Everyday Freedom
Designing the Framework for a Flourishing Society
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Henry Miller, High Impact Partnering
hmiller@highimpactpartnering.com
(917) 921-8034
There’s a glaring vacuum in the 2024 political debate—no party or candidate offers a governing vision that deals with the root causes of alienation and failure. Something basic is missing in our culture. Americans know it. Nothing much works as it should. Simple daily choices seem impossible, or fraught with peril. In the workplace, we walk on eggshells. Big projects—say, modernizing infrastructure—get stalled in years of review. Endemic social problems such as homelessness become, well, more endemic.
Everyday Freedom pinpoints the source of powerlessness that is fraying American culture and causing public failure, and offers a bold vision of simpler governing frameworks to re-empower Americans in their daily choices. “Everyday Freedom shows us how to break out of the spiral of decreasing trust, confidence, and capability,” social psychologist Jonathan Haidt concludes, “and re-invigorate our institutions, our governments, and ourselves.”
Everyday Freedom diagnoses our collective futility as resulting from a deliberate change in governing philosophy: The assault on authority after the 1960s, aimed at enhancing freedom, instead created a plague of powerlessness. The teacher in the classroom, the principal in a school, the nurse in the hospital, the official in Washington, the parent on a field trip, the head of a local charity or church…all have their hands tied. Things don’t work, and Americans have lost the freedom to be themselves. That’s the main reason America is in a downward spiral of alienation and extremism.
Who has a vision to revive hope and action? Not political leaders, who are picking the scab of resentment. Social media gets rich selling distrust. Stop the Steal! Defund the Police! Everyday Freedom, in the tradition of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense, offers a radical vision for change: Re-empower Americans in their everyday choices. The massive legal structures erected since the 1960s were based on flawed notions that human judgment could be replaced by elaborate dictates. Area by area, these failed structures must be replaced with simpler frameworks activated by human responsibility and accountability. Nothing will work sensibly until Americans are free to draw on their skills, intuitions and values when confronting daily challenges. This is the only cure to alienation. This is also the only way to deliver good government.
Philip Howard’s understanding of the essential role of human agency has been embraced by some of America’s leading economists, jurists, social psychologists and philosophers.
Everyday Freedom was published by Rodin Books on January 24, 2023. Read their press release here.
Selected Coverage
Mitch Daniels, "Attention, Elon Musk: Here’s a Blind Spot in Measuring Government Efficiency," The Washington Post, November 25, 2024
Quin Hillyer, "Musk and Ramaswamy Face Big Hurdles, But Their Aims Are Right," Washington Examiner, November 13, 2024
Joe Klein, "And Now?," Sanity Clause, November 8, 2024
Bret Stephens, "To Whom It May Concern," The New York Times, November 5, 2024
Quin Hillyer, “Four Issues the Candidates Are Ignoring,” Washington Examiner, September 16, 2024
Stephen B. Presser, “Son of Tocqueville, Socrates, and Holmes,” Chronicles, September 2024
unSILOed podcast, “The Pains of Legal Micromanagement,” August 5, 2024 (interview by Greg LaBlanc)
Center for Revitalizing American Institutions / Hoover Institution, “Institutional Breakdown a Product of Endless, Burdensome Rulemaking: Philip K. Howard,” July 8, 2024
Reasonably Speaking podcast (The American Law Institute), “Empowering Everyday Choices: A Conversation on Philip Howard's ‘Everyday Freedom’,” July 1 (interview by David F. Levi, and in conversation with Judge Edith Jones and Nicholas Bagley)
Night Owls podcast, “Common Sense Comes to ‘Night Owls’,” June 17, 2024 (interview by Joe Klein and John Ellis)
Philip K. Howard, “A Perpetual Process Machine,” News Items, May 9, 2024
