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Cass Sunstein, a prominent figure, has written an essay detailing 34 reasons for being a liberal. This piece has garnered attention and sparked discussions among various individuals, including Tyler Cowen, Richard Thaler, and Steven Pinker. Sunstein's perspective on liberalism has been both praised and criticized, with some expressing agreement and others highlighting differences in their own interpretations of liberalism.
Father of liberalism? (there is always another book) https://t.co/E3Wd0dOoPF
On being a liberal. @PeterBoettke @FriedrichHayek @JeremyJWaldron https://t.co/Bgved9U321
Cass Sunstein on liberalism https://t.co/vpuCT99Ofo
Why my colleague Cass Sunstein is a liberal. Me too -- though not a leftist, "neoliberal," or "progressive" (scare quotes because such folks generally hate the idea of progress). https://t.co/sgEvI3goFp
My friend @CassSunstein offers 34 notions of what he thinks it means to be a liberal. E.g.: #30 “Liberals are anti-anti laughter.”Does anyone want to opt out of this club? https://t.co/NcX1JilfOh
"Like many other old-fashioned liberals, I’d mistakenly perceived the social-justice phenomenon as a moral extrapolation of the civil-rights movement. In time, I realized that what I was really doing was signal-boosting the values of far-left academics seeking to destroy liberal… https://t.co/z3NfE6ucu0
I don’t see how you can read this, or write it, and think you are accurately describing the Biden Administration. Opinion | Cass Sunstein On Why He Is a Liberal - The New York Times https://t.co/8G9QtvYWX7
An excellent and benchmark piece: https://t.co/G1IJzqs3Pp, Cass Sunstein on liberalism.
34 reasons to be a liberal. (This essay has a long history behind it, and I'm not telling.) https://t.co/Bgved9U321