Khross wrote:
That said, there's an interesting confirmation bias present in the people you chose to mention; said confirmation bias is substantiated by the sources you generally choose to post. So, let me ask you something ...
How many "conservative" responses to Yglesias do you read for every blog post of his you read? How many non-Keynesian economic analyses do you read for every Keynesian one Krugman issues?
Yeah, I try to keep the echo chamber effect in mind, and I recognize that Yglesias and Krugman in particular are politically partisan. But I'd argue that the people I identified - Krugman, Cowen, McArdle, Yglesias, DeLong - do represent a reasonable spectrum of mainstream opinion. On the health care reform bill, for instance, Krugman, Yglesias and DeLong support it, while Cowen and McArdle oppose it. On TARP and the ARRA, they all supported bailouts and stimulus as necessary to avert an immediate crisis, but while Krugman, Yglesias and DeLong wanted as much fiscal stimulus and additional regulation as they could get, Cowen and McArdle argued for more modest fiscal stimulus and targeted regulatory reform with greater emphasis on things like payroll tax reductions and monetary policy. Sure, all of those views are within the realm of mainstream political and economic thought, but they still represent pretty different policy preferences.
All of that said, in a typical week I read most of the following: The Atlantic blogs, Matthew Yglesias, the Washington Monthly blog, Tyler Cowen, the Corner at National Review (less than I used to, since I loathe Mcarthy, Thiessen, and Gallagher), Volokh Conspiracy, Glenn Greenwald, Outside the Beltway, and the Foreign Policy blogs. And of course, given the nature of online writing, I usually end up following various links provided in the foregoing.
If you have other recommendations that are less mainstream without being fringe, I'd appreciate the pointer.