Lidia Thorpe mistakes identity of NT attorney-general as a ‘man’ and ‘white’
16 May 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, law and economics, politics - Australia Tags: law and order, political correctness, racial discrimination, regressive left
book announcement: party in the street – the antiwar movement and the democratic party after 9/11
16 May 2021 Leave a comment
It is my pleasure to announce the forthcoming publication of a book by Michael Heaney and myself. It is called Party in the Street: The Antiwar Movement and the Democratic Party after 9/11. It will be available from Cambridge University Press starting in early 2015.
The book is an in-depth examination of the relationship between the major social movement of the early 2000s and the Democratic Party. We begin with a puzzle. In 2006, the antiwar movement began to decline, a time when the US government escalated the war and at least five years before US combat troops completely left Iraq. Normally, one would expect that an escalation of war and favorable public opinion would lead to heightened activism. Instead, we see the reverse.
We answer this question with a theory of movement-party intersections – the “Party in the Street.” Inspired by modern intersectionality scholarship, we argue that…
View original post 173 more words
McKitrick (2021) Climate Policy: When Emotion Meets Reality
16 May 2021 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, comparative institutional analysis, development economics, energy economics, environmental economics, global warming Tags: climate alarmists
Operation Bodyguard: The Crazy (And Successful) Plan to Fool Hitler Before D-Day
15 May 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: D-Day, World War II
Govt reports it is doing nicely, thank you, at getting us into houses – but it warns it must also find ways of getting us out of our cars
15 May 2021 Leave a comment
Whoa, there – she’s bolted!
We refer to Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson, who this morning dropped another media statement into our email in-tray as Associate Housing Minister.
It was her third while she has been wearing the Housing ministerial hat.
She did issue another statement as recently as May 6 but that was as Minister responsible for the Prevention of Family and Sexual Violence and – in the same capacity – she has delivered two speeches.
In her statement today she didn’t actually announce anything. Rather, she said the Government welcomed the release of the second progress report on the Homelessness Action Plan and the progress it records.
More politically provocative was a statement from Climate Change Minister James Shaw and Transport Minister Michael Wood, although they, too, did not announce a new policy.
Rather, they invited public feedback on a range of policies being mooted to reduce emissions…
View original post 928 more words
Massive Subsidies For Wind & Solar ‘Industries’: The Never, Never, Never-Ending Story
14 May 2021 Leave a comment
Back in 1983 the American Wind Industry Association claimed that solar and wind would be “competitive and self-supporting on a national level by the end of the decade if assisted by tax credits and augmented by federally sponsored R&D”. That was over 37 years ago. And there was no lack of assistance in the form of tax credits and federally sponsored R&D, along with a whole bunch of other punitive mandates and targets designed to cripple conventional generators and favour chaotically intermittent wind and solar.
Wind and solar don’t run on sunshine and breezes, they’re powered by massive and endless subsidies. Remove the subsidies and both so-called ‘industries’ would disappear in a heartbeat.
The perpetual claims about wind and solar competing with dispatchable generation sources, such as coal, gas and nuclear, ring hollow when talk turns to reducing the subsidies and forcing the unreliables to face true competition – unleashed…
View original post 576 more words
Was Lady Jane Grey a legitimate Queen of England and Ireland?
14 May 2021 Leave a comment
When reading the lists of the Kings and Queens of England, Scotland, Great Britain or the United Kingdom, there can be discrepancies regarding the reign of Lady Jane Grey; some will list her as a legitimate Queen of England and some will not.
The question I am examining is whether or not Lady Jane Grey can be considered a legitimate Queen of England and Ireland or should she be considered a usurper? The issue at hand is there is no authoritative body to judge either the legitimacy or illegitimacy of Jane’s 9 day reign. Therefore it is open to interpretation and historians have been debating this for many, many years.
I am just another voice in this chorus of historians debating this issue. I will state my case in this post to why I don’t believe that Jane Grey was the legal successor to King Edward VI.

Lady Jane Grey
View original post 1,450 more words
History of Male British Consorts Part I.
14 May 2021 Leave a comment
Mary Tudor was England’s first queen regnant. As mentioned in the initial post announcing the series, Mary I of England is acknowledged as the first Queen to reign in her own right despite the brief, disputed reigns of the Empress Matilda and Lady Jane Grey.
In 1554, Mary married the future King Felipe II of Spain, becoming queen consort of Habsburg Spain on his accession in 1556. He was the eldest son of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, who is also Carlos I of Spain, and Eleanore of Portugal.
Felipe’s father arranged this marriage to 37-year-old Queen Mary I of England, Charles’ maternal first cousin. Charles V ceded the crown of Naples, as well as his claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, to Felipe in order to give his son equal status to his wife upon their marriage.
Their marriage at Winchester Cathedral on July 24, 1554 took place just…
View original post 885 more words
2014 Hamas rocket launch pad lies near Gaza homes
14 May 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, laws of war, war and peace Tags: Gaza Strip, Israel, war against terror
The DeHaviland Comet: The First Passenger Jet
14 May 2021 Leave a comment
in transport economics Tags: air crash investigations
The Stuarts: William and Mary (1689-1702)
13 May 2021 Leave a comment
The Catholic King James II had fled his throne, and a favored Protestant Dutchman named William of Orange had roused the people in what became known as the “Glorious Revolution.” It was a moment of extraordinary growth and opportunity for England under the governance of a foreign king. William, perhaps more than anyone, transformed the fractious English monarchy into a dominant imperial power. England was now to be regarded as a significant European power, on par with France, in alliance with the Netherlands, a hegemonic influence over the aging Spanish Empire. David Starkey calls William one of England’s greatest monarchs.
William of Orange was a tenacious yet somewhat sickly figure. As a child he was asthmatic and partly crippled with a tubercular lung. “But within this emaciated and defective frame there burned a remorseless fire, fanned by the storms of Europe, and intensified by the…
View original post 1,940 more words
SADLY THE HAMAS LEADERS NEED TO DO IT?
13 May 2021 Leave a comment
Gaza is an overpopulated area for non Jewish people, too stupid to see they could be so much better off if they accept the horrendous passage taken by Jews dispossessed in the main by the assault perpetrated by Nazi Germany’s bent out of shape racists that resulted in millions having everything taken from them before being either killed in short order or worked to death in slave labour enterprises, directly led to the established State of Israel
The remnants of the pogroms and slaughterhouses ended up in their homeland from biblical times where by force they established the modern state of Israel, actually the only functioning democracy enjoying the rule of law that covers all who live within the Borders of The Jewish State. Many many have perished amidst the ongoing violence on both sides that had appeared to have diminished significantly while Donald Trump occupied The White House. In…
View original post 230 more words
Productivity growth: failures and successes
13 May 2021 Leave a comment
As a parent I find it particularly disheartening to observe the near-complete indifference of governments and major political parties that might hope to form governments to the atrocious productivity performance of the New Zealand economy. If the last National government was bad, the Labour or Labour-led governments since 2017 have been worse. It is hard to think of a single thing they’ve done to improve the climate for market-driven business investment and productivity growth, and easy to identify a growing list of things that worsen the outlook – most individually probably quite small effects, but the cumulative direction is pretty clear. Before I had kids I used to idly talk about not encouraging any I had to stay in New Zealand, so relatively poor were the prospects becoming. It is harder to take that stance when it is real young people one enjoys being around, but…..at least from an economic…
View original post 1,850 more words



Recent Comments