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Topic: Jude Wanniski


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  WorldNetDaily Speaker's Bureau - Jude Wanniski
Jude Wanniski, president of Polyconomics, Inc., is one of the leading political economists in the United States.
Wanniski enjoys "anticipating the future," which his firm's forecasts accomplish with particularly singular insight, the accuracy being acknowledged by such notable sources as Barron's, Bondweek and The Wall Street Journal, among others.
Wanniski appears frequently in the broadcast and print media and is a much sought-after speaker for presentations at various corporate, financial, political and other events.
www.worldnetdaily.com /speakers/jwanniski.asp   (299 words)

  
 Wanniski's last word -- Copyright © United Press International
Wanniski was also working on some notes to a source and himself so he could continue working on the piece at home -- ending, journalistically, with, "What do you think?" He had composed an email posing some questions about Iraq to Ehsan Ahrari, a leading Middle East and global ideopolitical analyst.
Jude Wanniski is best known as the Thomas Paine (but, as an activist, with a dash of John Adams too) of America's revival of classical, or "supply-side," economics.
Jude Wanniski is in a better place, but he has left those of us in the world without his equal.
www.adti.net /upi/wanniski.html   (2245 words)

  
  Jude Wanniski; writer pushed supply-side economic theory - The Boston Globe
Jude Wanniski, a contrarian editorialist and economic consultant who became an early champion of supply-side economics, died Monday at a hospital in Morristown, N.J., after apparently suffering a heart attack.
Wanniski returned the rap by saying the reporters ''were looking for ways to break my legs all the way along." He later wrote a tongue-in-cheek guide to Washington reporters, rating them as if they were restaurant entrees.
Jude Thaddeus Wanniski was born in Pottsville, Pa., to a family with coal mining and Communist roots.
www.boston.com /news/globe/obituaries/articles/2005/08/31/jude_wanniski_writer_pushed_supply_side_economic_theory/?page=2   (843 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski: The Father of Supply Side
Jude was in search of a politician to become the perfect instrument of his policies, and the closest he ever came was Jack Kemp.
Wanniski talked about being a teen-age Democrat ringing doorbells for Adlai Stevenson before he became a Republican, but he never was much of a Republican.
Jude is the patron of lost causes, and Jude Wanniski lived up to his name.
www.nationalledger.com /cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=1&num=514&printer=1   (695 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski
Jude Wanniski is an American journalist and conservative commentator.
He is perhaps best known for being the associate editor of The Wall Street Journal from 1972 to 1978 and coined the term supply side economics.
Wanniski has a B.A. in Political Science and an M.S. in Journalism from the University of California, Los Angeles.
www.xasa.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/j/ju/jude_wanniski.html   (192 words)

  
 Flynn Files -- Jude Wanniski, RIP
Jude Wanniski served as an advisor to Ronald Reagan from 1978 to 1981, helping to shape the 40th president's tax policy that ultimately resulted in lowering top rates from 70 percent to 28 percent.
Wanniski wrote editorials for the Wall Street Journal from 1972 until 1978, when an appalled Dow Jones executive caught him handing out campaign literature for supply-side convert Jeffrey Bell, who unseated Senator Clifford Case in the Republican primary but lost the general election to Bill Bradley.
Wanniski's alienation from the GOP is understandable given the fractured nature of political philosophy (and double think) these days.
www.flynnfiles.com /archives/american_scene2005/jude_wanniski_rip.html   (462 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski, 69, Journalist Who Coined the Term 'Supply-Side Economics,' Dies - New York Times
Jude Wanniski, a journalist, consultant and, most of all, a fierce and unconventional partisan who marshaled intellect and salesmanship to promote big tax cuts as the best cure for an ailing economy, a theory embraced and executed by President Reagan, died yesterday in Morristown, N.J. He was 69.
Wanniski was eager to express big thoughts, like his explanation of the cause of the Depression in his 1978 book, "The Way the World Works." He wrote that the day-to-day collapse of the stock market in 1929 coincided with votes on the Senate floor on the protectionist Smoot-Hawley tariff bill.
Wanniski may have wandered from the traditional bounds of the Republican Party was suggested by his endorsement of Senator John F. Kerry in the 2004 presidential race.
www.nytimes.com /2005/08/31/business/31wanniski.html?ex=1283140800&en=9b18b36a7d83d605&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss   (922 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski Interview
Jude Wanniski, founder and chairman of Polyconomics, Inc., is a world-renowned political economist, former Associate Editor of The Wall Street Journal 1972 to 1978.
Scott talks with Jude Wanniski about Iraq's lack of WMD, the Iraqi election, the dreaded neoconservatives' possibly waning influence in Washington, and the disingenuous use of the Devil-image of Saddam Hussein as a pretext for war with Iraq.
Jude Wanniski returns to discuss his chapter in the new book Neo-conned, The (Bogus) Case Against Saddam.
www.weekendinterviewshow.com /InterviewDisplay.aspx?i=85   (182 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski - Editorials/Op-Ed - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Jude Wanniski once called himself a "theologian" of supply-side economics.
Wanniski died Monday from an apparent heart attack at the age of 69.
Wanniski is credited with convincing presidential candidate and then-California Governor Reagan to build his economic policy around supply-side economics.
www.washtimes.com /op-ed/20050831-091719-6173r.htm   (409 words)

