The Art of Political Power, with Robert Caro and William Hague
09 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history, politics - USA Tags: LBJ
Just about everyone has a gun in the Midwest
04 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in law and economics, politics - USA Tags: gun control

Must have retweeted something he did not like!
03 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture, politics - New Zealand

Shifty @jamespeshaw not the only minister not to know the cost of global warming to NZ
03 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, global warming, politics - New Zealand
What rubbish. Dozens have estimated the cost of global warming including regional and national estimates of the cost of global warming.

From official information act Official Information Act request to the Ministry of Environment.
Changing times
02 Mar 2018 Leave a comment
in discrimination, politics - USA Tags: political correctness

Press council complaint against @dompost upheld @sst_nz
24 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, law and economics, politics - New Zealand

Hillary Clinton on sexual assault issues: Crusader or hypocrite? | FACTUAL FEMINIST
23 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economics of crime, economics of education, gender, law and economics, politics - USA Tags: 2016 presidential election, political correctness
Kill Climate Deniers: The Explosive Inside Story – @sarahinthesen8 should report this too?
20 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, environmental economics, global warming, law and economics, politics - Australia Tags: Australian Greens, political correctness
Is @SenSanders happy that lithium could not be patented?
19 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in health economics, politics - USA, property rights
Lithium is a naturally occurring substance so it is not possible to patent it. In consequence, there is no way of recovering any investments in working out how to handle its sometimes toxic side effects.
The first patients treated with lithium in 1949 were well within 2 weeks. Their discharge from the asylum where they had been living for years was delayed for a couple of months just to make sure that the medicine lithium was actually working. It was such a stunning success that their doctors had to check. The inability to patented lithium delayed its commercial availability by over two decades.

From Wikipedia at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Cade
Does @OxfamNZ know of this shakedown? Any in the Pacific? @TaxpayersUnion #oxfamscandal
19 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in development economics, economics of bureaucracy, economics of crime, growth disasters, politics - New Zealand
Japanese ODA agencies budget 10% for donations. Their main interest is making sure that these donations go to the politicians who can actually deliver on removing roadblocks to their aid delivery rather than chancers who try it on and never deliver. Benazir Bhutto’s husband was Mr. 10% when she was first prime minister. He was a net plus to the country according to The Economist Magazine article of say 20 years ago because investors only had to pay him rather than dozens of petty bureaucrats, each wanting a taste. These payments are lawful under the laws of Western countries because they are facilitation payments. They are not bribes because the foreign company is only paying the politician or bureaucrat to do what is his duty to do in the first place rather than stall the process in the hope of a bribe.

From The Dictator’s Handbook.
Learnt a new word today: virtue out-bidding
18 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA Tags: political correctness
Does @_chloeswarbrick believe @PPTAWeb betrays the working class? Are handmaidens of the bosses?
17 Feb 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of education, politics - New Zealand, unions
Unions fight for better playing conditions for their members. Is not that what the class war is all about? Unions are not there to act as management consultants to the employer, working out ways to make their wage slaves profitable – extract more labour surplus.
Please do not mention that the employer of teachers is the state sector. That is an argument against unions in the state sector, a very slippery slope.
When the interests of the union and it is teacher members and the interests of children conflict, the union will do what its mission is which is to protect its members.
The first jobs to be unionised were craft jobs. The craft unions certainly foster the marketability of their members but were keen to suppress competition nonetheless. To quote Charles Baird
Most unions in the private sector are in crafts and industries that have few companies or that are concentrated in one region of the country. This makes sense. Both factors—few employers and regionally concentrated employers—make organizing easier. Conversely, the large number of employers and the regional dispersion of employers sharply limit unionization in trade, services, and agriculture. A 2002 unionization rate of 37.5 percent in the government sector, more than four times the 8.5 percent rate in the private sector, further demonstrates that unions do best in heavily regulated, monopolistic environments. Even within the private sector, the highest unionization rates (23.8 percent) are in transportation (airlines, railroads, trucking, urban transit, etc.) and public utilities (21.8 percent), two heavily regulated industries.
Craft unions opposed unionisation of less skilled workers because it threatens their own ability to extract higher wages as explained in the Wikipedia entry:
The concept of organizing a strong federation on the basis of craft evolved out of conflict between the Knights of Labor (KOL), which organized mass organizations of unskilled, semiskilled and skilled workers by territory, and the American Federation of Labor (AFL), which organized only skilled workers.[1] The craft workers were capable of demanding more from their employers due to their skills, and therefore organized into stronger organizations pursuing narrower interests.[2] The AFL was formed as a direct result of the perceived need by skilled workers to defend their individual craft organizations from poaching by the Knights of Labor.[3] The Knights of Labor believed that skilled workers should dedicate their greater leverage to benefit all workers.[4] Selig Perlman wrote in 1923 that this resulted in “a clash between the principle of solidarity of labor and that of trade separatism.”[2] The trade unions “declared that their purpose was ‘to protect the skilled trades of America from being reduced to beggary’.”[5]… As long as the craft unions were the dominant power in the AFL, they took every step possible to block the organizing of mass production industries. This led to challenges from both inside and outside the Federation.
The craft unions such as teachers unions have more bargaining power because they are difficult to replace on short notice unlike less skilled workers. In addition, teachers are much more difficult to automate away. I am not too sure what the teachers union might think of giving more responsibility to teachers aides?
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