Difference between revisions of "Madsen Pirie"

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Following this Dr Pirie moved to the United States where he worked for the [[House of Representatives]] in Washington DC, and was Distinguished Visiting Professor of Logic and Philosophy at [[Hillsdale College]] in Michigan.
 
Following this Dr Pirie moved to the United States where he worked for the [[House of Representatives]] in Washington DC, and was Distinguished Visiting Professor of Logic and Philosophy at [[Hillsdale College]] in Michigan.
  
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==Architect of Privatisation==
 
At the Institute, Pirie was part of the team which pioneered privatisation and the extension of the market. His work in helping to develop the [[Citizen's Charter]] led to his appointment to the [[Prime Minister's Advisory Panel]] from 1991-1995.
 
At the Institute, Pirie was part of the team which pioneered privatisation and the extension of the market. His work in helping to develop the [[Citizen's Charter]] led to his appointment to the [[Prime Minister's Advisory Panel]] from 1991-1995.
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:Dr Madsen Pirie invited me out once, in about 1982: "Come and meet the next Prime Minister". The other guest was an obscure East Anglian backbencher convinced, from the number of electric mains being set up for industrial estates in his constituency, that that recession was coming to an end. Though, as the MP - a Mr John Major - said, they tended to be slightly ahead of the national trend in Huntingdon.
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:Respect for the prophet Pirie has to be very high. And if the same prophet is to be found writing in the Spectator that [[John Major]] has been a better free-marketeer than [[Margaret Thatcher|Thatcher]], willing to privatise the [[Royal Mail]] about which she was royalistically sentimental, one should respond with respect. The same Madsen Pirie did also say in 1981 that the Tories would win the next election and the one after that. In the debris of the 14 city riots which networked out of Brixton, this was a distinctly eccentric view. Madsen Pirie was widely deemed an eccentric, if lovable, person. "That fruitcake,"said [[Chris Patten]], not unkindly, though Pirie was hurt and long remembered the remark very personally.
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:Subsequently, as co-director of the Adam Smith Institute and co-ordinator of the [[Omega project]], he made as large a contribution as anyone has to the underlying thinking of the Conservative governments which have ruled us. The Dr Pirie who prizes Major as a privatiser has himself stood in relation to the public sector like Alaric to the Central European plain. Airports, energy, post office, rail: you name it, he has called for its privatisation when the idea seemed absurd to Conservatives. {{ref|Pearce}}
  
 
==Publications==
 
==Publications==

Revision as of 15:52, 30 November 2006

Dr (Duncan) Madsen Pirie is President of the Adam Smith Institute, and was one of the Institute's three founders in 1977.

Pirie is a graduate of the universities of Edinburgh, St Andrews and Pembroke College Cambridge.

Following this Dr Pirie moved to the United States where he worked for the House of Representatives in Washington DC, and was Distinguished Visiting Professor of Logic and Philosophy at Hillsdale College in Michigan.

Architect of Privatisation

At the Institute, Pirie was part of the team which pioneered privatisation and the extension of the market. His work in helping to develop the Citizen's Charter led to his appointment to the Prime Minister's Advisory Panel from 1991-1995.

Dr Madsen Pirie invited me out once, in about 1982: "Come and meet the next Prime Minister". The other guest was an obscure East Anglian backbencher convinced, from the number of electric mains being set up for industrial estates in his constituency, that that recession was coming to an end. Though, as the MP - a Mr John Major - said, they tended to be slightly ahead of the national trend in Huntingdon.
Respect for the prophet Pirie has to be very high. And if the same prophet is to be found writing in the Spectator that John Major has been a better free-marketeer than Thatcher, willing to privatise the Royal Mail about which she was royalistically sentimental, one should respond with respect. The same Madsen Pirie did also say in 1981 that the Tories would win the next election and the one after that. In the debris of the 14 city riots which networked out of Brixton, this was a distinctly eccentric view. Madsen Pirie was widely deemed an eccentric, if lovable, person. "That fruitcake,"said Chris Patten, not unkindly, though Pirie was hurt and long remembered the remark very personally.
Subsequently, as co-director of the Adam Smith Institute and co-ordinator of the Omega project, he made as large a contribution as anyone has to the underlying thinking of the Conservative governments which have ruled us. The Dr Pirie who prizes Major as a privatiser has himself stood in relation to the public sector like Alaric to the Central European plain. Airports, energy, post office, rail: you name it, he has called for its privatisation when the idea seemed absurd to Conservatives. [1]

Publications

Pirie is author of several books including "How to Win Every Argument", "The Book of the Fallacy", "Micropolitics", "Privatisation in Theory and Practice" and "Blueprint for a Revolution". With his colleague Dr. Eamonn Butler, he has co- authored a series of books on IQ, including "The Sherlock Holmes IQ Book".

External links

References

  1. ^ Ed Pearce 'The prophet of private profit' Dr Madsen Pirie is a head of the Adam Smith Institute, and a passionate advocate of a free market in practically everything. Yet Guardian readers might still like the man, Guardian Unlimited, Monday April 19, 1993.