  
 :: BlackElectorate.com ::
Jude, the purist, spanked such thinking in public and private, but Jude, the leader and captain of ‘his team’, never publicly denied access and claims to ‘supply-side economics,’ even to those he was at variance with.
Jude was at his very best when he was on the trail of a story, inspired by an insight he had come across or uniquely valued.
Jude’s presence and persistence gave them all a chance, and potentially only prolonged their era of misguidance and false leadership, if they nibbled at the outer regions of his wisdom and sound advice — enough to keep them in power and extend their time but not enough to really solve problems or ‘save’ people.
www.blackelectorate.com /print_article.asp?ID=1456   (6047 words)

  
 disco-tech | Discovery Institute's Technology Blog: Jude Wanniski, RIP
Wanniski was a key force in the economic debates that led to the election of Ronald Reagan and to the implementation of his successful agenda of tax rate cuts, deregulation, and sound money.
Wanniski's split from establishment conservatism began in the mid-1990s when he declared that the U.S. should have a different foreign policy in a now unipolar post-Cold War world.
Wanniski's tone, as much as the content of his thoughts, was responsbile for more than a few rocky professional relationships.
www.disco-tech.org /2005/08/jude_wanniski_rip.html   (414 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski Dies; Influential Supply-Sider
Jude Wanniski, 69, a contrarian editorialist and economic consultant who became an early champion of supply-side economics, died Aug. 29 at a hospital in Morristown, N.J., after an apparent heart attack.
Wanniski returned the rap by saying the reporters "were looking for ways to break my legs all the way along." He later wrote a tongue-in-cheek guide to Washington reporters, rating them as if they were restaurant entrees.
Jude Thaddeus Wanniski was born in Pottsville, Pa., on June 17, 1936, to a family with coal mining and Communist roots.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/30/AR2005083001880.html   (894 words)

  
 Antiwar.com Blog · Antiwar.com Columnist Jude Wanniski Passes Away
I woke this morning to terrible news: Jude Wanniski is dead of a heart attack.
Jude was one of the leading ex-conservatives who had turned antiwar, and hard-core antiwar at that.
Jude coined the term “supply-side economics.” Along with economist Arthur Laffer (of the Laffer Curve fame), Jude shaped modern-day conservative economics and influenced leaders including Ronald Reagan, Jack Kemp and Steve Forbes.
www.antiwar.com /blog/comments.php?id=P2326_0_1_0   (283 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski: Archives
Jude Wanniski on a nation condemned for not bowing to the empire.
On the neocons and the UN, from Jude Wanniski.
Jude Wanniski on the neocon attempt to scapegoat him for the cakewalk.
www.lewrockwell.com /wanniski/wanniski-arch.html   (378 words)

  
 Hispanic American Center for Economic Research - Jude Wanniski (1936-2005)
Jude Wanniski was one of the most interesting and original thinkers of the supply side revolution.
Wanniski was an adviser to President Reagan from 1978 to 1981, and helped design the tax cuts that propelled the U.S. economy out of stagflation and led to the great boom that followed.
Wanniski's seminal book The Way The World Works, was named one of the 100 most influential books of the 20th century by the editors of the National Review.
www.hacer.org /current/US235.php   (525 words)

  
 JUDE WANNISKI 1936-2005 Reagan aide pushed supply-side economics Chicago Sun-Times - Find Articles
Wanniski eloquently and confidently explained the practical applications of the classical economic theory he described in 1976 as "supply-side economics." America of the 1970s was in thrall to Keynesian demand-side economics: Increase demand through government spending on social programs and public works, and America could spend its way out of stagflation.
Wanniski was forced to leave the Journal when a colleague saw him at a commuter station handing out fliers for a Republican U.S. Senate candidate and complained to the Journal's brass.
Wanniski's departure only enhanced his influence because he used his time off to write The Way the World Works, a manifesto for economic conservatives because of its joyful condemnation of taxes.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_20050901/ai_n15613556   (712 words)

  
 JUDE WANNISKI (June 17, 1936 - August 29, 2005) by by Jude Wanniski
Wanniski's advisory was supplemented by 40 years of earned trust from hundreds of eminently informed individuals in industry and government throughout the world.
Wanniski's clients spoke of him as "One of the great contrarians of his time," "uniquely provocative," "uncompromising," and consistently providing "independent and perceptive views of the monetary, fiscal, and geopolitical environment...having refined the necessary ingredients of classical and behavioral economics to reasonably predict outcomes."
Wanniski was an adviser to President Ronald Reagan from 1978 to 1981, and designed the Reagan tax cuts that propelled the U.S. economy out of stagflation and led to the great stock market boom that followed.
www.theconservativevoice.com /articles/article.html?id=7913   (801 words)

