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Mark Fissel's avatar

I have followed you for so many years, I have stopped counting. This post is why I keep coming back. You have a way of distilling complicated information into a reasoned argument of both sides, and taking a stand for one without forcing or pushing away dissenters. Thank you and continue to spread the light. I’m just a family man from Ohio but in my opinion, YOUR work is having a profound impact on how we (I) think about complicated issues.

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John Alcorn's avatar

Incisive and profound.

Let me raise two questions, which might be tangential. Note: I'm an outsider and have no expertise.

1. Might there have been room and need for a different response, outlined below?

Patiently cultivate international good will (immense on October 7), improve defense (as outlined by Russ Roberts), and sharpen the means to liberate hostages and to retaliate as narrowly as practicable against the guilty. Then retaliate.

This is not pacifism in the sense of turn the other cheek. It is a conjecture of an alternative strategy for balancing prudence, concern for the innocent, and punishment of the guilty. Is it less realistic than the current strategy, which seems to leave Israel with few friends and which kills a great many innocents to get at the guilty? Is the patient strategy too clever by half?

To be clear: Any strategic 'calculus' involves much uncertainty. And a strategy of great patience before a narrower retaliation would have been hard to sell in the moment to the deeply wounded Israeli citizenry.

2. Re: Adam Smith, crime, and punishment. Russ, Is there some inconsistency between (a) your eloquent insistence here upon retribution and (b) your compassion and for the guilty and, I think, unrealistic emphasis upon rehabilitation of offenders through liberal-arts education in the EconTalk discussion about the Bard College prisoner education program, at the link below?:

https://www.econtalk.org/max-kenner-on-crime-education-and-the-bard-prison-initiative/

I and other commenters at the EconTalk webpage essentially made counter-arguments like Adam Smith's.

Perhaps criminal justice and justice in war are apples and oranges.

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