Bentham's Bulldog delivers a searing indictment of the prevailing populist worldview, arguing that its core tenets are not just politically expedient but fundamentally morally bankrupt and intellectually hollow. In an era where isolationism is often framed as patriotic prudence, the author makes the startling claim that believing America is being "ripped off" by the world is a sign of "intellectual rot" that requires ignoring basic economic and ethical facts.
The Moral Calculus of Isolationism
The piece opens by dismantling the idea that the current administration's lack of coherent ideology is a bug rather than a feature. Bentham's Bulldog writes, "The Trump administration does not have much in the way of coherent ideology. Trump is not principled and goes along consistently with whatever the people who flatter him say." This observation sets the stage for a deeper critique: the only consistent thread is a worldview that views global engagement as a zero-sum game where foreign interests must be sacrificed.
The author challenges this by invoking a stark moral test. "If a foreign child was drowning in a pond, would we have no duty to pull him out because he was not American?" This rhetorical question cuts through the nationalist rhetoric, forcing a confrontation with the idea that human suffering has no borders. The argument extends to historical interventions, asking if the prevention of genocide in Rwanda or the Holocaust would have been wrong simply because the victims were not American citizens. Bentham's Bulldog asserts, "Suffering and death are bad things, and we have moral reason to stop them whenever they take place."
This moral framework is bolstered by a reference to John Rawls' concept of the "veil of ignorance." The author notes that under this philosophical test, where one does not know if they will be born in the U.S. or Uganda, "no one would dream of entirely neglecting the interests of foreigners." Critics might argue that a nation's primary duty is to its own citizens, but the author counters that the sheer disparity in wealth makes this calculus absurd. "It is insanity to hold that we should care vastly more about financially enriching those who are wealthier than almost anyone who has ever lived than those living on two dollars a day."
It is impossible to believe the core pillars of the populist worldview if you are informed.
The Economic Fallacy of Protectionism
Moving from ethics to economics, the commentary tackles the populist obsession with trade deficits and job losses. Bentham's Bulldog dismisses the fear that free trade steals jobs as a judgment that "does not survive contact with econ 101." The author leans heavily on the principle of comparative advantage, a concept rooted in classical economics, to argue that trade boosts wealth for all participating nations. The piece cites a comprehensive study spanning 151 countries from 1963 to 2014, which found that "tariff increases lead, in the medium term, to economically and statistically significant declines in domestic output and productivity."
The author points out that these tariffs often function as a regressive tax on the world's poorest. "It would be wrong to impoverish people in Mexico, Laos, Cambodia, and Lesotho, to slightly increase the wages of people who earn more in a few weeks than they earn in a year." This framing highlights the moral hazard of protectionism: it sacrifices the survival of the vulnerable for marginal gains to the already wealthy. The piece also notes that foreign aid, often scapegoated by populists, constitutes less than 1% of the budget, yet voters mistakenly believe it takes up a quarter. This ignorance, Bentham's Bulldog argues, allows politicians to "coast on our ignorance" and use aid as a convenient villain.
The Myth of the Fixed Pie
The final pillar of the critique addresses immigration, which the author describes as the latest target of "comical" and "ludicrous" claims from government officials. Bentham's Bulldog identifies the core error in anti-immigration rhetoric as the lump of labor fallacy—the mistaken belief that there is a fixed number of jobs available. "Treating the absence of jobs as a reason to restrict immigration is a classic example of the lump of labor fallacy," the author writes, noting that immigrants consume goods and services, thereby creating the need for more jobs.
The commentary emphasizes that immigrants are a net positive for the economy and innovation, yet the populist narrative treats them as a threat. "The standard arguments against immigration, when carefully examined, turn out to backfire and make the case for more immigration." The author draws a parallel to the work of Hanania, noting that politicians prefer to blame "greedy mega-corporations and nefarious foreigners" rather than address complex institutional failures. "Victimhood sells," Bentham's Bulldog observes, explaining why it is easier to demagogue than to explain the subtle mechanisms of free markets.
The best thing to do to boost wages would be banning people from having kids—so that the kids don't take the jobs.
This section also touches on the human cost of restrictive policies. Even if immigration slightly reduced American wages (a claim the author disputes), it would be "wrong to use harmful coercion to immiserate tens of millions of people for slight benefit." The argument is that the benefits of immigration are so robust that the case for restriction collapses entirely when facts are applied.
Bottom Line
Bentham's Bulldog's strongest contribution is the synthesis of moral philosophy and hard economic data to show that populism is not just a political strategy but a failure of reasoning. The piece's greatest vulnerability lies in its assumption that voters are primarily misinformed rather than motivated by deep-seated cultural anxieties that data alone cannot soothe. However, the verdict is clear: a nation that abandons the principles of comparative advantage and universal human dignity in favor of resentment is not just hurting itself, but leaving the world ill-equipped to handle global crises.