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Scott D. Gillette was born, raised and currently resides in New Jersey, although he has lived in other parts of the country as well. He began writing as a columnist at Arizona State University as a graduate student studying political science. This work served as an antidote to the reflexive statism and dull orthodoxy that prevails today at college campuses around the country. After his stint at graduate school, Scott served as a junior analyst at an economic consulting firm, and now is a teacher at a private high school. Scott was a self-described "Scandinavian socialist" in his youth, veered to the conservative right, and now holds an eclectic set of positions that are difficult to classify. Scott recently left the Republican Party, and is a political independent. He is first and foremost a supply-sider, because he believes that such policies hold the key for reducing and eventually ending poverty around the planet. His interests also include foreign relations, comparative politics, education, tax and monetary policy, the environment, and cultural trends. The Greatest Man You Never Heard Of The Case Against Attacking Iraq Darkest Before Dawn? The Stock Market Meltdown A Response to Mario: A Defense of the Pledge Social Entrepreneurs and Ashoka Goodbye to the GOP 5/31/2002 A World Transformed 12/10/2001 A Mission Fraught With Peril 10/15/2001 A Glorious New Century 8/9/2001 A Golden Anchor for the U.S. Economy 7/9/2001 An Introduction to the SALT and Christine O’Donnell 5/31/2001 The Art of Being W 5/7/2001 Arsenic and Saving Face 4/26/2001 Don’t Forget Juanita 4/18/2001 Deflation and the U.S. Economy 4/13/2001 An American Empire? 4/2/2001 The Unbearable Lightness of Television 3/23/2001 The Future of the Conservative Movement 3/9/2001 Do the Rich Really "Need" Lower Taxes? 3/2/2001 Scott Gillette responds to William Swann's "John McCain's good idea" The Face of Hatred - Columnist Scott Gillette interviews Matthew Hale The National Debt as the Crazy Uncle Scott Gillette is in the holiday spirit Tax Cuts: Like Father, Like Son? Scott Gillette believes the cloud of illegitimacy will linger no matter what Some Commentators Just Don't Want Republicans to Successfully Win Over Minority Voters The American Electorate Shrugs its Shoulders
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