Incoming Feed Items

Québec’s Pragmatic Utopians

 — Publication: Perspectives Journal — 

Québec’s left-wing sovereigntist opposition party, Québec solidaire (QS), held its 2025 convention this past November 7-9 in Québec City. Delegates at the convention elected MNA Sol Zanetti as the party’s new co-spokesperson, alongside MNA Ruba Ghazal to continue as QS co-spokesperson, and ratified a new policy programme to inform future platform development. As social democrats across Canada reflect on how to revive the left in dark times, QS’s history and renewal efforts can offer some food for thought.

Defeating Groyperism on Conservative Terms

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

American popular culture since at least the 1950s has fetishized rebellion. But what’s left to rebel against in the 21st century?

None of the traditional sources of authority or repression hold much sway today: not the church, not parents, not hierarchies of taste or class. Sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll are now just passé Boomer recreations. Yet American society is not without a rigid morality that imposes itself on everyone, and on some—young men in particular—much more than others.

The modern dogma that regulates everything from sex to speech is liberalism. What happens when the all-American love of rebellion meets this dogma? You get a generation in revolt against liberalism’s strictures. And like earlier generations that revolted against Christianity and bourgeois respectability, the radical youth of this generation embrace whatever is shockingly offensive to the old prudes.

Hierarchical marriage—the “trad wife”—is as much a rejection of today’s norms as sex outside marriage was of the old norms. Affirming traditional religion is now the kind of rebellion that rejecting the same used to be. Feminism is repressive, so the “manosphere” becomes liberation. Antiracism is humorless, so “The Will Stancil Show,” in all its ugliness, is an underground hit.

The Future of Payment Infrastructure Could Be Permissionless

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

Following the recent passage of legislation in the U.S., payment stablecoins seem to be on the brink of wider-scale adoption and explosive growth in market capitalization. In this post, we contend that the driving factor is not their proximity to digital cash instruments, but rather how they are transferred—via global, open-access, peer-to-peer systems, or “permissionless blockchains,” for short.

The Federal Reserve Has Created an Entire Page Dedicated to My Successful FOIA Requests

 — Author: Nathan Tankus — Publication: Notes on the Crisis —