Shared posts

30 Jun 02:55

The perennial fantasy

by John H. Cochrane

Two attacks, and one defense, of classical liberal ideas appeared over the weekend. "War and Pandemic Highlight Shortcomings of the Free-Market Consensus" announces Patricia Cohen on p.1 of the New York Times news section.  As if the Times had ever been part of such a "consensus." And Deirdre McCloskey reviews Simon Johnson and Daron Acemoglu's "Power and Progress," whose central argument is, per Deirdre, "The state, they argue, can do a better job than the market of selecting technologies and making investments to implement them." (I have not yet read the book. This is a review of the review only.) 

I'll give away the punchline. The case for free markets never was their perfection. The case for free markets always was centuries of experience with the failures of the only alternative, state control. Free markets are, as the saying goes, the worst system; except for all the others. 

In this sense the classic teaching of economics does  a disservice. We start with the theorem that free competitive markets can equal -- only equal -- the allocation of an omniscient benevolent planner. But then from week 2 on we study market imperfections -- externalities, increasing returns, asymmetric information -- under which markets are imperfect, and the hypothetical planner can do better. Regulate, it follows. Except econ 101 spends zero time on our extensive experience with just how well -- how badly -- actual planners and regulators do. That messy experience underlies our prosperity, and prospects for its continuance. 

Starting with Ms. Cohen at the Times, 

The economic conventions that policymakers had relied on since the Berlin Wall fell more than 30 years ago — the unfailing superiority of open markets, liberalized trade and maximum efficiency — look to be running off the rails.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, the ceaseless drive to integrate the global economy and reduce costs left health care workers without face masks and medical gloves, carmakers without semiconductors, sawmills without lumber and sneaker buyers without Nikes.

That there ever was a "consensus" in favor of "the unfailing superiority of open markets, liberalized trade and maximum efficiency" seems a mighty strange memory. But if the Times wants to think now that's what they thought then, I'm happy to rewrite a little history. 

Face masks? The face mask snafu in the pandemic is now, in the Times' rather hilarious memory, the prime example of how a free and unfettered market fails. It was  a result of "the ceaseless drive to integrate the global economy and reduce costs?" 

(Here, I have a second complaint -- the ceaseless drive to remove subjects from sentences. Who is doing this "ceaseless drive?" Where is the great conspiracy, the secret meeting of old white men "driving" the economy? Nowhere. That's the point of free markets.)

The free market has a plan, imperfect as it might be, for masks in a pandemic. Prices rise. People who really want and need masks -- doctors, nurses, police -- pay what it takes to get them. People who don't really need them -- nursery schools -- look at the price, think about the benefit, and say, "maybe not," or take other measures. People reuse masks. Producers, seeing high prices, work day and night to produce more masks. Others, knowing that every 10 years there is a spike in prices, pay the costs of storing masks to make great profits when the time comes. 

The actual story of masks in the pandemic is the exact opposite. Price controls, of course. Instantly, governments started prosecuting businesses for "price gouging" who dared to raise the price of toilet paper. Governments redistribute income; markets allocate resources efficiently. As usual, the desire to redistribute tiny amounts of income to those willing to stand in line to get toilet paper won out. An entrepreneur tried to start producing masks. The FDA shut him down. (I hope I recall that story right, send comments if not.) China wanted to ship us masks. Yes, China the new villain of globalization gone mad. But their masks were certified and labeled by EU rules, not US rules, so like baby formula they couldn't be imported and sold. 

More deeply, even I, devoted free-marketer; even at the late night beer sessions at the CATO institute, nobody puts mask distribution in a pandemic as the first job of free markets. There is supposed to be a public health function of government; infectuous diseases are something of an externality; safety protocols in government labs doing government funded research are not a free-market function. As we look at the covid catastrophe, do we not see failures of government all over the place, not failures of some hypothetical free market? California even had mobile hospitals after H1N1. Governor Brown shut them down to save money for his high speed train. We might as well blame free markets for the lines at the DMV.  

The idea that trade and shared economic interests would prevent military conflicts was trampled last year under the boots of Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

Does anyone think a prime function of free market economics is to stops wars, usually prosecuted by, eh, governments? The standard history of WWI is enough. We do allege that free markets, and free markets alone, make a country wealthy enough to fight and win wars, if the country has the will and desire to do so. The US and NATO military budget vs. Russia's, larger by a factor of 10 at least, seems to bear that out, along with the much greater quality of our weapons.  Heaven help us militarily once the protectionists lead us to state-directed penury. 

inflation, thought to be safely stored away with disco album collections, returned with a vengeance.

Did anyone every vaguely hint that inflation control is a function of free markets? Inflation comes from government monetary and fiscal policy.  

And increasing bouts of extreme weather that destroyed crops, forced migrations and halted power plants has illustrated that the market’s invisible hand was not protecting the planet.

Doe the Times even vaguely think of news as fact not narrative? There have been a lot of migrations. "Forced?" Many due to violence, poverty, ill government. None due to temperature. Halted power plants (more passive voice)? Yes, it was that pesky unfettered free market that shut down power plants... 

