The plot is familiar: a selfish weatherman is condemned to live a single day’s events over and over. The United States appears similarly condemned to revisit a plot in which the “rightful” – if unelected – rulers of the nation feel compelled to remove the duly elected President. Michael Anton reports.
At Least He Paid his Losing Bet
Paul Ehrlich, author of the spectacularly incorrect 1968 best-seller The Population Bomb, recently died at 93. Despite his longevity, Ronald Bailey points out in Reason, Ehrlich did not live to see even one of his numerous apocalyptic predictions come true. The world’s population certainly grew, but not merely larger, richer and fatter too. Most famously, Ehrlich once bet economist Julian Simon that the world was approaching economic collapse – but in 1990 had to mail Simon a cheque.


