![]() ![]() ![]() This conversation is no exception and I hope you enjoy it. I always find talking to Matt fun, stimulating, and oddly relaxing. We didn’t get to a bunch of stuff I wanted to chat about, but we did cover a lot of ground. We talk about whether we really ought to care if America remains king of the mountain, how to encourage larger families in a non-creepy way, and much more. Matt and I explore the under-appreciated virtues of population density and specialized clusters, which turns into a sort of digressive case study of the beneficial long-term effects of our old early-oughts wonk-blogger DC poker game. The book is a detailed examination of the policies we’d need to make this happen. That means boosting birthrates and welcoming scads of new immigrants. In his new book, “One Billion Americans: The Case for Thinking Bigger,” Yglesias argues that if America’s going to remain top dog on the geopolitical block and stay a step ahead of rising giants with 10-figure populations, like China and India, we need to double our numbers … and then some. But is it enough? Policy journalist and Vox.com co-founder Matthew Yglesias argues it’s not even close. About 330 million people inhabit the good ol’ US of A. ![]()
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