German-born Jew on Interrogating Nazi Prisoners of War
31 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, laws of war, war and peace Tags: World War II
Global Financial System at Risk From Flawed Climate Models
31 Aug 2022 Leave a comment

An unflattering analysis of climate models. Using mean values from numerous models is questioned. Climate attribution studies don’t fare any better: “these approaches are likely to be flawed”.
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A team of Australian scientists, financiers and economists have issued a stark warning over the use of “flawed” climate models to predict financial risk, says Net Zero Watch.
Writing in the journal Environmental Research they say building future strategies on information that is not understood and potentially misleading is likely to expose the global financial system to systemic risks of its own making.
Politicians and policy-makers are increasingly seeking to assess the potential risks to the financial system associated with climate change.
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Enviro-Fraud: Why Intermittent Wind & Solar Can’t Reduce Carbon Dioxide Gas Emissions
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
The greatest fraud in history started with the idea that you can run an economy on sunshine and breezes.
Sequentially, inevitably, every myth and lie put forward by renewable energy rent seekers and their shrinking band of acolytes gets busted and exposed.
Lines like: wind power is cheaper than coal (it isn’t); the wind is always blowing somewhere (it isn’t); this wind farm will power 30,000 homes (it doesn’t and never will); and that the ‘transition’ to an all renewable energy future is simply inevitable (sure, provided it’s a transition to the Dark Ages that you’re looking for?) – sound even more nonsensical, by the day.
There there’s the central, endlessly repeated lie upon which the wind industry seeks to ‘justify’ the colossal and endless subsidies upon which it critically depends; the destruction of wind farm neighbours’ health, wealth and happiness; and the slaughter of millions of birds and bats…
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RICHARD CLAPTON I Am An Island (1982) COUNTDOWN
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in Music, television, TV shows
Classic Film Review: The Madness of George C. Scott in Paddy Chayefsky’s “The Hospital”(1971)
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment



Fifty years after its release, screed-writing screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky’s dark comedy “The Hospital” still has the power to make your jaw drop.
Released amid growing cynicism about institutions that Vietnam inspired and Watergate proved, with documentaries such as “Titicut Follies” laying bare the stark realities of American medicine, and “M*A*S*H” puncturing the TV-burnished image of doctors as “ministering angels,” “Hospital” must have felt like a kick in the teeth.
The ensuing decades have seen nothing that went this far, with only TV’s “Saint Elsewhere” and a few edgier moments on the soapier “E.R.” or comical “Scrubs” etc. even trying.
That said, the black humor in Arthur Hiller’s “comedy” doesn’t really start to work until late in the picture. And it takes the ears and eyes a while to adjust to any visit to Paddy Chayefskyland. Few conversations sound natural. Characters launch into speeches and others in the scene simply yield…
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The Seekers – I’ll Never Find Another You (HQ Stereo, 1964/’68)
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in Music
What ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’ Teaches Us About Filmmaking
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in movies, television, TV shows
#globalwarming #climateemergency
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in energy economics, environmental economics, global warming Tags: electric cars

Monitor and mouse not included
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in economic history Tags: creative destruction

French Pretenders Part I: 2022
30 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
From the Emperor’s Desk: When I began this blog back in 2012 I initially wrote a series of articles on the various pretenders to vacant thrones of Europe. Many of these articles need an update so today I start with the pretenders to the vacant throne of France.
One of the most interesting battles for the claims to a vacant or non existent throne is that of France. The argument on who is the rightful heir to the French throne rests on the legality of the renunciation of rights to the French throne by King Felipe V of Spain (1700-1746) and his descendents at the end of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1714.
Felipe V of Spain (Philippe Duc d’Anjou) was born a French Prince of the Blood (Prince Du Sang) the second son of Louis the Grand Dauphin and a grandson of King Louis XIV of…
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