The favored economic road map helped produce fabulous wealth, lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and spur wondrous technological advances.

Well, a peek of sunlight, an actual correct fact! 

But there were stunning failures as well. Globalization hastened climate change and deepened inequalities. 

More fact free narrative spinning. How are "inequalities" plural? Globalization brought the sharpest decline in global inequality in the history of our species. Perhaps it "hastened climate change" in that if China had stayed desperately poor they wouldn't be building a new coal fired power plant a week. US emissions went down because of... choose 1: enlightened policy 2: fracking, a shift to natural gas made only possible by the curious US property rights system absent in Europe, and pretty much over the dead body of the entire energy regulatory apparatus. 

***

Meanwhile over at WSJ, Deirdre is in classic form. (Again, I have not read the book, so this is Deirdre coverage.) The paragraph that caught my attention and demanded a blog post: 

We need [according to Acemoglu and Johnson] ... the legislation currently being pushed by left and right to try again the policies of antitrust, trade protection, minimum wage and, above all, subsidy for certain technologies. Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson are especially eager to regulate digital technologies such as artificial intelligence. “Technology should be steered in a direction that best uses a workforce’s skills,” they write, “and education should . . . adapt to new skill requirements.” How the administrators of the Economic Development Administration at the Department of Commerce would know the new direction to steer, or the new skills required, remains a sacred mystery.

"Technology should be steered." There it is, the full glory of the regulatory passive voice. Steered by who? Deirdre answers the question with that gem of rhetoric, specificity.  "Administrators of the Economic Development Administration at the Department of Commerce" for example. 

The theme uniting the two essays: If there is one lesson of the last 20 years it is this: The catastrophic failure of our government institutions. From bungled wars, a snafu of financial regulation in 2008 just now repeated in FTX, SVB, and inflation the evident collapse of the FDA CDC and plain commonsense in the pandemic, the free market is bravely forestalling a collapse of government (and associated, i.e. universities) institutions. 

we need the state to use its powers “to induce the private sector to move away from excessive automation and surveillance, and toward more worker-friendly technologies.” Fear of surveillance is a major theme of the book; therefore “antitrust should be considered as a complementary tool to the more fundamental aim of redirecting technology away from automation, surveillance, data collection, and digital advertising.”

The question what institution has the technical competence to do this seems to be begging.  

“Government subsidies for developing more socially beneficial technologies,” the authors declare, “are one of the most powerful means of redirecting technology in a market economy.” 

Well, interpreting the sentence literally,  you have to give it to them. Government subsidies are powerful means of "redirecting technology." Usually to ratholes. 

Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson warmly admire the U.S. Progressive Movement of the late 19th century as a model for their statism: experts taking child-citizens in hand.

Their chapters then skip briskly through history...seeking to show how at each turn new innovations tended to empower certain sections of society at the expense of others. The “power” that concerns them, in other words, is private power.

This is, in fact, the central question dividing free-marketers and others. Private power being subject to competition, we worry more about state power. The essence of state power is monopoly, and a monopoly of coercion, fundamentally violence.  

The heart of the book is that technological gains create winners and losers, and Acemoglu and Johnson want that directed by a nebulous bureaucracy. Which will somehow never be infected by, oh, Republicans, or turn in to the endless stagnation of most of the last millennium which actually did pursue policies that forbade technological improvement in order to sustain the incomes of incumbents. Deirdre, who coined the lovely phrase "trade tested betterment" takes it on. 

 During the past two centuries, the world has become radically better off, by fully 3,000% inflation adjusted. Even over the past two decades the lives of the poor have improved. The “great enrichment” after 1800 and its resulting superabundance has brought us out of misery. Even the poor workers who did not benefit in the short run have done so enormously in the long run. In 1960, 4 billion of the 5 billion people on the planet lived on $2 a day. Now it’s fallen to 1 billion out of 8, and the income average is $50 a day. The state didn’t do it, and forcing short-run egalitarianism or handing power to the Office of Economic Development can kill it, as it regularly has. Messrs. Acemoglu and Johnson see great imperfections in the overwhelmingly private sources of the enrichment. With such imperfections, who needs perfection?

Another way to see the problem is to remember the common sense, refined in Economics 101 and Biology 101, of entry at the smell of profit. ...The great fortunes they deprecate have the economic function of encouraging entry into the economy by other entrepreneurs who want to get rich. This competition cheapens goods and services, which then accrues to the poor as immense increases in real income.

Many fortunes, for instance, were made by the invention of the downtown department store. The profit attracted suburban competitors, and at the mall the department-store model began to fail. Jeff Bezos reinvented the mail-order catalog. He is imitated, and the fortunes are dissipated in enormous benefit to consumers called workers. 

.... It’s what happened and happens in a liberal economy.

The book uses a lot of history, surveyed by McCloskey. As before, it's criticized a bit as history lite. The history Deirdre covers has the usual imperfections of the free market. 

