I first met Elizabeth Warren when she was a professor at Harvard Law School, in 2004.
The book argued that families with one income might actually be better off, since families with two incomes spent nearly the full combined income and then fell behind if one spouse lost a job.
Families with one income, by contrast, spent to the limit for one income, and if a spouse was fired, the unemployed spouse would then look for work to replace that single income.
The other half of iconoclastic Warren was typical progressive, anti-financial industry Warren.
The result: an emboldened Warren who saw her popularity as tied to her Big Government agenda.
No more reaching across the aisle; no more iconoclastic policies.
If Elizabeth Warren circa 2003 were running, she'd be the odds-on favorite for president.
https://townhall.com/columnists/benshapiro/2019/09/04/how-the-quest-for-power-corrupted-elizabeth-warren-n2552565
The book argued that families with one income might actually be better off, since families with two incomes spent nearly the full combined income and then fell behind if one spouse lost a job.
Families with one income, by contrast, spent to the limit for one income, and if a spouse was fired, the unemployed spouse would then look for work to replace that single income.
The other half of iconoclastic Warren was typical progressive, anti-financial industry Warren.
The result: an emboldened Warren who saw her popularity as tied to her Big Government agenda.
No more reaching across the aisle; no more iconoclastic policies.
If Elizabeth Warren circa 2003 were running, she'd be the odds-on favorite for president.
https://townhall.com/columnists/benshapiro/2019/09/04/how-the-quest-for-power-corrupted-elizabeth-warren-n2552565
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