If you see political appointees as something that’s the opposite of bureaucracy, Robert Moses wasn’t a bureaucrat and most of the intransparent decision making in the EU isn’t done by bureaucrats either.
I think both of those would be seen by Weyl as bureaucratic, thus I think your article isn’t touching the disagreement.
If you see political appointees as something that’s the opposite of bureaucracy, Robert Moses wasn’t a bureaucrat and most of the intransparent decision making in the EU isn’t done by bureaucrats either.
I think both of those would be seen by Weyl as bureaucratic, thus I think your article isn’t touching the disagreement.