Peter Berkowitz, “Philip Howard Aims To Enhance Freedom by Restoring Authority,” RealClear Politics, April 21, 2024
Future Hindsight podcast, “Everyday Freedom: Philip K. Howard,” April 18, 2024 (interview by Mila Atmos)
Robert M. Whaples, “Everyday Freedom,” The Independent Review, Spring 2024
Michael Barone, “A Fail-safe Society Is Sure to Fail,” Washington Examiner, April 10, 2024
Frankly Fukuyama (YouTube series), “Why Freedom Needs Authority: An Interview with Philip K. Howard,” American Purpose, April 6, 2024 (interview by Francis Fukuyama)
John Ketcham, “Ready for Freedom?,” City Journal, April 5, 2024
Jamie MacGuire, “Everyday Freedom: A Conversation with Philip K. Howard,” Quest, April 2024
FEDtalk, “Executive Power Over Employees,” April 4 (interview by Natalia Castro and Jason Briefel)
WBUR / On Point, “Has the United States lost its 'can-do' attitude?” March 29, 2024 (interview by Meghna Chakrabarti)
Donald Devine, “Promoting Everyday Freedom Requires Rewriting the Rule Books,” The American Spectator, March 29, 2024
Theodore L. Leonhardt, “Everyday Freedom,” American Purpose, March 27, 2024
Philip K. Howard, “Are Americans free to do what’s right and sensible?” The Orange County Register, March 24, 2024 (Everyday Freedom excerpt)
Philip K. Howard, “The Centrist Majority of Voters Want Government Overhaul,” Newsweek, March 21, 2024
Jonathan Leaf, “Rediscovering Our Everyday Freedom,” First Things, March 21, 2024
Frank Barry, “San Francisco Gets Tough to Save Liberalism,” Bloomberg, March 17, 2024
Stephen Wunderli, “The Utah Model: How One State Leads the Way on Faith, Family, and Friendship,” Washington Examiner, March 14, 2024
Eugene Steuerle, “Systematic Ways To Reduce Government Inefficiency And Complexity,” The Government We Deserve, March 14, 2024
R.R. Reno, “Everyday Freedom,” First Things, April 2024
Kevin R. Kosar, “Our Nanny State and the Loss of Everyday Freedom,” The Hill, March 12, 2024
Joe Klein, “On Miracles and Conspiracy Theories,” Sanity Clause, March 11, 2024
Francis Fukuyama, “Seeking Authority Rather Than Authoritarians,” American Purpose, March 11, 2024
Philip K. Howard, “Letting Leaders Lead,” American Purpose, March 8, 2024
Barton Swaim, “Politics: ‘The Primary Solution’ by Nick Troiano; Plus ‘Everyday Freedom’ by Philip K. Howard,” The Wall Street Journal, March 1, 2024
The Wall Street Journal, “17 Books We Read This Week,” March 1, 2024
Dean Kehler, “How to Restore Everyday Freedom in America,” GoLocalProv Business, February 28, 2024
Dirty Moderate podcast, February 23, 2024 (interview by Adam Epstein)
Philip K. Howard, “A Restoration of Vitality to American Institutions,” Law & Liberty, February 21, 2024
Casey Chalk, “Regaining Mutual Trust in a Suspicious World,” Acton Institute, February 21, 2024
C-SPAN / Book TV, “Everyday Freedom,” February 18, 2024 (interview by Charlotte Howard)
Lou Zickar, “Everyday Freedom,” The Ripon Forum, February 2024
David Lewis Schaefer, “How Self-Invented Rights Undermine the Common Good,” Law & Liberty, February 12, 2024
Roger Berkowitz, “Our Crisis of Disempowerment,” Amor Mundi (Hannah Arendt Center), January 27, 2024
Philip K. Howard, “Everyday Freedom,” News Items, January 25, 2024
Acton Line podcast, “How to Experience Everyday Freedom,” January 24, 2024 (interview by Dan Hugger)
Serve to Lead podcast, January 19, 2024 (interview by James Strock)
Maddalena Maltese, “‘American Brokenness’ and Resentment Made Trump Win the Iowa Caucus,” La Voce di New York, January 18, 2024
Adrian Wooldridge, “The UK Post Office Scandal Is a Cautionary Global Tale,” Bloomberg, January 17, 2024
Lenore Skenazy, “Toronto Bans Tobogganing on 45 Hills, Puts Up Warning Signs,” Reason, January 16, 2024
Gruppo Esponenti Italiani, “GEI Lunch with Philip K Howard About the US Elections,” January 16, 2024 (interview by Mario Platero)
Will Marshall, “Beyond Partisan Deadlock, There’s a Nation in Search of ‘Can Do’ Democracy,” The Hill, January 12, 2024
Mary Williams Walsh, “Everyday Freedom,” News Items, January 2, 2024
Robert Whitcomb, “Advance Their Feeling of Agency,” GoLocalProv News, December 31, 2023
Tyler Cowen, “Everyday Freedom,” Marginal Revolution, November 30, 2023
Advance Praise