I wonder if the book has any history of success of this plan, of governments successfully guiding technological transformations to protect the rights and incomes of incumbents, without in the process killing technical change.  Governments habitually screw up basics like rent control. Figuring out what new technology will do is pretty much beyond the capacity of private investors and book-writing economists. The  idea that bureaucracy has the capacity to figure out not just what new technology will work, but to guide its social and distributional consequences seems... far beyond the historical record of bureaucratic accomplishment. But I am straying beyond my promise to review the review, not the book, before reading the latter. 

****

I recognize the desire on both sides. Partisan politics needs "new" ideas and a "new" propaganda. In particular, the right is aching for something shiny and new that it can sell to voters, which it regards with the same sort of noblesse-oblige intellectual disdain as the left does. Mind the store, mend the institutions, freedom, rights, opportunity and make your own prosperity are, apparently, not sexy enough. So both sides need new initiatives, expanded governments, to excite the rabble. But we're not here to supply that demand, merely to meditate on actual cause-and-effect truth of what works. Beware the temptation. 

Update:  In retrospect, perhaps the issue is much simpler. The bulk of economic regulation serves exactly the purpose McCloskey basically alleges of Acemoglu and Johnson: Preserve rents of incumbents against the threats of technological improvements. From medieval guilds to trade protection to taxis vs. Ubers, that is really its main function. So we have an extensive bureaucracy that is very good at it, and extensive experience of just how well it works. Which is, very well, at protecting rents and stifling growth.  



29 Jun 17:30

Why Julian Assange Must Be Freed

by Matt Taibbi

At Parliament Hill in London Saturday, there was a demonstration on behalf of jailed Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. Present was the famed rendering of Assange, Chelsea Manning, and Edward Snowden made by sculptor Davide Domino. The statue includes an empty chair for the next whistleblower. I had the honor of standing on that chair to give a short address:

I have a confession to make. Once, like a lot of journalists, I didn’t like Julian Assange. It wasn’t just that Wikileaks was breaking one huge story after another. He had fab hair. He wore skinny jeans. He even modeled at fashion week!

What can I say? I was jealous. We’re in London, so I can quote Shakespeare, can’t I?

Beware the green-eyed monster, which doth mock the meat it feeds on.

Jealousy, that monster, impairs one’s thinking. It impaired mine. I didn’t have a reason to dislike Assange. So I invented one. I decided I didn’t like the concept of “radical transparency.” I thought: “You can’t just dump all of those secrets on the public. That’s irresponsible!”

I was so brainwashed that I forgot, as many people do, that secrets do not belong to governments. That information belongs to us. Governments rule by our consent. If they want to keep secrets, they must have our permission to do so. And they never have the right to keep crimes secret.

I’m an American. Many of you are from the U.K. In our countries, we’re building skyscrapers and huge new complexes to store our secrets, because we don’t have room to keep them all as is!

Why do we have so many secrets? Julian Assange told us why. From an essay he wrote:

Authoritarian regimes give rise to forces which oppose them by pushing against the individual and collective will to freedom, truth and self realization. Plans which assist authoritarian rule, once discovered, induce resistance. Hence these plans are concealed by successful authoritarian powers.

When governments become authoritarian, they inspire resistance. Techniques must then be developed to repel that resistance. Those techniques must then be concealed.

In short: the worse a country is, the more secrets it has. We have a lot of secrets now.

Left, robots tend to the FBI’s Central Records Complex in Winchester, Virginia. Right, the NSA’s “Bumblehive” data center in Utah

Julian Assange became famous as we were creating a vast new government-within-a-government, a system of secret prisons, extraordinary rendition, mass surveillance, and drone assassination. Many of these things we know about only because of Wikileaks. Ostensibly, all this secrecy was needed to fight foreign terrorism.

The brutal irony now is the architects of that system no longer feel the need to hide their dirty tactics. My government, openly, wants to put this man in jail for 175 years, mostly for violations of the Espionage Act. These include crimes like “conspiracy to receive national defense information,” or “obtaining national defense information.”

What is “national defense information?” The answer is what makes this law so dangerous. It’s whatever they say it is. It’s any information they don’t want to get out. It doesn’t even have to be classified.

The amended Assange indictment

What is conspiracy to obtain such information? We have a word for that. It’s called journalism.

My government wants to put Julian Assange in jail for 175 years for practicing journalism. The government of this country, the U.K., is going to allow it to happen.

If they did this to Andrei Sakharov, or Nelson Mandela, every human rights organization in the world would be denouncing this as an intolerable outrage. Every NGO would be lining up to lend support. Every journalist would be penning editorials demanding his release.

But because our own governments are doing it, we get silence.

If you’re okay with this happening to one Julian Assange, you’d better be okay with it happening to many others. That’s why this moment is so important. If Assange is successfully extradited and convicted, it will take about ten minutes for it to happen again. From there this will become a common occurrence. There will be no demonstrations in parks, no more news stories. This will become a normal part of our lives.

Don’t let that happen.

Free Julian Assange.

