Arnold Kling says we are all wrong about it.
Well, maybe someone is right, and we just haven’t heard from them.
Arnold Kling says we are all wrong about it.
Well, maybe someone is right, and we just haven’t heard from them.
It is certainly far too easy to vote.
Yes, you are the bad guys.
I disagree, though, that Bill Clinton shouldn’t have been impeached.
And Steven Hayward asks “Why are the baddies so bad?”
[Thursday-afternoon update]
“Who are the ‘elites,’ anyway?“
[Bumped]
If this was happening in Michigan, there’s no reason to think it wasn’t happening in other swing states.
…may have terrible consequences.
Yes, yes it may.
A long but interesting discussion with Scott Pace on space policy.
A depressing litany of how far we’ve fallen in this century.
Did they prevent Stalin from conquering all of Europe after the defeat of Nazi Germany?
Why didn’t the Romans have one?
Before I read it, the first thing I thought was this: “How are engineers to do experiments and calculations without any concept of the experimental method, and without anything close to the mathematical tools that are available today to any fifth-grader?”
As he notes, they didn’t have Arabic numerals, they didn’t have zero, they didn’t have negative numbers, or complex numbers. They had no higher math, and no way to get to it with their numbering system. One of the foundations of the industrial revolution was the invention of calculus, and understanding of physics, including thermodynamics. That was all happening in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The other thing that was happening was the invention of capitalism in the coffee houses of London and Amsterdam (which wouldn’t have happened had coffee not become a thing in the wake of opening the New World). It’s not clear how, even had Rome not fallen, how they would have ever had those foundations.
[Update a while later]
Link is fixed now, sorry.
…has been dissected into a 630-page report that documents all of Hunter’s crimes, and implicates Joe.
The report itself is here.