Thursday
Over on the Von Mises Institute site, there is a Read the whole review. Highly recommended.It is now clear that [Robert Skidelsky] refuses to confront these shameful comments of his hero. So, for all practical purposes, Keynes's fawning words on Stalinism have been thrown down an Orwellian memory hole, rarely if ever to reappear in the literature.
[...]
But if Keynes was such a model champion of the free society, how can we account for his peculiar comments, in 1933, endorsing, though with reservations, the social "experiments" that were going on at the time in Italy, Germany, and Russia? And what about his strange introduction to the 1936 German translation of General Theory, where he writes that his approach to economic policy is much better suited to a totalitarian state such as that run by the Nazis than, for instance, to Britain?