29 Jun 16:48

New and Noteworthy: What I Read This Week—Edition 227

by Mark Sisson

Research of the Week

Eating disorders and self harm increased among teen girls during lockdowns.

Dietary fat restriction may make it harder for obese people to stick to a healthy diet.

The missing pandemic.

A Neanderthal bone tool industry site.

Is it bad to prefer attractive partners?

New Primal Kitchen Podcasts

Primal Health Coach Radio: Gala Gorman

Primal Kitchen Podcast: Obesity Expert Dr. Spencer Nadolsky Weighs in on Ozempic

Media, Schmedia

Why are sperm counts falling?

Lab grown chicken gets USDA approval.

Interesting Blog Posts

How Western parenting styles appear to the Runa indigenous people.

The changing story of human evolution.

Social Notes

My toughest workout of the week.

Everything Else

If Ireland has 500k fewer cows than 20 years ago, why do they need to cull even more?

Legal cocaine?

Things I’m Up to and Interested In

Not surprised: Targeting farmers may have been a bad move for Europe.

Low-carb wins: Low-carb vs DASH.

Important: BMI underestimates obesity.

Great essay: What is science?

We don’t really understand space at all: Black holes might not exist after all.

Question I’m Asking

What’s the hardest workout you ever did?

Recipe Corner

Time Capsule

One year ago (Jun 17 – Jun 23)

Comment of the Week

“Regarding this week’s SWS, I believe you are conflating a cliched pop culture term, that doesn’t really have an agreed-upon definition with a complete misunderstanding of what monastic life actually is. Frankly, it’s a mess. Spending a period of time, away from distractions and outside influence in order to focus, think deeply, and crystallize one’s ideas followed by getting those ideas out in the world is how real progress is made. Breakthroughs don’t happen through groupthink or committees. I could go on, but basically, you are suggesting a false choice.“

-Well said.

Oil_&_Vinegar_640x80

The post New and Noteworthy: What I Read This Week—Edition 227 appeared first on Mark's Daily Apple.

28 Jun 20:54

I kid you not, Maryland's governor said banning pornographic books in schools, some that encourage students to have their genitals changed, is akin to "castrating" kids

by Not the Bee

Governor Wes Moore of Maryland is here to demonstrate the Iron Law of Woke Projection for us.

27 Jun 19:20

GUY GOES VIRAL FOR ACCURATELY ANALYZING THE HORDES OF LIBERAL WOMEN WHO MOVE TO THE CITY TO GET AWAY

by Ed Driscoll

GUY GOES VIRAL FOR ACCURATELY ANALYZING THE HORDES OF LIBERAL WOMEN WHO MOVE TO THE CITY TO GET AWAY FROM THEIR “BACKWARDS” FAMILIES AND END UP HATING EVERYTHING:

Once upon a time there was a tweet from a Columbia professor.

Educated Hillbilly sure can, and he has thoughts on the hordes of urban women who move to the big city to find meaning in a career – especially those who make a job out of trashing their own families.

Apparently a lot of people liked (or hated) his thoughts because as of the time of this writing, he had 771,000 views on that tweet.

I’ll put the rest of his thread in a text box:

I’ve seen enough to get a fix on this gal and I’ve seen her type a million times. And they’re a dime a dozen in the writing world. They almost always go into the arts… never the sciences. Because your intelligence can be measured in the sciences. Writing is subjective.

Molly here grew up poor, TN I believe she said, but she mentions “poor” & “the south” about a million times. She’s making a point here. That she has the authority to speak on these topics & tell the liberal NY writing society that they’re correct to hate rural white poors.

She absolutely hates her parents, hates having to grow up in & around all that poor, all that filth, all their ignorance. Imagine knowing you’re better than everyone else & having to share a school bus with them. A lunch table. A class room. The rage builds for 18 years.

As the late Charles Krauthammer wrote in in 2002, “To understand the workings of American politics, you have to understand this fundamental law: Conservatives think liberals are stupid. Liberals think conservatives are evil.” But there’s a problem, Christopher Caldwell wrote a couple of years later: “For these people, liberalism is not a belief at all. No, it’s something more important: a badge of certain social aspirations. That is why the laments of the small-town leftists get voiced with such intemperance and desperation. As if those who voice them are fighting off the nagging thought: If the Republicans aren’t particularly evil, then maybe I’m not particularly special.”

27 Jun 18:15

WOKE BULLYING KILLS CHILDREN: Doctors think gender affirming care for kids is ‘crazy,’ but are ‘too

by Glenn Reynolds
27 Jun 15:51

OUT: FOLLOW THE SCIENCE. IN: Mayo Clinic professor suspended after saying testosterone improves a

by Glenn Reynolds

OUT: FOLLOW THE SCIENCE. IN: Mayo Clinic professor suspended after saying testosterone improves athletic performance: Doctor’s comments ‘problematic [for] the LGBTQI+ community,’ Mayo Clinic said.

Maybe we shouldn’t give “communities” a veto over science. Or maybe we should quit funding whatever goes on at Mayo, which apparently isn’t science anymore.

