unfunny reference to a Democrats, doctors, and abortions, conflating the three. It strikes me as distasteful and inappropriate for a strip that runs in family newspapers. . . .
"Dead baby jokes? Let's hear 'em."
The "D & C" remark *was* a dead baby joke.
"One place where our public education system really has failed us is this widespread belief that a group of slaveholders cared about individual liberty. Obviously they cared about it for themselves, not for everybody."
(a) I think there are public schools (not all, but lots) where the part about the Founders owning slaves does, indeed get mentioned.
(b) The Founders were still a step above people in many other times and countries (like ours), in that they at least knew that freedom (republican institutions, trial by jury, right to bear arms, freedom of press, et. al.) was a good thing. There were also some, like Jefferson, who knew that what they were doing to the slaves was unjust, but feared to set them free lest it precipatate a race war. Self-serving rationalization, perhaps, but at least they realized the problem. Franklin, of course, was a non-slaveowning abolitionist, so you can't lump *all* the founders together as slaveowners.