You meet the most interesting people at FreedomFest

You meet the most interesting people at FreedomFest

 

The Bellagio
Our room at Planet Hollywood has enormous windows overlooking the Bellagio (shown here, where we can watch the famous fountains at night), the Aria, and the Cosmopolitan.
(Photo by Patrick Pellster)
Click to enlarge.

 

After my presentation this afternoon about the Middle East, I had a conversation, of sorts, with the kind of hardcore libertarian who helps to keep me from fully signing up.

 

His position, so far as I could understand it, is that Israel and the United States are the greatest threats to human welfare on the planet.

 

Because I didn’t agree with him, he described me as whitewashing American and Israeli crimes against humanity.

 

I asked him about China, and he responded that China doesn’t maintain military bases in Europe and the Middle East — as if that, in and of itself, were the sole criterion.

 

I asked him whether Israel was the most oppressive country on earth, and he said that it ranked high among them.  I finally got him to admit, though, that North Korea is probably more oppressive.

 

But, he pressed me, if China were occupying parts of America, wouldn’t I celebrate young people who decapitated Chinese civilians and drowned them and burned them alive in cages?  “No,” I said, “I wouldn’t.”  “Anything to fight back,” he said.  “No, I replied.  “Not ‘anything.'”

 

He next demanded to know whether I didn’t think that dropping bombs in ISIS positions in Syria was worse than beheading individual people.  When I said “Absolutely not!” he looked at me as if I were some sort of moral freak.

 

I find such positions depressing.

 

But he was, in his way, a nice guy, and we parted amicably.

 

And FreedomFest remains fun and stimulating.  In part, precisely, because there is such a wide range of interesting people here — including him.

 

Tonight, my wife and I attended a filming of John Stossel’s program for Fox.  His guests included Steve Wynn, the developer of such hotel/casino complexes as The Mirage, Treasure Island, Bellagio, and Wynn Las Vegas; Andrew Puzder, the CEO of Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s; Star Parker, of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education; John Mackey, the CEO of Whole Foods, with whom I had dinner last night; two leaders of the Cato Institute; and Grover Norquist.

 

Afterwards, my wife and I exchanged pleasantries in the elevator with George Gilder.

 

Incidentally, last night, after sitting next to Ken Elzinga, the Robert C. Taylor Professor of Economics at the University of Virginia, I learned that he’s also written three novels under the pen name of Marshall Jevons — in which his protagonist solves crimes by means (believe it or not) of economic analysis.

 

This is a fun gathering.

 

Next year, by the way, FreedomFest 2016 will be held 13-16 July, also at Planet Hollywood here.

 

Posted from Las Vegas, Nevada

 

 


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