27 Jun 15:47

TRUST THE EXPERTS: CDC Director knew COVID vax did not prevent infection. “This revelation comes v

by Glenn Reynolds

TRUST THE EXPERTS: CDC Director knew COVID vax did not prevent infection. “This revelation comes via a FOIA request that, you can see, was redacted. Given that the email was in no way classified, the excuse for removing 90% of the content is a mystery. Perhaps the content was embarrassing? Who can say? Perhaps she included war plans against Iran or secret intelligence that Russia was planning an invasion of Ukraine.”

27 Jun 15:43

HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: I Paid for Free Speech at Arizona State: The university is firing

by Glenn Reynolds

HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: I Paid for Free Speech at Arizona State: The university is firing me for organizing an event featuring Charlie Kirk and Dennis Prager.

I thought that Arizona State University, my alma mater and employer, was different from other schools when it came to free speech. In 2011 the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression awarded ASU a “green light” rating for its written policies on freedom of expression. The university happily complied when FIRE suggested it adopt the Chicago Principles and protect the “free, robust and uninhibited sharing of ideas among all members of the University’s community.” The ASU Barrett Honors College has even been home to heterodox initiatives like the T.W. Lewis Center for Personal Development, where I served as executive director for the last two years.

But beneath ASU’s written commitment to intellectual diversity lies a deep hostility toward divergent views. The latest trouble started in February when the Lewis Center hosted Robert Kiyosaki, Dennis Prager and Charlie Kirk for an event on “Health, Wealth, and Happiness.” This nonpartisan program was part of a popular speaker series focused on connecting students with professionals who can offer career and life advice.

At the names of Messrs. Prager and Kirk, the faculty of ASU’s honors college were outraged. Thirty-nine of its 47 faculty signed a letter to the dean condemning the event on grounds that the speakers are “purveyors of hate who have publicly attacked women, people of color, the LGBTQ community, [and] institutions of our democracy.” The signers decried ASU “platforming and legitimating” their views, describing Messrs. Prager and Kirk as “white nationalist provocateurs” whose comments would undermine the value of democratic exchange by marginalizing the school’s most vulnerable students.

The faculty protests extended beyond the letter. Professors spent precious class time denouncing the program. On Twitter they lamented the university’s willingness to allow donor input on campus events. Mr. Prager received a death threat, forcing municipal and campus police to enact extensive security measures.

The event’s topic made no difference to the faculty protesting it. The political views of Messrs. Prager and Kirk rendered both men personae non grata on any issue. The message to students was clear: Nuance is impossible in the presence of “wrongthink”; the offender must either comply or face sweeping castigation.

The university administration’s position on the event was no secret. All advertising about “Health, Wealth, and Happiness” was scrubbed from campus walls and digital flyers. Behind closed doors, deans pressured me to postpone the event indefinitely. I was warned that if the speakers made any political statements, it wouldn’t be in the Lewis Center’s “best interests,” which I interpreted as a threat.

I ignored their threats and the event was a resounding success—1,500 people attended in person, another 24,000 joined us online. There were no protests, no disturbances, and no traumatized students. But the faculty’s illiberal tantrum was devastatingly effective on two fronts.

First, the scare tactics worked on undergraduates. Many students told me they were intimidated by professors into not attending. Some would attend only if we promised that cameras wouldn’t face the audience. Students worried that attending or expressing interest in the event would hurt them academically. Grades for ambiguous things like “class participation” give professors the ability to punish students for their politics. The success of professors’ fearmongering was reflected in the audience, where older attendees outnumbered the students.

Second, the event cost its organizers dearly. Shortly after “Health, Wealth, and Happiness,” Lin Blake, the events operations manager at ASU Gammage Theater, was fired by ASU Gammage. Before her firing, Ms. Blake told me that she was “berated by ASU Gammage leadership for coordinating an event that did not align with the values of ASU Gammage.” And as of June 30, ASU will dismantle the Lewis Center and terminate my position as its executive director. Barrett Honors College leadership told me this is purely a business decision, despite my raising more than $500,000 in the last year through the center.

Arizona’s legislature should be asking questions and cutting budgets.

27 Jun 00:49

OH: So That’s Why Hunter Biden Got a Sweetheart Plea Deal When He Did. “Just days after Hunter Bid

by Glenn Reynolds

OH: So That’s Why Hunter Biden Got a Sweetheart Plea Deal When He Did. “Just days after Hunter Biden reached a sweetheart plea deal with his father’s Justice Department to avoid jail time for tax and gun crimes, the House Ways and Means Committee unveiled new testimony from IRS whistleblowers alleging roadblocks were set before them to ensure preferential treatment to President Joe Biden’s son. What’s more, whistleblower testimony claims that the U.S. attorney overseeing the probe of Hunter’s alleged tax crimes had his attempts to charge Hunter in 2022 denied.”