Everyday Freedom offers a master class in consequences of lost agency. Agency not only promotes freedom, but its deprivation through policies and regulations saps civil vitality. Politicians’ inattentiveness to the problem stokes alienation and populism. Re-empowering individuals can produce a can-do, let ‘er rip economy of opportunity and flourishing. We’ve corrected such “system failure” before, and Howard provides a roadmap for doing so again. The book is a must read for any student of what ails this society—that is, all of us.
GLENN HUBBARD — Russell L. Carson Professor of Economics and Finance, Columbia University, and former chair, White House Council of Economic Advisers
In this insightful book, Philip Howard shows why an economy where people can flourish requires a legal framework permitting individuals to use their judgment and initiative, and how this self-expression is a cornerstone of societal progress.
EDMUND PHELPS — Recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Economics, McVickar Professor Emeritus of Political Economy and Director of the Center on Capitalism and Society, Columbia University
America is in a self-reinforcing spiral of decreasing trust, confidence, and capability. Philip Howard has been warning us about it for 15 years, and in Everyday Freedom he shows us how to break out of it and re-invigorate our institutions, our governments, and ourselves. This short, clear, passionate book shows how we can create an upward spiral of freedom, wisdom, and success.
JONATHAN HAIDT — Thomas Cooley Professor of Ethical Leadership, New York University—Stern School of Business, author of The Righteous Mind, co-author of The Coddling of the American Mind
Everyday Freedom is the most powerful, incisive critique of modern governance we have seen in a generation. Howard's razor-sharp analysis cuts through legal complexity to reveal a clear path to American rejuvenation: simplifying the bureaucratic maze that binds our ingenuity. This is an urgent, necessary read for all who are committed to re-empowering individuals and restoring the vibrant spirit that defines our nation.
JENNIFER BRICK MURTAZASHVILI — Founding Director of the Center for Governance and Markets and Professor at the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh
Philip K. Howard’s slim Everyday Freedom is a hefty addition to the literature of freedom. While debates rage over freedom of speech, Howard is concerned with freedom of doing. That is the freedom to use one’s knowledge, experience, and intuition to act effectively in the circumstances at hand—in leading a classroom, patrolling a neighborhood, managing a business, fixing a bridge, helping a stranger. Human agency in such practical endeavors is being smothered because judges and bureaucrats are neglecting their own capacities for moral judgement. Howard recognizes that the problem is deeply embedded in modern culture. But he argues convincingly that the first, feasible step for restoring everyday freedom is for our institutions and their leaders to reassert their authority and accountability for the common good.
CHRISTOPHER DEMUTH — Distinguished Fellow, Simon Center for American Studies, Heritage Foundation, and former president, American Enterprise Institute
Phillip Howard’s powerful new book is a cri de coeur about the decay of “everyday freedom” in America. Howard shows how the rights revolution of the 1960’s designed to expand individual freedom by limiting institutional authority instead ushered in a daily regime of paralyzing red tape, sign-here forms, and rigid protocols that not only waste our time, but worse, deprive us of personal agency. Teachers hesitate to hug a hurt child, doctors order batteries of tests in cases where they know they’re irrelevant adding to medical costs and crowding, civil projects that should take a few months drown in a sea of agency permits. Also lost in all of this is America’s legendary can-do spirit and pragmatism, not to mention citizens’ personal satisfaction in “getting stuff done.” If you want to understand the sense of futility and mistrust that corrodes so much of American life these days, Everyday Freedom is essential reading. This is an important book.
