What Happened Behind a Photographer’s Lens on D-Day
08 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
Piercing the Atlantic Wall- D-Day [Part 3]
08 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
Through The Gates of Hell – D-Day [Part 2]
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
In Defence of Democracy – Professor Elizabeth Rata at the ACT Party Conference
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
I am not an ACT party voter. I disagree too strongly with their liberal stances on social issues, which in my opinion are at least as important as economic management.
But damn, they are tempting me to vote for them this time around. They’ve always had a much better understanding of their values and ideology than National, who have forgotten their values and see their purpose as keeping Labour out of power, but not necessarily their policies.
Their party conference was held over the weekend. One of the guest speakers was Professor Elizabeth, a sociologist of education in the School of Critical Studies, the Faculty of Education and Social Work at the University of Auckland (that’s a mouthful!). She is also infamously one of the seven signatories who sent the letter ‘In Defence of Science’ to the NZ Listener in July 2021, decrying the assessment of Maori customs as being…
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Crazies to Right – Insane Weirdos in NZ Socially-Conservative Politics
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
When Colin Craig launched the Conservative Party back in 2011, I was cautiously optimistic – maybe, finally, here was a party that could see that our societal fragmentation and lack of values was the cause of many (not all) of our problems. Boy was I wrong. Crazy Colin Craig turned out to be a monster, which was obvious even before it came out that he was a sex pest.
I never held any faith in the loonies associated with that party after that debacle. I felt it was a pity that the large minority of NZers with strong social values did not have a political home. But unfortunately, rather than winding up and letting something else take their place, people just kept trying to resurrect the very dead corpse of that party.

The first person to try to really flog the dead horse was Leighton Baker, a builder from Rangiora…
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Safe & Reliable Nuclear Power Provides Cleanest, Greenest Energy Future
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
Wind and solar generation spreads like cancer. Dilute and diffuse, intermittent and unreliable the wind and solar generators’ demand for land is insatiable. And because every single MW of wind or solar generation capacity has to be backed up by another MW of dispatchable power generation (coal, gas, diesel or hydro) to accommodate sunset and calm weather, the conventional generators will continue to occupy the space they always have.
Which brings us to nuclear. None of what appears in the paragraph above applies to nuclear power generation. Concentrated, persistent and reliable, nuclear power doesn’t need batteries and it doesn’t need backup. Moreover, it doesn’t need an endless acres of land, as Ronald Bailey explains below.
New Study: Nuclear Power Is Humanity’s Greenest Energy Option
Reason
Ronald Bailey
10 May 2023
Germany idiotically shut down its last three nuclear power plants last month. Until 2011, the country obtained one-quarter of its…
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Entitlement Collapse and Demographic Change
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
In my recent interview with John Stossel, I explained that America’s entitlement programs are unsustainable because of demographic change.
Our population pyramid is turning into a population cylinder, so there will not be enough working-age taxpayers in the future to finance all the benefits promised to the elderly. Not even close.
This inevitably and unavoidably means one or more of the following options.
- Massive tax increases.
- Massive benefits cuts.
- Massive borrowing.
- Massive money printing.
- Genuine entitlement reform.
Given those choices, entitlement reform is the only sensible path. Both for the United States and for other nations.
Some readers may think I’m exaggerating in order to push a libertarian agenda. So let’s look at some analysis from non-libertarian sources.
We’ll start with some excerpts from a recent report by the St Louse Federal Reserve Bank. Authored by
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Is the Hipkins outfit afflicted by creeping incompetence or crisis-ridden?
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
Is anyone feeling sorry for the Prime Minister? Here, confronted once more by an errant minister, he has had to use his disciplinary powers, but not to the satisfaction of Opposition parties.
Michael Wood may have been one of the more effective ministers in the current administration, though that is disputed by both National and ACT.
Certainly the failure to dispose of his holding of Auckland Airport shares while he held the Transport portfolio, though told to do so not once but six times, aroused a measure of doubt about his competency, even more so when it was subsequently revealed by the NZ Herald that he declined North Shore Aerodrome’s application for airport authority status while he owned shares in Auckland Airport, a potential competitor.
Some commentators dismiss the Wood offence as just another “bit of creeping incompetence” that Hipkins has had to deal with since he took over as…
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Invasion by Air – D-Day [Part 1]
07 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
06 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in economics of education, economics of media and culture Tags: health and safety
The Moment D-Day Was announced
06 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
HIMARS and Storm Shadow: Ukraine’s Once and Future MVPs
06 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Ukraine
Roosevelt blasted Hoover for spending and taxing too much
05 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
New Zealand along with Australia had the fastest recoveries from the great depression because they cut government spending by 20%. New Zealand even reduced its debt payments by 10%, it defaulted partially.
The article containing that quote, Great Myths of The Great Depression has been around since 1998, but it’s always good to put it in front of people repeatedly because there myths don’t die easily.
For example, Old Leftists like Chris Trotter will always bring up the First Labor Government in NZ and FDR’s New Deal in the USA for how they dealt to the Great Depression. What they don’t mention is that Great Britain and Australia had centre-right governments – even with Labour Party involvement occasionally – that did not go for all the industrial nationalisation, new types of welfare support, and most importantly, Keynesian spending. And yet they emerged from the Slump at the same speed as we or the USA did in terms of GDP recovery, dropping unemployment (both Britain and Australia) and so forth.
What’s also not mentioned is that in the USA, after all of…
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June 4, 1738: Birth of George III, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, King of Hanover
05 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
George III (June 4, 1738 – January 29, 1820) was King of Great Britain and of Ireland from October 25, 1760 until his death in 1820. The two kingdoms were in a personal union under him until the Acts of Union 1800 merged them on January 1, 1801. He then became King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. He was concurrently Duke and Prince-Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg (“Hanover”) in the Holy Roman Empire before becoming King of Hanover on October 12, 1814. He was a monarch of the House of Hanover who, unlike his two predecessors, was born in Great Britain, spoke English as his first language, and never visited Hanover.
George was born on June 4, 1738 at Norfolk House in St James’s Square, London. He was a grandson of King George II of Great Britain and the eldest son of Frederick Louis, Prince of Wales, and…
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BRIAN EASTON: What do economists do?
05 Jun 2023 Leave a comment
Steven Levitt, famous for his Freakanomics, shows that being an economist is not just mouthing supply and demand.
- Brian Easton writes –
Anyone can call themselves an ‘economist’. Many do, despite having no qualifications in economics and hardly any formal training; they often make elementary errors. That is the result of a conscious decision of the economics profession which resists barriers to exit and entry. In contrast other professions have restrictions, often for good reasons; I am glad my medical advisers are not only qualified but also registered. However, claiming to be expert on economics to contribute to the public commentary without any expertise, is confusing to those with more humble understandings.
On the other hand there are those who have a high reputation in the economics profession but who don’t seem to be really economists. Consider Steven Levitt, who has written of himself, ‘I am having trouble…
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