27 Jun 00:41

HABEAS LAW IS A MESS, AND INNOCENCE SHOULD MATTER: A Troubling Supreme Court Habeas Decision. “The

by Glenn Reynolds

HABEAS LAW IS A MESS, AND INNOCENCE SHOULD MATTER: A Troubling Supreme Court Habeas Decision. “The Supreme Court was wrong to deny relief to a man imprisoned for activity that Court’s own rulings indicate was not illegal – one who never had an opportunity to challenge his incarceration on that basis.”

17 Jun 05:00

Myth of Big Oil’s Funding of Climate Scepticism vs Reality of Big Green’s Billions Driving Climate Alarmism

by Chris Morrison

Climate activists often repeat the myth that Big Oil is pouring millions into climate scepticism. The reality is that Big Green's billions are driving climate alarmism worldwide.

The post Myth of Big Oil’s Funding of Climate Scepticism vs Reality of Big Green’s Billions Driving Climate Alarmism appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

16 Jun 20:38

DISPATCHES FROM WEIMAR AMERICA: California mom claims LA school encouraged daughter to transition an

by Ed Driscoll
14 Jun 14:09

EVERYTHING IS RUN BY THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST: https://twitter.com/wretchardthecat/status/16687

by Glenn Reynolds

EVERYTHING IS RUN BY THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST:

14 Jun 13:00

SPEAKING OF BACK PEDALING, JOHNS HOPKINS DECIDED THE HUMAN RACE CONSISTED OF MEN AND NON-MEN:  I wr

by Sarah Hoyt
Jts5665

Webster's may be the next banned book...

SPEAKING OF BACK PEDALING, JOHNS HOPKINS DECIDED THE HUMAN RACE CONSISTED OF MEN AND NON-MEN:  I wrote about it here.
Obviously I wasn’t anywhere close to alone, because this is a comment on my post:

Ride right through them. They’re demoralized as h*ll. ;)

14 Jun 03:42

ABOUT TIME: Scientists beam solar power to Earth from space for 1st time ever.

by Glenn Reynolds
13 Jun 22:11

Watchdog group says feds have wasted $3 TRILLION on "improper payments" in the past 20 years. That's TRILLION, with a T.

by Not the Bee

Normally I would say something like "It's nice to know what my money is going to" but in this particular case, I wish they hadn't told us.

13 Jun 20:20

Here's one I've never seen before: Cat saves child from attacking dog

by Not the Bee

That was a full-on Lawrence Taylor shoulder hit, yo.

13 Jun 20:19

Amazon just locked a man out of his smart home for a week because a delivery driver reported him as a racist after mishearing something from the doorbell – the guy wasn’t even at home

by Not the Bee

This story sounds like it comes straight from a dystopian sci-fi novel.

13 Jun 20:15

IRS: 332,000 TAXPAYERS LEFT CALIFORNIA IN ONE YEAR. A new documentary exposes the real reasons behin

by Ed Driscoll

IRS: 332,000 TAXPAYERS LEFT CALIFORNIA IN ONE YEAR. A new documentary exposes the real reasons behind the mass exodus that’s costing California $29.1 billion dollars.

Or as America’s Newspaper of Record reported in 2021: Gavin Newsom Named U-Haul Salesperson Of The Year.

13 Jun 20:13

Coal Plant Fired Up as Solar Panels Fail Because It’s Too Sunny

by Will Jones
Jts5665

Interesting, I wonder what the temperature restriction on solar panel production means for solar power production plans in the desert?

Britain was forced to burn coal to generate electricity again this week after solar panel generation failed because it was too sunny. But the coal plant is due to be closed next year. What will we do then?

The post Coal Plant Fired Up as Solar Panels Fail Because It’s Too Sunny appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

13 Jun 15:34

Gavin Newsom says Trump's federal indictment is 'sad,' praises former president's COVID response

by Madeleine Hubbard
Jts5665

That's an unexpected take from Newsom...

Newsom said Trump "was incredible" during the pandemic.
13 Jun 13:43

The Scandal of the NHS Ombudsman Who ‘Deletes’ Thousands of Complaints He is Supposed to Investigate

by David Hansard

David Hansard writes on the brewing scandal of the NHS Ombudsman who, since Covid, has 'deleted' thousands of complaints he is supposed to investigate and refused to commit to a return to normal service.

The post The Scandal of the NHS Ombudsman Who ‘Deletes’ Thousands of Complaints He is Supposed to Investigate appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

12 Jun 21:16

Cleaned by Capitalism and Soiled by Socialism

by Donald J. Boudreaux

In 2004 at my blog, Café Hayek, I launched a series of posts titled “Cleaned by Capitalism.” Each post describes – and is typically accompanied by a photograph of –  an affordable and familiar modern good that makes humans’ immediate environment cleaner, safer, and more pleasant. Each of these goods is made available to the masses by innovative, competitive markets.

Cleaned by Capitalism

An example is the lightbulb. As I noted on my blog,

Before the electric light bulb, people at night used gas lamps (which were dangerous), fuel lamps (which were dangerous and dirty), and – for most of the time prior to the 20th century – candles (which also were dangerous and dirty).

