’60 Minutes’ Makes Fake News About Humans Ruining Earth
06 Jan 2023 1 Comment
By Tim Graham ~
Chalk this up as 60 Minutes hosting the worst peddler of false knowledge since Dan Rather left the set.
CBS kicked off 2023 by touting “mass extinction” blather by Paul Ehrlich, the guy who’s been peddling radical and misanthropic eco-garbage since his book The Population Bomb in 1968.
That screed began: “The battle to feed all humanity is over. In the 1970’s the world will undergo famines–hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.”
This may qualify as the drop-dead dumbest announcement of the Sixties and should have disqualified him from the status of Expert by the end of the 1970s. But the left-wing media never tire of him. They can’t get enough of this ecological self-loathing. The human race is always a pestilence on the planet.
Pelley led off the show with Ehrlich…
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Is it racism or poverty?
05 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Glen C Loury writes about Affirmative distraction :
The United States has a problem with persisting racial inequality. It is, in part, a legacy of our ignoble past: the institution of chattel slavery and a century of unfreedom and unequal citizenship for African-Americans after emancipation. Americans have a moral imperative to redress the consequences of that past. But affirmative action isn’t the remedy for this problem. It’s a distraction.
That doesn’t mean that affirmative action should never be practiced, that it’s morally wrong, or that it can never be a suitable policy. Those are separate questions. Racial inequality is deep and abiding, showing no sign of going away, and we are a lesser nation for it. Yet while affirmative action helps to obtain an adequate representation of diverse ethnic groups at elite institutions of higher education, it imposes serious costs.
Institutionalizing the practice of preferential affirmative action when assessing…
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ACT aims to get a third of the seats in the next government
05 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Here is an edited version of an e-mail from David Seymour. A third of the seats in the next government means in practice about 16-17% of the total vote and it has reached that in polls since the 2020 election, but only when National was suffering. However, it is do-able when it’s considered that the present government’s Apartheid system is a huge issue for many voters and National under Luxon says nothing about it. The Labour and Green parties hardly need to fundraise — the government-paid Legacy Media promote their government and policies all the time. But opposition parties are going to need a big ‘war chest.’

We must deliver real change, and we need your support to deliver it.
Change means a new Government. Another three years of Jacinda Ardern just won’t work, but the reality is now much worse than that. Imagine three years with Jacinda, Chlöe…
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Air Travel Prices Have Not “Soared” Since 1980 — They’ve Been Cut in Half
05 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Winter holiday travel is notoriously frustrating. This year was especially bad if you were flying on Southwest. But that frustration about delayed and cancelled flights seems to have caused a big increase in pundits criticizing the airline industry generally. Here’s one claim I’ve seen a few times lately, that airline prices have “soared” as airlines consolidated.
Reich’s claim that there are 4 airlines today is strange — yes, there are the “Big Four” (AA, United, Delta, and Southwest), but today there are 14 mainline carriers in the US. There have been many mergers, but there has also been growth in the industry (Allegiant…
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January 4, 1649: The Rump Parliament Decides To Bring King Charles I of England to Trial.
05 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Despite defeat in the First English Civil War, King Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland retained significant political power. This allowed him to create an alliance with Scots Covenanters and Parliamentarian moderates to restore him to the English throne. The result was the 1648 Second English Civil War, in which he was defeated once again.
Charles I in Three Positions by van Dyck, 1635–36
Treaty of Newport
In September 1648, at the end of the Second English Civil War, the Long Parliament was concerned with the increasing radicalism in the New Model Army. The Long Parliament began negotiations with King Charles I via the Treaty of Newport intended to bring an end to the hostilities of the English Civil War.
The members wanted to restore the king to power, but wanted to limit the authority he had. Charles I conceded militia power, among other things, but he later…
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Zero Warming: Chilling UAH Temps December 2022
04 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
The post below updates the UAH record of air temperatures over land and ocean. But as an overview consider how recent rapid cooling completely overcame the warming from the last 3 El Ninos (1998, 2010 and 2016). The UAH record shows that the effects of the last one were gone as of April 2021, again in November 2021, and in February and June 2022 Now at year end 2022, we have again global temp anomaly matching zero warming since 1995. (UAH baseline is now 1991-2020).
For reference I added an overlay of CO2 annual concentrations as measured at Mauna Loa. While temperatures fluctuated up and down ending flat, CO2 went up steadily by ~55 ppm, a 15% increase.
Furthermore, going back to previous warmings prior to the satellite record shows that the entire rise of 0.8C since 1947 is due to oceanic, not human activity.

