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Checkmating History
Accuracy in Academia ^ | July 16, 2014 | Malcolm A. Kline

Posted on 07/17/2014 7:43:14 AM PDT by Academiadotorg

Perhaps chess champions who escaped from the old Soviet Union can give us better history lessons than academic historians. “Sometimes I joke that if guys like Barack Obama and David Cameron had been in power in the 1980s, I would still be playing chess for the Soviet Union,” Garry Kasparov said at a Cato Institute dinner in May. garry kasparov

By way of contrast, Kasparov observed that “Ronald Reagan had two things more recent free world leaders lack: principles and the credibility only principles can provide.”

At the Cato Institute dinner, he took note of some recent trends in this country that even those of us who were born here have been rather reluctant to acknowledge. “The traditional American values of liberty, sacrifice, risk-taking, and even faith have declined,” Kasparov said. “On the rise are safety over risk, equality over excellence, comfort over sacrifice, and hyper-partisanship that fights harder and harder for smaller pieces of a smaller pie.”

Slate magazine pointed out that Kasparov was the world chess champion for 15 years. “I’m afraid my memory is not photographic as some of the legends about me say, but I am sure I would remember if the works of Adam Smith included the phrase, ‘too big to fail,’” Kasparov said at the Cato event. “When the state steps in, deciding which companies live or die, things have gone terribly wrong.”

“If a bankrupt small business in South Carolina can go belly up, so must General Motors, so must Goldman Sachs.” Arguably, Kasparov has a keener understanding of economics than many professional economists, particularly those who work in government and engineered the bailouts.

“When you base your policies on principles there is no room for ‘but,’” Kasparov told the mostly libertarian audience at the Cato dinner. “That’s trouble.”

“Rising inequality is a critical problem today, and it comes from decades of moving away from the principles of excellence that had created the richest society in history by the end of the 1960s.”

Specifically, “In the span of one generation the world’s greatest entrepreneurs and capitalists convinced themselves that there could be reward without risk,” Kasparov said at the black-tie dinner. “It is time to wake up from this dangerous delusion, built on a mountain of debt.”

For those who prize “equality” over just about everything else, including freedom, Kasparov has a chilling warning: “Trust me, I am from a place where everyone was supposed to be equal, and it wasn’t as nice as some of today’s liberal commentators seem to think it would be.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: adamsmith; chess; ussr

1 posted on 07/17/2014 7:43:14 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
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To: Academiadotorg

We’re all going to be equal alright, equally $%&#@!.


2 posted on 07/17/2014 7:50:07 AM PDT by longfellow (Bill Maher, the 21st hijacker.)
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To: Academiadotorg
Obama bingo
3 posted on 07/17/2014 7:52:02 AM PDT by Fear The People (When the government fears the people, you have LIBERTY.)
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To: Academiadotorg

It’s great to see that Kasparov has learned that Communism is for idiots! For a while I had thought he was a wishy-washy centrist only concerned about democracy and not other principles, but it’s good to see that this isn’t the case.

Good riddance to Karpov and the rest of the Botvinnik School, as well. Funny how Communists play chess like wimps and accept grandmaster draws so readily.


4 posted on 07/17/2014 7:55:59 AM PDT by Objective Scrutator (All liberals are criminals, and all criminals are liberals)
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To: Objective Scrutator
My husband and I visited Russia in 2008. My husband hadn't too long to live and he wanted to see St. Petersburg.

YAWNNN.

Their great "Hermitage" museum is a pale knock-off of the Louvre.

Our guide had to turn in HER passport for my husband to USE a wheelchair in the museum. SUCH trust in their own people.

Their food was VERY expensive and mediocre.

The hotel was forgettable AND it had no hot water.

Their elevator worked when it wanted to...swell for the wheelchair.

===============================

The world may have thought that Russia could be a first-world country, but MY opinion: they will never, ever, EVER catch up to us, Japan or most of Europe.

Never.

5 posted on 07/17/2014 8:11:03 AM PDT by cloudmountain
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To: cloudmountain
The hotel was forgettable AND it had no hot water.

I have found that at many hotels in Europe. 'Hot' is really just above room temp. The hotels I stayed in Germany, Denmark and Switzerland all had lukewarm showers..................

6 posted on 07/17/2014 8:19:39 AM PDT by Red Badger ("An armed society is a polite society. " - Robert Heinlein................)
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To: Red Badger
I have found that at many hotels in Europe. 'Hot' is really just above room temp. The hotels I stayed in Germany, Denmark and Switzerland all had lukewarm showers..................

I was always free to leave, wasn't I?

7 posted on 07/19/2014 5:56:07 PM PDT by cloudmountain
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