Not only does the light bulb provide reliable and ample light, it does so without polluting our homes’, workplaces’, and play-places’ interiors. And being much safer than candles, fuel-burning lamps, or gas lamps, light bulbs are much less likely to ignite fires – fires that would burn down not only the buildings in which they started but also risk burning down surrounding buildings.

My series has three related purposes. The first is to explain that the relevant environment for humanity is not exclusively the outdoor and often-distant environment that we think of today when we encounter this word. Humans’ environment includes more than just the likes of the outdoor air that we breathe, the condition of the oceans and of far-away tundra, and the average temperature of the globe; humans’ environment includes also the cleanliness of the buildings in which we live, of the furniture on which we sit and sleep, of the clothing that we wear, and of the foods that we eat.

The second purpose of my series is to document, using examples from everyday modern life, the practically countless ways that innovative capitalist markets cleanse our personal environments of filth and perils that pose a far greater and more immediate threat to us than do global warming and the other the environmental conditions that are today regularly featured in the news.

The third purpose is to encourage readers to understand that, while capitalist production does indeed emit pollutants into the air and water, it also – and in the process – produces goods many of which make our everyday lives less polluted. Whatever are the costs of the ‘seen’ environmental effects of industrial production – effects such as carbon emissions and the risk of oil spills – these effects must be weighed against the benefits, including the unseen environmental benefits, of the very industrial activities that have as a by-product these ‘seen’ environmental effects.

There’s no question that the environment in which modern humans live is immeasurably cleaner, safer, and more pleasant than was the filthy and dangerous environment in which all of our pre-industrial ancestors lived.

Soiled By Socialism

But on this front not all the news is good. As innovative entrepreneurs in capitalist markets daily devise new goods and services to make our lives cleaner and safer, government officials are increasingly working to reverse this environmental improvement. Ironically, much of this government action is done in the name of improving the environment. This dismal reality was driven home to me recently by an e-mail from my friend Andy Morriss, a professor at Texas A&M.

Andy – who knows of the Café Hayek series “Cleaned by Capitalism” – was in London doing research at the British Library. He was prompted by the experience to send to me this e-mail:

I’m at the British Library this week doing research. They have what seem to be waterless urinals, with the predictable result that the men’s rooms reek of urine. So you should add ‘Soiled by Socialism’ to the series!

Unfortunately, there are enough instances of government soiling our environment to make Andy’s idea an excellent one. I’ll start that series soon. And waterless urinals are an ideal inaugural entry. I speak from personal experience because several years ago waterless urinals were installed in many men’s rooms on George Mason University’s Fairfax, Virginia, campus. Within a couple of months these men’s rooms were foul, with urine odor detectable even before entering the facility. So water was indeed ‘saved’ by avoiding flushing, but this ‘savings’ came at the high cost of rendering the men’s-room air and urinal surfaces unnecessarily repulsive and dirty.

By some miracle, George Mason eventually replaced the waterless urinals with proper water-flush ones. The improvement is noticeable and welcome.

Another example of “Soiled by Socialism” is government-mandated low-flow water faucets, showerheads, and toilets. At the very best, these low-flow devices simply fail to achieve their purpose of saving water, as people – to compensate for the lower flows – keep faucets and showers running longer, as well as flush toilets multiple times. But because water pressure, in addition to volume, contributes positively to cleansing one’s hands, body, and toilet-bowl interiors, we and our toilets do not get quite as clean with the low-flow devices as we would with higher-flow ones.

Or consider a new U.S. Department of Energy proposal to require manufacturers of automatic dishwashers – as reported by the Wall Street Journal – “to slash water use by a third, limiting machines to 3.2 gallons per cycle, down from the current federal limit of five gallons. New appliances must simultaneously cut estimated annual energy usage by nearly 30%.” As the Journal’s Editorial Board explains, “Americans have learned the hard way that stricter efficiency rules on already efficient appliances translate into higher costs, inconvenience, and ultimately waste.”

Regulations such as this one, of course, also make our immediate environments dirtier and, hence, less healthy. As the Journal’s Editors drolly put the matter to their readers: “Did you enjoy last night’s spaghetti, still crusted on the plate? Now you can taste it twice.”

Sadly yet predictably, our overlords in Washington aren’t content to further worsen the performance only of our dishwashers. Again, the Wall Street Journal’s Editorial Board is on target:

In recent months the Energy Department has proposed or finalized punishing new standards for ovens, microwaves, refrigerators and laundry machines (get ready for even moldier clothing). These come on top of rules for furnaces, air conditioners, and lightbulbs. In December the White House bragged that it had taken more than 110 efficiency actions for “appliances and equipment,” as if frustrating the daily household experience of millions of Americans is somehow a point of pride.

So I solicit your help with my soon-to-be-launched series, at Café Hayek, titled “Soiled by Socialism.” In what other ways do government regulations and environmental hysteria operate to make the environments in our homes, workplaces, schools, play-places, and vehicles less clean and sanitary than these would otherwise be? Please e-mail your suggestions to me at dboudrea@gmu.edu.

