FTPA Joint Committee lays down marker for the future
12 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011placed a legal obligation on the Prime Minister to make arrangements for a committee to review the legislation before the end of 2020. That committee was duly created, and published its reportlast month.Robert Hazell and Meg Russell offer a summary of the committee’s work and argue thatthe committee ‘ignored’ the weight of the evidence on several key areas.
On 24 March the parliamentary Joint Committee to review the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 (FTPA) published its report. The committee was established last November under section 7 of the FTPA, which required the Prime Minister in 2020 to make arrangements for a committee to review the operation of the Act, and if appropriate to make recommendations for its amendment or repeal. The review was carried out by a Joint Committee composed of 14 MPs and six members of the House of Lords, and…
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Jim Brown interview: I disagreed with Martin Luther King Jr. (Surprising)
12 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economics of bureaucracy, economics of education, economics of love and marriage, human capital, income redistribution, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics, occupational choice, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, Public Choice, welfare reform
Chris Rock on ’70s School Busing
12 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, economics of education, law and economics, politics - USA, television Tags: busing, racial discrimination
Franz Josef: The Last Great Emperor
11 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economic history, war and peace Tags: Austria, World War I
Ricky Gervais On What Counts As An Act Of God
11 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of religion Tags: Blasphemy
January 1 and the forgotten history of the New Year
10 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
The Syrian Civil War – Evolution of the Syrian Army’s Way of War
10 Apr 2021 Leave a comment


By Eyal Berelovich
militarystrategymagazine.com
The views expressed above are those of the author and do not represent those of the Israel Defense Force Ground Forces, the R.D.C Department, or the Israel Defense Force.
Professor Eyal Zisser’s 2018 article on the Syrian Civil War begins with the following words: “In March 2011 a revolution erupted in Syria. It began as a limited local non-violent protest in the rural and peripheral areas of the country, and within a few months escalated into a bloody civil war that quickly became sectarian, and worse yet – religious, a holy war (Jihad). The civil war attracted foreign intervention that transformed Syria into a regional and international arena of conflict, with the rival sides being used by the global and regional powers as pieces on the chess-board of their conflicts.” [i]
Most descriptions and analyses of the war divide it chronologically into several main phases. Some…
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Here’s What It’s Really Like To Enter The Witness Protection Program
10 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, law and economics
How did Europe React to the Discovery of the Americas?
09 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of media and culture
THE YORKIST TRIUMPH, 1460–1461 Part I
09 Apr 2021 Leave a comment

Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York
Of the many sudden changes of political fortune which mark English history in the fifteenth century, none is more remarkable than the recovery of the Yorkist cause following the débâcle of October 1459. Within a month of Ludford its leaders were proscribed and attainted exiles. Yet by June 1460 they were able to mount a successful invasion of England and take control of London. Shortly after, they defeated the king’s forces at Northampton and Henry VI became a prisoner in their hands. This made possible a period of Yorkist-controlled government lasting to the end of the year, when the disasters at Wakefield (30 December 1460) and St Albans (17 February 1461) again put all in suspense, and thrust Edward of March onto the English throne.
Why this Yorkist revival was so successful has never been properly explained. Certainly, the rebels’ control of bases outside England…
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Holding senior officials to high standards
09 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
I’ve been bothered for some time by how lightly the Director-General of Health, Ashley Bloomfield, was excused over his lapse of judgement in accepting hospitality from New Zealand Cricket at a time when preferential access to the Covid vaccine for the New Zealand cricket team was a matter of some concern to New Zealand Cricket, and when Bloomfield himself exercises considerable clout in such matters (having both formal statutory powers assigned to him ex officio, but also being (one of) the Covid minister’s chief advisers). It wasn’t even as if this was a single lapse, since Bloomfield acknowledged that he had last year several times accepted tickets to rugby games, and yet the Rugby Union had been negotiating with the government re the ability to host foreign teams in New Zealand.
New Zealand has tended to pride itself over many years about the incorruptibility of public life. Unfortunately, we…
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Why you can’t compare Covid-19 vaccines
09 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
in health economics Tags: economics of pandemics, vaccines
April 6, 1199: Death of King Richard I of England
08 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
Richard I (September 8, 1157 – April 6, 1199) was King of England from 1189 until his death. He was the second king of the House of Plantagenet. He also ruled as Duke of Normandy, Aquitaine and Gascony, Lord of Cyprus, Count of Poitiers, Anjou, Maine, and Nantes, and was overlord of Brittany at various times during the same period. He was the third of five sons of King Henry II of England and Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine and seemed unlikely to become king, but all of his brothers except the youngest, John, predeceased their father. Richard is known as Richard Cœur de Lion or Richard the Lionheart because of his reputation as a great military leader and warrior.
Richard was born on September 8, 1157, probably at Beaumont Palace, in Oxford, England, son of King Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine. He was a younger brother of…
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April 7, 1141: Empress Matilda claims the English Throne
08 Apr 2021 Leave a comment
Empress Matilda (c. February 7, 1102 – September 10, 1167), also known as the Empress Maude, was one of the claimants to the English throne during the civil war known as the Anarchy. Empress Matilda was the daughter of King Henry I of England by first wife Matilda of Scotland, daughter of Malcolm III, King of Scots.
Henry I’s two eldest surviving children were William Ætheling and Matilda. William Ætheling (1103 – 1120), commonly called Adelin, sometimes Adelinus, or Adelingus or other Latinised Norman-French variants of Ætheling. William was married to Matilda of Anjou the eldest daughter of Count Fulk V of Anjou. The couple were married when William Ætheling was 16 and Matilda of Anjou was only 8. Needless to say, that when William drowned in the English channel in 1120, a year after their marriage, when his ship, The White Ship, sank, there were no children from the…
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