Daily Torment: Plaintiffs in Wind Turbine Noise Nuisance Case Give Damning Evidence
19 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
Anyone telling you that wind turbine noise isn’t soul-destroying, has never lived with it. The plaintiffs who are pursuing $millions in damages from a Victorian wind farm operator at Bald Hills (see our post here) have been telling a Supreme Court Judge, Justice Richards all about it over the last couple of weeks. Here are a couple of reports on what one of them, John Zakula had to say about trying to live with 52 giant industrial wind turbines thumping and grinding away in his backyard, every night.
Wind farm neighbour had to sleep at the beach
Sentinel-Times
9 September 2021
SO LOUD was the roaring and constant “woosh, woosh, woosh” of the Bald Hills Wind Farm turbine blades, after they became operational in 2015, that neighbouring landowner, John Zakula, had to clear out at night, on dozens of occasions, especially during winter, and sleep in his car at…
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76-mm Sherman
19 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
Standard M4A2(76mm) Sherman
M4A3(76mm) Sherman

The US Army made a conscious decision in 1943: to ignore calls for rapid development of the heavy, 90mm-gun T26 (Pershing) to take on the Panthers and Tigers, and instead to mass produce the M4 – a medium tank that would do the job well enough rather than brilliantly, and at a practical cost in time, talent, treasure, and shipping weight.
Its 75mm gun and 50mm (2in) frontal armor were not good enough to take on a late Panzer head-to-head; but Sherman crews used their numbers, speed and agility to swarm round the Panthers and Tigers. The Panzer might survive long enough to kill one, maybe even two M4s; but in the meantime the rest of the platoon, working round onto its flanks, would be putting rounds into its more vulnerable sides and engine compartment from close up.
The Sherman also lent itself to adaptation…
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David Friedman on stateless societies
19 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, David Friedman, defence economics, economic history, economics of crime, history of economic thought, international economics, law and economics, property rights Tags: anarchocapitalism
The Ideas of Friedrich Hayek (with Steven Horwitz)
19 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
in Austrian economics, F.A. Hayek, liberalism, libertarianism
Coleman Hughes on The Perils of Race Science with Charles Murray [S2 Ep.21]
19 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economics of education, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, liberalism, libertarianism, Marxist economics, occupational choice, poverty and inequality Tags: racial discrimination
The Godfather Part II
18 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
The Godfather Part II (1974) Director: Francis Ford Coppola
“I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart…”

★★★★★
The beauty of the Godfather Part II lies in it being both a sequel –perhaps the greatest sequel in cinematic history– and yet also a prequel. The two narratives, sequel and prequel, are beautifully interwoven in a way that forces the audience to contemplate the distinct lives between the old generation of Vito Corleone and his rise from Sicilian orphan to American mafia Don, and the new generation of Michael Corleone whose reign as mafia Don is plagued by political infighting, legal crackdowns, and familial collapse.
Shortly before the original Godfather was released, a sequel was approved by Paramount and Mario Puzo began working on the script for a sequel. Throughout the film we see Francis Ford Coppola quoting himself and re-working or reimagining scenes from the first film in…
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Curia political poll is grim news for the Nats – but its measure of enthusiasm for “Aotearoa” will be vexing for Maori Party, too
18 Sep 2021 Leave a comment

The New Zealand Herald was not alone in reporting on the discomforting results for National in the latest Curia opinion poll and the petition mounted by Maori Party leaders to have the name of this country officially changed to Aotearoa.
The first matter was headlined The National Party’s polling company has the party crashing to within six points of Act
The writer of the report beneath this headline seemed to delight in noting who had conducted this poll.
The National Party’s historic pollster has the party’s support crashing to historic lows, while Act is on the verge of overtaking it.
A Curia poll, conducted for the Taxpayer’s Union, has National on just 21.2 per cent, with Act close behind on 14.9 per cent.
The result is only a whisker above National’s worst-ever election result, 20.93 per cent in 2002. It is the closest National and Act have ever been in…
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Norway’s new socialist government expected to keep drilling for oil and gas
18 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
Essential UCLA School of Economics: How Property Rights & Profits Reduce Discrimination
18 Sep 2021 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, Armen Alchian, comparative institutional analysis, discrimination, economic history, economics of education, Gary Becker, gender, human capital, industrial organisation, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics, property rights, Public Choice, survivor principle, theory of the firm Tags: racial discrimination, sex discrimination



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