The Three Reasons the Russia-Ukraine War Hasn’t Ended
06 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Ukraine
Money For Nothing: Europe Squandered $Trillions On Weather-Dependent Part Time Power
05 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Despite Europe spending €1.2 Trillion on large-scale wind and solar generation, the amount of power being actually delivered in return is risible.
Which is precisely what you’d expect from power generation sources which can only deliver anything like their nameplate capacity when the sun is up, in a cloudless sky, and the wind is blowing at wind speeds greater than 6m/s. Drop the sun drops the wind speed and the whole lot drops off the radar.
For the uninitiated, Ed Hoskins tells the story in pictures below.
A Few Graphs Say It All for Weather-Dependent “Renewables”
Watts Up With That?
Ed Hoskins
5 October 2022
A few graphs say it all for Wind and Solar power
This is the 10-year productivity record for European Weather-Dependent “Renewables”: that is the annual power output divided by the nominal installation rating of the Weather-Dependent “Renewables” installations over the last decade. The data is…
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Why the Bank of England was right to raise rates
05 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Many people have been baffled by the Bank of England’s decision to raise interest rates by a historically large three-quarters of a point this week, despite forecasting that the UK economy is sliding into recession. I understand this confusion, but there are three reasons why rates had to be increased.
First, the job of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is to worry about inflation, not growth. Some might like to change the MPC’s mandate, but for now it is tasked with keeping inflation at 2%. Currently inflation is over 10%, and forecast to remain high. With inflation now having spread well beyond food and energy prices, the MPC needed to act to prevent a temporary inflation shock from becoming permanent.
Second, the starting point is important. Even after the latest increase, UK interest rates of 3% remain historically low, and are firmly negative in real terms (after allowing for inflation)…
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The Third Battle of the Isonzo – French Despair On The Western Front I THE GREAT WAR Week 67
05 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
Was the B-29 Superfortress a Failure?
05 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War II
Here’s a banana for those who don’t want to eat anything modified by humans
05 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
in health economics Tags: anti-GMO movement

Fifth time’s a charm?
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Israel has had five elections in just three years.
It’s this sort of thing that has often led dictators and mere authoritarians to sneer at democracy because it’s so unstable and messy.
Moreover, this involved a candidate for Prime Minister who is currently facing trial on charges of “corruption,” former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
And he’s won – again – and unlike the previous four elections it seems this one was decisive:
A resounding victory for opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu and his bloc of right-wing, far-right and religious parties, a result that would end a political crisis that has seen five general elections held in under four years.
…
Israel has been rocked by political turmoil since a Netanyahu-led government fell apart in late 2018. Two rounds of elections, in April 2019 and September 2019, failed to yield a winner, and a short-lived unity government formed after the…
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‘Green’ Fraud: Wind & Solar ‘Transition’ Devouring The Planet’s Scarce Resources
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Rent-seekers and the MSM keep telling us the transition to an all-wind and sun-powered future is not only inevitable, it’s a cinch.
The power pricing and supply calamity playing out in renewables-obsessed Germany and Britain stands as a pretty fair counterpoint, to that nonsense.
Then, we’re told, it can all be done, provided it’s “done right”; which, in doublespeak, means more of precisely the same; even more $billions in subsidies gifted to crony capitalists, offering nothing but even more hopelessly intermittent wind and solar, in return.
Call it scaling up on an avoidable calamity, or doubling down on an inevitable disaster.
What’s overlooked in their starry-eyed and far-reaching promises about a ‘green’ Utopia, is the volume of mineral and other resources required to get there.
Every wind turbine and solar panel is the product of scarce resources, and not just the rare stuff mined by 9-year-olds in the Congo.
As…
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Inside Russia’s “Escalate to Deescalate” Strategy
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Atomic weapons, Ukraine
The IMF, the Laffer Curve, and Supply-Side Economics
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
The Laffer Curve is a very straightforward concept.
It graphically illustrates why politicians are wrong if they think you can double tax revenue by doubling tax rates (or that revenues will drop by 50 percent
if tax rates are cut in half).
Simply stated, you also have to look at what happens to taxable income.
In cases where taxpayers have a lot of control over the timing, level, and composition of their income, changes in tax rates may cause big changes in taxable income (or “tax base” in the jargon of economists).
None of this should be controversial. Even Paul Krugman agrees that the Laffer Curve exists.
Today, we are going to see that the pro-tax International Monetary Fund also admits there is a Laffer Curve.
Indeed, a new study authored by David Amaglobeli, Valerio Crispolti, and Xuguang Simon Sheng openly states that politicians should be…
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ACT beats Hipkins to the draw in announcing changes to our gun licensing laws
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Buzz from the Beehive
Uh, oh. Earlier this afternoon there was nothing doing in the Beehive. Or rather, there was nothing doing that they wanted to tell us about.
We therefore drew a blank when we checked the Beehive website to find what our servants are up to.
Nor (when we checked with Scoop) could we find anything new from the Nats or the Greens, although the Nats since then have posted a statement on the rising expense of hiring government consultants.
ACT was given a free kick, in effect, and scored with three statements.
First, ACT’s Firearms Reform spokesperson Nicole McKee was braying that relentless pressure from her party has resulted in the Government making much-needed changes to firearms licensing.
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The Notwithstanding Clause Strikes Again!
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Another moral panic against the Notwithstanding Clause has broken out and gripped the salons and cafes of Toronto in a repeat of the previous Panic of 2018; Andrew Coyne outed himself yesterday as the Geraldo Rivera of this second wave.
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Some Parts of the Constitution Are More Constitutional Than Others
04 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
Introduction
The constitution cannot be unconstitutional. It follows therefore that one part of the constitution cannot be used to strike down or nullify another part of the constitution. This tautology, fittingly, sounds very obvious and simple – yet it still bears repeating with respect to the Constitution of Canada, a confounding Cherub (like that in the Book of Ezekiel) composed of disparate, even contradictory, parts that ought not fit together yet must fit together and reconcile with one another.
On 10 September 2018, Justice Belobaba of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice struck down the provisions of the Better Local Government Act reducing the size of Toronto City Council by half and using the federal and provincial electoral districts as the basis for the City of Toronto’s new wards, as unconstitutional; Premier Ford, in turn, announced that the government will introduce a bill re-acting these provisions under the Notwithstanding Clause…
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No Defence: Chaotic Wind & Solar Prime Culprits For Massive Retail Power Price Hikes
03 Nov 2022 Leave a comment
The insane cost of the wind and solar ‘transition’ is starting to bite; the wind and sun cult are struggling to shift the blame. While Vlad Putin may be a seriously thuggish dictator, he can’t seriously be held responsible for rocketing power prices in the UK, Europe and Australia, where power prices have been surging northwards for years, and long before the Russians stormed their way across Ukraine.
No, the answer in each case lies much closer to home and rests with the lunacy of attempting to run first world economies on sunshine and breezes.
The Australian’s Nick Cater is, as usual, on the money with this article, albeit that he confuses efficient to operate combined cycle gas turbines with highly inefficient open cycle gas turbines, a minor error that we resolve below.
Labor could pay the ultimate price from electricity shock
The Australian
Nick Cater
30 October 2022
The…
View original post 1,296 more words






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