I found http://fee.org this past year, and it offers a lot of good perspectives on economic and culture issues.
Here's a sample of one of the articles they've run
https://www.google.com/amp/s/mercury.pos...-idle-men/
What are men doing with their time if not working?
One-sixth of all men of prime working age in America – men aged between 25 and 54 – are not just unemployed, but have stopped looking for jobs altogether. This is a time bomb with far-reaching economic, social, and political consequences.
Millions of men are becoming dependent, infantilized and sick.
“Unlike the dead soldiers in Roman antiquity,” he writes, “our decimated men still live and walk among us, though in an existence without productive economic purpose. We might say those many millions of men without work constitute a sort of invisible army, ghost soldiers lost in an overlooked, modern-day depression.”
Note, I don't write for them or have any ties to them whatsoever, and some of their constant libertarian cheering can be bothersome/redundant, but other articles are exemplary
Here's a sample of one of the articles they've run
https://www.google.com/amp/s/mercury.pos...-idle-men/
What are men doing with their time if not working?
One-sixth of all men of prime working age in America – men aged between 25 and 54 – are not just unemployed, but have stopped looking for jobs altogether. This is a time bomb with far-reaching economic, social, and political consequences.
Millions of men are becoming dependent, infantilized and sick.
“Unlike the dead soldiers in Roman antiquity,” he writes, “our decimated men still live and walk among us, though in an existence without productive economic purpose. We might say those many millions of men without work constitute a sort of invisible army, ghost soldiers lost in an overlooked, modern-day depression.”
Note, I don't write for them or have any ties to them whatsoever, and some of their constant libertarian cheering can be bothersome/redundant, but other articles are exemplary