Glenn Loury: Tales of Sex, Drugs, and Capitalism
The economist and podcaster discusses his new memoir Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative.
My guest today is economist and podcaster Glenn Loury, whose new memoir is titled Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative. Born in 1948 and raised working-class in Chicago's predominantly African American South Side, Loury tells a story of self-invention, ambition, hard work, addiction, and redemption that channels Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography, Richard Wright's Native Son, Saul Bellow's The Adventures of Augie March, and Milton Friedman's Capitalism & Freedom. The first tenured black economist at Harvard, Loury emerged in the 1980s as a ubiquitous commenter on race and class and was offered a post in the Reagan administration. Then a series of scandals involving affairs, arrests, and addiction threatened the end of his personal and professional lives. Late Admissions is an unflinching look at Loury's failures and successes, written by one of the most popular academic presences on YouTube.
0:00— Introduction
1:34— Why write a memoir now?
4:17— What is a black conservative?
7:47— Glenn Loury's background
15:10— Addiction and self destruction
17:00— 'A hustler and a player'
21:34— Crack, Infidelity, and the remarkable Dr Linda Loury
25:44— Loury's downfall in the late 80s
28:38— Recovery, self-knowledge, and making amends
36:32— 'Rise Above It': a MLM scam with real lessons 40:40- Loury's career and legacy in Economics
45:08— College students and protests
49:00— Affirmative action and conservatives
52:30— Equality, childhood development, and cultural influences
57:21— The Black Experience and healthy cultural discourse
1:02:22— Immigrants as beacons of hope
Read more: A transcript from Nick Gillespie's conversation with Glenn Loury in the August/September 2024 issue of Reason
Previous appearance: Glenn Loury: 'We're Being Swept Along by Hysteria' About Racism in America, June 24, 2020
Today's Sponsor:
- ZBiotics. ZBiotics Pre-Alcohol Probiotic Drink is the world's first genetically engineered probiotic. It was invented by Ph.D. scientists to tackle rough mornings after drinking. Make ZBiotics your first drink of the night, drink responsibly, and you'll feel your best tomorrow. Get 15 percent off by going to ZBiotics/TRI and using the code TRI at checkout.
- Video Editor: Regan Taylor
- Audio Production: Hunt Beaty
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Funny how it took drugs and sex addiction to get Reason to mention Loury.
I always love when Gillespie rejects any definition of conservatism that is in conflict with his own. If someone tells you the definition they’re using, just accept what they mean. Don’t tell them “Well, if you believe in markets, prices, and laissez-faire, you’re not a conservative, you’re a libertarian!” There are conservatives and liberals who also believe in those ideas, Nick. You could just point out the overlap without trying to attack his identifier.
Nick is confused about conservativism, believing that markets and laissez-faire is the only thing conservatives are supposed to believe in.
There's always a lament when a small number of Republicans (or small-c conservatives) fail to agree to disagree with every social idea the left proposes.
Conservative doesn't really mean anything without context. All depends on what is considered the established, traditional way of doing things in a particular place and time. It's an orientation towards the world, not a specific political philosophy or ideology.
True. Populism isn't an ideology either, just an orientation towards the common people against elites as rulers. And fascism is a style of governance that allows a lot of variation in policy content, so it isn't an ideology either.
Sorry but two Americans talking about conservatism has a built in context and Nick is being a retard trying to ignore that. There are enough other markers between conservatism and libertarianism in the US to make the distinction.
Nobody is going to confuse Chase Oliver as conservative despite his proclamation of free market beliefs.
I also should apologize to Gillespie, since I thought he was the one who wrote the article criticizing Vivek’s definition of conservatism and trying to tell Vivek that he doesn’t actually believe what he believes. That was Eric Boehm. I assumed this was Nick doing the same thing he’d done to Vivek, gateway keeping “free markets” and such, but he wasn’t the one who did it to Vivek.
It is part of Gillespie's longtime project to claim anyone somewhat overlapping with libertarian thinking as being libertarian in order to say libertarianism is mainstream, if not the political center. This is when people in the real world political center tend to regard libertarians as more of a lunatic fringe.
Greg Loury
I was about to respond with something like “Don’t be blinkered by boring windbags whose main message is that they’ve been oppressed by academia (while being in academia) and racist White liberals for 50 years.
But… I’m trying to be nice so I won’t say anything. Really great interview, Nick!
Now call him a "lawn jockey" too.
Boy, do you ever hate black professionals, Buttplug.
Well, good thing you didn't say that because it makes no fucking sense.
Ok, I’ll admit I didn’t listen to the interview because—well—Greg Loury. How many times did he mention cancel culture or employ sweeping generalizations about how the White Man is keeping the underexposed Black conservative down?
I’ll warn you. I’m not a racist, but if morons keep accusing me of being a racist I might just become one. I learned that particular trick from you guys, ok?
"I’m not a racist"
This is a lie.
You haven't learned anything at all, steaming pile of lefty shit.
Glenn Loury on the Biden race Smackdown.
"Well, if you believe in markets, prices, and laissez-faire, you’re not a conservative, you’re a libertarian!”
As of the last LP convention, no you're not.