Climate Change Weekly # 540 — ‘Cheap’ Wind and Solar Raise Electricity Prices

Multiple studies have demonstrated wind and solar power remain more expensive than historically traditional sources of electricity, such as coal, natural gas, nuclear, and hydropower, and Energy Information Administration data back that up—disproving claims by renewable energy profiteers and their lobbying groups. As coal plants have been prematurely retired and replaced by wind and solar, prices have risen and reliability has declined. The greater the forced (through renewable mandates) or incentivized (through subsidies, tax breaks, and tax credits) incursion of wind and solar into a state’s electric power supply, the higher and faster the costs rise.

Climate Change Weekly # 540 — ‘Cheap’ Wind and Solar Raise Electricity Prices

Finally common sense for drug approvals

David Seymour announced: Associate Health Minister David Seymour is welcoming Cabinet’s decision to enable medicines to be approved in less than 30 days if the product has approval from two recognised overseas jurisdictions.    This change is included in the Medicines Amendment Bill (the Bill), which amends the Medicines Act 1981. The pathway will be in […]

Finally common sense for drug approvals

Why Tariffs Don’t Cause and Won’t Fix Trade Deficits

There’s a fundamental misconception at the root of President Trump’s tariff policies, which is the mistaken claim that the existence of a US trade deficit proves that trade is unfair. There are two related mistaken claims. One is a claim that if tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade were removed, then trade would be balanced.…

Why Tariffs Don’t Cause and Won’t Fix Trade Deficits

The challenge facing Andrew Little to become Mayor of Wellington

Peter Dunne writes – Should former Labour leader and Minister Andrew Little decide to seek the Wellington Mayoralty later this year he will have a very good, but by no means guaranteed, chance of winning. Little was regarded in national politics as a reasonable, competent safe pair of hands, although sometimes his passion got the […]

The challenge facing Andrew Little to become Mayor of Wellington

Why Economics Is Really Called ‘the Dismal Science’: The (not-so-dismal) origin myth of a ubiquitous term

By Derek Thompson of The Atlantic Monthly. From 2013.  “The story goes like this: Thomas Carlyle, a Scottish writer and philosopher, called economics “the dismal science” in reference to Thomas Malthus, that lugubrious economist who claimed humanity was trapped in a world where population growth would always strain natural resources and bring widespread misery. Dismal,…

Why Economics Is Really Called ‘the Dismal Science’: The (not-so-dismal) origin myth of a ubiquitous term

Maps

German Editor Sentenced and Fined for Satirical Picture of Interior Minister

We previously discussed the case of  Deutschland-Kurier editor David Bendels who published a satirical meme of Interior Minister Nancy Faeser holding an altered sign that read “I hate freedom of speech.” Ironically, the sign was believable given the anti-free speech positions of Faeser and the German government. Faeser, however, went ballistic. In a country that routinely arrests […]

German Editor Sentenced and Fined for Satirical Picture of Interior Minister

“Coercive Control”: Parents Could Lose Custody Under Proposed Colorado Law for “Misgendering”

Parental rights are emerging as one of the major civil liberties movements of this generation — and one of the greatest conflicts between the right and the left in this country. For example, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit ruled schools can hide a change of gender in young children from […]

“Coercive Control”: Parents Could Lose Custody Under Proposed Colorado Law for “Misgendering”

Paper Tigers? Princeton Faces Test Over Free Speech Following Disruption of Bennett Speech

In sports, many are saying that it is a “great year to be a Princeton tiger.” The question this week is whether the same is true for free speech at Princeton. For years, we followed free speech controversies at the school over the investigation of dissenting faculty, the targeting of critics, and general intolerance for […]

Paper Tigers? Princeton Faces Test Over Free Speech Following Disruption of Bennett Speech

NPR Repeats False Claim That the Court Rejected Claims of Government Involvement in Censorship Efforts

Leila Fadel and National Public Radio recently interviewed me on free speech. While the program ominously warned that “what you’re about to hear is hate speech” in playing extreme voices on the right, it did interview me and former Columbia University president Lee Bollinger from the free speech community. I wanted to address a statement […]

NPR Repeats False Claim That the Court Rejected Claims of Government Involvement in Censorship Efforts

The Year Without a Summer: A Climate Catastrophe and Its Global Impact

The “Year Without a Summer,” which occurred in 1816, stands as one of the most dramatic examples of short-term climate disruption in recorded history. This year was marked by unusual and extreme weather patterns that caused widespread crop failures, food shortages, and social unrest across the Northern Hemisphere. The phenomenon was primarily caused by the […]

The Year Without a Summer: A Climate Catastrophe and Its Global Impact

When Genius Failed

Myron Scholes was on top of the world in 1997, having won the Nobel Prize in economics that year for his work in financial economics, work that he had applied in the real world in a wildly successful hedge fund, Long Term Capital Management. But just one year later, LTCM was saved from collapse only […]

When Genius Failed

Book review: The Economists’ Hour

Once upon a time, economists were backroom advisers, crunching numbers and developing theories, but rarely in the limelight and certainly not the central actors in political decision-making. However, as Binyamin Appelbaum outlines in his 2019 book The Economists’ Hour, that all changed in the late 1960s. The title of the book references the period from…

Book review: The Economists’ Hour

Norway’s Political Earthquake: A Backstop No More

After decades of quietly footing the bill for Europe’s grand energy experiments, it appears Norway has finally decided to walk off the stage — or at the very least, slam the door shut on a few cross-border power cables on the way out.

Norway’s Political Earthquake: A Backstop No More

THE TRIALS OF HARRY S. TRUMAN: THE EXTRAORDINARY PRESIDENCY OF AN ORDINARY MAN, 1945-1953 by Jeffrey Frank

(President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Vice President elect Harry S. Truman, Vice President Henry Wallace) During my forty-four year teaching career on the secondary and university level I was often asked; “Who is your favorite President?”  The answer came very easily, Harry S. Truman.  My response was based on his personality, moral code, and his actions […]

THE TRIALS OF HARRY S. TRUMAN: THE EXTRAORDINARY PRESIDENCY OF AN ORDINARY MAN, 1945-1953 by Jeffrey Frank

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