Labour says they want more competition in grocery retail. I worry about the cursed monkey paw version of it.Here’s what they say:“We know that it’s tough right now for many people, and the high cost of food isn’t helping,” Commerce and Consumer Affairs spokesperson Duncan Webb said.“The inquiry we ordered into competition in the grocery…
A late pitch for supermarket competition
A late pitch for supermarket competition
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
ELIZABETH RATA: Two Treaties of Waitangi – the Articles Treaty and the Principles Treaty
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Elizabeth Rate writes – There are two versions of the Treaty of Waitangi. The first is the 1840 Treaty – the ‘Articles Treaty’. The second is what I call the ‘Principles Treaty’. It dates from 1986 when the principles were first included in legislation. Astonishingly, the parliamentary representatives who inserted the word ‘principles’ did not […]
ELIZABETH RATA: Two Treaties of Waitangi – the Articles Treaty and the Principles Treaty
Inflation, Deflation and Debt
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, economic history, financial economics, fiscal policy, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Economics Lessons from the Kibbutzim
02 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

In March 2023, I visited Ma’agan Michael Kibbutz and had a meeting with a former Israeli government official charged with managing the government bailout of about 200 kibbutzim. Both offered empirical lessons about the challenges of communal living. Background and Description Ma’agan Michael was one of the few kibbutzim not bailed out. It is…
Economics Lessons from the Kibbutzim
Motorway service stations hiring staff to police surging levels of EV ‘charge rage’
02 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

By Paul Homewood h/t Paul Kolk This was all so predictable! Britain’s biggest motorway service station provider has brought in marshals to police “charge rage” among electric vehicle drivers battling for access to plug-in points. Moto chief executive Ken McMeikan warned the UK’s motorway service stations are facing growing “public disorder” […]
Motorway service stations hiring staff to police surging levels of EV ‘charge rage’
Does Government Debt Matter Anymore? | Perspectives On Policy
02 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, economic growth, economic history, fiscal policy, health economics, labour economics, labour supply, macroeconomics
John Lewis stops insuring electric cars over repair cost fears
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

By Paul Homewood h/t Paul Kolk And in yet more bad news for the EV rollout: John Lewis has stopped offering insurance to electric car drivers amid fears over the cost of repairs. The department store’s lending business John Lewis Financial Services has put a temporary pause on customers taking out cover or […]
John Lewis stops insuring electric cars over repair cost fears
MICHAEL BASSETT: HAPLESS HIPKINS AND HIS RACISM
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Without so much as batting an eyelid, Chris Hipkins told an audience on Saturday that there had been “more racism” in this election campaign than ever before. And he blamed it on the opposition parties, National, Act and New Zealand First. In those statements he indicated his unworthiness to be the Prime Minister of New…
MICHAEL BASSETT: HAPLESS HIPKINS AND HIS RACISM
Caturday felid trifecta: U.K.’s cat of the year; why cats love tuna; woman feeds Colorado State Fair cat daily for 20 years; and langiappe
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in cats

We’re back to Caturday Felids again, and let me know if you want this to continue, as I’m not sure people are that keen on Caturday felids, and it takes a bit of work. At any rate, we’ll have one today, at least. The Washington Post has a lovely story about an English woman, profoundly […]
Caturday felid trifecta: U.K.’s cat of the year; why cats love tuna; woman feeds Colorado State Fair cat daily for 20 years; and langiappe
Jesse Singal on Coleman Hughes vs. TED
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

By now most of us know that Coleman Hughes, a heterodox black thinker, got into trouble when he gave a preapproved TED talk echoing Martin Luther King’s “don’t judge a person by their skin color” trope. Hughes’s point wasn’t that we shouldn’t be aware of color, but what we need to do is concentrate on […]
Jesse Singal on Coleman Hughes vs. TED
Quotation of the Day…
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Tweet… is from page 29 of the 1981 edition of George Reisman’s translation of Ludwig von Mises’s 1933 tract, Epistemological Problems of Economics: Human action always confronts experience as a complex phenomenon that first must be analyzed and interpreted by a theory before it can even be set in the context of an hypothesis that…
Quotation of the Day…
Ten Reasons Why the Biden Impeachment Inquiry is Justified
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

There have been repeated references to the ten facts that I alluded to in my congressional testimony as establishing an ample basis to launch a formal impeachment inquiry. I have received emails asking about those ten developments so I wanted to post them. They are found in my written testimony, but I did not have […]
Ten Reasons Why the Biden Impeachment Inquiry is Justified
Death and popcorn
01 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
So Diane Feinstein did not make it to the political finish line of 2025. Suffering from numerous ailments, including senility, and often absent from the Senate, and having announced that she would retire at the end of this term, she finally died the other day at the age of 90. Despite attacks on her by […]
Death and popcorn


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