What Happens if a Cemetery Goes Under?
24 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
Basque – A Language of Mystery
24 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture Tags: economics of languages, Spain
Don’t Be PC. Be Polite.
20 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture Tags: political correctness
Why Doesn’t the Queen of England Need a Passport?
20 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
Life on Tristan da Cunha – the World’s Most Remote Inhabited Island
19 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
Why conspiracy theories are rational to believe Cass Sunstein
17 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture Tags: cognitive psychology, conspiracy theories, political psychology
10 Common Mistakes That Native English Speakers Make
16 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture Tags: economics of languages
Filipino – The National Language of the Philippines (Tagalog)
15 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in development economics, economics of media and culture Tags: economics of languages, The Philippines
Top 10 Seemingly INNOCENT Things That Reveal Shocking Amounts of Information About YOU
15 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture Tags: economics of privacy
Swing dancing started in Harlem, New York and then swept the country.
14 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
My car operation skills are becoming obsolete in modern cars
14 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture, transport economics
I first noticed this when I could not find the break in an SUV I rented through an upgrade. It was an electronic brake hidden down the side which took quite some time to find especially after a long international flight arriving after midnight.
Next were the headlights. No longer were they set in the way they were for at least 100 years.
This late model Corolla decided to let the driver decide the angle of the headlights. I did not know this for quite some time until I came across the switch by accident. Up until then my headlights in the previous times I rented this model of car were pointing downwards rather than in a safe direction outwards. I have no idea why this ability to vary the direction of your lights is a safety measure.
The next problem I had was driving around the car rental garage at Auckland airport with the lights of the car on in the middle of the day. I could not work out how to turn them off. I had to go back to the office to discover that the lights come on automatically in doll lighting. I did not know that. I just thought it was a fault that was going to run the battery flat.
These days, cars do not even have keys. I had to go back to the office and ask for the key because the key ring they gave me did not have a key. No one told me why they needed to switch from keys to buttons to turn on cars.

Why are the Dutch so tall?
13 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture, health economics
A Tax on the Poor The Lotto and the Surprisingly Common Sad Aftermath of Winning
13 Jun 2017 Leave a comment
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