As promised, my past two days of job searching has ended. I applied to a number of job offerings that are related to my field, so all I have to do now is play the waiting game until I find… Read More ›
Month: June 2022
Planning for the Future
Today, I felt I needed to be more transparent about one of my other plans lately. I decided, after finishing my undergraduate studies at university late last year, to continue going to school and begin my graduate studies sooner rather… Read More ›
Japan’s Refusal to Save A Free-falling Yen Reflects the Global Economy’s Shortcomings — Spheres of Influence
Despite the value of the yen being in freefall, Japan sees economic intervention as too costly an endeavor. How will this policy decision play out? And what does it reveal about the state of the global free market? Japan’s Refusal to… Read More ›
US Inflation at 8.6% in May 2022 Surges Past Four-decade High Record
Originally posted on Institute for Pioneering Insightful Research Private Limited (InsPIRE):
Dr Debesh Roy, Chairman, InsPIRE The U.S. consumer inflation surged ahead to touch a more than four decades high of 8.6% annual rate in May 2022, due to spiraling…
Update (13 June 2022)
I have yet to figure out what I will be writing about for the next post. Again, there are a few ideas that I would like to explore, but I would like it if every weekly batch of posts follows… Read More ›
Conservative Socialism: Lind’s Critiques of Jeffersonianism (Pt. II of II)
The statistical data used to justify the so-called “Great Replacement Theory” in the US can be traced as far back as the 1990s. Back in the 1990s, there were demographers who were anticipating that America’s English Protestants would no longer… Read More ›
Update (11 June 2022)
Yesterday and today are proving to be extremely busy for me. Since I had to take care of a few appointments yesterday, I do not have anything ready to be posted for the Blog. My goal as of late is… Read More ›
Karl Radek’s Critique of National Bolshevism
Bogumil, If there was something which binds the narratives of “Revolutionary People’s War or Counter-Revolutionary Civil War?” and Karl Radek’s subsequent critique, it would arguably be their discussions of 20th century geopolitics. My conclusion that the geopolitical conclusions of Laufenberg… Read More ›
Geopolitics of National Bolshevism (Response)
“It’s a bit pedantic, but ‘syndicalist’ tended to be used as a generic term by the Bolsheviks to describe any tendency which rejected the central role of the Communist Party. The council-communists who ended up in the KAPD didn’t use… Read More ›
Conservative Socialism: Lind’s Critiques of Jeffersonianism (Pt. I of II)
Earlier today, I had been reading the latest articles of Michael Lind in the American Jewish publication known as Tablet Magazine. Catching up on his writings, there has been a number of noteworthy articles which I felt were worthy of… Read More ›
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