The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Slaughterhouse

A Failure of Reason

Is Richard Posner too big to fail?

A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of ’08 and the Descent into Depression
By Richard Posner
(Harvard, $23.95, 346 pages)

IS RICHARD POSNER TOO BIG TO FAIL? That term of art usually refers to companies that are too politically paid up to go down without a few congressional hearings and whispers of bailouts from our disinterested representatives on Capitol Hill. But it can apply to political prognosticators as well. Certain people manage to build up reputations so formidable that they can withstand almost anything. And unlike in the financial services sector, the bottom line often doesn’t bite them. A Bernie Madoff-like day of reckoning need never arrive in their lifetimes.

With that in mind, it will be interesting to see what happens to Posner after the publication of his simply awful A Failure of Capitalism (Failure, hereafter). Posner is a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, a lecturer at the University of Chicago, and author of about 40 books, some of them good, on subjects ranging from sex to scandal to plagiarism. His Wikipedia entry sums up the pre-Failure consensus on his life’s work thus: “One journal has identified Posner as the most cited legal scholar of all time. He is one of the most respected judges in the United States.”

The journal that attested to Posner’s influence was Chicago’s Journal of Legal Studies, from an article published back in 2000. Now that citation seems beyond dated. High-ranking jurists establish their reputations through their legal reasoning. Posner, a Reagan appointee, was once thought one of the finest minds associated with the “law and economics” movement that tried to make the legal profession more sensitive to market forces. But for reasoning to be effective it must convince, and Posner has lately found himself staring down the twin barrels of incredulous public opinion and judicial incomprehension.

In spite of his earlier opposition to a right to privacy, Posner ruled that the grotesque and medically unnecessary procedure known as partial-birth abortion is a constitutionally protected right. Last year, when the Supreme Court ruled that the District of Columbia’s near-total gun ban was unconstitutional, Posner parried in the New Republic that the decision, which simply acknowledged, in the plain meaning of the Second Amendment, that law-abiding citizens have a “right to keep and bear arms,” was “questionable in both method and result.” Serious scholars of the Second Amendment had a good chuckle over that one.

And nearly everybody laughed when, on the Becker-Posner blog (a collaboration with Chicago economist and Nobelist Gary Becker), Posner toyed with the idea of “expanding copyright law to bar online access to copyrighted materials without the copyright holder’s consent, or to bar linking to or paraphrasing copyrighted materials” without same. Posner wasn’t talking about illegally reposting content, just linking to it, or, really, talking about it in any meaningful sense. In his ideal world, this review might be illegal.

Many conservatives have said that they felt betrayed by Posner over this last decade, as he endorsed every liberal trendy cause-from catastrophism to judicial activism-but in reading Failure, it’s hard to see why they should want him. The book is a badly written jumble, a prose train wreck, a mishmash of half-thoughts, and irritable mental gestures.

Posner’s once good sense fails him from the get-go, when he insists that what America is suffering through right now is not a recession but rather (cue eerie music) a depression. Rather than moving on to the next point, he lingers there too long and defeats himself. He concedes that maybe this won’t be as bad as the Great Depression, but “there is semantic space between a ‘Great Depression’ and a mere recession,” so this could still go down as a Pretty Great Depression.

The world-famous jurist downplays many of the causes that responsible economists have fingered for the buildup of the housing bubble-chiefly, relentless pressure on banks to make risky loans backed by ever-increasing federal quasi-guarantees through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and a burgeoning investment market built on that house of houses- and instead focuses on the red herring of “deregulation.”

Posner dances around most of the worst actors in this Greek tragedy-the affordable-housing shakedown artists, the clueless regulators, the politically connected Fannie and Freddie execs, the congressmen who ridiculed the Cassandras-and instead blames capitalism itself. The problem is “systemic,” so what the U.S. needs is a different system. Going forward, he advises massive deficit spending, much more highly regulated financial markets, higher taxes, and even the return of usury laws to prevent future “depressions” from occurring. He calls these reforms “small beer,” which only invites the sophomoric reply: Party at Posner’s house!

About the Author

Jeremy Lott is editor of RealClearPolicy.com, RealClearBooks.com and RealClearReligion.org and associate editor of RealClearScience.com.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (21) |

james wilson| 9.1.09 @ 11:11AM

Humility is what keeps the great men out of reach of the destructive effects of hubris. Tocqueville, Milton Friedman, Hayek. Posner is in love with himself.

Teflon93 | 9.1.09 @ 11:43AM

Posner's no different than every other Establishment intellectual who prefers comity to inquiry.

Brian B| 9.1.09 @ 1:09PM

Well, this is the AmSpec so I nominate Judge Posner for the Strange New Respect Award and if Mr. Lott is right, maybe the Worst Book of the Year award as well?

Joe B| 9.1.09 @ 2:01PM

Posner is actually a fascinating experiment in neuroscience. At the peak of his powers his powerful intellect aligns with with conservatism, but as his mental ability wanes, creeping senility turns him into a liberal.

Is anyone surprised?

diesel jeans | 9.1.09 @ 9:29PM

This is a great piece. Very thought provoking. I like the sort of ending that leaves it opn to personal input. Makes it work for just about everyone I think. Nicely done! I’ll subscribe.

Pingback| 9.2.09 @ 7:40AM

» Judge Poser? links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:

Judge Poser? Home | About | Archives | Links | Contact Wed 2 Sep 2009 Judge Poser? Posted by Sean Higgins under Criticism , Schadenfreude  Over at the American Spectator, Jeremy takes the hammer and tongs to Judge Richard Posner’s latest book, A Failure of Capitalism: Posner’s once good sense fails him from the get-go, when he insists that what America is…

Alan Brooks| 9.11.09 @ 11:48PM

Posner ougt to be humble.
He has much to be humble about.

Pingback| 9.15.09 @ 2:37PM

jeremy lott – 海运女 links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:

…Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds. [Post to Twitter] Tweet This Post. discovertexarkana.com – http://discovertexarkana.com/ ||| The American Spectator : A Failure of Reason Jeremy Lott is editor of the Capital Research Center's "Labor Watch" and author of The Warm Bucket Brigade: The Story of the American Vice Presidency (Thomas Nelson). He…

More Articles by Jeremy Lott

More Articles From The Slaughterhouse

http://spectator.org/archives/2009/09/01/a-failure-of-reason

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

FLASHBACK TO: 1995

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

The IRS Immigration Fraud Scandal

Jeffrey Lord | 6.18.13

Obama's Climate of Intimidation

Matthew Sheffield | 6.18.13

Obama's Unaffordable Act

Peter Ferrara | 6.19.13

Whither Suburbia?

Steven Greenhut | 6.18.13

Barack's Brave New World Blarney

George Neumayr | 6.19.13

The Biggest Fool of All

Doug Bandow | 6.17.13

There's Something About Cambridge

Daniel J. Flynn | 6.19.13

The Loss of Trust

Thomas Sowell | 6.18.13

ADVERTISEMENT