Paul Krugman
Paul Krugman (born February 28, 1953) is the 2008 Nobel Economic Prize-winner (Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences). He is an American professor at Princeton University and a liberal Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times.
I will be writing a lot more about this, but the Swedes just made perhaps the worst decision in the history of the prize today in naming Paul Krugman the 2008 award winner. [1]
Krugman is the author of several books; the best known "The Conscience of a Liberal (October 2007)".
Krugman’s economics can be reduced to Proudhon's famous socialist slogan, "Property is robbery." [2]
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"I think we've learned this when we see Joe Stiglitz writing," Krugman said, referring to the winner of the economics Nobel in 2001. "I haven't noticed him getting an easy time. People just say, 'Sure, he's a great Nobel laureate and he's very smart, but he still doesn't know what he's talking about in this situation.' I'm sure I'll get the same thing." [3] |
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See also
NPR’s Siegel Helps Krugman Lie Human Events
Siegel’s interview of Paul Krugman was "a liberal love fest of junk economics and revisionist political history. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, 'You are entitled to your opinion, but you’re not entitled to your own facts.'" Main Page/Previous Conservapedia Breaking News/Archives/October 2007