Percentage of American Adults 18+ Device Ownership…01.09.13

The rate of diffusion of tablets and e-readers was extraordinary by historical standards

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Apparently, some Americans still have dial-up

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Rules For Climate Radicals

Tony Heller's avatarReal Climate Science

  1. Refuse to believe any historical Arctic ice data which is not from satellites
  2. Ignore any Antarctic sea ice data which is from satellites
  3. Refuse to believe any temperature data which is from satellites
  4. Arctic air is very warm, until it comes to the US, where it becomes very cold
  5. Any cold location is weather.
  6. Any warm location is climate

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India’s Amazing No-Show Civil Servant Wins Membership in the Bureaucrat Hall of Fame

Dan Mitchell's avatarInternational Liberty

I’m impressed, in a dark and gloomy way.

I thought the Italian healthcare official who showed up for work only 15 days in a nine-year period set the record for bureaucratic loafing.

Based on longevity of laxity, he definitely out-did the San Francisco paper pusher who didn’t work at all in 2012 yet still got paid $333,000.

And while it’s remarkable that a New Jersey bureaucrat simultaneously got paid for six different jobs, he presumably actually went to work every day.

But all these bureaucrats will probably be ashamed to learn that one of their counterparts in India makes the rest of them seem like workaholics.

Here are some excerpts from a report in England’s Daily Telegraph.

Even in India, where government jobs are considered to be for life, A.K. Verma was pushing it. Verma, an executive engineer at the Central Public Works Department, was fired after…

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Team Science and the Creative Genius

Peter G. Klein's avatarOrganizations and Markets

| Peter Klein |

Turing1_jpg_600x639_q85We’ve addressed the widely held, but largely mistaken, view of creative artists and entrepreneurs as auteurs, isolated and misunderstood, fighting the establishment and bucking the conventional wisdom. In the more typical case, the creative genius is part of a collaborative team and takes full advantage of the division of labor. After all, is our ability to cooperate through voluntary exchange, in line with comparative advantage, that distinguishes us from the animals.

Christian Caryl’s New Yorkerreview of The Imitation Game makes a similar point about Alan Turing. The film’s portrayal of Turing (played by Benedict Cumberbatch) “conforms to the familiar stereotype of the otherworldly nerd: he’s the kind of guy who doesn’t even understand an invitation to lunch. This places him at odds not only with the other codebreakers in his unit, but also, equally predictably, positions him as a natural rebel.” In fact, Turing was funny…

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Obamanomics: slowest jobs recovery in 50 years

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Terence Corcoran: Stop yelling ‘Monopoly!’ in a competitive world

US energy generation by source

fuel source lines

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Philip Cross: And the Worst Book of the Year prize goes to . . . Naomi Klein

The iPhone was revealed eight years ago today — look how terrible the first one was

A challenge for anti-vaxxers!

Thomas Sowell on the changing social standing of achievements of others

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Blasphemy and Freedom of Speech

Unknown's avatarJONATHAN TURLEY

By Mike Appleton, Weekend Contributor

“The law knows no heresy, and is committed to the support of no dogma, the establishment of no sect.”

-Watson v. Jones, 80 U.S. 679, 728 (1872)

In November of 1950 an Italian film directed by Roberto Rossellini entitled “L’Amore” opened in New York City with English subtitles. The film was an anthology of three stories, one of which, “The Miracle,” told the tale of an emotionally troubled peasant girl who is impregnated by a transient and believes that she is giving birth to Jesus. The film was voted best foreign language film by the New York Film Critics’ Circle. It was also condemned by the Catholic Legion of Decency as “a sacrilegious and blasphemous mockery of Christian religious truth.” Francis Cardinal Spellman, the powerful archbishop of New York, insisted that the film demonstrated a need for stronger censorship laws. Within a few months the…

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Noah Smith wouldn’t have his fantasies about the right-wing politics of economists if he had been job-hunting in the mid-1980s and the 1990s

Noah Smith somehow persuaded himself that the economics profession is moving to the left after a period on the right. There is ample evidence to show that the economists who make up the economics profession were never right-wingers. To be specific, Smith says in his recent op-ed that:

A lot of people see economics as a “conservative science” that makes up unrealistic theories in order to push a free-market agenda. I don’t know if that was ever true — maybe in the 1970s? — but if so, those days are long gone.

And that

Back in the 1970s, the public face of economics was Milton Friedman. A consummate public intellectual, Friedman would travel around the country giving lectures about the power of free markets and the virtues of capitalism. Just search YouTube and you can easily see highlight reels of Friedman smacking down socialists and idealistic leftist youths. He inspired a generation of bright young conservatives to go into economics. And before Friedman, there was Friedrich Hayek, whose tirade against Keynesian government intervention is still revered by many on the right.

Noah Smith received his PhD in economics from the University of Michigan, graduating in 2012. He is a blogger, professor and writer for Bloomberg view.

It is well known, and easy to locate on the web, a large number of papers showing that the average economist is a moderate Democrat and has been so for the several decades since these surveys and other research has been undertaken. The cleverest of these cross-tab voter registrations with faculty homepages.

For example, Dan Klein showed that for Stanford, an overall Democrat: Republican ratio was 7.6:1. Indeed, registered Democrats easily outnumber registered Republicans in most economics departments in the USA. The registered Democrat to Republican ratio in sociology departments is 44:1! For the humanities overall, only 10 to 1. As people register for vote in the USA and political donations are a public record, it’s relatively easy to find out their political bias.


Little wonder that Dan Klein titled one of his papers “Is there a free-market economist in the house” in which he said:

We find that about 8 percent of AEA members can be considered supporters of free-market principles, and that less than 3 percent may be called strong supporters. The data are broken down by voting behaviour (Democratic or Republican). Even the average Republican AEA member is “middle-of-the-road,” not free-market.

The Bush administration was populated by new Keynesian macroeconomists. Indeed, there are so few leading economists who are Republicans, especially in the macroeconomics field, that it was difficult for President Bush to recruit a chairman of his Council of Economic Advisers that was of high standing in the profession as a macroeconomist.

As for Milton Friedman been the spokesman for the economics profession in the 1970s, I wish he had been. It would have made my job hunting a lot easier in the 1980s and 1990s in Canberra.

Mentioning Milton Friedman’s name in the mid-1980s at job interviews in Canberra would have been extremely career limiting. Not much better in the early 1990s.

Back in the 1980s, Milton Friedman was just graduating from being ‘a wild man in the wings’ to just a suspicious character in policy circles.

If you name dropped Hayek in the 1980s and 1990s, any sign of name recognition would have indicated that you were been interviewed by educated people.

I know from first-hand experience working in the economic division of the Prime Minister’s Department that Friedman certainly had no influence on macroeconomic policy in Australia in the late 1980s. The economists in the monetary policy section have great difficulty even describing what Friedman stood for in terms of monetary policy.

I wrote two papers in 1995 for the then Industry Commission in Canberra on merger and price control policy. I was required by the deputy chairman (and the champion of my paper) to delete all of my references to Richard Posner and Robert Bork because they were too contentious. They were merely Chicago school of anti-trust economics.

As I mentioned at the start, Noah Smith completed his Ph.D. in 2012. I put his ignorance of the left-wing bias of the economics profession down to his youth and inexperience.

 

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