The animation is an update…
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Were They A Usurper? King Edward IV of England. Part I.
04 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
With the usurpation of the throne of England by Henry Bolingbroke as King Henry IV of England and Lord of Ireland this event brought instability to the Monarchy and planted the seeds for further usurpations during the period of the Wars of the Roses.
To get to the reign of King Edward IV of England we need to examine the complex genealogy of the descendants of King Edward III of England and the ancestry of King Edward IV.
The heir presumptive to childless King Richard II of England was Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, a great-grandson of King Edward III’s second surviving son, Lionel, Duke of Clarence.
Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March
Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, was born at New Forest, Westmeath, one of his family’s Irish estates, on November 6, 1391, the son of Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March, and Eleanor Holland. He had…
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Thomas à Becket?
04 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Thomas Becket (December 21, 1119 or 1120 – 29 December 29, 1170) is also known as Saint Thomas of Canterbury, Thomas of London and later Thomas à Becket.
He was an English nobleman who served as Lord Chancellor from 1155 to 1162, and then notably as Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 until his murder in 1170. He is venerated as a saint and martyr by the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion. He engaged in conflict with Henry II, King of the English, over the rights and privileges of the Church and was murdered by followers of the king in Canterbury Cathedral.
On February 21, 1173 – little more than two years after his death – he was canonised by Pope Alexander III in St Peter’s Church, Segni.
This simple blog post is about his name. When I began studying European Royalty back in the late 1970s and early…
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The Higher Education Racket, Part II
04 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
In Part I of this series, I shared a very amusing video from Bill Maher about how colleges and universities have become “luxury day-care centers.”
I then added some of my analysis to show that government subsidies – such as student loans – were the underlying problem.
Simply stated, colleges and universities increased tuition and fees so they could capture the value of the subsidies (as explained by Professor Daniel Lin back in 2012).
To make matters worse, they’ve been spending the money on more bureaucracy rather than anything that would improve educational outcomes for students (or generate spin-off benefits for the overall economy).
But “more bureaucracy” is an understatement. Here’s a sentence that I initially thought had to be satire.
But I’m not joking. This sentence comes from a jaw-dropping story about university bureaucrats trying to micro-manage student social life at Stanford University.
Here are the full details…
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The Higher Education Racket, Part I
04 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Sometimes Bill Maher, the host of Real Time on HBO, says smart things and sometimes he says not-so-smart things.
His recent monologue on the “college scam” was an example of the former. It’s almost as if he was channeling Professor Daniel Lin.
Maher makes great points about how government subsidies for higher education are a backwards form of redistribution, taking money from lower-income people and giving it to higher-income people.
And I love what he says about credentialism, where people can’t climb the job ladder without getting useless degrees like masters in education.
But his monologue wasn’t perfect. He mentioned how tuition costs have exploded, but he didn’t make the should-be-obvious connection between rising costs and government subsidies.
To be more explicit, tuition expenses have skyrocketed because colleges and universities have raised prices to capture all the extra loot politicians are dumping into the system.
Which…
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Nuclear plants face shutdown over tax on windfalls
03 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
Heysham power station [image credit: Belfast Telegraph]
The UK government is running short of electricity supply options due to net zero policies based on climate obsessions, as well as years of reluctance to believe that renewable energy is, and will always be, too erratic and unreliable. A power supply crunch is looming.
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The Telegraph reports:
Two nuclear power stations crucial to keeping Britain’s lights on risk being closed next year as a result of Jeremy Hunt’s windfall tax, their French owner warns today.
EDF, which operates all five of the country’s serving nuclear plants, said the Chancellor’s raid on power producers will make it harder to keep the ageing Heysham 1 and Hartlepool stations open as long as hoped.
It would mean the sites close in March 2024, potentially removing the “cushion” of spare capacity used by the National Grid to avoid blackouts and reducing nuclear…
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Milton Friedman on Donahue #2
03 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, economic history, economics of bureaucracy, economics of regulation, entrepreneurship, environmental economics, history of economic thought, income redistribution, labour economics, law and economics, liberalism, libertarianism, Marxist economics, Milton Friedman, Public Choice, public economics, rentseeking Tags: capitalism and freedom, The Great Enrichment
Liberal Media Made Slew Of Dubious Climate Change Claims, New Report Finds
02 Jan 2023 Leave a comment

The anti-all-things-modern propaganda goes on…and on and on. Relentlessly blaming severe weather on humans, or saying they made it worse, is silly and in any case unscientific. Why do they do it?
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The AP and other outlets made dodgy claims about climate change in 2022, with the AP getting over $8 million from activist groups to do it, says Climate Change Dispatch.
The “Climate Fact Check 2022″ report (pdf), presented by the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), the Heartland Institute, the Energy & Environmental Legal Institute, the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), and the International Climate Science Coalition (ICSC), stated that “climate alarmists” and members of the media engaged in claims about the relationship between man-made emissions and natural disasters, claims that clashed with “reality and science.”
In February, the Associated Press admitted that they would assign more than 24 journalists across the…
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