The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Heart of Texas Episode
This week all three of your whisky-swilling disputationists found themselves together in Austin, Texas, for a Civitas Institute conference, and we managed to sneak away to record this week’s episode in person. Though you wish earnestly for us to return to Substack or Zoom, since we had some technical challenges with our sound mix (one microphone wouldn’t work at all, and we weren’t able to fix it much in post-production).
In any case, after noting how John’s beloved McRibb is going to rescue Bitcoin from its recent 40% slump, we get down to business, answering a reader/ listener comment asking what, exactly, is “scientific” about “political science”? And for our second topic, we beat up John (so what else is new, you ask) about his forthcoming essay on “The Declaration of Independence as a Constitution,” part of our ongoing consideration of the Declaration ahead of the 250th anniversary this summer. To be continued. . .
The Three Whiskey Happy Hour
The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Newsom, Clinton, Tigers and Bears Oh My!
John wonders whether the Clinton deposition about Epstein is really sensible, Steve wonders how Gaffen-Gavin Newsom can possible survive this week’s “George Romney Moment," and Lucretia wonders why universities have allowed themselves to be swallowed whole by useless administrators.

The Three Whisky Happy Hour: War! What Is It Good For? (Absolutely. . . Something!)
In this episode, we reviewed some key points of the Great Iran War of 2026, along with observations on the Supreme Court’s intervention on the side of California parents.

The Three Whisky Happy Hour: Band Reunion Time
John Yoo is back this week, bringing the 3WHH up to full strength again after last week’s astonishingly congenial episode, which can mean only one thing—not even high tariffs, which this week’s host (Steve) vainly tried to impose on ths discussion—could stop a vigorous free trade in ideas.

Pursuit of Happiness

The Rise of Latino America
In The Rise of Latino America, Hernandez & Kotkin argue that Latinos, who are projected to become America’s largest ethnic group, are a dynamic force shaping the nation’s demographic, economic, and cultural future. Far from being a marginalized group defined by oppression, Latinos are integral to America’s story. They drive economic growth, cultural evolution, and workforce vitality. Challenges, however, including poverty, educational disparities, and restrictive policies, threaten their upward mobility. Policymakers who wish to harness Latino potential to ensure national prosperity and resilience should adopt policies that prioritize affordability, safety, and economic opportunity over ideological constraints.

Richard Epstein on Roman Law and Sociobiology
How and why Roman law worked, how it eventually fell apart, and sociobiology as a way to explain the foundations and limits of legal norms.

Becoming All-American
Blue Moon takes place on the evening of March 31, 1943, the opening night of Oklahoma!

The Original Sin of U.S. Health Care
As long as most Americans receive health insurance as an invisible, employer-managed fringe benefit, health care will remain expensive, opaque, and unresponsive.














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