KAY HYMOWITZ — William E. Simon Fellow, Manhattan Institute
Philip K. Howard is astutely careful in his beautiful case for everyday freedom and the architecture of everyday freedom. His argument is at the core of today's grand debates about basic rights and responsibilities. This is an essential read that touches on major issues that deserve immediate action.
PAUL C. LIGHT — Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service at NYU, and a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution
This book is a call to action for progressives and conservatives to develop a new legal framework within protected freedom. Philip Howard focuses on the values of self-reliance, individual responsibility, pragmatism and loyalty to the greater good, to restore trust in our modern society. He has written a groundbreaking and compelling case for reform, required reading in every civics course.
PETER PAZZAGLINI — Senior Scholar, Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia University
Americans created a Constitution to “secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity.” But as Philip Howard shows, those blessings are increasingly burdened by erratic government, angry partisanship, and the corrosive cultural malaise that inevitably follows. Everyday Freedom is an eloquent and thoughtful call to reignite the American spirit by reinvigorating our constitutional and cultural institutions.
ADAM J. WHITE — Co-Director, C. Boyden Gray Center for the Study of the Administrative State at Scalia Law School, and Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
In Everyday Freedom, Philip Howard…rightly sees that in our efforts to eliminate human bias and error we have created new self-propagating barriers to efficiency and equity. As we stand at the brink of the Age of AI with its promises of algorithms that will replace human decision-making, this may be the most important book you read this year.
PHILIP BOBBIT — Herbert Wechsler Professor of Federal Jurisprudence, Columbia Law School
Interviews
unSILOed podcast, “The Pains of Legal Micromanagement,” August 5, 2024 (interview by Greg LaBlanc)
Reasonably Speaking podcast (The American Law Institute), “Empowering Everyday Choices: A Conversation on Philip Howard's ‘Everyday Freedom’,” July 1 (interview by David F. Levi, and in conversation with Judge Edith Jones and Nicholas Bagley)
Night Owls podcast, “Common Sense Comes to ‘Night Owls’,” June 17, 2024 (interview by Joe Klein and John Ellis)
Future Hindsight podcast, “Everyday Freedom: Philip K. Howard,” April 18, 2024 (interview by Mila Atmos)
Frankly Fukuyama (YouTube series), “Why Freedom Needs Authority: An Interview with Philip K. Howard,” American Purpose, April 6, 2024 (interview by Francis Fukuyama)
Jamie MacGuire, “Everyday Freedom: A Conversation with Philip K. Howard,” Quest, April 2024 (pp. 68-69)
FEDtalk, “Executive Power Over Employees,” April 4 (interview by Natalia Castro and Jason Briefel)
WBUR / On Point, “Has the United States lost its 'can-do' attitude?,” March 29, 2024 (interview by Meghna Chakrabarti)
Dirty Moderate podcast, February 23, 2024 (interview by Adam Epstein)
C-SPAN / Book TV, “Everyday Freedom,” February 18, 2024 (interview by Charlotte Howard)
Acton Line podcast, “How to Experience Everyday Freedom,” January 24, 2024 (interview by Dan Hugger)
Serve to Lead podcast, January 19, 2024 (interview by James Strock)
Adrian Wooldridge, “The UK Post Office Scandal Is a Cautionary Global Tale,” Bloomberg, January 17, 2024
Gruppo Esponenti Italiani, “GEI Lunch with Philip K Howard About the US Elections,” January 16, 2024 (interview by Mario Platero)
Mary Williams Walsh, “Everyday Freedom,” News Items, January 2, 2024