Unequal Justice How long will it take for U.S. Attorney David Weiss to testify publicly in front of the House, and Republicans? Kimberley Strassel at the WSJ guesses it could take a week for the Delaware prosecutor to unwind his office’s growing list of Hunter Biden special favors. That’s before mentioning its half-truths and outright […]
Archives for July 2023
A 2045 Space Odyssey
Imagine you’re a time traveler who is on the back end of a 2001 space odyssey. You don’t remember much from the journey, but today, 22 years later, you have a pile of money that, thankfully, was invested in the price-weighted 30-stock index Dow Jones Industrial Average. You have no recall of the gut-wrenching volatility. […]
Summertime in Paris
Traveling to Paris during the summer can be a risky affair because so many of the city’s residents are on their own vacations. But, Paris resident and expert David Lebovitz suggests there are still good reasons to visit in August if you know where to go. He writes: While it’s not quite August yet, things are winding […]
Should Argentina Adopt the Dollar?
You read earlier today that despite Bidenflation, the dollar still goes a long way in Argentina, where inflation reaches levels most Americans can’t comprehend. At Cato Institute, Daniel Raisbeck and Gabriela Calderon de Burgos report that the rate has reached over 100% for the first time since 1991. Many Argentinians, report Raisbeck and Calderon de […]
CBDCs “Should Deeply Alarm All of Us”
At The Economic Collapse, Michael Snyder explains why the development of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) should be deeply alarming for everyone. He writes: Central bank digital currencies are feverishly being developed all over the globe, and this is something that should deeply alarm all of us. For a moment, I would like for you […]
The Tragic Decline in American Education
At LewRockwell.com, Taki Theodoracopulos explains the declining state of American education, with a focus on public speaking. He writes: I am writing this dispatch from the birthplace of “oracy,” the art of public speaking first perfected by the Athenian Demosthenes, a speaker so eloquent and influential he managed to force the great Aristotle to move […]
The Woman Who Created the Rolling Stones
In The Spectator, Helen R. Brown reviews a new book by Elizabeth Winder titled Parachute Women, about the women who helped shape the Rolling Stones, and one, Anita Pallenberg, who is credited as “creating” them. Brown writes: Feminism? Pfft! Marianne Faithfull practically spat the word at me when I interviewed her in 2017. Then she […]
The Dollar Goes a Long Way, in Argentina
In The Spectator, Dave Seminara recounts his recent family vacation to Argentina and how far his dollars went in the country, which saw 94.8% annual inflation last year. He writes: Planning a foreign trip is a bit like watching a trailer for a film. The research is a preview of coming attractions. I almost never […]
Can State Media Compete with the Internet?
Karen Kwiatkowski explains in LewRockwell.com that state media must now compete with new media, which doesn’t forget and move on from controversial news stories as the news cycle changes. She writes: Can the state compete with the frank and factual national conversation we are starting to see? With cities falling apart, along with the dollar, […]
Will Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine Lead to Human Extinction?
At Lewrockwell.com, Lewellyn H. Rockwell Jr. explains his feelings that the conflict in Ukraine has put the world closer than ever to annihilation. He writes: We should never forget that the Ukraine War, masterminded by brain-dead Biden’s necon controllers, threatens the world with imminent destruction. If we continue to threaten and provoke Putin, the future […]
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