12 Jun 20:20

Watch: Florida beachgoers shocked as a BLACK BEAR swims in to shore from out in the ocean

by Not the Bee

There's a reason why Florida is such a popular destination spot. There's lots to do there, but for the most part, Florida is known for its beaches.

12 Jun 20:18

BOMBSHELL: COVID-19 Developed by Chinese Military at Wuhan Lab, Says Report. More here [VIP]: The

by Stephen Green
12 Jun 17:40

Sunday Times: yes, it was almost certainly a lab leak #COVID19

by Nitay Arbel (a.k.a. New Class Traitor)

Via Powerline. What used to be suppressed on social media (at governments’ behest) as a “conspiracy theory” is now reported in all seriousness by one of the world’s most respected newspapers, not the New York Slimes but the original Times [of London].[*]

Here is the original (paywalled) Times [of London] article, and here is a cached copy. Some teasers:

Scientists in Wuhan working alongside the Chinese military were combining the world’s most deadly coronaviruses to create a new mutant virus just as the pandemic began.

Investigators who scrutinised top-secret intercepted communications and scientific research believe Chinese scientists were running a covert project of dangerous experiments, which caused a leak from the Wuhan Institute of Virology and started the Covid-19 outbreak.

The US investigators say one of the reasons there is no published information on the work is because it was done in collaboration with researchers from the Chinese military, which was funding it and which, they say, was pursuing bioweapons.

The facility, which had started hunting the origins of the Sars virus in 2003, attracted US government funding through a New York-based charity whose president was a British-born and educated zoologist. America’s leading coronavirus scientist shared cutting-edge virus manipulation techniques.

The institute was engaged in increasingly risky experiments on coronaviruses it gathered from bat caves in southern China. Initially, it made its findings public and argued the associated risks were justified because the work might help science develop vaccines.

This changed in 2016 after researchers discovered a new type of coronavirus in a mineshaft in Mojiang in Yunnan province where people had died from symptoms similar to Sars.

Rather than warning the world, the Chinese authorities did not report the fatalities. The viruses found there are now recognised as the only members of Covid-19’s immediate family known to have been in existence pre-pandemic.

They were transported to the Wuhan institute and the work of its scientists became classified. “The trail of papers starts to go dark,” a US investigator said. “That’s exactly when the classified programme kicked off. My view is that the reason Mojiang was covered up was due to military secrecy related to [the army’s] pursuit of dual use capabilities in virological biological weapons and vaccines.”

According to the US investigators, the classified programme was to make the mineshaft viruses more infectious to humans.

They believe this led to the creation of the Covid-19 virus, and that it leaked into the city of Wuhan after a laboratory accident. “It has become increasingly clear that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was involved in the creation, promulgation and cover-up of the Covid-19 pandemic,” one of the investigators said.

Much, much, much more at the link — including why certain scientists were not at all interested in the truth becoming public. In particular the role of one Peter Daszak reminds me of what Judge Benjamin Halevy told Rudolf Kästner: “macharta et-nishmatekha la-Satan” (you sold your soul to the devil).

Go read the whole thing. If you prefer to hear something podcast style, here is an embed.

Infographic from the article embedded [fair use under Israeli copyright law]:

[*] The Times has been continuously published since 1785, at first as The Daily Universal Register, since January 1, 1788 under its current name. It is the second oldest one of the oldest continuously published daily dailies in English (after the Hartford Courant, est. 1764), and one of the oldest worldwide — the very oldest is the Swedish Post och Inrikes Tidningar (Post and Inland/Domestic Times, est. 1645). The Wiener Zeitung (Vienna Newspaper), est. 1703, seems to be more a gazette (government-issued official bulletin) rather than a newspaper proper. The oldest that still has a print run appears to be the Italian-language Gazzetta di Mantova (the Mantua Gazzette), est. 1664.

This list claims Lloyd’s List (est. 1734) as the oldest in English, but that is a shipping and marine insurance trade journal and not a general newspaper.

12 Jun 17:37

Native Americans block Interior Sec. Haaland from entering event celebrating oil ban

by Addison Smith
Protesters said the ban on the oil leases is a big financial loss to surrounding, low-income communities.
11 Jun 02:41

I MENTIONED THIS EARLIER, BUT HERE’S THE PAPER: Taurine Deficiency as a Driver of Aging.

by Glenn Reynolds

I MENTIONED THIS EARLIER, BUT HERE’S THE PAPER: Taurine Deficiency as a Driver of Aging.

11 Jun 02:15

BAD LUCK: An Extremely Rare Mutation Landed a Woman in Prison For Murder. “Twenty years ago, Kathl

by Glenn Reynolds

BAD LUCK: An Extremely Rare Mutation Landed a Woman in Prison For Murder. “Twenty years ago, Kathleen Folbigg was imprisoned, having been found guilty of killing her four children. A few days ago, she received a full pardon and walked free. A mutation in a CALM gene that affects one in 35 million people is now thought to have caused the deaths of her two daughters via a rare syndrome called calmodulinopathy.”