  
 Wanniski.com
Jude Wanniski, late founder and chairman of Polyconomics, Inc., was a world-renowned political economist whose 1978 book The Way the World Works was named one of the 100 most influential books of the 20th Century by the editors of the National Review.
Wanniski, 69, founded Polyconomics in 1978 to advise corporate and financial strategists on the impact political events would have on the stock and bond markets and on the domestic and global economy.
Wanniski held a B.A. in Political Science and and M.S. in Journalism from UCLA.
www.wanniski.com /staffbio.asp?authorid=6   (446 words)

  
 Wanniski watch: genocide denial. - By Timothy Noah - Slate Magazine
Jude Wanniski's Genocide DenialWherein the supply-side guru disputes, against all evidence, Saddam's gassing of the Kurds.
Jude Wanniski, the former Wall Street Journal editorialist whose book The Way the World Works popularized supply-side economics (and therefore helped create the deficit crisis that paralyzed domestic policy-making during the 1980s and 1990s), has a gift for forging screwball alliances.
Wanniski is clearly opposed to extending the war on terrorism to Iraq.
www.slate.com /id/2063934   (1322 words)

  
 WorldNetDaily: Supply-side inventor Jude Wanniski dies
Economist Jude Wanniski, the man who coined the term "supply-side economics," died of a heart attack earlier today at 69.
The former WND columnist was founder and chairman of Polyconomics, Inc., and author of the 1978 book "The Way the World Works," named one of the 100 most influential books of the 20th century by the editors of the National Review.
Wanniski appeared frequently in the broadcast and print media, and also wrote weekly commentary for the Polyconomics website.
www.worldnetdaily.com /news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=46037   (259 words)

  
 Jude Wanniski - SourceWatch
Jude Wanniski, according to his web site wanniski.com, "As an associate editor of The Wall Street Journal from 1972 to 1978,...
Wanniski, and Polyconomics, Inc., have achieved recognition worldwide for the efficacy of the supply-side political-economic model.
Wanniski holds a B.A. in Political Science and an M.S. in Journalism from the University of California, Los Angeles."
www.sourcewatch.org /index.php?title=Jude_Wanniski   (158 words)

  
 WorldNetDaily: WorldNetDaily News Archives
Wednesday, September 19, 2001 by Jude Wanniski -- Memo To: Editors From: Jude Wanniski Re: Farrakhan Press Conference The national news media for years have cultivated the impression that Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan is a rabid, anti-Semitic bigot, a "fl Hitler,"...
Jude Wanniski is author of the political-economic classic, The Way the World Works.
Wanniski's investment service, SupplySideInvestor.com, is geared to help investors understand the global capital markets, and his firm, Polyconomics Inc., has achieved international recognition for its accurate forecasts and particularly singular insight.
www.worldnetdaily.com /news/archives.asp?AUTHOR_ID=17   (543 words)

  
 OpinionJournal - Extra
Unbound by zero-sum economics, Jude forged the golden gift of a profound and passionate argument that the establishments of the mold must finally give way to the powers of the mind.
But with the help of Lewis Lehrman, Jude finally prevailed on me and I fully capitulated at the American Spectator, editing and publishing his argument on the deflationary impact of declining gold prices in the late '90s.
Jude was too headstrong to be faithfully followed at every turn, and I readily confess to reservations on the point and prudence of his current caper.
www.opinionjournal.com /extra/?id=110007205   (520 words)

  
 Bloomberg.com: U.S.
Wanniski died at Morristown Memorial Hospital in New Jersey of an apparent heart attack, said a spokesman for his company, Polyconomics Inc., in Parsippany, New Jersey.
Wanniski's Web site contained a raft of testimonials from prominent supporters, including one from Reagan, who said in 1988: ``Economic truth is a lever that can move governments, move history...the economic model that we've created truly has become what Jude Wanniski described as `the way the world works'''.
Born June 17, 1936, in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, Wanniski received a bachelor's degree in political science and a master of science degree in journalism from the University of California in Los Angeles.
www.bloomberg.com /apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=aJGoSwMV3.xw&refer=us   (477 words)

  
 Wanniski.com
Jude Wanniski became acquainted with Laffer in 1970, and Laffer began tutoring Wanniski, introducing him to Mundell in May, 1974.
Wanniski had eventually returned to New York after completing his UCLA degrees, working first on newspapers in Anchorage, Los Angeles and Las Vegas, then as a political columnist for the Dow Jones weekly National Observer.
Wanniski terms this monetarist theory as akin to keeping your car’s accelerator depressed to the same degree regardless of whether you are going uphill, downhill, through curves or around a corner; the outcome can be disaster.
www.wanniski.com /showarticle.asp?articleid=2803   (3510 words)

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