The Wright Flyer: The Spectacular Birth of Modern Flight (That Many People Believed Was Fake)
19 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in economic history, transport economics
Navigating the culture wars with Douglas Murray and Ayaan Hirsi Ali
19 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economics of crime, gender, labour economics, law and economics, liberalism, Marxist economics, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA Tags: free speech, Freedom of religion, political correctness, regressive left
German Defensive Strategy and Tactics At Passchendaele I THE GREAT WAR Special
19 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
Origins of the Holy Roman Empire. Part II.
19 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
Scholars generally concur, however, in relating an evolutionary process to the institutions and principles eventualy forming and constituting the empire, describing it as a gradual assumption of the imperial title and role of the emperor and the empire itself over the lands under its authority.
Let us delve deeper into the creation of the empire. First some background information leading to the rule of Charlemagne.
From the time of Roman Emperor Constantine I (r. 306–337), the Roman emperors had, with very few exceptions, taken on a role as promoters and defenders of Christianity. The reign of Constantine established a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor in the Church.
Roman Emperors considered themselves responsible to the gods for the spiritual health of their subjects, and after Constantine and his conversation to Christianity, the Emperors believed they had a duty to help the Church define and maintain orthodoxy. The emperor’s…
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Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1949)
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
‘If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face — for ever.’
I read this when I was 16 in 1977. The Soviet Union still existed, Eastern Europe was ruled by communist dictatorships and England was visibly falling to pieces. The external situation was bad enough but being a teenager and new to this kind of adult literature, it scared the bejesus out of me, in fact it helped introduce me to what books could really do, their power to change your entire view of life.
Quite clearly Nineteen Eighty-Four is the summary towards which all of Orwell’s writings were heading. It brings together numerous themes, ideas and obsessions which thread through all his previous work:
- The theme of political lying, of the power of political propaganda if applied with ruthless consistency to utterly distort ‘the truth’ – something which Orwell had seen…
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The Age of Empire: 1875 to 1914 by Eric Hobsbawm (1987)
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
Summary
This is a very mixed bag of a book. The first quarter or so is a thrilling global overview of the main trends and developments in industrial capitalism during the period 1875 to 1914, containing a vast array of fascinating and often thrilling facts and figures. But then it mutates into a series of long, turgid, repetitive, portentous, banal and ultimately uninformative chapters about social change, the arts, sciences, social sciences and so on, which are dreadful.
And underlying it all is Hobsbawm’s unconcealed contempt for the nineteenth century ‘bourgeoisie’ and their ‘bourgeois society’, terms he uses so freely and with so little precision that they eventually degenerate into just being terms of abuse.
And in his goal of insulting the 19th century ‘bourgeoisie’ as much as possible, Hobsbawm glosses over a huge range of crucial differences – between nations and regions, between political and cultural and religious traditions…
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Loaded Dice: How The Wind Industry Rigged Noise ‘Rules’ So It Could Ruin Neighbours’ Lives
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
When it comes to the noise that drives neighbours nuts, wind power outfits get away with blue murder. And there’s a reason for that.
Over the years, hundreds of our posts have covered the topic of the adverse health effects caused by turbine generated incessant low-frequency noise and infrasound; the woefully inadequate, indeed, utterly irrelevant noise standards written by the wind industry; and the institutional corruption that:
a) allowed those standards to become the “benchmarks” in the first place; and
b) witnesses public authorities, with a responsibility to protect public health, not only sitting on their hands, but barracking in favour of the wind industry, at the expense of the very people these planning and public health agencies and authorities are paid handsomely to protect.
In this post from February 2015 – Three Decades of Wind Industry Deception – STT set out a chronology of what the wind industry and…
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The Conscripts and Conscientious Objectors of World War Two – WW2 Special
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War II
The Battle of Britain and Artie Holmes’ Hurricane
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War II
Diana Fleischman on Evolutionary Psychology, Men & Women & Effective Altruism
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of education Tags: evolutionary biology, evolutionary psychology
Bryan Caplan – The Case Against Education
18 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, economics of education, economics of information, human capital, labour economics, labour supply, occupational choice, personnel economics Tags: adverse selection, asymmetric information, screening, signaling
Indian Insurrection: Thousands of Rural Protesters Revolt Against Threatened Wind Farm
17 Aug 2021 Leave a comment
Another day, another rural community revolts against industrial wind power. This time it’s thousands of Indian villagers fighting back to prevent the destruction of their precious forests and fertile farmlands.
In the absence of massive subsidies, the wind industry would pose no threat, to anyone, anywhere. But, for as long as governments dole out taxpayer and power consumers’ money in the form of endless subsidies, mandates and targets, wind power outfits will continue to ride roughshod over hard-working farmers and their families.
While the charge NIMBY is often levelled by wind industry rent-seekers at those protesting against the prospect of having 260m high monsters speared into their backyards, in STT’s view there is no place for industrial wind turbines, anywhere, ever. Our argument starts with the unassailable fact that weather-dependent wind power simply cannot deliver meaningful electricity on demand; never has, never will. Accordingly, wind power is, and will always…
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