I used to be checking a reference in a e-book for one thing I’m writing. The e-book is Michael Hirsh, Capital Offense: How America’s Smart Males Turned America’s Future Over to Wall Avenue, 2010. There are numerous passages about Milton Friedman, and the writer had interviewed Milton years earlier.
That is one passage I discovered hanging:
For many of these years of the Chilly Battle, he remained the chief of a maverick insurgency, remoted and condemned even on the Chicago campus because the Nineteen Sixties counterculture grew. There have been occasions when nobody would eat with him within the college eating room. On the campus bookstore Friedman’s works had been on a backside shelf, far out of view of the Marx and Lenin posters on the partitions. When he gave talks at different faculties, he would typically go in by way of the kitchen, the higher to keep away from protesters. Even to some who admired him, he was one thing of an oddity. “I had to see for myself what that black magician from the Middle West was like,” one Harvard graduate introduced to him upon arriving in Chicago. It was a lonely time. Chicago graduate college students couldn’t even get positioned, besides at lesser colleges. “We were on the outs, the East Coast and West Coast basically had no use for them,” mentioned Gary Becker. “Columbia was the exception; they were broadminded about it. But Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Berkeley, Yale, they were hostile to all these types of ideas. We were considered extremists.” (italics added)
The lengthy years within the ideological wilderness took their toll. Friedman by no means forgot the snubs. “You have no idea of the climate of opinion in 1945 to 1960 or 1970,” he later instructed writer Alan Ebenstein.
This jogs my memory of a narrative a couple of September 1968 assembly with two buddies who had visited Milton and Rose in August. I wrote concerning the assembly in my e-book The Pleasure of Freedom: An Economist’s Odyssey, however didn’t inform this story. These two buddies, Michael Prime and my mentor to be, Clancy Smith, together with two others, drove to Capitaf, Milton and Rose’s summer season residence in Vermont. Milton and Rose welcomed them warmly. The 4 younger individuals began taking part in what I name “Ain’t it awful,” speaking about present authorities insurance policies and the way unhealthy they had been getting. However I nonetheless keep in mind Milton’s reply that my two buddies reported: “You should have been around in the late 1940s. Totalitarian thinking was dominant in academia.”
By the best way, I do assume there was an issue with dates within the quote from the e-book. I don’t doubt that Milton mentioned it, however my impression is that Milton was approach much less remoted in 1970 than in 1960.