The Man in the Reading Room – Part II – After the Diagnosis
The first essay, The Man in the Reading Room – Will He Be Right Again – traced the American economy from 1900 to 2026 and ended with a question. Whether a free people will choose, again, to govern the economic forces in its midst.
This essay names the levers.
Three principal ones — a modern Glass-Steagall, a structural antitrust standard, Wagner-Act protections extended to contingent work — and two supporting ones. Each is laid out with the historical statute that originally embodied it, what it would do, what it would cost, and what is most often argued against it.
The exercise is not advocacy. It is the kind of orderly description a writer can produce when he believes the citizens he is writing for are capable of weighing the evidence themselves.
The patterns are visible. The data is on the table. The levers are named.
The rest is yours