Extraordinary claims require slightly better evidence than someone darkly hinting that one of the organizations whose policy objectives he helped shape "appears well funded in the country of its founding (the UK), and it seems suggestive that its members have appeared at national and international events and conferences together – and apparently singing from the same hymn sheet – with the Bank of England and the George Soros (Gyorgy Schwartz)-funded INET (‘Institute for New Economic Thinking’)" whilst failing to acknowledge he was its most reputable contributor and disavowing the policies he's advocated in various capacities for quarter of a century before that only implicitly (whilst continuing to cite other parts of the papers anyway).
Feels like the whole argument is going on inside his own head, and whilst I've heard economists conclude policies they used to advocate wouldn't work before, I've never seen them handwave their earlier beliefs away as "totalitarian" without even acknowledging they actually used to hold them.
Feels like the whole argument is going on inside his own head, and whilst I've heard economists conclude policies they used to advocate wouldn't work before, I've never seen them handwave their earlier beliefs away as "totalitarian" without even acknowledging they actually used to hold them.