Life as an Academic Defender of the Intuitively Obvious
Academics are supposed to find counterintuitive, nonobvious ideas. That should be especially true for me, given that I hold many unpopular views, and am deeply opposed to populism of both the left and right-wing varieties. A Man of the People I am not.
But, especially in recent years, much of my work actually consists of defending intuitive ideas against other experts who reject them. When I describe these issues to laypeople, I often get the reaction that the point in question is just obviously true, and incredulity that any intelligent person might deny it.
Some examples:
1. Widespread voter ignorance is a serious problem for democracy. Academic experts have generated a large literature trying to deny this; I critique it in works like Democracy and Political Ignorance: Why Smaller Government is Smarter. It is ironic that this anti-populist idea is, on average, more readily accepted by ordinary people than by academic experts. But that’s been my experience over more than 25 years of writing and speaking about this subject.
2. “Public use” means actual government ownership and/or actual use by the public, not anything that might benefit the public in some way. The Supreme Court and lots of legal scholars disagree! See my book The Grasping Hand: Kelo v. New London and the Limits of Eminent Domain, for why they’re wrong. In teaching cases like Kelo v. City of New London, I usually end up spending much of the time explaining why the Court’s rulings might be right (even though I oppose them myself). Most students find these decisions intuitively repugnant, and it is my duty – as an instructor – to help them to see the other side.
3. “Invasion” means an organized military attack, not illegal migration or cross-border drug smuggling. The Trump administration, multiple state governments, and a few academics say otherwise. I have written various articles (e.g. here and here) and amicus briefs (see here and here) explaining why they’re wrong.
4. The right to private property includes the right to use that property, and significant restrictions on the right to use qualify as takings of private property under the Constitution. The Supreme Court has long said otherwise, and lots of legal scholars agree. For why they’re wrong, see my article “The Constitutional Case Against Exclusionary Zoning” (with Joshua Braver). I have a forthcoming book chapter that gets into this issue in greater detail.
5. The power to spend money for the “general welfare” is a power to spend for purposes that benefit virtually ever
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