Monday, July 11, 2011

Capacity for Human Suffering

Then
"So long as business activity goes on," Albert Wiggin, chairman of Chase National Bank, told a Senate committee in 1931, "we are bound to have conditions of crisis once in so often." The committee chairman, Robert M. La Follette, Jr., then asked Wiggin if he thought "the capacity for human suffering is unlimited." "I think so," the banker replied. (McElvaine)

Now
From Democracy to Kleptocracy

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