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Gathering Goateggs's avatar

Chris—after reading your latest submission, I finally pulled the trigger and became a paid subscriber. I left the world of academic economics decades ago — long before the advent of even usenet groups, never mind Twitter or EJMR. I too left the profession without obtaining a PhD. I have had absolutely no trouble making my way in the world with the skills I obtained while finishing a Master’s in Political Economy, and I recognized long ago that my life has been far happier, my work has been more fulfilling, and my mind has been more at peace that it possibly could have been if I had been pulled into the infantile neurotic academy.

I’m not going to pretend I understand all the nuances of the ethical scandals you investigate and expose, but I can tell you that this kind of bullshit went on more or less unimpeded in the 1980s and was much more difficult to expose simply because records, documents, and dissertations were only stored on paper. I myself had work stolen by full professors on two occasions and there was simply no recourse. Keep plugging.

Also regarding your writing: you are on the right track. You become a better writer by writing. Keep at it. I’ll be reading every word.

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Corwin Slack's avatar

Just a thought in attracting paid subscribers. I believe that a lot of academic articles are anywhere from a hack job to downright fraudulent. So where to start flushing them out? Choose the academics who are exposing themselves as public intellectuals. Take Emily Oster of Covid amnesty infamy. She has published in academic journals. Has she plagiarized? Has she hacked her stats? Was the sample size ridiculously small? Etc. etc.

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