David Lay Williams
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laywilliams.bsky.social
David Lay Williams
@laywilliams.bsky.social

Political theorist at DePaul and author of The Greatest of All Plagues: How Economic Inequality Shaped Political Thought from Plato to Marx (Princeton, 2024). Essays in NY Times, Washington Post, Time, Bloomberg, etc. Jazz Guitar, New York Mets. .. more

Political science 46%
Philosophy 36%
Pinned
After a decade's labor, it is finally book-release day for "The Greatest of All Plagues: How Economic Inequality Shaped Political Thought from Plato to Marx." I'm both relieved and excited to see this day arrive. press.princeton.edu/books/hardco...
The Greatest of All Plagues
How the great political thinkers have persistently warned against the dangers of economic inequality
press.princeton.edu

Look what just arrived, @lkatfield.bsky.social! Looking forward to diving in!

Reposted by David Lay Williams

I feel silly publicizing a book in these times BUT my book describes how constitutional structures allowed the accumulation of generational wealth + rights for settlers and white people. These are the same advantages MAGA is trying to preserve today. Pre-order page:

Who needs real friends so long as we have AI? (At the Davis L Station in Evanston.)

We’ve tried extreme inequality, but why not try hyper-, super-, turbo-extreme inequality? What could go wrong?
Musk Wins $1 Trillion Pay Package, Creating Split Screen on Wealth in America
www.nytimes.com
I fully believe in the corporate death penalty and believe we would be a better world if OpenAI lost its corporate charter and was forcibly dissolved.

www.cnn.com/2025/11/06/u...
ChatGPT encouraged college graduate to commit suicide, family claims in lawsuit against OpenAI | CNN
A 23-year-old man killed himself in Texas after ChatGPT ‘goaded’ him to commit suicide, his family says in a lawsuit.
www.cnn.com
Ellis, apparently wrapping up, is quoting George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and others.

Humanities where the cool jobs at

I know it's hard to draw up reasonable guidelines about these matters, which is probably why universities and state legislatures have generally trusted professors to handle these matters as they think best promote a convivial learning environment. Anything else runs the danger of excess constraint.

Also, I think I understand what this is getting at, but where do we draw the line? What if a student is a Holocaust denier or a Nazi? How free should they feel to express their views?

I think this passage is potentially problematic. For example, when I teach Henrik Ibsen's Enemy of the People, it's hard not to discuss climate change as a phenomenon parallel to what is confronted by Ibsen's 19th century Norwegian village. Because some doubt climate change, is this off-limits???

Reposted by David Lay Williams

Tonight, we're discussing inequality in the history of economic and political thought at 6PM CET online in a ULC Stone Centre Webinar

Discussion is centered on recent books by Branko Milanović and David Lay Williams

Register here : ucl.zoom.us/webinar/regi...

Reposted by David Lay Williams

I was reading @johncassidysays.bsky.social
"Capitalism and its critics". Highly recommend. Very well written, easy to read, well-informed. Goes from Adam Smith to Piketty.

It’s a very good book!

Much like Alcibiades. (This account from Plutarch's Lives.)

Still relevant.

A student yesterday came up to me to share that she had taken my recommendation to attend the Lyric Opera of Chicago's performance of Medea! She loved it. Made my day!
Medea
Hell hath no fury like a sorceress scorned. Euripides' tragic tale of infidelity and revenge comes alive in this intense revival, directed by Sir David McVicar.
www.lyricopera.org

Pink Hawley!

In my district.
FLAG: Progressive House candidate Kat Abughazaleh has been indicted on federal charges stemming from protests outside an ICE facility outside Chicago.

Abughazaleh called the charges "political prosecution" and a "gross attempt to silence dissent, a right protected under the First Amendment."

Reposted by David Lay Williams

In this episode of the Dondena Decode podcast I have the honour of interviewing Nobel laureate James Robinson on the reasons why modern democracy is proving to be a fragile institution, on the importance of studying the past, on the consequences of getting a Nobel...
open.spotify.com/episode/4CqO...
Dondena Decode - Episode 5
open.spotify.com

Reposted by David Lay Williams

FLAG: Progressive House candidate Kat Abughazaleh has been indicted on federal charges stemming from protests outside an ICE facility outside Chicago.

Abughazaleh called the charges "political prosecution" and a "gross attempt to silence dissent, a right protected under the First Amendment."

Reposted by David Lay Williams

There's been good polling on what people know about inequality. (They think it's a LOT less than it is.)

This is over a decade old; I'd love to see an update
INEQUALITY IN THE U.S.: IMAGINED VERSUS REALITY - Sociology Toolbox
The Society Pages (TSP) is an open-access social science project headquartered in the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota
thesocietypages.org

Reposted by Branko Milanovic

Karoline Leavitt officially announced the "Launch of a large-scale investigation to find the people behind 'No Kings.'"

I've saved her some time.

So sorry for your loss. She was clearly a very good girl.

This is how I'd feel if someone gave me a Yankees jersey.
Pope Leo is a longtime fan of the Chicago White Sox. Some people can’t seem to keep it straight.
Once Again: The Pope Likes That Other Chicago Team, Not the Cubs
Although he posed with a Cubs jersey on Monday, a gift from a religious leader also from Chicago, Pope Leo is a longtime fan of the Chicago White Sox. Some people can’t seem to keep it straight.
nyti.ms