Jung Chang and the Cultural Revolution
14 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in liberalism, Marxist economics Tags: China
Meatgrinder At The Somme – Battle of Mametz Wood I THE GREAT WAR – Week 103
14 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
Solar Power Outfit Hit With $135m in Fines & Damages For Polluting Neighbour’s Land
13 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
The wind and solar ‘industries’ always struggle with their neighbours, principally because they treat them as ‘roadkill’.
But that model doesn’t work when those neighbours are determined to fight back, using every legal means available.
Such is the case with Shaun and Amie Harris, who took a solar power outfit to court seeking damages for the nuisance that it had caused by polluting their land with silt and sediment.
The jury awarded them a cool US$10.5 million in damages, and whacked the solar generator and its construction contractors with a further US$125 million in fines for their egregious misconduct.
Bonner Cohen reports on the result below.
Solar farm runoff pollutes property, couple awarded $135 million
CFACT
Bonner Cohen
6 June 2023
Inflicting heavy fines on developers of a project billed as supplying clean, renewable energy, a federal jury has awarded a couple in southwest Georgia $135.5 million after runoff from…
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In Defence of Non-IPCC CO2 Science
13 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
Currently some Zero Carbon zealots are trying to discredit and disappear a peer reviewed study of CO2 atmospheric concentrations because its findings contradict IPCC dogma. The paper is World Atmospheric CO2, Its 14C Specific Activity, Non-fossil Component, Anthropogenic Fossil Component, and Emissions (1750–2018). by Skrable et al. (2022). The link is to the paper and also shows the comments recently addressed to the authors and the editor of the journal, as well as responses by both.
This came to my attention by way of a comment by one of the attackers on my 2022 post regarding this study. Text is below in italics with my bolds.
D. Andrews 10/7/2023
This post is over a year old, but in the interest of correcting the record, please note the following:
1. Skrable et al. have conceded that the data they “guesstimated” bore little resemblance to actual atmospheric radiocarbon data.
2. In…
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Jerry Receives A Mysterious Package | The Package | Seinfeld
13 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in television, TV shows
How the West Destroyed Slavery Around the World | Thomas Sowell
12 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, development economics, economic history, economics of crime, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics Tags: age of empires, economics of slavery
What Is the Risk of Disaster at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant?
12 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, energy economics, war and peace Tags: atomic energy, Ukraine
Govt. Green Rules Make Appliances Cost More and Do Less
12 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
NYC going after pizza oven emissions. You’d have to burn a pizza stove 849 years to equal one year of John Kerry’s private jet
In his Master Resource article Energy Appliance Victory! (DC Circuit vs. DOE), Mark Krebs explains the DOE agency machinations targeting boilers as a case in point of government bureaucrats attacking everyone’s economic well-being in the name of saving the planet. First, a contextual piece describes the game plan behind all this. Later on, a synopsis of Kreb’s analysis of the tactics on the ground.
Background: Why This Judgment Matters
Biden’s Green Rules Make Appliances Cost More and Do Less
Authored by Kevin Stocklin at The Epoch Times, published at Planet Today. Excerpts in italics with my bolds and added images.
The Biden administration announced in December 2022 its pledge to take “more than 100 actions” to impose significantly tighter environmental standards on consumer goods is…
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Classic Film Review: McQueen plays but Jewison holds the Cards in “The Cincinnati Kid” (1965)
10 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
I was about five minutes into re-watching “The Cincinnati Kid” when it struck me that I needed to read or re-read director Norman Jewison’s autobiography, or hunt down the recent biography of the Canadian director.
He’s not exactly an obscure filmmaker, with seven Oscar nominations and films like “Moonstruck” and “The Russians are Coming, the Russians are Coming” in his extensive filmography.
But his fifth feature film, his first “serious” movie, has threads that turn up so often in his later work that one wonders, “What made him such a righteous dude?”
The Toronto native who made the groundbreaking “In the Heat of the Night,” “A Soldier’s Story” and the very impressive bio-pic “The Hurricane” was astutely in touch with America’s shifting attitudes on race. And he made sure his films were ahead of the curve in that regard.
Jewison, a child of the Great Depression, took over a 1930s…
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An external MPC member speaks
10 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
has a central banker ever admitted that inflation is a monetary problem and they are part of the problem
This blog has been a bit quiet in recent weeks (if anyone has insights on what sections 15D and 98 of the Government Superannuation Fund Act do and don’t allow I’ll be happy to hear from you) but I hope to make up for it this week.
In the 4+ years the statutory Monetary Policy Committee has been in existence, there has been not a single public speech given by any of the three external members. There have been no serious interviews either, just one petulant and testy set of responses to some emailed questions late last year, responses that I characterised at the time this way:
At times, Harris displays all the grace and constructive open and engagement we might expect in a rebellious 15 year old told they have to make conversation with Grandma at the family Christmas celebrations. If the answers aren’t quite monosyllabic grunts. most of…
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Government looks an “utter shambles” – so why does it still have a chance of re-election?
10 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
After a succession of ministerial stumbles, some of them fatal for the respective political careers of the stumblers, the Labour government is still buoyed by its own polling. And even independent commentators think the parties of the left are level-pegging with those on the right.
How could this be? There is little argument NZ has been hit by a cost-of-living crisis, families are going hungry, hospital emergency departments are overflowing. Others cite ministerial fumbling for the failure to deliver on policy announcements. Economists point to the deficits in the public accounts getting worse and net debt climbing.
Wherever voters look, the Labour government has a dismal story to present.
So why aren’t Opposition parties racing ahead?
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The Questionable Engineering of Oceangate
10 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in transport economics Tags: health and safety








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