Now they are highlighted in the new book by Richard Davenport-Hines, Universal Man: The Seven Lives of John Maynard Keynes:
[H]is marriage to a Russian [Lydia Lopokova] in whom bigotry of the Tsarist regime had been ingrained since girlhood, perpetuated this blight on his character. Their banter together included automatic jibes about the Jews: he considered Judaism as a subject for harsh superior humor. 'I smelt it', he told Lopovoka in 1924 after hearing that the Gluckstein family, which owned Lyons Corner House, had bought the Cafe Royal where his Tuesday Club held its monthly dinners...NYT would rather distort the views of Walter Block, a non-Keynesian economist, then give us truth about their quite evil guiding light Keynes.
He still remained enough of an Edwardian to regard immigrants from eastern Europe as schemers, who outwitted less nimble-minded natives and polluted their environment: "It is not agreeable to see a civilisation so under the ugly thumbs of its impure Jews who have all the money and the power and the brains' he said of Weimar Germany.
-RW
In all fairness, Walter should have a little more sense than talking about "voluntary slavery" and whatnot.
ReplyDeleteIn all fairness Walter makes a lot of sense when he tries to make a joke.
DeleteI am spending much of this weekend trying to determine how much to contribute to my overseer. My master isn't all that bad: as long as I give him about 25% of my income and I don't speak ill of him, he generally leaves me alone.